SP2 METROGIVEAWAYS.COM
‘
’
Harry Who
Inside: Our Super Guide
J A N UA RY 27- F E B R UA RY 2 , 20 1 6 | V O L . 3 1 , N O .45 | S I L I C O N VA L L E Y, C A | F R E E
Goats,
GOD AND THE DEVIL
A meet and greet with Silicon Valley ’ s Satanists By Jennifer Wadsworth p16
P
SOR
Y
10 2 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
PS
356014_WED_METRO_LEFT_012716
14" Laptop with Intel Quad Core Processor
Professional Security System
14"
• 2GB Memory • 32GB SSD • 14" Actual Diagonal Screen Size
8-Channel Digital Video Recorder with 4 x 720p Cameras and Pre-Installed 500GB Hard Drive
• Surveillance in the Palm of Your Hand in Live Viewing with Your Smartphone and Tablets Regular Price $399.99
Regular Price $249 In-Store Price $199
$
$50
PROMO CODE
In-Store & Online
149
*
SAVE 40%
SHIPS FREE
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8673440 Good Through 01.30.16
*With Sunday Promo Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
PROMO CODE
299
*
In-Store & Online
SAVE 14%
15.6" New AMD A10 Quad Core Laptop withRadeon™ R6 Graphics
*With Sunday Promo Code
15.6"
15.6" Intel Core i7 Laptop for Best Performance ®
PROMO CODE
499 SHIPS FREE
In-Store and Online While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8688450
Analog HD *With Sunday Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
DVD-RW
In-Store & Online
SAVE 20% *With Sunday Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8602380 Good Through 01.30.16
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
$
$50
Good Through 01.30.16
SHIPS FREE
329
99*
SAVE 34%
In-Store & Online
*With Sunday Promo Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8593559 Good Through 01.30.16
In-Store and Online While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8688420
Analog HD *With Sunday Promo Code www.frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
Good Through 01.30.16
Professional Security Camera
Professional Security System
DVD-RW
SAVE 20%
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
PROMO CODE
4-Channel 1080p Digital Video Recorder with 4 x 1080p Full HD Resolution Cameras and Pre-Installed 1TB Hard Drive
PROMO CODE
599*
$
$170
15.6"
Regular Price $749 In-Store Price $649
Regular Price $649 In-Store Price $599
*
™
• 8GB Memory • 1TB Hard Drive • 15.6" Actual Diagonal Screen Size
• 15.6" Actual Diagonal Screen Size • 8GB Memory • 1TB Hard Drive
$
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8591989 Good Through 01.30.16
DVD-RW www.frys.com/signmeup
SHIPS FREE
$100
SAVE 37%
• Surveillance in the Palm of Your Hand in Live Viewing with Your Smartphone and Tablets Regular Price $499.99
Regular Price $349
$
24999*
8-Channel Digital Video Recorder with 8 x 720p Cameras and Pre-Installed 500GB Hard Drive
• 15.6" Actual Diagonal Screen Size • 4GB Memory • 750GB Hard Drive
$50
PROMO CODE
Professional Security System
15.6"
15.6" Intel® Pentium® Quad Core Laptop
$
$150
1080p Multi-Purpose Day/Night Security Bullet Camera
• 100ft / 30m Night Vision • 70° Viewing Angle • BNC Cable Connection
• 100ft 30m Excellent Night Vision • Cable Threaded Through Stand for Additional Security • Weather proof IP67 casing and 60ft 18m BNC Cable
Regular Price $379.99
Regular Price $99.99
$
$100
PROMO CODE
27999*
SHIPS FREE
SAVE 26%
*With Sunday Promo
In-Store and Online Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8648650 Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
STORE HOURS M-F 8-9, Sat 9-9, Sun 9-8 Prices Good Wednesday, January 27, 2016 through Saturday, January 30 , 2016. Prices subject to change after Saturday, January 30 , 2016. 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.
Good Through 01.30.16
$
$20
79
PROMO CODE
99*
SHIPS FREE
SAVE 20%
*With Sunday Promo
In-Store and Online Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8661640 Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
Good Through 01.30.16
*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
356016_Metro_RT_012716
11 3
OR $60 Refill Card
Receive
200 Frys Gift Card
$
$40 Refill Card
$50 Refill Card
When you Purchase and Activate any NEW at&t Apple, Samsung and LG Smartphones See Store for Details
Regular Price $60
$
$6
PROMO CODE
54*
SAVE 10%
Regular Price $40
Regular Price $50 In-Store Only Limit 2 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #7931720
*With Sunday Promo Code
Good Through 01.30.16
$
$5
45*
SAVE 10%
$4
36*
Trade in your Old Smartphone and Receive up to $450. See Store with Details
Good Through 01.30.16
Good Through 01.30.16
www.frys.com/signmeup
Bagless Upright Vacuum
• Lightweight and Maneuverable with Large Capacity Dirt Cup • Powerful Multi-Surface Cleaning • Premium Pet Tools
• Slim, detachable 1.5L capacity canister • Cyclone Force technology provides more powerful suction that lasts • Anti-allergy filtration system captures allergens and fine dust particles • Multi-surface cleaning ability
Weighs 10.6lbs.
199
SHIPS FREE
In-Store Only Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks
Navigator Light Upright Vacuum
• 1200-Watts of High Power • Flat Keypad Panel for Easy-to-use Programming; 10 Power Levels
Regular Price $299.99 In-Store Price $229.99
$
SAVE 10%
In-Store & Online Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #7931600
www.frys.com/signmeup
HOT DEAL!
$30
PROMO CODE
*With Sunday Promo Code
Good Through 01.30.16
www.frys.com/signmeup
1.2 Cu. Ft. Mid Size Stainless Steel Microwave
• 10 Speed Solid-State Control • 8 Cups Flour Power • Includes 4.5 Qt Stainless Steel Bowl, Flat Beater, Dough Hook & Wire Whip
$
*With Sunday Promo Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
Ultra Power 4.5 Qt Grey Stand Mixer
PROMO CODE
In-Store & Online Limit 2 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #7931680
Regular Price $139.99
Regular Price $149.99 In-Store Price $129.99
PROMO CODE
In-Store & Online SAVE Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last 33% No Rainchecks #8451048 *With Sunday Promo Code Good Through 01.30.16
99*
$
$30
99
PROMO CODE
99*
SHIPS FREE
SAVE 33%
In-Store & Online
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #6828686
$
$25
114
Regular Price $179.99
PROMO CODE
99*
SAVE SAVE 17% 80%
In-Store & Online Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8644960
$
$55
124
PROMO CODE
99* Each
SAVE 30%
In-Store & Online
Limit 1 per Customer While Supplies Last No Rainchecks #8699810/#8699820
SHIPS FREE
SHIPS FREE
*With Sunday Promo Code
*With Sunday Promo Code
*With Sunday Promo Code
*With Sunday Promo Code
www.frys.com/signmeup
www.frys.com/signmeup
www.frys.com/signmeup
www.frys.com/signmeup
Good Through 01.30.16
Good Through 01.30.16
Good Through 01.30.16
Good Through 01.30.16
*Instant activation discount requires activation through Fry’s Electronics on new lines of service with new 2-year agreement on qualifying plan per line. Limit 5 phones per customer. Limited time offer. No Dealers. Subject to terms and conditions of carrier’s agreement, including, if applicable, activation/upgrade fees, credit approval and early termination fees. The Qualified upgrade discount requires a new 2-year agreement for qualified existing customers. See contract and carrier’s rate plan brochures for additional details. California customers to be charged sales tax based on price without activation, including items designated as “free” after instant savings. While Supplies last, limited time offers. DROID is a trademark of Lucasfilms Ltd. and its related companies. Used under license. Beats Audio and the b logo are trademarks of Beats Electronics, LLC. Google, the Google logo, Android and Google+ are trademarks of Google, Inc. 4G LTE is available in more than 410 markets in the U.S.; see vzw.com. LTE is a trademark of ETSI.Coverage not available everywhere. See brochures and Terms and Conditions (including arbitration provision) at www.T-Mobile.com for additional information. T-Mobile and the magenta color are registered trademarks of Deutsche Telekom AG. ©2013 T-Mobile USA, Inc.**4G speeds delivered by LTE or HSPA+ with enhanced backhaul. Available in limited areas. Availability increasing with ongoing backhaul deployment. Requires 4G device and compatible data plan. Learn more at att.com/network.
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
STORE HOURS M-F 8-9, Sat 9-9, Sun 9-8 Prices Good Wednesday, January 27, 2016 through Saturday, January 30 , 2016. Prices subject to change after Saturday, January 30 , 2016. 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.
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
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
PS
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
4
by Dr. JANE ART OF PERFECTION
INNOVATION
METRO SILICON VALLEY A locally owned company.
Comics • Live Music • Fun Happenings
BIG KAHUNA’S BIG GAME PARTY
Sunday February 7th •1:00 pm Pre-Game Stand-Up Comedy Football Themed Coloring Book Pages For All BEER/ WINE SPECIALS
CHECK OUT CRAFT BEER MENU of 20 BOTTLED BEERS
NEW YEAR PROMOTION Buy Ultherapy Face & Neck Get 40 Unit Zeomin & 1.5 mm Nasolabial Ultherapy Free Jenesis LadyLift (Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation) Promo Price with this ad (20 patients only) Buy 5 BellaƓll Get 1 BellaƓll & Regenica Cream Free Buy InƓQi 4D Deep Get Laser Toning & Hydrafacial Free Negraft Hair Transplant $6 /graft with 1500 graft purchase Get PRP Hair Free
LIPO / FAT TRANSFER / FILLER / BOTOX / LASER / HAIR / SKIN/ LASER VAGINAL REJUVENATION
Call for Free Consultation
408 996 0200
1471 Saratoga Ave., San Jose, CA 95129
www.JenesisLipoplasty.com www.JenesisHairTransplant.com
THE ART BOUTIKI
44 Race Street San Jose 95126
408-971-8929 www.artboutiki.com
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 Managing Editor: Josh Koehn Music & Arts Editor: Nick Veronin Associate Editor: Paul Hersh Staff Writer: Jennifer Wadsworth Contributing Writers: Anna Bagirov, Adrienne
Blaine, Rita Cameron, J.J. Carburry, Jeffrey Edalatpour, John Flynn, Karla Kane, Stephen Layton, Andrew Lentz, Tad Malone, Ngoc Ngo, Sheryl Nonnenberg, Gary Singh, Richard von Busack, Tomek Mackowiak
ART/PRODUCTION Design Director: Kara Brown Graphic Designer: Tabi Dolan Production Operations Manager: Sean George Graphic Artists: Lorin Baeta, Rene Barba,
Kathy Manlapaz, Mariana Sanchez Photographers: Greg Ramar, Geoffrey Smith II Illustrator: Jeremiah Harada
DISPLAY SALES Advertising Director: John Haugh Senior Account Executive: Bill Stubbee Account Executives: Reina Alvarez,
Gordon Carbone, Billy Garcia, Michael Hagaman, Sherman Lee Sales & Marketing Assistant: Natalie Kirkland Digital Media Specialist: Carl Foisy
CLASSIFIED SALES Senior Account Executive: Michael R. Hill Classified Sales: Dave Miller
ACCOUNTING/OPERATIONS/ ADMINISTRATION Accounting Specialist: Aurene Pokorny Information Systems: Chris Giancaterino Operations/Circulation: Lazaro Cardenas 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. Subscriptions: $50/six months, $95/one year.
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 © 2015 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
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
THIS MODERN WORLD
By TOM TOMORROW
I SAW YOU
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
6
ISawYou@metronews.com Send us your anonymous rants and raves about your co-workers or any badly behaving citizen to I SAW YOU, Metro, 380 S. First St., San Jose, 95113, or via email.
No Help Wanted
comments@metronews.com RE: “THE SUPER SEX MYTH,” COVER, JAN. 20
You’re about to see a bunch of stories about the Super Bowl and sex trafficking. Proceed with caution.
Hey buddy, it’s 2 o’clock in the morning and you’re hunched over next to a woman in the pouring rain on the sidewalk. Sorry to ask if you’re all right. I’m not sure what the situation is, but it’s definitely a situation. Your two friends are in a car, stopped in the middle of this one-way street at a green light. So excuuuuse me for expressing concern. Didn’t think that called for your rage-filled rant of expletives (which, by the way, you so bravely waited to spew until I was already on the other end of the block). But you’d have to expect at least a little bit of curiosity from passersby. You look like you’re crying, for chrissakes. Did you just get in an argument with your friends? Did you jump out of the car? Who’s the woman? Don’t bite my head off for inquiring. Someone else might’ve called the cops.
RE: “THE SUPER SEX MYTH,” COVER, JAN. 20
I appreciate the voice of sex workers in the article but not at the cost of those that are being coerced into the work. @MSANDREADIAZ VIA TWITTER
@RADLEYBALKO VIA TWITTER RE: “ORGANIC INCONGRUITY,” ALLEYS, JAN. 20
RE: “ORGANIC INCONGRUITY,” ALLEYS, JAN. 20
RE: “THE SUPER SEX MYTH,” COVER, JAN. 20
Gary Singh’s column about funky shops on Park Avenue was terrific, and as always a welcome antidote to more conventional perspectives in the media. And the cover story on the myth of Super Bowl human trafficking was perhaps the most significant piece of serious journalism I’ve read in a long time, especially since it has an “emperor without clothes” quality to it in attacking a politically correct shibboleth.
Great article in @metroactive by @gary_singh about #sanjose Park Ave … Shout out to Val @Bigsby #cityofdjinns #stsj
I’m against trafficking and taking advantage of young men and women being sold to the highest bidder… however, and I know I’m gonna get a whole lotta haters and naysayers responding as they do but … if any man or woman who is of consenting age chooses to sell their “services” to lonely men … I don’t judge.
DON GAGLIARDI VIA EMAIL
@CAYCEHILL VIA TWITTER
WHITNEY ELISABETH VIA FACEBOOK
RE: “THE SUPER SEX MYTH,” COVER, JAN. 20
Is the #SuperBowl a site for #sextrafficking? @sanjoseinside reports this “myth” harmful for survivors @SCHUSTERINST VIA TWITTER RE: “THE SUPER SEX MYTH,” COVER, JAN. 20
Super Bowl sex trafficking is a myth— and ‘crackdowns’ endanger sex workers. @REALSESMITH VIA TWITTER
11 7 Building Community Through Fun
JAN 29 - FEB 7 | 12 - 10PM www.sanjoseca.gov/prns FOOD SALES
LIVE MUSIC
MINI SPORTS FIELD
Grab a bite to eat from local vendors.
Take in performances from local musicians and DJ's throughout the day.
Toss around the pigskin during daily challenges, competitions, and free-play. All ages welcome!
FAMILY GAMES & ACTIVITIES Start a game of Cornhole or Ping Pong. Daily kids activities and crafts too!
BEER GARDEN Sip on a pint or enjoy a glass of wine from a local winery.
Park activation and improvements funded in part by Adobe and Knight Foundation, designed by Groundswell Design Group, and produced by the Department of Parks, Recreation and Neighborhood Services. Building healthy communities through partnership.
DUI DEFENDERS · You have 10 days from your arrest to try to save your license - ACT FAST! · Single & multiple offender DUI/criminal defense · DMV and criminal proceedings for low flat rate · Defend against state and federal drug possession, use and distribution charges · Se habla español
1-800-DUI-7317 Practical, Dedicated, & Experienced A Professional Corporation
9 5 S. Ma r ke t S t. , S u i te 3 0 0 S a n J o s e, C A . 9 5 1 1 3
Call now to speak confidentially with the DUI/420 attorney now! Please don’t drink or medicate and drive · yourduilawyerca.com
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Winter Plaza de Cesar Chavez
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
THE FLY
SVNEWS
Polluted Poll Earlier this year, Santa Clara County announced a $64 million plan to shelter 6,000 of the region’s chronically homeless. The ambitious proposal stemmed from an ad hoc Housing Task Force formed by Board of Supervisors prez DAVE CORTESE. To answer what Supervisor CINDY CHAVEZ called the “$64 million question,” the board decided to appeal to constituents. Any day now, pollsters from EMC Research will start calling likely voters to gauge their willingness to bump up the countywide sales tax. But the questions don’t exactly relate to homelessness—rather, the poll will query three groups about a special, general and combined tax. This isn’t the survey’s first run, either. South Bay Labor Council (SBLC) chief BEN FIELD had EMC ask voters those same questions last year, yielding less-than-favorable results. The labor council attempted to give it a second shot by teaming up with the Silicon Valley Leadership Group on a transportation tax, but the answers were apparently even less promising and that partnership has since fallen through. The SBLC has now targeted They taxpayer funds to ask the Did same questions until they What? get the answers they SEND TIPS TO want. A no-bid county FLY@ contract approved by METRONEWS. supervisors will spend COM $50,000 to conduct the three-pronged poll, by the same firm, EMC, used by the SBLC. One miffed source compared the back-door polling efforts, as well as conducting three different surveys, to taking “three different bites at the apple.” The ploy is especially disingenuous considering the county just asked voters to approved a half-billion dollar sales tax in 2012. Measure A pushed the county’s sales tax to one of the state’s highest at 8.75 percent, and ended up raising more money than the county needed. Supervisors put $9.6 million in “surplus” funds up for bid in 2014. It came as no surprise when KATHLEEN KING, who ran the county’s Measure A campaign along with Chavez, nabbed $6 million for her fledgling nonprofit, the Healthier Kids Foundation.
Frederic Legrand - COMEO, via Shutterstock.com
8
Gov. Rainmaker BROWN GRASS The governor has a cautiously pessimistic view of the state’s economy.
Jerry Brown’s new budget expresses caution over extended drought BY TOM GOGOLA
I
N A STATE that’s been dealing with a drought for the past four years, Gov. Jerry Brown yet again played the role of cautiously pessimistic weather forecaster when he released his $170 billion 2016–17 budget. Suggesting the next recession might be right around the corner, Brown emphasized in his early January announcement that California should put a little something aside—$2 billion—for the state’s rainy day fund. Prudence and discipline were also hallmarks of his 2016 State of the State address last week, which lasted all of 20 minutes, and Brown’s budget has a number of drought-beating, water
security items embedded within it, including an update to the Delta Plan. Of eight “significant adjustments” noted in the budget’s action plan for water, he’s earmarked $3.6 million to flow the WaterFix Delta conveyance plan into the broader Delta Plan. Translated into English, that means, yes, Brown is pushing ahead with his plan to build two large water tunnels to ensure the flow of desalinated water from the Sacramento River southward, which has drawn substantial backlash to the governor’s chagrin. The water security part of the plan has been cleaved from habitat restoration efforts underway in the Delta. The broader effort is now undertaken as the so-called 4A option, which state and federal authorities enacted last April. Now the state Natural Resources Agency is the lead on the habitat restoration part of the deal, under the WaterRestore plan, while WaterFix builds the tunnels
and associated other infrastructure to hedge against future droughts and their crippling impacts on Big Ag. The Bay Delta Conservation Plan is just one of a number of budget nuggets released by Brown that are of interest to the Bay Area. Here are some of the highlights:
Failing Grads The governor gave the California State University system high marks for making college affordable, but graduation rates are nowhere near acceptable. Less than a fifth (18 percent) of first-time college students graduate within four years. In particular, San Jose State University ranked 18th out of 23 schools in four-year graduation rates for first-time students (11 percent). The campus has been a home for dysfunction over the last year as it deals with disgruntled faculty and allegations of racial discrimination, and it’s yet to be seen if the sudden departure of president Mohammad Qayoumi— now an advisor to the Afghanistan
10
11 9
JANUARY 27, 6 PM WESTVALLEY.EDU/CAREERS REGISTRATION OPEN HOUSE JANUARY 30, 9:30 AM WESTVALLEY.EDU/REG SPRING SEMESTER STARTS FEB. 1 WESTVALLEY.EDU 408.867.2200
AMERICA’S PREMIER INDOOR KARTING CENTER
ARRIVE & DRIVE
ADULTS AND
JUNIORS 48” AND UP
BIRTHDAY PARTIES
CORPORATE EVENTS
2925 Mead Ave, Santa Clara, CA 95051 - (408) 338-0579 160 Beacon St., S. San Francisco, CA 94080 - (650) 741-0215 K1SPEED.com . . . . . . . . .
AZ - PHOENIX, CA - CARLSBAD IRVINE ANAHEIM TORRANCE ONTARIO SANTA CLARA SAN FRANCISCO SACRAMENTO SAN DIEGO, CO - DENVER, FL - FT. LAUDERDALE MIAMI GA-ATLANTA,HI-KAPOLEI,IL-BUFFALOGROVE.ADDISON,IN-INDIANAPOLIS,MA-PLYMOUTH,NY-ALBANY.POUGHKEEPSIE,TX-AUSTIN.HOUSTON.SANANTONIO.DALLAS,WA-SEATTLE
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
CAREER PROGRAMS INFO NIGHT
10
8
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
government—will turn out to be a positive or a negative. Last year, the CSU Chancellor’s office rolled out the Graduation Initiative 2025 to increase graduation rates for the abovementioned students to 24 percent in the next 10 years, and Brown’s budget provides an additional $225 million to the CSU’s general fund.
Criminal Justice
Circle of Palms Downtown San Jose
November 13 - February 7 downtownicesj.com 408 291 0525
Brown’s budget also responds to two recent lawsuits brought against the state that address broader issues around criminal justice reform. Under his plan, the state will spend $9.3 million to comply with the ruling in Sassman v. Brown, “which requires the state to expand the existing female Alternative Custody Program to males.” Under this program, inmates serve out the last year or two of their terms in home detention or a residential facility. This bill could be a boon for private providers of electronic monitoring services, given the expanded pool of inmates. “It is unclear how many males will ultimately qualify for an alternative placement,” Brown notes in his budget summary. “Consequently, future budget adjustments may be necessary to capture the full impact of this program expansion.” The state also reached an agreement last year in Ashker v. Brown that hit on the overuse of solitary confinement in prison. The agreement moves the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation “away from a system of indeterminate terms for segregated housing to a system that focuses on determinate terms for behavior-based violations,” Brown notes. The state would save $28 million by shutting down some solitaryconfinement units, and the governor pledges to spend $5.8 million “for additional investigative staff to monitor gang activity in prisons as the new segregated housing policy changes are implemented.”
Fire Protection A San Jose Downtown Association Production. Supported in part by a Cultural Affairs grant from the City of San Jose.
Brown is offering some $300 million to deal with damage from last year’s big fires in Lake and
Calaveras counties, but the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, CalFire, is hampered in its firefighting efforts because of its fleet of 12 Vietnam-era, military surplus helicopters, which are aging and not up to the task, CalFire says. Brown offers an unspecified figure for the replacement of the choppers and says he is waiting on a procurement plan which should be unveiled this spring, just in time for fire season.
Minimum Wage Brown says it would be nice, but fiscally foolish, to push for a statewide $15 minimum wage (it’s $10 an hour as of Jan. 1) for all workers, but in the meantime, he and the state Legislature have to deal with a federal Department of Labor ruling from last year that said In-Home Supportive Service (IHSS) workers are entitled to overtime, travel time between clients and wait time pay related to doctor visits. Brown also proposed to lift a 7 percent reduction in service hours slapped on IHSS workers around the time of the Great Recession, which he says will cost the state $236 million in 2016–17. The overtime ruling could cost nearly $1 billion a year starting in 2016–17; about half of that would come from the state’s general fund. “These regulations will lead to over $440 million annually in additional state costs,” notes Brown. The federal overtime rules are anticipated to be implemented in February.
Medical Marijuana Last year Brown signed off on the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act, a statewide regulatory framework that will oversee the “licensing and enforcement of the cultivation, manufacture, transportation, storage, and distribution of medical marijuana.” The governor is asking for $25 million and 126 new state positions, spread across numerous agencies— Fish and Wildlife, Public Health, Food and Agriculture and the State Water Resources Control Board, among others—to ensure a steady and just roll-out of the new medical cannabis regime. Josh Koehn contributed to this report.
Car Wash/Detailing
Any Full Service Wash Includes: Vacuum • Wash Outside Interior Cleaning • Wheel Bright Tire Dressing • Fragrance Trucks and Vans Extra. Must present this coupon. Not valid with any other offers
$20 off
Complete Detail
By our Auto Detailing Specialists
408-293-3128 • 21 N 5th St • Downtown San Jose 408-371-6660 • 1667 S Bascom Ave • Campbell
LASER
TATTOO
REMOVAL
c a r w a s h p a c i f i c . c o m
Weight Loss & Antiaging programs
Lose upto 60 lbs in 2 mos HGH, HCG, OPTIFAST, Belviq New Innovative Meds
Phentermine, Belviq, Qsymia etc Human Growth Hormone, HCG in
Hormone therapy ..Testosterone, Estrogen etc..
B12 & Lipotropic Inj Available
Fremont & San Jose Offices
$50off $30off $20 reg price
HCG
reg price
Phen
Vit. B12 408.938.0800 WeightWise101.com
THE FASTEST LASER RESULTS FREE CONSULTATION
30% off new patients * F I R S T T R E AT M E N T O N LY
KORMAN PLASTIC SURGERY SAN JOSE • CARMEL • MOUNTAIN VIEW
11 JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
PACIFIC 100% HAND CAR WASH BEST $3 off
999 Story Rd. Ste 9003 • SJ • 408.831.6229 2500 Hospital Dr. Bldg 9 • Mtn Vw • 650.254.1200
KormanMD.com
E I GH TE E N E I GH T
F IN E MEN ’ S S ALO N S
HAIRCUTS & STYLING • WAXING MANICURE • COLOURING SERVICES FACE TREATMENTS • SCALP TREATMENTS GROOMSMEN PARTY PACKAGES • STRAIGHT RAZOR SHAVES AD SIZE:
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE
1/3v
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE
PUB 00/0
DESIGNER: NAME HERE
NEW CLIENT OFFER: 50% OFF ANY 1 SERVICE Metro Silicon Valley
380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000 EIGHTEENEIGHT.COM I CALL 408.872.6401 I OR BOOK ONLINE AT EIGHTEENEIGHT.COM/CAMPBELL-CA HAMILTON AVE AT HWY 17 (NEAR BED, BATH, BEYOND AND ELEPHANT BAR) 513 E HAMILTON AVE, CAMPBELL
ISSUE 15XX
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
12
An inside look at San Jose politics
WEB: SanJoseInside.com TWITTER: @sanjoseinside FACEBOOK: SanJoseInside
H2O CEO Retires, Keeps Showing Up to Office
‘DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH’ San Jose police ended a high-speed chase with three arrests and no injuries.
A High-Speed Chase with San Jose Police at 1,000 Feet BY JOSH KOEHN We don’t know that the stolen car barreling down a residential street lined with grade schools contains two minors, one just 13 years old. All we know is what the radio tells us: a disturbance at a nearby Rotten Robbie; a records check of the license plate comes back stolen. The Airbus EC12OB positions itself above the corner of Story Road and Hopkins Avenue on San Jose’s East Side, and a spotlight with a 1,000-foot stare washes the suspects’ vehicle like a wellplaced interrogation room lamp. The light might as well have been green, as the high-speed chase begins. We track the vehicle south and kill the spotlight to coax the driver into letting off the gas and avoid smacking into oncoming traffic. The driver seems unmoved, and the vehicle, presented with a “T” intersection and options of only left or right, clips a parked car
before coming to a stop. Two people hop out and book it while a third, 18-year-old Gianna Marlee, the only adult in the car, jumps into the driver’s seat and attempts to skirt the corner. She too will soon flee on foot, but only a 17-year-old male escapes police custody for longer than a minute. For what seems like an eternity, we circle, and an infrared camera scans houses, backyards and neighboring streets and we no longer bank left or right but pedal turn, which gives the unusual feeling of being held by the waist and hung over the side of a building as if money was owed. A few inches in front of my face I see several small white bags that have been placed in the seat pocket in case I lose my nerve. A perimeter forms and our work—well, their work—is done. We’ll later learn that the last suspect was
found hiding in a residential trash can. The chances of seeing a high-speed chase on a ride-along is a “diamond in the rough,” according to my escorts, San Jose Police Department officers Chuck Moggia and Andy Cacayo, who pilot the Airbus EC12OB. The 15-year-old, single-engine eye in the sky has become especially helpful for a department that has lost hundreds of officers in recent years because of budget shortfalls and a pension reform war. The 90-minute trip took months to arrange, mostly due to maintenance issues, including a rogue bird smashing through the Airbus EC12OB’s windshield in December. The collision, pilots tell me, nearly forced an emergency landing on Highway 101 in the middle of evening rush hour. To read a longer version of this story go to SanJoseInside.com.
Beau Goldie made an unexpected— and extended—goodbye tour last week at the Santa Clara Valley Water District’s offices, and things got more than a little awkward. Of course, his “retirement/resignation” was so contrived it’s possible Goldie thought he was still running the show. Since his last day on Jan. 15, it’s been reported that he received a six-month severance package of more than $152,000, rather than simply calling it a career. The former CEO and 31-year district employee popped up three straight days last week, after his last official day. During these drop-ins Goldie Beau Goldie reportedly violated rules on unsupervised visitors and may have even attempted to influence staff direction on future work. According to an internal email sent out Friday on behalf of Chief Operating Officer (COO) Norma Camacho, the former CEO had discussions with staff that allegedly included disparaging comments about the board, as well as giving instructions to staff working on recycled water projects. The latter item is especially worrisome considering Goldie and his colleagues have been accused of conflicts of interest and violating rules in expediting contracts with RMC Water and Environment on an $800 million recycled water treatment plant. The company is owned in part by a district administrator who reported to Goldie. In the final months of his tenure as CEO, Goldie remained steadfast that all contracts and district protocols were followed in relation to RMC work. However, San Jose Inside has published multiple reports, citing internal documents and emails, which suggest or explicitly state the opposite.—Josh Koehn
11 13
vs.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SJEARTHQUAKES.COM A C U PU NC TU R E | H ER B S | EN ER G ET I CS | D I ET | MA S S A G E
Five Branches Accreditations and Approvals
............. ACAOM CCAOM NCCAOM BPPE
Become A Licensed Acupuncturist Please visit us at our new location in San Jose!
• Nationally accredited and recognized as one of the nation’s top acupuncture programs • Federal financial aid available for tuition and living expenses • Flexible course schedules offered in English and Chinese languages • Elective certificate programs and clinical externship opportunities abroad
Dept of Veterans Affairs Dept of Education
Santa Cruz Campus 200 7th Avenue, Santa Cruz CA (831)-476-9424
|
San Jose Campus 1885 Lundy Ave, San Jose CA (408) 260-0208
www.fivebranches.edu
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
HOME OPENER SUNDAY, MARCH 6
The 1947 Partition Archive
14 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
SILICONALLEYS ALLEYS SILICON
Survivor Series STORY SAVERS Ranjanpreet Nagra interviews a Partition witness.
Stanford hosts landmark event to bring exposure to Partition BY GARY SINGH
I
N 1947, the British partitioned South Asia into the separate nation states of India and Pakistan, unleashing what was likely the biggest mass migration in human history. The results were horrific. Approximately 10 million people were forced to leave their ancestral territories on a moment’s notice. Families split up. Wealthy people lost everything. As refugees traveled back and forth between the two countries, Hindus, Sikhs
and Muslims committed massacres against each other. An estimated one million people lost their lives. Aside from exacerbating religiousbased distrust in that part of the world, the Partition of 1947 is often understood as having significance equal to the Holocaust or the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, yet it remains ignored in comparison to those other tragedies, especially in the West. Many survivors of the Partition era are still alive, but their numbers are dwindling. In response, the 1947 Partition Archive was launched in 2008 to give voice to those who witnessed the horrors by collecting and preserving their stories on
digital video. Anyone still around from those days can contribute a story to the archive. On Feb. 18, a poignant event will take place at Stanford University. Co-produced by the Stanford Center for South Asia, witnesses from the events of 1947 will attend, videos will be shown and discussions will take place. The 1947 Partition Archive began as the brainchild of Guneeta Singh Bhalla, a Ph.D. candidate in physics at UC-Berkeley. Originally from Delhi, she came to the U.S. at age 10. Partition stories were always in the back of her mind. “I had been thinking about it for a very long time,” she says. “I'd grown up hearing the stories and I knew I wanted to do something, because there’s a huge disconnect between what we learn in our history classes and what we learn through folk stories in our communities.” While finishing her Ph.D. research
in Tokyo, Bhalla made a trip to Hiroshima, where she experienced the oral history archives. The stories left a profound effect on her. “It was much more powerful than reading about it in books, or what we usually hear, or in movies,” she says. “To hear the personal accounts and watching people tell it on video, I realized at that moment, this is what we needed to do for Partition, to make it legitimate in the public’s eye.” Skip to 2016 and Silicon Valley donors are starting to jump on board. The project now has five full-time staff members, 16 part-time interns and more than 500 volunteers around the world, all of whom have helped capture 2,000 stories on digital video. So far, stories have come in from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Israel, and Europe totalling more than 12 different countries. Whoever wants to volunteer their personal account can do so. However, there is still a long way to go. Everyone involved feels a sense of urgency to carry out the work as fast as possible, since most of those who remember Partition are now at least 80 years old. Millions of stories could still be uncovered. Since the archive essentially functions as a nonprofit startup, an NGO of sorts, fundraising is still the biggest challenge and Bhalla says she wants the project to grow at a faster pace. The goal is to archive 10,000 stories by the end of 2017, the 70th anniversary of Partition. What’s more, as the project continues to evolve, those archiving the stories, especially the younger volunteers, have all discovered deeper aspects of their own roots and histories than they ever would have learned in school. Bhalla includes herself among this group. “I’ve met a lot of really educated women from that time period,” she says. “You wouldn’t think that there were South Asian women with advanced degrees or medical doctors back in the ’40s, but there were. That was really fascinating, the depth and extent of the culture.”
Voices of Partition
FEB 18 6:30PM
1947partitionarchive.org
FREE
Stanford Humanities Center, Levinthal Hall (Room 100)
Kf X[m\ik`j\ ZXcc +'/%)''%(*'/
Licensed Vet on duty Community Veterinary Clinics Pruneridge, Santa Clara Sundays 1:30-3:00p First St., San Jose Saturdays 3:30-5:30p DeAnza, Cupertino Sundays 1-2:30p Morgan Hill Saturdays, 9:30-11a
Branham, San Jose Sundays 10-11:30a Santa Teresa, San Jose Saturdays 4-5:30p Main St., Milpitas Sundays 1-2:30p
Your Pet is always welcome at
An-Jan Feed & Pet Supply
anjan.com • M-F 9:30a-7p, Sat 9a-7p, Sun 10a-5p
Now Seven Locations! N
San Jose EW STO R 5750 Santa Teresa Blvd E! 408-578-7790 1109 Branham Ln. 408.269.5551 1633 S. 1st St. 408.293-6232
Santa Clara 1841 Pruneridge Ave. 408.243.1571
Cupertino 1129 S. DeAnza Blvd. 408.446.3932
Milpitas 111 S. Main St. 408.263.1774
Morgan Hill 433 Vineyard Town Center 408-779-6800
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Xkkfie\pj c\^Xc j\im`Z\j
Large or Small, We Feed Them All… for less!
11 15
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
16
Hail Satan, Full of Grace How Satanists became government watchdogs BY JENNIFER WADSWORTH
S
UNDAY EVENING, the Lord’s Day, at Flames: a few lost souls wander around the San Jose diner trying to find a ruck of Satanists. They’re late, sidetracked by a bunch of leather-vested bikers who rented the banquet room for a holiday party. After a couple wrong turns and awkward exchanges, the stragglers arrive. One of them, a young man—crimson hoodie, red hair, flushed cheeks—sidles into a seat and lets out a relieved sigh.
17 public service must always express those core values. “That’s right,” Schadenfreude affirms. “We want to help the community because that is the rational, satanic thing to do.”
Temple Tantrums The Satanic Temple stormed into the public eye on the steps of the Florida state capitol in January 2013. A throng of caped Satanists staged a rally to facetiously applaud Gov. Rick Scott for pushing a bill that sanctioned prayer at public school assemblies. They raised a banner proclaiming “Hail Satan! Hail Rick Scott!” and gushed to news cameras about how the new law would allow students to offer up invocations to the Prince of Darkness. Doubtful that honest-to-God Satanists would salute a politician who openly promotes Christianity in government, journalists blew their cover. Turns out a New York-based film crew had put out a casting call for unpaid “minions” and extras to act in a “mockumentary” about “the nicest satanic cult in the world.” The “Satanists for Scott” stunt went viral. But the temple realized that in order for its message to truly resonate, they had to drop the act. Doug Mesner, the Harvard-educated ringleader, assumed the name Lucien Greaves and became the face of the organization. He set out to prove that despite the fake film setup, the Satanic Temple is the real deal. Originally conceived as a “poison pill in the church-state debate,” as Mesner phrased it in a 2013 interview with Vice, the temple has since evolved beyond reactive political ploys. “Our message and beliefs are deeply sincere,” says Jex Blackmore, who leads the group’s highest-profile chapter in Mesner’s native Detroit. “To us, Satan is a figure that embodies the characteristics that inform our deeply held beliefs, rather than a stab at the superstitious.” Adherents of the Satanic
Temple have no qualms with the occult or low-key spirituality. But Greaves and his ilk embrace an atheistic philosophy that views Satan not as a deity but a literary symbol. Satan, in this brand of “ism,” stands for reason, autonomy and rejection of superstition and arbitrary authority. Through this lens, he bears more resemblance to the rebel angel of Paradise Lost than the Bible’s rendition of evil incarnate. In the spirit of Satan as eternal outcast, activism remains central to the group’s mission. Where religion has already breached the churchstate divide, the Satanic Temple elbows in to remind lawmakers that those privileges necessarily extend to other beliefs. Following the Florida demonstration, temple chapters began cropping up throughout the country to promote plurality and shine a critical light on the intersection of church and state. They touched down in Mississippi, to officiate same-sex unions on the grave of Catherine Johnson, whose son Fred Phelps founded the militantly anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church. Mesner declared her a lesbian in the afterlife and ended the affair by tea-bagging the late Johnson’s headstone. The scrotum incident incited outrage, predictably, but also garnered widespread support for its most incendiary project: a 9-foot statue of the goat-god Baphomet. Greaves et al famously petitioned to have the one-and-ahalf-ton bronze figure, paid for by $30,000 in donations, installed on the lawn of the Oklahoma state capitol alongside a monument of the Ten Commandments. A lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union derailed those plans, however, as the state was forced to remove the Christian display. Satanists, of course, welcomed the outcome. The timing was impeccable, too. With Arkansas poised to display the 10 Commandments on the capitol grounds in Little Rock, the Satanic Temple asked lawmakers
19
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
“Who else thought those bikers were Satanists?” he asks. “I thought Satanists wore black.” Jedidiah Schadenfreude, a dyed-in-the-wool Satanist whose burly build occasionally gets him mistaken for a Hell’s Angel, chuckles. “Oh we do,” says Schadenfreude, who, in addition to a diabolical alias, sports leather cuffs, a black button-down shirt, shaved head and kohl-smudged eyes. “But not all people who wear black are Satanists.” They wonder how many of the bikers were asked with straight-faced sincerity about their allegiance to Lucifer. The inaugural gathering of the Satanic Temple’s San Jose chapter draws a handful of inquisitive strangers. Some look the part— slag-black garb, dye-darkened hair, facial piercings. Others, in Carhartt coats and heavy work boots, could pass for God-fearing, salt-of-the-earth folk. “This is good,” Schadenfreude says, nodding his head approvingly as people settle in. He’d been apprehensive about the first public meeting, inviting a bunch of strangers to a satanic mixer—for good reason. Chapters elsewhere have faced death threats, some broadcast on national talk radio. Thus, the pseudonym. With beers ordered and introductions made, Schadenfreude cracks open a white binder to review the fundamentals of Satanism. The tenets he reads invoke compassion, reason, justice, the inviolability of one’s body and freedom that never encroaches upon another’s. “But even these aren’t set in stone,” he says, glancing up from the page to gauge the group’s reaction. “These are guidelines to hold us accountable to ourselves and to each other. These are here to promote personal responsibility and rational inquiry.” Schadefreude’s right-hand man, who goes by the decidedly less sinister anonym Nolan Bell, chimes in to explain that their
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
10 18
LOS ALTOS STAGE COMPANY January 28 – February 21, 2016
Middletown by Will Eno ENTER TO WIN A $150
SP2 DINING CERTIFICATE TO
COMMUNAL BAR & RESTAURANT
Scan this QR code with your smartphone or visit METROGIVEAWAYS.COM Bus Barn Theater • 97 Hillview, Los Altos 94022
Special! New Years
L ASE R
HAIR RE MOVA L $ 50 Off first treatment for new patients!
WARTS are a Common Problem If you have a wart on the back of your hand, or foot you may qualify for a clinical research study. Currently enrolling qualified participants in a clinical research study for a new treatment for warts.
To qualify you must: • Be aged 18 through 50 • Have a wart that has been present for at least 12 weeks Health insurance is not needed to participate and you may receive compensation for time and travel. Eligibility is determined at time of initial visit.
Expires 2/29/16
BRUCE M. SAAL, M.D. Dermatology & Laser Surgery • Since 1976 777 Knowles Drive, Suite 16 • Los Gatos 408.374.1320 • losgatosdermatology.com
To see if you or someone you know may qualify, please contact us at:
Center for Dermatology Clinical Research, Inc. 2557 Mowry Ave. Ste 25 Fremont • 510.797.0140 ext. 3
HAIL SATAN, FULL OF GRACE
Deal With the Devil The man known as Schadenfreude, a 43-year-old artist-musician who lives in Campbell, asks to meet at his favorite haunt, Flames. In a black T-shirt emblazoned with a red devil-horned PBS logo, he’s easy to spot if you’ve got your eyes peeled for a Satanist. I wave him over to my booth, where he explains how he had a hard time leaving his flu-addled girlfriend. “I tucked her in and made her dinner,” he says, apologizing for seeming preoccupied. “Sometimes she wants me to leave so I don’t fuss over her.” Over Buffalo wings and IPA, he tells me about growing up Southern
Baptist in Louisiana, where he lost his faith innocently enough. At the age of 6, he wrestled with the idea of loving Jesus more than his parents. Love Jesus the most, his Sunday school teacher cautioned, or end up in Hell. Enough threats of eternal damnation got him used to the idea. He developed an affinity for the outcast, the heel, the devil himself. “I used to listen to that song ‘The Devil Went Down to Georgia’ and think the devil got a bad shake,” he says. “My Sunday school teacher didn’t like that either.” By his teens, Schadenfreude says, he embraced Satanism with a “piss on the Bible” kind of fervor. He turned his walk-in closet into a satanic shrine, with an altar and candles, where he’d practice spells. That her son had long since sworn his soul to the devil only dawned on Schadenfreude’s mother years later. The nationwide “satanic panic” of the 1980s compelled parents and church groups to censor anything remotely blasphemous, from heavy metal to Dungeons and Dragons, David Bowie and Cabbage Patch Dolls. TV shows and a resurgence of a conservative spin on “family values” fueled a pandemic paranoia that demons lurked behind every doorknob. “My mom heard Geraldo Rivera going on about how to tell if your kid has fallen prey to a satanic cult,” Schadenfreude says. “Something must have clicked—the dog collars, the black clothes, the mohawk—because she marches up to my friend’s house, where I just happened to be watching the movie ‘Hellraiser,’ and demands I get home right that minute.” To his mother’s chagrin, the Satan thing wasn’t just a phase. (They’re cool now, as long as he doesn’t mention it.) At the time, the Church of Satan remained the nation’s leading satanic institution. Founded a half-century ago by circus organist-turned-mystic Anton LaVey, who died in 1997, the church espoused a virtue of selfishness and a touch of what it called “lesser” magic. Schadenfreude identified more with Aleister Crowley, whose occultism, while not overtly satanic, embraced “the shadows and darkness of mankind.” “The Church of Satan says, ‘Fuck the weak,’” Schadenfreude says. “It’s all about social Darwinism, about
21
HE RT to HE RT Lingerie & Adult Boutique
❤ ❤ ❤ ❤
Lingerie including Plus Sizes Bustiers, Corsets & Thi Hi's Dancer Shoes & Boots Men's Robes, Boxers & Thongs Bachelorette & Honeymoon Items Romantic Kits & Games Adult Toys Books & DVDs Lelo & We Vibe Toys Gift Certificates Available
FROM THE
% 15
F OF
HE RT
Bringing Sexy Back! A MOTHER/DAUGHTER OWNED BOUTIQUE OPEN EVERYDAY Mon-Sat 11am-9pm • Sun 1-7pm 1565 S. Winchester Blvd. Campbell (near Hamilton Ave.) .NET • 408.871.1826 pleasuresfromtheheart.NET
*Must present ad or have picture of the ad •
EXP. 2/3/16
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
to reserve a spot for their beloved Baphomet. Schadenfreude, who converted to a more occult form of Satanism as a teenager, says he joined the Satanic Temple because it so clearly struck a nerve. Its campaigns, he says, have forced the powers that be to engage in a dialogue that makes the world more equitable for all beliefs. “That’s what pulled me in,” he says. “I like to tell people: We’ve got teeth.” In relatively progressive Silicon Valley, however, the movement may be less defined and the battles less pronounced. In the Midwest and other conservative parts of the United States, Satanists have tilted against religion-based laws that sanction prayer in public school or threaten access to comprehensive reproductive healthcare. “Our role is fluid depending on the culture and the place,” Schadenfreude says. “But wherever we go, we’re here for the outsider.” Aiden Simon, 27, an atheist who joined the San Jose chapter after dropping in on the first meeting last month, says that’s exactly what brought him to the table. “I’m transgender, and you don’t really have many spaces, even queer spaces, without some sort of opposition,” he says. “Being from more than one subculture myself, I like the idea of promoting these various groups, whether they’re on the LGBT spectrum or in the broader community. I do want to actively help and I think the [temple] can be a big part of that.”
19
17
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
10 20
SAN JOSE Saturday Feb 20 @ I Bet You Didn’t Know?
Double Racing- New 2 stage running sport Take your pick!
Double Road Race 15k (9.3 miles) Run 10k + Halftime Break + Run 5k
+ The new sport of Double Racing was created right here in Los Altos a few years ago.
UjENA Double 5k Run/Walk (3.1 miles) Run/Walk 3k + Halftime + Run/Walk 2k
+ The two stage running (or walking) sport has a halftime recovery break between the legs.
Bob Anderson’s Kids Cup Double 1.5m (For kids 13 and under) 1m +break +half
+ Some are saying Double Racing is harder than straight racing. Why? Not everyone has the mental strength to start back up after the halftime break.
Take A Double Hike 4 Miles walk, hike or jog 2.5 miles + halftime + 1.5 miles. Non-timed. Finisher medal.
+ A two sided medal is awarded all who Do The Double. Yes, two sided.
Times of the two stages are added together to get your final time.
+ Double Racing veteran Bob Anderson likes the Double more than straight racing. The halftime break adds a new dimension to running he says.
SAVE $5.00 - Use promo code METRO www.sanjosedouble.com
Benefits
and youth running!
HAIL SATAN, FULL OF GRACE
‘We want to help the community because that is the rational, satanic thing to do.’ By 2014, the year-old Satanic Temple had reached a level of visibility unmatched by any other satanic denomination. Many among them accept LaVey’s point about selfgratification, but argued that altruism is in everyone’s best interest. While Greaves characterizes the old school as libertarian and isolationist, modern Satanists champion progressive causes: abortion rights, marriage equality, sexual consent and ideological pluralism. They’ve taken their fight to court. A lawsuit filed by a Satanist in Missouri, a state that’s steadily scaled back abortion access, challenges a perceived government intrusion into reproductive rights. Those public displays in the name of Satanism have so infuriated LaVey’s sectarian heir, Church of Satan Magus Peter H. Gilmore, that he’s taken to openly criticizing the upstart temple, calling its followers a bunch of attention-whoring trolls. For Greaves, the normally aloof Gilmore could barely contain his derision.
“When a fellow in horns—with an adopted moniker fit for a 1970s hairdresser—teabags a tombstone while some ‘goth’ rejects swap spit on the grave, it seems to us to be a parody of Satanism rather than a representation of some actual philosophical religious organization,” he wrote on the church’s official blog. The temple refutes the notion that its activism—though purposefully attention-grabbing—is anything but sincere. The organization’s seven core tenets, adherents argue, prove that their mission isn’t simply reactionary. As Greaves puts it, their push for churchstate separation stems from a deeply held belief absent of superstition. In a phone call with the San Jose chapter earlier this month, Greaves spoke about creating ordination coursework. The class, he says, will offer substantive teachings for people to officiate weddings, minister to inmates or the bereaved or offer endof-life counseling. “There’s real substance,” says Schadenfreude, who launched the San Jose chapter in October 2014. “That philosophy about collective action and civic engagement really spoke to me. I’m not a spectator, I’m a participator.”
JAN 30 TH • 10AM - 5PM
HALF MOON BAY BREWING COMPANY OUTDOOR LOTS
Premium Craft Beer, Wine & Cocktails Gourmet Food Trucks Cool Coastal Marketplace Original Arts & Crafts Ocean Advocacy Exhibits Chef Demos & Seafood Sustainability Panel Entertainment by World-Renowned Earth Circus Mavericks Concert Stage (ALL DAY)
Counter Cult
The House Rockers, Mustache Harbor Rumbache, The Lady Crooners
In San Jose there are no Christian monuments to remove from City Hall. But the Satanic Temple has its work cut out for it, he says. Its adherents want to respond to the cultural moment and the specific needs of the community. Here, that may entail promoting diversity in the tech industry, or providing secular charities for the homeless. It could mean advocating for sex workers or counter-protesting pro-choice demonstrators outside of Planned Parenthood. “A lot of this is about civic justice,” says Xepher Ashe, 36, an excommunicated Mormon who handles communications for the San Jose temple. “There’s a huge potential here to do good.” “And to stop the bad,” Schadenfreude says in agreement. “You don’t need religion to do good,” adds Bell, 42, whose penchant for debate led him from fundamentalist
22
Zip-line, Bungee Jump & Fin-Tastic Funzone Field of Dreams Lot Across The Street, Free Admission
TO BENEFIT MAVERICKS COASTSIDE FOUNDATION AND CABRILLO EDUCATION FOUNDATION
INFO-LINE:
650-728-2739
EXT.
207
Supported By: Coastside.net, HMB Media, Alifano Technologies, San Mateo County Harbor District, Monterey Fish Market.
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
survival of the fittest, the strong, it’s all about you, your own needs, without considering others.” While recognizing some truth in LaVeyan Satanism, Schadenfreude began to broaden his personal beliefs into a philosophy of erring toward “lefthand path,” the term occult scholar and Temple of Set votary Stephen E. Flowers used to refer to the diametric opposite of prevailing ideology. Still, he kept Satanism at the heart of it. “It taught me personal responsibility to the extreme,” Schadenfreude says. “That really tilled the soil of my being.”
21
Rain or shine!
19
HAIL SATAN, FULL OF GRACE
21
Harry Who
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
22
SAT. FEB 27 LEVI’S® STADIUM TH
FIRESTARTER Jedidiah Schadenfreude brought the Satanic Temple to San Jose.
PARTY ON THE FIELD OF THE BIG GAME! • All-you-can-eat bacon dishes + strips • Unlimited pours of 100+ craft brews • Music, games, contests + more
20% OFF CODE: METRO
BACONANDBEERCLASSIC.COM
Christianity to anti-theist Satanism relatively early in life. Even using reductive terms, “good” or “bad,” he says, makes him cringe. “The point is,” Bell continues, “religion doesn’t have a monopoly on charity or public service.” To that end, the San Jose Temple will conduct itself much like other service groups. They plan to adopt a highway and give Satanists a mention on the side of a major road and hold a speaker series to give voice to various cultures and causes. Taking a cue from chapters elsewhere in the country, they may sign up to deliver an invocation at a City Council or some other public meeting. Simon, an avid gamer, suggested social events such as Pathfinder or other role-playing nights. “A lot of Satanists love role playing,” Schadenfreude replied when that particular idea came up. During our one-on-one klatch at Flames some weeks earlier, Schadenfreude talks about having the temple encourage more people to foster or adopt shelter animals. “And what about the companion animals being … killed—they’re being killed,” he says, choking on his words as tears spring up in his eyes. “I’m sorry. I’m … hold on.” He takes a swig of beer then wipes his eyes with the back of his forearm. Unable to speak, he raises his hand to
signal a pause as he fights back emotion. “I can’t even think about it without getting emotional,” he resumes, apologizing again. “But people abandon rabbits, Chihuahuas and cats, because they can’t commit to the responsibility. It’s not right.” Satanism strives to be forever in flux, a shifting undercurrent of the mainstream, he notes. It’s an ideological check on authority, in whatever form it assumes, and a counterbalance to the dominant worldview. In The Revolt of Angels, one of Schadenfreude’s favorite books, Anatole France writes about Satan waking from a nightmare about overthrowing God in Heaven. In this dream, the thrill of victory quelled his thirst for knowledge, “he took pleasure in mystery . . . God conquered will become Satan; Satan conquered will become God,” France’s Satan concludes. “I love Hell, which formed my genius. I love Earth, where I have done some good.” “I love that chapter,” Schadenfreude says. “It’s a great example of how this will always be a counter ideology. The needs change, we adapt.” The waitress, a friendly brunette with a bouncy up-do, returns with the tab and excuses herself for the interruption. “Happy holidays!” she chirps. “Hail, Satan!” Schadenfreude replies, just as cheerfully.
11 23
Downtown San Jose 387 S. First St. sofamarketsj. c om @sofamarketsj
V I B RANT
DOWN TOWN
FOO D • D R I N KS
CO M I N G SOO N : M I L K & WO O D G e l ato
ON THE F L I PS I D E B u rg e rs
VERO’S CO F F E E B A R Cof fe e
H AWA I I A N P O K E B OW L Po ke
THE FO U N TA I N H E A D Craf t Co c k ta i ls
KO N J O E T E I
V I TA M I N A
Japanese
J u ic e
TOAST E D S a n dw ic h e s
P IZ ZE T TA 408 P iz za
GameDay @TheCOOP! ADVERTISER: SoFA MARKET
AD SIZE
1/3h Multiple BIG Screens
PUB DATE:
1/27/16
ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: CARL FOISY DESIGNER: LORIN BAETA
Watch • Eat • Drink Food and Drink Specials
ISSUE NUMBER:
Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
1604
90 Skyport Dr., San Jose 408·392·0212 SonomaChickenCOOP.com
Spider & Varicose Vein Removal Relief from tired aching legs!
State-of-the-Art Laser Technology! No surgery, no scars, no need to miss work
SKI & STAY PARK CITY UTAH *$99 Plus tax. Restrictions apply.
4 Days & 3 Nights from $99 plus tax 1.800.279.2414 • WSTGT.com/74886197180 Promo Code: 74886197180 *Thi s adver ti si ng mater i al is b eing used for the p urp ose of soliciting sa les of timeshare interest.
20% off cosmetic procedures with this ad, one procedure only. 1 coupon per customer, expires 2.10.16 Consultation fee waived with procedure
Jeff Kaplan, MD FACS
www.veinsrepair.com • 408.457.1070 2505 Samaritan Drive #601, San Jose
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
N E W • LOCA L
Before After Results in just 4 weeks*
Scan this for info *Results may vary
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Ngoc Ngo
24
SVDINING
Bird’s the Word WAGYU THE DOG Smeared sauces help accentuate most dishes, like Wagyu skirt steak, at Bird Dog.
Big plates, small bites at minimalist Palo Alto restaurant Bird Dog BY NGOC NGO
M
INIMALIST DESIGN doesn’t get any simpler than a large window set against a dark concrete exterior. Underneath this window, at Palo Alto’s Bird Dog restaurant, is a hardly noticeable, industrial-style sign cut out of metal. It is the sole indication that this is indeed Bird Dog. The sign could be missed entirely
and the grand, wood-paneled front doors would look like the opening to a boutique hotel. The minimalism continues to the menu, which currently has a whopping 18 items. I prefer it this way. I came to eat, not think. Our waiter was nearly flawless in his service, guiding us through the menu and ingredient substitutions for the night. The persimmon in the salad was replaced with grilled butternut squash ($15) and served with mixed greens dressed in a vinegar from cuties— those adorable clementines. Heavenly dollops of stretchy and creamy burrata, imported from Italy, begged
to be gobbled up first. Never hesitate when it comes to great burrata. As detected from the décor, there is a dusting of Asian influence over the establishment and a leaning towards California cuisine in the menu. It was more apparent in the heirloom carrots ($14), with sauces made from red curry and tamarind. While the quality of the locally grown carrots was amazing, they were juxtaposed with an Asian-like sauce when they could have been at their best if simply roasted. Not to sound cliché, but less can be more. It seems customary here to artfully arrange the food by using as little of a big beautiful plate as possible. As long as it tastes good, I don’t mind. Pieces of the Wagyu skirt steak ($29) formed a line down the center of the plate with papaya sauce dots around, an avocado smear at the edge sprinkled with
crushed pistachio, and a Fresno chile for contrast. Although skirt steak is not the tastiest of cuts, this is a Wagyu steak after all. On its own it was fair. The papaya sauce and avocado smear helped enhance the flavor. As I learned through the meal, the sauces were not just pretentious plate decorations. Rather, they are deliberately chosen and meticulously plated to be dipped, smeared, smothered and combined in all manners to aide in the enjoyment of the dish. The sauces were especially unique in the fried chicken thigh ($18). A crunchy chicken thigh piece with already flavorful breading sits in a pool of yellow sauce which may have had smoked uni. Separate dots of green curry sauce adorned the plate. After trying different variations, my favorite way to consume this soon-to-be famous fried chicken was to dip it in the yellow sauce and then the green curry sauce. The bright dining room had a modern farmhouse feel. Wooden ducks are arranged on the walls, tying in with the name as a bird dog is used for hunting. Bird Dog only serves dinner six days a week, but it felt as if we were dining in broad daylight thanks to strings of orb lanterns. They line the length of the room, drawing attention to the open kitchen. It’s a daring yet trending concept to have the kitchen staff on display. Meal service felt like dinner and a show as I sipped my smooth tequilabased Duck Blind ($14) with lemon and pear and watched the staff hard at work. It’s a pleasure to witness a kitchen staff without any tension or yelling. Most of the background noise was truly from the music and guests immersed in conversation. Individual item prices are reasonable, but the portions are rather small. More dishes are required to make a meal here, which is likely the intent. Don’t let the simplicity fool you as high quality burrata and perfectly executed fried chicken are rare finds. For those in the mood for dinner as an experience, Bird Dog fits the bill.
BIRD DOG AMERICAN (NEW)
$$$
420 Ramona St., Palo Alto 408.656.8180 birddogpa.com
11 25 JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
AD SIZE:
1/4s
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE
PUB DATE: 00/00/15
DESIGNER: NAME HERE Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
Family owned since ���� BEST POKE BOWL IN TOWN! • Fresh ingredients delivered weekly from Hawaii • Wide variety of Hawaiian Sun products • Free and convenient parking
Santo Market | ���.���.����
��� E. Taylor St. at �th St., San Jose
Find us on online: facebook.com/santomarket
ISSUE NUMBER: 15XX
10 26 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Available to Host Your Private Event or Big Game Party! Call Carlos 408.472.4121
The Best California Burrito The Best Carne Asada Fries
The Best Lunch value in town!
5.95 7.95
Complete lunch $
starting at
$
Open Late Friday & Saturday till 3am Open at 9am for Authentic Mexican Breakfast
See our great reviews on
FULL BAR 6HDTVS BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER • CATERING
MUCHOS! RESTAURANT & BAR The Palace of the Hot Sauce!
4 08 . 277. 0 3 3 3 72 E. Santa Clara St. (between 2nd & 3rd St.) Showing
the Big Game!
Visit MuchosTaqueria.com
DRINK & APPETIZER SPECIALS
Da Best N’awlins Cooking Gumbo•Jambalaya•Etouffée•Po’Boys•Catfish
WATCH THE BIG GAME HERE, SUNDAY, FEB. 7 BIG GAME SPECIAL:
Celebrate Super Week at Kyoto Palace Japanese Steakhouse. Watch Your Chef Chop, Dice & Toss food before your eyes. Dinners start at $21, children 10 & under start at $10.95.
February Special: Filet Mignon & Chicken-Lunch $21; Dinner $31.
PRUNEYARD CENTER, CAMPBELL • 2ND FlOOR 408.377.6456 • KYOTOPALACE.COM
$15 PITCHER OF BEER AND PLATE OF 8 BUFFALO WINGS
10OFF
any food purchase 0f $40 or more Expires 2.10.16. cannot be combined.
5OFF
any food purchase 0f $20 or more Expires 2.10.16. cannot be combined.
L e t u s J a zz u p Y o u r n e x t c a t e r i n g e v e n t !
WE VALIDATE PARKING LUNCH HOURS: Monday-Friday 11am-2pm DINNER HOURS: Saturday: Noon to 10pm Sunday: Noon to 9pm FRIDAY: 5pm-11pm SUNDAY: Noon-9pm
HAPPY HOUR SPECIALS 5pm -7pm Weekends
& DURING SHARKS HOME GAMES
408.295.1300
19 N. Market st. san jose • LouisianaBistroSanJose.com
Great Seafood, Steaks & Cocktails
A Rooftop Restaurant with Stunning Views of the Silicon Valley LUNCH MON-FRI 11.30A - 1.30P HAPPY HOUR MON-FRI 3.30P - 6.30P DINNER MON-FRI 4.30P, SAT 5P & SUN 4.30P ROOFTOP LOUNGE THURS-SAT, 9PM-12PM
FULL BAR • LARGE ROOFTOP PATIO 185 PARK AVE, DOWNTOWN SJ 408.971.1700 SCOTTSSEAFOODSJ.COM
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND ST. JOHN'S 1/2 PRICE NIGHTS Cheese Steaks Monday Nights
All Hamburgers
Tuesday Nights
What a Pair! Football Party Packages To Go
1/2 off
2/7/16 ONLY
10 People
Wednesday Nights & All Day Saturday
Chicken Sandwiches
HOOTERS & FOOTBALL
$
99 99
100 WINGS (any style) 5 Blue Cheese & Celery 5 Ranch & Carrots 2 Small Sides (slaw or potato salad) Specials Valid for Dine-in only. 4pm-close. All day Sat.
St. John’s Bar & Grill 510 Lawrence Expwy, #110, Sunnyvale 408.738.8515 | www.stjohnsgrill.com
20 $ People
189 99
200 WINGS (any style) 30 Buff Shrimp 10 Blue Cheese & Celery 10 Ranch & Carrots 2 Large Sides
28999
Ultimate $ Package
300 WINGS (any style) 40 Buff Shrimp 5 Orders Garlic Fries 20 Blue Cheese & Celery 20 Ranch & Carrots 4 Large Sides
28 BIG SCREENS
Happy Hour: M-F 3-6p & 10p-Close Sat 10p-Close • Sun 5p-Close
1555 S. Bascom Ave., Campbell CA 95008
bayareahooters.com
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
SCOTT’S SEAFOOD
11 27
SF Beer Week
BITES
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Event Held at
Gordon
biersch January 28th 5pm-7pm
We will be tapping
into our Whiskey
Barrel Aged Winterbock & Imperial Stout
$8 per glass
Limited supply! Get a glass before we run out!
33 EAST FERNANDO ST. SAN JOSE, CA 95113 408.294.6785 • WWW.GORDONBIERSCH.COM
In town for the Big Game? Have a "Super" meal at House of Genji For reservations, Call 408.453.8120 1335 N. First St., San Jose www.houseofgenji.net
Japanese Steak House
HOT TOPIC Hometown Noodles nails dry heat.
Hometown Glory
T
HE SANDWICH board menu outside of Hometown Noodles’ front door is written in Mandarin without translation. That wouldn’t be a surprise in Mountain View or Cupertino, areas with large Chinese populations, but not in south San Jose.
Inside, the restaurant is a cozy and tastefully decorated eatery with faux strings of chili peppers adorning the walls, a clue that the place takes the hallmark of Hunan cooking seriously. “You can’t be a revolutionary if you don’t eat chilies,” claimed Hunan’s best known native, Mao Zedong. If true, Hometown Noodles would make the founder of the People’s Republic of China proud by bringing the revolution to a modest Cambrian strip mall. Unlike its central China neighbors in the Sichuan province, who are known for numbingly spicy dishes featuring peppercorns, Hunan food is considered spicy with dry heat, relying on chilies and flavorful, preserved ingredients. Hometown Noodles’ Pickled Long Bean with Minced Meat ($9.98 small; $11.68 large) is authentic Hunan cuisine. It’s a bowl of rice noodles with a spicy, flavorful broth, fresh colorful ingredients, topped by bok choy and peanuts. There’s a sour taste created by the long beans to compliment the spiciness. A similarly excellent noodle dish is the Spicy Chicken ($9.98, $11.68), which lives up to its name but isn’t overwhelming. For a milder option, the Stewed Beef Brisket ($10.98, $12.68) is an excellent choice. The meat is tender and flavorful and swims in a rich broth with the rice noodles, fresh vegetables, and peanuts. For appetizers, the Fried Egg Rolls ($3.98) were a nice surprise as they are thin and light, not the bigger rolls that tend to get heavy from absorbing oil. The Fried Tofu ($4.98) is soft and sits in a soy sauce, topped with garlic and scallions. It’s the dish I’ll order on every visit. For those desiring an authentic or adventurous dish, order the Homestyle Pig Ear ($5.98): a bowl of pickled, thinly sliced, cold pig ears with vegetables. The flavor is refreshing, but the texture for the uninitiated can be a gelatinous challenge. There’s only one quasi dessert option on the menu: Beijing Yogurt ($2.78). Unlike the other dishes, the presentation isn’t elegant. Diners get a small drink carton with a mini straw. It’s a yogurt that nicely finishes off a spicy meal. Hometown Noodles’ service is pleasant and attentive when not too busy. Most important, the food is deliciously authentic. Perhaps it’s the beginning of a food revolution in Cambrian Park. —J.J. Carburry HOMETOWN NOODLES 3617 Union Ave., San Jose. 408.369.8868.
Dean C., via Yelp
28
11 29 An American Restaurant with Influences Derived from Generations of Spanish and Italian Heritage
14572 Big Basin Way, Saratoga 408.867.1906 • TheBasin.com
Discover Award Winning BBQ! Teske's Germania
Authentic German Beer & Food
255 N. First Street 408.292.0291 | Teskes-Germania.com
Family Owned and Operated for 24years
Delicious BBQ, Local Wines, Beer, Warm Patio Sam’s BBQ • 1110 Bascom Ave., SJ • 408.297.9151 • samsbbq.com
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
This establishment was conceived and created in the entrepreneurial spirit of Silicon Valley; a belief that given a positive workplace, and a commitment to excellence, people of diverse talents can gather together and build a better product. We invite you to experience a taste of why we love to live and work in Northern California. Welcome to The Basin. Ext. 1999
10 30 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Mezcal Welcomes Football Fans
Oaxacan Cuisine -- Catering
-Open for lunch & Dinner -- Kids Menu -Patio Seating Available for Special and Corporate Events, Private Parties, up to 120 people
Full Bar/Tequila & Mezcal Bar
25 W San Fernando St., San Jose, CA (408) 283--9595
Sweet Spot
$1 OFF WITH AD CREPERIE & ICE-CREAM SHOP
WEDDINGS • CORPORATE • EVENT CATERING
SOUTH BAY’S ONLY ITALIAN WATER ICE OPEN MIC NIGHT THUR. 6-10PM 11AM TO 10PM EVERYDAY 669.350.7873
1807 E. Capitol Expressway (corner of Aborn Rd) San Jose, CA 95121
Watch the Big Game Here SUNDAY, FEB. 7, STARTING AT 2PM Drink Specials: $4.00 Well Drinks & Imported Beers $3.50 domestic beers
HAPPY HOUR REDUCED PRICES
On Selected Tapas, Sangria, Beer, Cocktails And Wine • Mon-Fri • 3:30-6:30pm FRIDAY 1/29 • 9pm-Midnight
Appetizer Specials
Gypsy Tribe
Karaoke in the bar after the game
James Robinson Group
SATURDAYS • 9pm-Midnight
BEST 331 Hacienda Ave., Campbell 408.374.3400 • EffiesRestaurantandBar.com
Latin American Restaurant Mojitos
400 Castro Street • 650.940.9500 cascalrestaurant.com
11 31
Only Place In Town
61s t A n
niv e r s a r y !
71 St. Peter Welcomes Denver and Carolina Big Game Daily Specials All Week Long
$625
STEER BURGER
SPECIAL 1/2 lb. Steerburger French Fries
with this coupon. Expires 2.9.16. • Good for entire party.
kumako ramen
Modern European Cuisine & Full Bar In The Heart Of Super San Pedro Square
408.286.2111
211 E Jackson Street • San Jose
"LOU'S VILLAGE LITE" AKA
408.269.8062
1349 Blossom Hill Rd at Kooser (Across from Princeton Plaza)
Monday - Sunday 11:30am - 11pm • 71 N San Pedro St., San Jose 408.971.8523 71saintpeter.com
Try a Chevela or Michilada!
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Now Serving Katsu Curry
SAN PEDRO SQUARE MARKET
LOUSBEACHSHACK.COM
SPECIAL
SERVING GREAT SEAFOOD & MORE 87 N. SAN PEDRO ST., SAN JOSE
408.216.0822
7
$ 99 Choice Of: Burrito 2 Enchiladas 2 Flautas • 2 Tacos Includes: Green Salad & Large Soda • Exp: 2/9/16
Let us Host or Cater Your Next Party
MEXICAN RESTAURANT & BAR 408.995.3447 195 E. Taylor St. • San Jose AD SIZE:
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE PUB DATE:
AD SIZE:
1/4s
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE
PUB 00/0
DESIGNER: NAME HERE Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
ISSUE 15XX
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
10 32
Big Game
Specials! Get It By The Pound
Cajun Seafood Fresh never frozen
779 Story Rd #10, San Jose • 408.286.2729
1228 S Abel St., Milpitas • 408.262.2729
Crawdaddysj.com AD SIZE:
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE PUB DATE:
NOW OPEN Authentic Portuguese Cuisine
IN THE HEART OF THE SILICON VALLEY
OMG-LETTE Food at the new south San Jose diner Mimosas holds its own.
More than Bubbly
O
F COURSE, the menu at Mimosas Cafe begins with their eponymous cocktail. For $8 diners can order anything from the classic, with fresh squeezed orange juice, to more creative concoctions like prickly pear or papaya.
We opted for coffee instead of champagne on this particular visit, though the bright, fruit-filled glass goblets brought to a nearby table looked appetizing. For birthdays, the restaurant will pour a complimentary giant mimosa (usually $20, weekends only) in a glass the size of a large table lamp. The food portion of Mimosa’s menu has all the breakfast and brunch favorites (omelets, skillets, benedicts, waffles, pancakes, French toast) plus sandwiches and salads for the lunch crowd. Opening at the beginning of January, the restaurant took up residence in a Branham stripmall, replacing a short-lived Salvadoran papuseria. In remodeling the interior the drop ceiling was removed and the exposed structural beams were painted black. Low-level track lighting runs throughout. The booths, counter tops and furniture all share similar dark, subtle hues. Grateful for a break in the rainy weather, we snagged a table outside on the concrete patio, next to busy Pearl Avenue. I ordered the California Omelet ($12.25) accompanied by hashbrowns and toast, while my friend ordered the Corned Beef Skillet ($12), served with a thick biscuit. We split a waffle ($7). My heaping omelet came filled with bacon, mushrooms, green onion and tomato, topped with jack, cheddar and swiss cheese, plus a dollop of sour cream and what looked to be half of a perfectly ripe avocado. Accompanied with some fluffy, non-greasy hashbrowns and thick slices of sourdough toast, there was no way I could eat more than half. I faired better than my friend though, who could barely dent her huge Corned Beef Skillet, a heap of potatoes, slow corned beef brisket (“NOT from a can” they emphasize in the description), onions, jack cheese and horseradish sauce, topped with two eggs over medium. A greasy spoon spot Mimosas is not, as both of our meals looked and tasted fresh. But as longtime diner aficionados, we both agreed that the waffle was the highlight of the meal. I’ve had more than my share of tough, cold, unappetizing waffles. This one was light and fluffy, the perfect size for splitting. —Stephen Layton
Elegant flavors
The largest wine selection from Portugal
Valentine’s Day
7-Course Prix Fixe Dinner *$95.00 tax & gratuity not included
ADEGA RESTAURANT
1614 ALUM ROCK AVE, SAN JOSE ADEGAREST.COM · 408.926.9075
MIMOSAS CAFE 4660 Pearl Ave., San Jose. 408.267.1233. mimosascafe.com. !
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Stephen Layton
BITES
33
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
34
metroactive
CHOICES BY:
Anna Bagirov Adrienne C. Blaine John Flynn Andrew Lentz
ANDRE NICKATINA
HENRY FONG
*thu REVERIE
MIDDLETOWN
BIG ROCK SHOW
The Caravan Lounge, San Jose Thu, 9pm, Free
Bus Barn Theater, Los Altos Thu, 8pm, $18-$30
Art Boutiki, San Jose Thu, 7:30pm, $10
The boys from Reverie combine their individual expertise to form one dank mother of a groove. You know it’s serious when you’ve got a three-pronged vocal attack—Garfunkel (singing), Donny (screaming), and a little bit of both from guitarist James. In addition to the thunderous lows of bassist Gavin and staccato pulse of drummer Alex, the band’s new keyboardist, Jet, lends a variety of textures to the proggy metalcore churn. Though Reverie has yet to release a proper album, the San Jose band was demo-ing its latest material as of press time, so expect good things from them in 2016 and beyond. (AL)
Los Altos Stage Company is presenting the Bay Area premiere of Middletown, a play that explores life’s big questions as well as its tiny moments. Audiences discover Middletown through the character of newcomer Mary Swanson, who begins to learn more about her new neighbors as she settles in and befriends a local man. Winner of the Horton Foote Prize for Promising New American Play, playwright Will Eno explores the lives of seemingly ordinary townspeople as they interact with each other, and sometimes even the audience. Heavily inspired by Thornton Wilder’s Our Town, each character subverts archetypes while revealing the complexity of his or her inner life. (ACB)
If rocking out at a comic book store after hours sounds like your scene, check out this “Big Rock Show” for all ages at Art Boutiki. Showcasing three bands from the Bay Area, this kind of rock is all about “trying 2 have a good time,” according to the headliners. Expect songs about being too broke to get tattoos, stealing Thin Mints and facing your day job. The show opens with Mountain View indie band Dogcatcher. Then San Jose’s Cola channel the late, great Lou Reed during the only Bay Area performance of their January tour. The show closes with San Francisco’s Rin Tin Tiger. (ACB)
A TRIBUTE TO MICHAEL BRECKER Café Pink House, Saratoga Thu, 7:30pm, $15 Veteran jazz musicians will honor the late Michael Brecker, remembered as one of America’s most influential jazz saxophonists, in a modern venue that puts small town Saratoga on the map for live music. San Francisco Saxophonist Tod Dickow, who has collaborated with Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra and Harry Connick Jr.—to name a few—joins forces with three virtuosos who collectively call themselves the “Charged Particles.” Enjoy dinner and a show at Café Pink House with Dickow’s tenor sax, Murray Low’s keyboard wizardry, Aaron Germain’s sophisticated bass and Jon Krosnick’s fiery drums. Concert reservations come with a table. (ACB)
*fri
HENRY FONG Pure Lounge, Sunnyvale Fri, 10pm, Free Henry Fong started out as a DJ seeking a way to diversify his set. He began by fiddling with ’80s pop and ’90s rap hits, bolstering them to fit his sensibilities. From there, he built tracks from scratch— keeping them short to match the attention span of the college bar set. He first tasted fame after remixing Dillon Francis’ “Without You” into a chugging alt-electro anthem, building up to and fading from propulsive drops. Recently, the dreadlocked producer forayed into “Reggaedm” with his original mix “Wine Dem,” where he lays a stomping baseline, laser pewpews and brassy tubas below chopped-and-screwed dancehall toasts. (JF)
* concerts MIDDLETOWN
WWE LIVE
Feb 6 at SAP Center
SUPER BOWL 50
Feb 7 at Levi’s Stadium
BLACK SABBATH
Feb 9 at SAP Center
SUPER FURRY ANIMALS Feb 10 at The Ritz
DAM FUNK + EGYPTIAN LOVER Feb 12 at The Ritz
VALENTINES OLD SCHOOL JAM Feb 12 at SAP Center
DISNEY ON ICE: FROZEN Feb 17-22 at SAP Center
DRIVE LIKE JEHU Feb 27 at The Ritz
RIHANNA
Feb 28 at SAP Center
CASH’D OUT
Mar 11 at The Ritz
JUSTIN BIEBER
Mar 17 at SAP Center
STYX
Mar 17 at City National Civic
ANDRE NICKATINA Agenda Lounge, San Jose Fri, 10pm, $10 Andre Nickatina is a local legend. Over the course of his 20-plus years in the game, the gangly emcee has built a diverse fan base of privileged college partiers, philosophical backpack-rap heads and straight-up gangsters. A perpetual banner-waver for the Bay, he takes a moment at every show to pay tribute to his passed compadre, Mac Dre. With a flow that is both staccato and gymnastic, the S.F.-born Dre Dog skips through bars with ease. Known for underground hits, such as “Smoke Dope and Rap” and “Ayo For Yayo,” he is capable of being unapologetically callous, insightfully introspective and absolutely absurd. (JF)
*sat BALANCED BREAKFAST SHOWCASE X-Bar, Cupertino Sat, 8pm, $7 It’s hard not to be pulled under by the narcotic waves of ambient rockers, Skyway View. On their new album, The Victoria Trap, the San Jose band weaves together an undulating fabric of droning, Interpol down strokes; throbbing ’90s shoegaze; acoustic and synthetic goth ripples; and the occasional Latin flourish. Whatever eras these hopeless (nu)romantics are jacking, a deliciously dolorous yearning is never far away. There’s hooks aplenty with Life Size Models’ jangly-strummy goodness, exploring the personal (“Bedroom Eyes”) and the pedestrian (“Bayshore Freeway”) on their catchy new 5-song EP Burden Of Youth. (AL)
THE REVEREND HORTON HEAT Mar 18 at The Ritz
YANNI
Mar 19 at City National Civic
MELVINS
MEET THE BREWERS
THE WIZARD OF OZ
THE STONE FOXES
Hermitage Brewing Company, San Jose Sat, 1pm, $40
Center for the Performing Arts, San Jose Sat, 2pm & 8pm, $43-$128
Apr 6 at SAP Center
Representatives from more than 30 breweries—all of them hailing from within a 150-mile radius of San Jose—are gathering for this annual celebration of NorCal beer to eat, drink and be merry. Held under a giant tent just outside of Hermitage Brewing Company’s front door, this event gives beer lovers the chance to literally meet the brewers of their favorite ales, lagers, porters and stouts. A wide selection of street snacks will be on hand, courtesy of the various food trucks associated with Moveable Feast, and the event will also feature a number of local artisans affiliated with SJMade. (AB)
Before taking the kids to see Star Wars for the umpteenth time, consider traveling somewhere over the rainbow. In a TED Talk on “How Movies Teach Manhood,” Colin Stokes criticizes the original Star Wars series for failing to be as progressive as The Wizard of Oz from 1939. This live musical production adapts the Oscarwinning movie score from the original blockbuster while introducing new songs by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. Bringing the magic of the screen to life, the whole family can appreciate 3-D entertainment without those pesky glasses. (ACB)
Mar 19 at The Ritz Apr 1 at The Ritz
ELLIE GOULDING SELENA GOMEZ
May 11 at SAP Center
PRONG
Jun 1 at RockBar Theater
STING & PETER GABRIEL Jul 14 at SAP Center
ADELE
Jul 30-31 at SAP Center
DEMI LOVATO & NICK JONAS Aug 18 at SAP Center
For music updates and contest giveaways, like us on Facebook at metrofb.com
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
KID KOALA
Feb 4 at Bing Concert Hall
35
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
36
metroactive ARTS
‘Open’ To Interpretation INQUISITORS ‘Los Penitentes Nomades,’ a 2014 piece by Marc D’Estout, is one of many works on display at the local artist’s NUMU exhibit.
Marc D’Estout’s NUMU exhibition is meant to spark the imagination BY GARY SINGH
T
WO SCULPTURES by Marc D’Estout, Muse and Abused Muse, appear to complement each other. Both are made from fabricated steel and both are mockeries of Mickey Mouse hats. Together they constitute an unabashed ridicule of every way in which Disney has infected the youth of America. The shiny silver-colored Muse is nickel plated and appears to be upside-down. If one bashed on Muse as a musical instrument, the sculpture
might sound like some crazed Tibetan singing bowl turned industrial. In fact, the piece already looks like someone playfully bent Mickey’s ears in the wrong direction. Abused Muse, on the other hand, is not shiny. It doesn’t have the nickel plating. The ears hang down, as if someone yanked on them. A new show at NUMU, Marc D’Estout: Open Investigation, includes 15 of the artist’s sculptures. Fusing the conceptual with the wasteful, half of the show features work he sculpted from found objects, while the other half showcases pieces he designed and fabricated from scratch. The difference, according to D’Estout, can be understood as the difference between improvisational free jazz and
scored music—between John Zorn and Count Basie. In the former case, D’Estout develops a creative conversation with the found object and the resulting work rarely identifies as anything remotely similar to its original intent. With the fabricated pieces, he begins the process from raw materials, often flat sheet metal, then cuts and shapes the material into various forms. After stages of welding and applying surface treatments, the creative energy emerges spontaneously. D’Estout has lumbered around these parts for quite some time. After degrees from what was then CSU Hayward and also San Jose State, various teaching, curatorial and institutional gigs took him throughout the Bay Area. He even lived in Los Gatos during the late ’70s, at a time when he says “mostly artists and hippies” dominated the community. The show at NUMU is now officially open for investigation, hence the title. One piece, Myopic Isolator, originated with the visual image of the
cover one puts over a kerosene lamp. Resembling an upside-down punching bag, the work sits suspended on a pedestal in the middle of the gallery and features a tiny hole dead center. “It’s about: ‘How do we expand our awareness?’” D’Estout explains. “How do we take our myopic habits and bring them in, so they don’t escape?” Perhaps the most multifaceted piece is Los Penitentes Nomades. The 2014 word depicts hooded prisoners tied up in some crazed, suburban garbage contraption, but recast as a death trolley. The prisoners are actually discarded zinc pipes from a pipe organ, but they resemble Satanic hooded characters being carted off to the hanging tree. “I thought at first I was going to make a mantlepiece,” D’Estout says. “It was going to be an altar. I kept looking at them, I kept thinking, there’s something about the Spanish Inquisition here, just the shape of them.” Pinhead on the other hand, was almost supposed to be a self-portrait, but D’Estout admits it really isn’t. What looks like a flesh-colored set of shoulders gives way to a large point where the person’s head would normally sit. Again, one wouldn’t necessarily come to any conclusion that the piece resembles a head or a pin or a pinhead. That’s fine with D’Estout. “There’s an ambiguity to these pieces,” he says. “And that’s deliberate.” Other bizarre minimalist fabrications include: Bluebird, possibly a nod to Brancusi, resembling a blue mustache; Buried, which features the butt of a rifle crammed into a metal garbage can lid; and A Brief Case of Puppetry, in which a puppet hangs from two strings, always slightly drifting back and forth. Each piece can be understood from numerous perspectives. NUMU’s Julie Harper encourages visitors to arrive at any possible conclusion. While installing the show, one person told her Myopic Isolator looked like a cactus. “We want visitors to be involved in the open investigation of this kind of contemporary sculpture,” Harper says. “Because it’s normally such an enigmatic genre, and it could be alienating to the general public that doesn’t have a lot of experience with the art world.” THRU MAR 27 FREE-$9
MARC D’ESTOUT: OPEN INVESTIGATION NUMU: New Museum of Los Gatos
1
| S A N J O S E .O R G | S A N J O S E .C O M / S U P E R VA L L E Y
Copyright 2016 Metro Publishing Inc. | A supplement to San Francisco Examiner | East Bay Express | Metro Silicon Valley | North Bay Bohemian | Pacific Sun | Good Times
S P E C I A L A DV E R T I S I N G S E C T I O N
T
he South Bay is excited and proud to welcome the Big Game, and there will be plenty of places and reasons to celebrate. When we are not building drones, smart watches, search engines and self-driving cars, we enjoy the amenities, culture and natural beauty of this amazing area. You’ll find the Silicon Valley culture welcoming, surprisingly rich in options and very diverse. Join us for the Big Game and come back to explore some more because there is a lot to sample and experience. This insider’s guide to the San Jose area was prepared by the editors of Silicon Valley’s weekly, Metro, with the support of Team San Jose. If you are already a local and know all this stuff, please give this to the cousin from Nebraska who’s sleeping on your couch, otherwise he’ll never get him out the door and you’ll be vacuuming up nacho crumbs all weekend. Note: addresses are San Jose unless otherwise indicated
|
e h t d an
S U P E R VA L L E Y 2 0 1 6
e s o J n a S r e p u s ! y e l l a v o t e m welco
Eat Like You’re an
International Traveler
High Tech Art
S A N J O S E .C O M / S U P E R VA L L E Y
|
S A N J O S E .O R G
|
S P E C I A L A DV E R T I S I N G S E C T I O N
|
S U P E R VA L L E Y 2 0 1 6
2
The city blazed a trail in 1881 with the gigantic, 237-foot tower San José Electric Light Tower at Santa Clara and Market Streets in 1881. It blew down in a 1915 windstorm, but a scale replica of it exists at History Park at 635 Phelan Ave. A series of LED stripes, known as Show Your Stripes, adorns the residential highrise at 88 E. San Fernando St. at Second Street in Downtown San Jose. To change the light pattern, call 408.287.0128 between sunset and 3am. After the tone, enter a 3 number combination (* and # can be used), then press zero, and end the call. San Carlos Street Lantern Relay: Eight interactive lanterns on lampposts on San Carlos Street from Market through Fourth streets. Buttons allow pedestrians to change the patterns of the lanterns’ LED light displays. Seattle artist Dan Corson’s “Sensing You” installation lights up two underpasses under Highway 87 with LED rings of pulsing color in 35 different variations. Look for what locals affectionately call the “blue doughnuts.” Displayed on Adobe Corp.’s Almaden Avenue Tower, the San José Semaphore displays four wheels at four distinct positions, to display 256 possible combinations. The four wheels turn every 7.2 seconds. Try to crack the code.
Greg Ramar
Eat Smart Local Like a
Silicon Valley’s global consciousness is evident in the cornucopia of delicious ethnic cuisines found throughout the area. Zeni at 1320 Saratoga Ave. and Gojo at 1261 W. San Carlos St. are two popular Ethiopian choices. Tayyibaat in Milpitas Center serves grilled kababs, wraps and rotisserie chicken platters, all hormone-free and halal. Established ramen hotspots like Santa Clara’s Orenchi Ramen draw long lines; newer places like Noodle Dude on Santa Clara Street and Konjoe Tei in the SoFA Market are a good bet. Vietnamese pho soup, a local staple, can be found near downtown hotels and museums at Pho 69 on South First Street (try the filet mignon). For a more formal dining experience, try Vung Tau at 535 E. Santa Clara St or Tamarine at 546 University Ave. in Palo Alto. Other Southeast Asian cuisines include Chez Sovan (Cambodian) at 923 Oakland Rd., Layang Layang (Malaysian) at 1480 S. De Anza Blvd., and Krungthai (Thai) at 642 S. Winchester Blvd. Downtown hole-in-the-wall SA-By Thai Cuisine at 346 E. William St. is popular with locals. Experience two countries for the price of one at Thaibodia, located at 910 Meridian Ave. Campbell’s Naschmarkt is a modern European fine dining experience serving Viennese cuisine. Greek cuisine can be enjoyed at top-tier restaurants like Evvia in Palo Alto, Dio Deka in Los Gatos and Nemea in Downtown San Jose, as well as budget-friendly places like Opa! at 1100 Lincoln Ave, Nick The Greek at 143 W. Santa Clara St., and Souvlaki Skewers on 577 W. Alma Ave. Culinary dining trends like shared tables and comfort food are a good way to get to enjoy local culture. A totally off-the-radar option for most visitors is the Naglee Park Garage at the corner of 11th and San Carlos, a neighborhood casual dining destination. Jeffrey Stout’s new Orchard City Kitchen (OCK) in Campbell is a local hot spot and Bib Gourmand selection. Henry’s World Famous Hi-Life at 301 W. St John St. is a local institution that has been serving barbecued meats for more than half a century. Original Joe’s at San Carlos and First Street also belongs on any shortlist.
The San Jose area boasts a wealth of options for healthy and delicious casual dining that reflects its amazingly diverse population and various fusions thereof. Falafel Drive In at 2301 Stevens Creek Blvd. has been serving up Middle Eastern fare since 1966 and it’s legendary for falafels, foul and banana shakes. La Victoria Taqueria, home of the world famous Orange Sauce, has five San Jose locations and one in Hayward. Iguana’s in Downtown San Jose and Santa Clara is known as the “Home of the Burritozilla,” a 5-pound, 18-inch Super Burrito that’s caught the fancy of competitive eaters, but they have plenty for regular folks with a good appetite. Pizza Bocca Lupo at San Pedro Market is known for its thin-crust, individual-sized pizzas. The Hawaiian poke bowl craze is in full swing here, with Hawaiian Poke Bowl in the SoFA Market, Japantown’s Santo Market and Poki Bowl on the Almaden Expressway.
Copyright 2016 Metro Publishing Inc. | A supplement to San Francisco Examiner | East Bay Express | Metro Silicon Valley | North Bay Bohemian | Pacific Sun | Good Times
The area that produced such legendary skateboarders as Steve Caballero and the late Tim Brauch keeps rolling. Circle-A Skateboards at 108 Paseo de San Antonio is a good place to pick up a deck. And even with the region’s gloriously warm weather, ice skating is also deeply embedded in our culture. The San Jose Sharks play at San Jose’s SAP Center, while Olympic gold medalist Kristi Yamaguchi grew up in Fremont and Rudy Galindo trains and coaches at Sharks Ice San Jose. Olympic medalist Debi Thomas—the first African American to win a national championship in figure skating—grew up in San Jose, and the Five Skaters Art Piece in Guadalupe Park commemorates Peggy Fleming, Brian Boitano, Galindo, Thomas and Yamaguchi.
ASIAN TEAS & SWEETS Big straws, melon flavors and chewy tapioca pearls made from cassava root have become part of Silicon Valley’s culture and character. Boba Bar is right in the thick of things at 310 S. Third St. Tucked way inside Grand Century’s East San Jose shopping plaza is the forest-themed Tea Lyfe, 989 Story Rd. in Suite 818. Meow Tea, located by the San Jose fairgrounds at 2857 Senter Rd., is for cat lovers and prominently features portraits of the owner’s marmalade tabby, Uni. For amazing milk tea head over to nearby Soyful Desserts, 999 Story Rd. in Suite 9048-B. Brace yourself for purple everything— walls, lights, straws and fuzzy seats—at ChaTime, 311 N. Capitol Ave., which also serves a variety of fried foods. Newly opened last year, Vanitea Snow Lounge at 1195 Branhan Ln. boasts an in-house art gallery, and the jasmine milk and panda boba teas at Palo Alto’s Gong Cha, 439 Waverly St., draw loyal patrons to all of its locations, including San Jose spots 1701 Lundy Ave. and 1600 Saratoga Ave.
Copyright 2016 Metro Publishing Inc. | A supplement to San Francisco Examiner | East Bay Express | Metro Silicon Valley | North Bay Bohemian | Pacific Sun | Good Times
S A N J O S E .C O M / S U P E R VA L L E Y
Skate Through Life
bartenders to walk patrons through their preferences to identify the perfect drink. A short drive—at this point a cab, Lyft or Uber would be smart—to Los Gatos offers two more destination lounges in Lexington House, located at 40 N. Santa Cruz Ave., and Jack Rose Libation House at 18840 Saratoga Los Gatos Rd.
|
Downtown San Jose has the craft cocktail scene on lock, and the indie appreciation for spirits all began at the speakeasy-style saloon Haberdasher (originally known as Single Barrel) at 43 W. San Salvador St. in the SoFA District. The basement bar pours smoky and sweet, and it's a perfect place to start a cocktail crawl before stopping off at The Continental at 349 S. First St. Then head north to South First Street neighbors 55 South and Paper Plane, located by Post Street. Both have an extensive selection of spirits and experienced
S A N J O S E .O R G
Local roasters and artisanal coffee houses keep Silicon Valley’s creative juices flowing. The Chromatic small batch roaster is located in downtown San Jose, with a flagship coffee shop at 5237 Stevens Creek Blvd., Santa Clara. Another boutique roaster founded in San Jose and now based in Santa Clara is the award winning Barefoot Roasters. Rollup/Training Lab is at 408 Martin Ave. in Santa Clara, and its baristas also practice latte art at 1819 S. Bascom Ave., in Campbell. Bellano Coffee slow pours and espressos a selection of regional brand at 3985 Stevens Creek Blvd. in Santa Clara and in downtown’s San Pedro Square Market. Roy's Station in Japantown has made good use of a converted gas station. In the SoFA District, options include the Italian-themed Cafe Frascati and the highly regarded Vero's Coffee Bar in the SoFA Market. Cupertino’s Bitter + Sweet is known for pouring Sightglass Coffee and serving specialty desserts. Bay Area favorite Blue Bottle is now at SAP’s HanaHaus at 456 University Ave., in Palo Alto. And Red Rock Coffee Co. on Mountain View’s Castro Avenue is known for specialties such as salted caramel espresso along with its community-building programming.
We Craft Our Cocktails
|
COFFEE?
Gatos just this month. Celebrities and presidents dine at The Grill on the Alley at the Fairmont Hotel, and next door, on the 17th Floor, the exclusive Silicon Valley Capital Club allows David Kinch private club members and their guests to enjoy a commanding view of Silicon Valley. Of course if you want to drink the same coffee as they drink on the Facebook and Google campuses, there are Philz Coffee locations in San Jose, Palo Alto and Sunnyvale.
S P E C I A L A DV E R T I S I N G S E C T I O N
DID YOU SAY
Google’s original chef, Charlie Ayers. Jobs was also known to scarf sushi at Jin Sho at 454 S. California Ave. in Palo Alto and was fond of frozen yogurt at Fraiche Yogurt at 644 Emerson St., since relocated to 200 Hamilton Ave. Jobs recruited execs and dined with billionaire VC John Doerr at Il Fornaio in Palo Alto. Elon Musk dined with Ashlee Vance at Alexander’s The Sea. The family friendly farm-tofork restaurant in Los Altos, Bumble, is owned by the billionaire Anne Wojcicki. David Kinch’s legendary Manresa restaurant just won its third Michelin star and he opened the New Orleans cafe Bywater in Los
|
Deals are cut over breakfast at Buck’s in Woodside. The Rosewood Hotel’s Michelin-starred Madera restaurant and the Village Pub in Woodside are two other favorite VC haunts. Palo Alto’s Fuki Sushi and Palo Alto Sol, a burrito and margarita cantina, catered Mark Zuckerberg's wedding, and the Facebook founder has been photographed at Walia Ethiopian restaurant in San Jose. Steve Jobs was fond of Calafia in Palo Alto, where a photo of him hangs over his table and where he was once paparazzied having coffee with billionaire Eric Schmidt. The restaurant is owned by
S U P E R VA L L E Y 2 0 1 6
Eat Like a Billionaire
3
S A N J O S E .C O M / S U P E R VA L L E Y
|
S A N J O S E .O R G
|
S P E C I A L A DV E R T I S I N G S E C T I O N
|
S U P E R VA L L E Y 2 0 1 6
4
MICROBREWERS
& CRAFT
BEER PUBS
Could football, as we know it, even exist without beer? Interesting question, though there’s no need to entertain the thought, as the South Bay and Peninsula are home to plenty of great microbreweries and craft beer pubs. Gordon Biersch, a pioneer in the microbrew movement, was founded in Palo Alto and is now headquartered in San Jose. Around the corner from GB’s downtown restaurant is Good Karma—home to vegan comfort food and a large (and hoppy) beer selection—and Original Gravity, where gourmandizers can order duck dogs and all kinds of great brew. San Jose is also home to some up-andcoming breweries, including Santa Clara Valley Brewing and Hermitage. On the edge of the city’s historic Japantown, you won’t find anyone calling themselves a “gastronomist” at the neighboring pubs of Teske’s Germania and Trials—just great beer and hearty food. Head south to Campbell, recently named one of the West Coast’s coolest suburbs by Sunset Magazine, to find the upscale pub Liquid Bread. And trek north to Mountain View, home to Google and Castro Street, a gourmet ghetto where the tech elite dine and sip on suds at the likes of Steins, Beirhaus and Tied House.
Wine Trails, SPEED CITY’S Tasting Rooms SPORTS & Wine Bars STARS San Jose earned the nickname “Speed City” thanks to Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who blazed their way to historyat the 1968 Summer Olympics. The San Jose State track stars and their raised fists are commemorated in a massive statue on the school’s campus. Before her transformation, gold-medal winner Caitlyn Jenner chased Olympic dreams training at San Jose City College. Others greats to come out of San Jose include former MLB pitcher Dave Righetti, iconic women’s World Cup shootout winner Brandi Chastain, pro skateboarder Steve Caballero and the late Pat Tillman (pictured), who put country before multi-millions.
OUTDOOR Recreation
Alum Rock Park and Almaden Quicksilver County Park are two destinations for nature lovers within the city limits of San Jose. The 3,988-acre Rancho San Antonio Open Space Preserve and the Sierra Vista Open Space Preserve offer high level views of the valley floor. The Ed R. Levin County Park has 19 miles of trails and the 3,600-acre Castle Rock State Park is a great way to immerse one’s self in forests of coastal redwoods, Douglas-fir and madrone.
Three distinct wine countries, each with their own appellation, surround Silicon Valley. They are easy to get to, generally less crowded and offer better values than regions to the north. The 28-mile Santa Clara Valley Wine Trail loop has revived America’s original premium wine region. The Santa Cruz Mountains viticultural area encompasses 850 square miles and is highly regarded for premium pinots, syrahs and small production chardonnays. The Livermore Valley has more than 30 easily accessible wineries. Tasting rooms in the central part of the valley include Travieso in Campbell, Testarossa in Los Gatos, J. Lohr at 1000 Lenzen Ave. and Big Dog Vineyards in Milpitas. Paul Draper’s Ridge Vineyards in Cupertino produces some of the best wine in the world, and many wine bars offer local wines as well, among them the Vintage Wine Bar at Santana Row, Vino Vino at the San Pedro Square Market, Vyne Bistro on Paseo De San Antonio, Wine Affairs on the Alameda, Rootstock in Los Gatos and CooperVino in, where else, Cupertino.
COUNTERCULTURE HISTORY
The Grateful Dead hail from Palo Alto, and last summer they celebrated their 50th year with two concerts at Levi’s Stadium. They first played a concert at a party thrown by Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters at Fifth and Santa Clara streets in San Jose, where the City Hall dome now sits. Just up the street, Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg made literary history. Those are just two footnotes in the rich history of an area that was central to the cultural and technological transformation of popular culture in the last third of the 20th Century. Bands like Moby Grape and Journey have their roots in the South Bay and on the Peninsula. The Doobie Brothers lived in a house on 12th Street in Naglee Park, next to Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham.
For more information and to plan your trip, please visit SanJose.org. Copyright 2016 Metro Publishing Inc. | A supplement to San Francisco Examiner | East Bay Express | Metro Silicon Valley | North Bay Bohemian | Pacific Sun | Good Times
metroactive ARTS TIGERS BE STILL
After Sherry Wickman graduates with a degree in art therapy, she falls into a depression while living with her parents. Eventually she finds a job opportunity that gives her life new purpose. Now her life is perfect except for a host of family problems and a tiger that has escaped from the zoo. Jan 21-Feb 21. $17-$32. City Lights Theater Company. San Jose.
MIDDLETOWN
Winner of the The Horton Foote Prize for excellence in American Theater, this play follows Mary Swanson as she discovers the complex underbelly of this superficially honest and welcoming town. Jan 28-Feb 21. $18-$28 Bus Barn Theater. Los Altos Stage Company. Los Altos.
THE MOUNTAIN TOP
in conjunction with the activist company, El Teatro Campesino. Feb 10-Mar 6. $55-$65. The San Jose Stage.
of the Great Rift Valley of Kenya and Tanzania. Artist in Residence Gallery. Los Gatos.
*concerts
“Artists including Me: William Wegman,” “Diebenkorn in the Bedroom, DeFeo in the Den: Generous Gifts from the Dixon and Barbara Farley Collection,” “Character Studies: Clay from the Collection” Thru Feb 7. TueSun, 11am-5pm, closed Mon. San Jose.
DAYDREAM NATION
San Pedro Square Market hosts its monthly last Saturday, alternative concert. Free. San Pedro Square Market. San Jose.
MUSIC AT THE MARKET
A hotbed of live jazz talent, organized by San Jose Jazz. Every Fri, 7-9pm. San Pedro Square Market. San Jose.
TOSPS TUESDAYS
A weekly showcase of Bay Area’s budding music scene across all genres. Most Tuesdays, 7pm. Theatre on San Pedro Square. San Jose.
*opera
In April of 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis. This awardwinning production inserts spunky motel maid Camae, who bends facts toward the fantastic. Jan 15-31. $10-$35. Pear Theatre. Mountain View.
CAFFE FRASCATI
FOREVER PLAID
CANTOR ARTS CENTER
Sparky, Smudge, Jinx and Frankie formed a flannel jacket quartet who perished on the way to their first gig in a collision with a school bus. But now, the ethereal fellas will get one more shot to hit a heavenly harmony. $20-$35. Jan 30-Feb 21. South Bay Musical Theatre. Saratoga Civic Theatre.
WIZARD OF OZ
Iconic musical masters Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Weber reinvent the classic film for the stage, adding a couple surprise new songs to the timeless yarn about Dorothy, her “lacking” partners and the Wicked Witch of the West. $43-$128. Jan 29-Feb 4. Center for the Performing Arts. San Jose.
VALLEY OF THE HEART
Written and directed by the famed Luis Valdez, this bold epic throws the divide between American ideals and actions into powerful relief. This play is performed
Opera Night. First Friday of every month. San Jose.
*art MUSEUMS ”Missing Persons” tracks those who have been lost. Thru Mar 21.“Richard Diebenkorn: The Sketchbooks Revealed” Thru Aug 22. “Edward Hopper: New York Corner” Thru Aug 22. “Missing Persons” dramatizes the loss of human life. Stanford.
DE SAISSET MUSEUM
“Gold Rush” Exploring the regional symbolism of gold through art, sports and culture. Thru Mar 13. Santa Clara.
HISTORY PARK SAN JOSE
“Slugs, Dingbats, and Tramp Printing” The printing press is one of the most important inventions in human history. See the machine that printed the first newspaper in California. Thru Jan 31. San Jose.
LOS GATOS COMPANY
“Zulugrass Jewelry Gallery,” featuring the colorful clothing and ornaments adorned by the Maasai tribe
SJ MUSEUM OF ART
2015-16
SEASON
SAN JOSE MUSEUM OF QUILTS & TEXTILES
“Earth Stories” 25th Anniversary Exhibition. Thru Feb 28. San Jose.
TRITON MUSEUM OF ART
“Gridiron Glory” The Best of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Thru April 3. Santa Clara.
GALLERIES GALLERY HOUSE
“Breathless” Prints and Glasswork by Rozanne Di Silvestro and Rose Hagan. Thru Jan 30. Palo Alto.
GABRIEL KAHANE & BROOKLYN RIDER FRI, JAN 29
MAIN GALLERY
“Winter Light” Thru Feb 21. Redwood City.
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER
“Botanica Poetica” New Work by Lucas Art Fellows. Thru Jan 31. Saratoga.
PALO ALTO ART CENTER
“Bird in the Hand” Over 40 artists portraying aviary things with wings. Thru Apr 10.
SAN JOSE INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART
Jim Campbell: New Work and Collaboration with Jane Rosen. Thru Feb 13. San Jose.
KURT ELLING, PASSION WORLD SAT, FEB 27
LOVE SONGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
SEEING THINGS GALLERY “Unassuming Psycho” by Daryl Angel. San Jose.
*events PEKING ACROBATS
Celebrating 30 years, this is the gravity-defying ensemble that gave us Yin from the George Clooney’s Oceans series. They’ll be flying through the air, flipping around and doing things we humans generally haven’t done in our entire history. Sun, Jan 31, 3pm. $10-$60. Flint Center. Cupertino.
EXPERIENCE TWO ONE-OF-A-KIND PERFORMANCES IN THE EXCEPTIONAL BING CONCERT HALL On Friday, January 29, singer-songwriter Gabriel Kahane meets the dynamic string quartet Brooklyn Rider for a night of folk-pop and strings. Then in February, Grammy Award-winning jazz crooner Kurt Elling performs love songs from around the world.
LIVE.STANFORD.EDU / 650.724.BING (2464) Season Media Sponsors
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
*stage
37
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Susan Mah Photography
38
STAGE
TOUGH LOVE Sherry (Melissa Weinstein, left) questions her sister Grace’s (Akemi Okamura) vengeful tactics in ‘Tigers Be Still.’
‘Tigers’ Be Sweet, Funny “COMEDY” AND “DEPRESSION” may not always go hand in hand, but in the case of Tigers Be Still, the new production by City Lights Theater Company, the two blend together in humorous, touching ways. Anyone who's graduated from college only to struggle with grownup life can identify with protagonist Sherry (Melissa Weinstein), who earned her master’s degree in art therapy but fell into a funk after failing to find a job. The other women in her family aren’t doing any better. Her elder sister, Grace (Akemi Okamura), caught her fiancé cheating, suffered a breakdown and moved back home. She spends her days commiserating with Sherry and their mother, watching Top Gun while crying into a bottle of whiskey, and stealing things from her ex's condo in an attempt to force him to confront her. Their mother has been a bedridden recluse since medication caused her to gain weight and hide from the world—even from her devoted daughters. Tigers Be Still Sherry’s life gets an energy boost after she’s hired by her mother’s high school sweetheart, Joseph (Keith Marshall), the principal at a local elementary school. He wants her to provide therapy to his teenage son, Zack (Sean Okuniewicz), who’s traumatized by a family tragedy and suffering from anger issues. Also, a tiger has escaped from a local zoo and may be lurking nearby.
Thru Feb 21, 8pm, $15-$30 City Lights Theater Company, San Jose
It may sound bleak, but Kim Rosenstock's script, the actors’ performances and Virginia Drake’s direction make for a winning combination. Weinstein is adorably awkward as the earnest perfectionist Sherry. Something in her chirpy manner and well-enunciated delivery reminds me of Grover from Sesame Street (and I mean that as a compliment). Okuniewicz is great as her foil and friend. As Zack, he convincingly flares with rage, while simultaneously revealing a soft side and big heart underneath. And Okamura is hilarious playing the part of a woman scorned—delivering lines like, “There's a fine line between the stupidest thing you can do and the sexiest thing you can do.” All the characters are damaged and flawed, but the audience truly roots for them to break through the depression, anger and anxiety to become their better selves. One of the many admirable qualities of City Lights is that each production has a nonprofit partner. In this case, it’s the Silicon Valley Pet Project, inspired by two (sadly offstage) Chihuahua characters. It’s yet another touch of sweetness in a charmingly off beat show.—Karla Kane
11 39
FEBRUARY 19-21, 2016
Direct from Spain, a sizzling selection of José Manuel Carreño’s favorites Jorma Elo Glow-Stop Ohad Naharin Minus 16 Annabelle Lopez Ochoa Prism Two virtuoso Cuban Pas de Deux
Performances at the SAN JOSE CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Supported, in part by a Cultural Affairs grant from the City of San Jose
TICKETS START AT $25
408.288.2800 siliconvalleyballet.org Photo by Alejandro Gomez of James Kopecky in Ohad Naharin’s Minus 16
kqchildcenter.com 15063 Union Ave, SJ 408.377.6660
0-5 years Active learning to promote cognitive, social/emotional, physical development Science-based and academic curriculum Oversized playground with beautiful play structure and gardening area Pre-Kindergarteners over and beyond prepared for Kindergarten
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Director’s Choice
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
40
metroactive FILM
Senior Moments OLD ENOUGH TO REPAINT In ‘The Lady in the Van,’ Dame Maggie Smith plays an eccentric transient woman living in a gentrifying London neighborhood.
‘The Lady in the Van’ gives viewers a lesson in compassion and charity BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
A
CHARMING MEMOIR of a smelly, prickly old lady, The Lady in the Van is based on material that was first performed on stage, then as a radio play. Surprisingly, as a movie it hasn’t lost any keenness. Its writer and subject is Alan Bennett (played by Alex Jennings), a playwright whose breakthrough was being part of the Beyond the Fringe quartet that paved the way for Monty
Python. In 1973, when Bennett moved to Gloucester Crescent in London’s Camden Town, it was a changing district—awaiting the gentry who inhabit it today. Priding themselves on their liberality, the neighbors put up with one Miss Shepherd (Dame Maggie Smith) a transient old lady living in her van on the street. When the parking police tried to run her off, Bennett allowed her to park in his driveway. She would be encamped there for 15 years. Bennett once commented that he thought he’d go into the clergy just because he looked like a clergyman. Jennings’ Bennett does look like a vicar: tall, self-effacing, awkward, limp-haired.
In his never-to-be-forgot Beyond the Fringe sketch, “Take a Pew,” Bennett played a minister trying to explain, with multiple inanities and chummy, hopeless faux-contemporary allusions, the importance of a scripture verse from II Kings 14. The quote was actually from Genesis: “But my brother Esau is a hairy man, but I am a smooth man.” The funny thing is that Bennett ended up a bit of a nondenominational minister, after all. As opposed to the more overt (and boring) St. Francis imagery in The Soloist—the Jamie Foxx-starring movie on a similar subject to this—The Lady in the Van is a sweet, subdued piece of natural Christianity. During the course of his friendly but never informal relationship with Miss Shepherd, Bennett often has a good talk to himself. The play depicts Bennett split in half on the grounds that a writer
is actually two people in conversation with himself. And while watching this strange woman, and learning her own sad history, he has some guilt about using her for material. Nicholas Hytner is primarily a theater director and an occasional filmmaker. He has made three movies this century. Bennett’s direct address to the camera doesn’t look stagey, and the movie is opened up to take in the hilliest, most endearing part of London as it was 40 years ago. The role is so right for Smith that it might be easy to underrate her very tough and touching work here. (Think of the twinkling a less rigorous actor would have brought to this. Smith’s derelict Miss Shepherd is no pixie.) Smith has long been a deep-focus underplayer, from her helpless Desdemona to Olivier’s Othello, to 1987’s Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne— the soul is so strong in her that we never really think of this 80-year-old performer’s fragility until the end of the film, when her health fails. Before then, her Miss Shepherd has push. She is willing to be a pain; snarling at anyone who dares to play music around her, or talking grandly of her memoirs, to be titled either The Lady Behind the Curtain or A Woman of Britain. The fragrance of Miss Shepherd is described as that of “a bad dish cloth”; out of folk wisdom, she eats raw onions to ward off colds. Alan, not an enormous fan of the physical world, admires the way the ambulance people or the social workers can handle this exasperating woman without minding her moods or her smell. He himself downplays his own ability to stand her bad habits, including her regularly soiling his driveway. “Caring is shit,” Alan decides. Indeed, cleaning up shit, and putting up with it, is essential to dealing with human beings, instead of being a wry outsider who avoids them. It’s bemusing to imagine the army of people in their vans, trucks and campers today, displaced by the obscene rents of the Bay Area, being looked after with the care and dignity demonstrated by the characters in this story. The Lady in the Van wells up with compassion; it never drills for it.
PG-13
THE LADY IN THE VAN
104 MIN
Camera 7, Campbell
metroactive FILM
PREVIEW
2016 OSCAR-NOMINATED ANIMATED FILMS
FRANCOPHILE James Franco will be among Cinequest 2016’s Maverick Spirit Award recipients.
Cinequest 2016 PALO ALTO-BRED auteur James Franco, incandescent performer Rita Moreno, and indie film guiding light Robert Hawk are this year’s Maverick Spirit Award winners at the Cinequest Film Festival in San Jose, March 1-13. Opening night’s film has one of the last appearances of the late Alan Rickman in director Gavin Hood’s critique of the drone program, Eye in the Sky. And closing night features The Daughter, an Australian film starring Geoffrey Rush and Miranda Otto. Cinequest 2016 offers 26 Bay Area made films, including a work in progress by SJSU’s Spartan Studios—a modernday adaptation of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s 1892 work, The Yellow Wallpaper. Harold Lloyd’s 1924 Girl Shy will also be shown, with Dennis James playing the California Theater’s Wurlitzer. The historic will be complemented by the modern. Halfdan Hussey, the festival’s executive director and co-founder (with the Cinequest president Kathleen Powell), has his eye on the future of moving image technology. Mister Invincible, for example, is a work in progress that aims to be the first feature-length, three-screen film on the Barco Escape format, which was promoted last year with excerpts of The Maze Runner. Cinequest’s programmer Michael Rabehl points to a number of film
premieres: “Embers tells of a future in which no one remembers anything. It’s a really unique sci-fi film. Rita Moreno is here with the world premiere of Remember Me, which is hilarious. We have a new version of The Little Prince, an expansion of the original short tale, Cinequest starring Jeff Bridges; there’s a very French feel to this Mar 1-13 movie. Love is All You Need Downtown San is an expansion of a short Jose film that went viral on YouTube with 50 million hits or so. It’s about a parallel world where homosexuality is normal and heterosexuality is considered disgraceful.” Guest programmer Charlie Cockey describes one of his favorites, the Argentinian film Parabellum, as “a journey into a most modern heart of darkness.” Chile’s Memory of Water and Peru’s Magallanes also represent the new South American cinema. The Ukrainian Song of Songs is based on the work of Sholem Aleichem, the Yiddish writer whose stories sourced Fiddler on the Roof. More details on this festival— arguably the two most exciting weeks in Silicon Valley’s calendar (at least in the mind of this film fan)—in upcoming issues of Metro. —Richard von Busack
Not counting the best supporting actress category of the Oscars, the short animated category is the most hellishly difficult to pick. Two dark horses in the field are Chile’s “Bear Story” by Gabriel Osorio and “We Can’t Live Without Cosmos” by Konstantin Bronzit. Osorio’s wrenching short has a bear telling his story of capture and exile, via an intricate mechanical toy he operates for coins on a street corner. What could have been alienating pathos is prevented by Osorio’s gift for the horror-comic, as in a scene of secret policeman-like ringmasters raiding a tenement of exotic animals. Bronzit’s “We Can’t Live Without Cosmos” continues the work Ray Bradbury did to humanize questions of space travel. Too bad Bradbury didn’t live to see this charming Damon and Pythias story of a pair of cosmonauts. “Sanjay’s Super Team” demonstrates the matchless efficiency of the wordless storytelling taught at Pixar. In an antiseptic apartment, we see a father and his son at dawn. The older man is at his Hindu ritual of aarti, lamp lighting; across the room, young Sanjay is watching a superhero cartoon on the television set. Director Sanjay Patel finds the rhyme in these two different forms of veneration. The amazing “Prologue” is a sixminute proposal for a feature film by the 82-year-old animator Richard Williams, creator of the Pink Panther and Roger Rabbit. “Prologue” puts the agony back into cartoon combat. His subject is arms and the man, a seriously bloody battle of two pairs of Bronze-age warriors. Williams takes us as close as a soldier’s eye and as far back as a sweeping 360-degree point of view of encircled combatants. With pencil and paper, Williams is doing all the things cyberanimation can do, only with much more power. Previously mentioned here: Don Hertzfeldt’s “World of Tomorrow” looks like nothing you’ve seen except for Chris Marker’s “La Jetee” and Koreeda's After Life. This mordant, unusually imaginative short isn’t just Hertzfeldt’s best, it’s a minor masterpiece of the science fiction film. (Opens Friday at Camera Cinemas.) (RvB)
45 YEARS It’s based on a story by David Constantine, “Another Country,” which takes its title from a famous quotation
from Christopher Marlowe’s The Jew of Malta. Fending off a criminal charge of fornication, the villainous Barabas answers “That was in another country, and besides, the wench is dead.” Director Andrew Haigh has two of the finest actors alive starring in his often touching but stiff story of dread surrounding a 45th anniversary party. Jeff (Tom Courtenay) and Kate (Charlotte Rampling) are planning a public celebration of their marriage, but the Monday before the party brings startling news. The corpse of Katya, Jeff’s old love, was just found in a Swiss ravine in which she fell when Jeff and Katya were both climbing in the Alps in the 1970s. Moving from preoccupation to obsession, Jeff muses over Katya, and his silences and omissions torment his wife as the big event approaches. While the material might be better off as theater, photographer Lol Crawley brings out painterly shots of the two actors and of the misty Norfolk countryside. What we’re seeing, though, is two great actors banking their fires. Good news is still good news, no matter how long it takes to arrive; it seems funny that Rampling, this magnificent actress of leonine carriage and hooded eyes, is finally being discovered by some film critics. Is she the kind of woman to be threatened by a 50-year-old ghost? Courtenay, who could give you a King Lear you’d never forget, isn’t nearly as believable as a guy next door (note the way his voice rises to fill a room when he’s giving a toast to his wife). It’s only during a tipsy scene in which he’s complaining about a reunion at his workplace that he seems free at last of Haigh’s too-tight conception of old love. (Opens Friday valleywide.)(RvB)
THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH (1976) This was the late David Bowie’s best film—a portrait of an exile suffering a typical exile’s fate, an avant-garde science fiction tale of an alien who comes to Earth and ends up thoroughly probed. Its concerns are far ahead of its time. Who back then worried then much about cataclysmic water shortages, as opposed to today? Director Nicolas Roeg made a film heavy on the mood and light on the logic; serious sci-fi aficionados will be furious watching the scene where “Newton” (Bowie) tries to indicate where his planet is: “I’m not an astronomer, but it’s over there (pointing at the horizon).” The uncut version, with Roeg’s full-frontal love scenes intact, shows what a neglected film this is. (Various streaming services.) (RvB)
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Now Playing
41
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
42
metroactive MUSIC
Why So Serious GARBAGE PATCH KIDS Daly City metal crew, Kill The Messenger, are always up for a laugh.
Kill The Messenger keep their heavy, technical music light with laughter BY ANDREW LENTZ
K
ILL THE MESSENGER aren’t a mere Bay Area band. They’re from Daly City dammit, and they want you to know it. “Gotta rep the hood,” jokes drummer Danny Haddad on a fourway conference call, which includes bassist David Scanlon, guitarist and vocalist James Conelly, and lead vocalistguitarist Adam Rupp, the latter of whom gets disconnected almost immediately.
“We don’t want to just say we’re another band from San Francisco.” Neighborhood shout-outs aside, the band’s newish 10-song album, From The Ashes, is a fearsome display of guitar heroics and chunky riffs— and, what’s more, in a genre not known for yuks, a dash of humor. Take “Exodus” which examines the pitfalls of working out and at one point proclaims, “I am so hungry!” “That song’s about losing your gains,” says Haddad. “Like, you don’t want to lose your gains.” Then there’s the UrbanDictionary-approved “Speak Now Or Forever Hold Your Feelz.” You’d be forgiven for thinking this was self-aware hipster metal. “A lot of our stuff can be satirical,” says
Haddad, citing mock-epic “Curse Of Broseidon,” whose precision tempo and layered intricacy are anything but jokey. “But a lot of it can be touchy subjects.” An example would be “Words Like Guns,” which the drummer penned. “I don’t want to get too deep into it but everybody has some past relationship that’s gone horribly awry and that’s what that song’s about.” Kill The Messenger blend aspects of ‘90s Swedish melodic death-metal with strains of modern American metalcore. Occasionally, the band goes beyond the realm of metal and its myriad subgenres entirely. “Speak Now” features a Flamenco guitarinspired interlude with congas. The album’s 12-minute-plus finale, “Phoenix,” is bathed in electronics and soaring strings. “It’s not anything to do with genre but having everything be deliberate,” says Conelly, a classically trained
musician. “I know this is a whole tone scale, it’s going to fit in this particular chord structure.” Scanlon is more blunt: “We wanted to pull the best out of ourselves instead of pumping out the same song over and over.” At times, Kill The Messenger achieve cinematic scope. In its final third, “For Death And Glory” features the pre-recorded chaos of a pitched battle scene. “Basically all that Viking metal is just bad-ass,” says Scanlon. “That song called out for the Norse gods.” On a DIY budget, programmed sequences lend a certain studio gloss. “[Otherwise] we’d have to hire a keyboard player and so many other people when we play live,” says Conelly. “Logistically it made a lot more sense to do backing tracks.” Scanlon adds, jokingly: “Plus, we couldn’t hire another person who would put up with the four of us.” The embellishments never get in the way of the aggression. The combination of dirty and clean vocals create an added dimension to the song structures. “I do the more growly stuff, since I have a deep voice,” says Conelly. The clean vocals are courtesy of Rupp and Haddad, the latter often harmonizing while stomping speedy double-bass parts— pushing his lungs to the limit. “It’s not an ideal situation, I can tell you,” he says. “Especially when I’m about to keel over from exhaustion.” When it comes to making money from their music, it’s good thing the boys in KTM have day jobs: Conelly is a software engineer, Haddad is a web developer, Scanlon is in real estate and Rupp works as a barista. “Our biggest goal right now is to get the album in more people’s ears,” Haddad says. The band’s demo has been sent out to labels all over the world. In the meantime, there’s talk of a mini tour with A Human Costume, who shares the bill at the upcoming show at The Caravan Lounge. Until then, Kill The Messenger just enjoy savoring small moments, like the time Conelly recalls, when a couple fans wanted their copies of From The Ashes signed at a show. “That was trippy.”
JAN 29 10PM
FREE
KILL THE MESSENGER The Caravan Lounge, San Jose
11 43
S U N D AY F E B 7
Party Kicks Off at 12 noon 15 Screens $2 BBQ Plates with Fixings
Drink Specials and Raffle Prizes Football Week Specials Feb 3 - Feb 8 All Day Long 1/2 Mile from Sunnyvale Caltrain Station
Visit our Facebook for Week Long Specials
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Big Game Bash
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | J ANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
44
POOR HOUSE BISTRO PRESENTS
2 BIG NIGHTS
CELEBRATING FOOTBALL'S BIGGEST GAME! FRI. FEB. 5 9PM
SAT. FEB. 6TH
Andre Thierry A LT E R N AT I V E C R E O L E
metroactive MUSIC
Rock/Pop/ Hip-Hop AGAVE Every Fri, 9:30pm: DJ Norman. San Jose.
REVUE
WEE WILLIE WALKER
PLUS The
TERRIE ODABI
Anthony Paule
Soul Orchestra
9PM TO 12AM TICKETS: $10 ADVANCE $15 DAY OF
PoorHouseBistro.com
CITY NATIONAL CIVIC Fri, Jan 29, 6pm: La Semesienta. San Jose.
CLUB FOX
AGENDA LOUNGE
THE FUNKY GODFATHER
7pm: Hootenanny. Fri, Jan 29, 7pm: Fossil. Sat, Jan 30, 8pm: Eddie Toro Band. Every Sun, 6pm: Joe Ferrara. Los Gatos.
9PM TO 12AM TICKETS: $25 ADVANCE $30 DOOR LIMITED SEATING
Nightly Entertainment
91 S. AUTUMN STREET - near sap DOWNTOWN SAN JOSE 408.292.5837
Every Wed, 8pm: Salsa Wednesdays w/ free dance lessons. Every Thu, 9pm: Banda Night. San Jose. Every Sunday: Hip-hop & reggae. San Jose.
ART BOUTIKI Wed, Jan 27, 6pm: Reggae Vinyl Hour. Thu, Jan 28, 7:30pm: Rin Tin Tiger, Dogcatcher, Cola. Sat, Jan 30, 7:30pm: Craig White, Z Will. San Jose.
THE BACK BAR SOFA Every Wed, 9pm: The Cypher, feat. Hip-hop, Jungle, Soul, Reggae, Dubstep, Trap, BreakBeat, House and more. San Jose
BRITANNIA ARMS DOWNTOWN Every Wed: DJ 512. Every Thu: DJ Nico & Neeber. Every Fri: DJ Benofficial & Clay. Every Sat: DJ Ready Rock. San Jose.
CARDIFF LOUNGE Every Tues, 10pm: Resident DJ Gabriel Black presents Beat Culture. Every Wed, 10pm: Rubber Soul w/ Wen Davis, Nappy, Cutso, and Golden Child (Hip-Hop). Every Thu, 10pm: Roger Morehouse Presents Foxy Thursdays. Campbell.
CHARLEY'S LG Every Wed, 10pm: Wi3rd Wednesdays. Every Thu, 7pm: Speakeasy Saloon w/live country music. Los Gatos.
C&J’S SPORTS BAR Every Thu, 10pm: Karaoke. Every Fri & Sat: Live Music or DJ. Santa Clara.
Every Wed: Club Fox Blues Jam. Fri, Jan 29, 8:30pm: Salsa Spot DJ Night. Sat, Jan 30, 8:30pm: Mick and the Big Dawg Patriots. Redwood City.
DANA STREET COFFEE Every 2nd Mon, 7pm: Ukulele Jam. Mountain View.
FLINT CENTER Fri, Jan 29, 8pm: Peninsula Symphony - Taylor Eigsti. Cupertino.
MARIANI'S Fri-Sat: Live Music. Santa Clara.
MOJO LOUNGE Most Fri/Sat: Live Music. Every Sun, 8pm: Acoustic Jam. Every Tue, 8pm: Aki Kumar’s Band. Every Thurs: DJ Mist. Fremont.
NORMANDY HOUSE LOUNGE Every Thu, 9:30pm: DJ night w/ DJ BenOfficial & DJ Vex. Every Fri and Sun, 9:30pm: Karaoke w/ DJ NoWrath. Santa Clara.
NUMBER ONE BROADWAY Every Wed: J.C. Smith Jam. Thu, Jan 28, 8pm: Blind Pilots. Fri, Jan 29, 8pm: Fog City. Sat, Jan 30, 8pm: Take 2. Los Gatos.
THE QUARTER NOTE Every Mon, Wed & Thu: Pro Jam. Sunnyvale.
More listings:
METROACTIVE.COM
Jazz/Blues/ World AGAVE Every Thu: Banda La Unica. Every Fri, 6:30pm: Mariachi Mariachismo. San Jose.
AGENDA LOUNGE Every Wed, 8pm: Salsa. Every Thu, 9pm: Banda Night. San Jose.
ANGELICA’S BISTRO Every Tue: Jazz Tuesdays. Thu, Jan 28, 7:30pm: Lisa Woo w/ Rick Ferguson. Fri, Jan 29, 8:30pm: George Silva (Elvis Impersonator). Sun, Jan 31, 7pm: Prince Ali Belly Dance Band. Redwood City.
BLUE NOTE LOUNGE Every Tue, 7:30pm: Yoshi Senzaki Band. Every Sun: Jazz or Blues. Milpitas.
BLUE ROCK SHOOT Every Fri: Blue Rock Showcase. Every Sat: Live Featured Show. Every Sun: Jazz & Blues Jam. Saratoga.
CAFE STRITCH Every Wed: Wax Wednesday: All Vinyl DJ Sets. Thu, Jan 28, 9pm: Dahveed Behroozi Quartet. Fri, Jan 29, 8:30pm: Couches, Rubedo, Holophrase. Sat, Jan 30, 8:30pm: James Mahone Quartet. Every Sun: Eulipions Jazz Jam Session. San Jose.
CAFFE FRASCATI Thu, Jan 28, 8:30pm: Mat Callahan and Yvonne Moore. Fri, Jan 29, 8pm: Wildflower. Sat, Jan 30, 8pm: Sophie Todd. San Jose.
THE RITZ Fri, Jan 29, 8pm: Strangelove, Temptation. Sat, Jan 30, 8pm: Monkey. San Jose.
SAN PEDRO SQUARE MARKET Thu, Jan 28, 7pm: The Dead Lies. Fri, Jan 29, 7pm: The Mary Ellen Duell Trio. Sat, Jan 30, 7pm: The Cruisetones. San Jose.
THE X BAR Every Thu: No Cover night. Every Sat: Saturday Nite Live Music Show. Cupertino.
CAFE PINK HOUSE Thu, Jan 28, 7:30pm: Tod Dickow & Charged Particles Fri, Jan 29, 7:30pm: Ayako Hosokawa. Sat, Jan 30, 2pm - 3:30pm: Live Music Hangout. 7:30pm: Terrence Brewer Trio. Sun, Jan 31, 6pm: Wildflower. San Jose.
CASCAL Every Fri & Sat: Live Music. Mountain View.
CLUB FOX Every Wed: Club Fox Blues Jam. Redwood City.
THE CATS Wed, Jan 27, 7pm: Heather and the Mad Hatters. Thu, Jan 28,
WOODHAMS LOUNGE Fri: Live music. Santa Clara.
DANA STREET COFFEE Every 2nd Mon, 7pm: Ukulele
46
11 45
Score’ s Annual
RONNIE MILSAP Big Game Pa r t y !
Food Drinks & Fun
Happy Hour Priced Drinks All Day Every Day
1126 Saratoga Ave, San Jose 408.296.9591
LIVE AT THE SADDLE RACK
SUNDAY FEBRUARY 21 Come see the 6 time Grammy Award Winner at his only Northern California Appearance. Go to TheSaddleRack.com to purchase your $30 Advance Tickets.
DOORS OPEN AT 6PM
SUPER SUNDAY FOOTBALL PARTY FEBRUARY 7
DOORS OPEN AT 2PM
$3 AD SIZE:
1/8v
Spaghetti (per plate with Salad & Bread) Bottle Beer Hot Dogs
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE MUSIC IMMEDIATELY Following The Game LIVE PUB DATE: with Rob Tracy ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE Band 00/00/15 DESIGNER: NAME HERE Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
ISSUE NUMBER:
THE SADDLE15XXRACK &
RELAY FOR LIFE PRESENTS ROCKIN' THE RACK AGAINST CANCER
Live Music & Dancing featuring Frontage Road, Old School Rock-N-Roll, Big Mike & the HartBeats, & Slingtown
Silent & Live Auctions Great Food & Raffle Prizes $20 Advance Tickets, $30 Day Of Show Live Music 6:30pm DJ Music During Band Breaks Go to TheSaddleRack.com to purchase Advance Tickets.
42011 Bosc el l Rd. Fremont, CA ( 510) 979-0477 T heSaddl e R ac k . c om
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Final
Goosetown
46 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | J ANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
Cocktail Lounge
BEST Karaoke
FRI & SAT 9:30P-1:30A
BBQ & Drink Specials
FOOTBALL
PARTY PLACE
6 BIG Screens · Drink Specials
Complimentary Food
Appetizers · Gumbo
1072 Lincoln Avenue San Jose • 408.292.4835 goosetownlounge.com
r
LIVE JAZZ & DINING
14577 Big Basin Way, Saratoga, CA | w: cafepinkhouse.com
(408)647-2273 | events@cafepinkhouse.com Make Reservations On-Line!
THURSDAY, JANUARY 28th TOD DICKOW & CHARGED PARTICLES - TRIBUTE TO MICHAEL BRECKER
virtuoso jazz/fusion sax
COVER CHARGE $15 | 7:30pm
FOX THEATRE Fri, Jan 29, 7pm: The Pacific Mambo Orchestra. Redwood City.
HEDLEY CLUB AT HOTEL DE ANZA
SATURDAY, JANUARY 30th LIVE MUSIC HANGOUT | 2pm to 3:30pm
Fri-Sat, 8pm: Hawaiian music. San Jose.
COVER CHARGE $15 | 7:30pm
880 W. HAMILTON AVE CAMPBELL 408-475-ECIGS 18+ W/VALID ID FOLLOW US ON IG @VAPORS408 VAPORSSMOKESHOP.COM
SAM'S BBQ
LITTLE LOU’S BBQ
ST. STEPHENS GREEN
Wed, Jan 27, 7pm: Scott Goldberg Pro Jam. Every Thu, 8pm: Aki’s Blues Jam. Fri, Jan 29, 8pm: AC Myles. Sat, Jan 30, 8pm: Jim Ripper and the Night Prowlers. Every Sun: Little Lou’s Jazz Jam Band. San Jose.
Every Tue, 7:30pm: Irish music. Fourth Sat, 10pm: South American Hits. Mountain View.
TRAIL DUST BBQ
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER
Every 2nd and 4th Thu, 7-9pm: Don Balistreri. Every Sat, 7-9:30pm: Live jazz. Every 1st and 3rd Sat, 9pm: Randy Whiting and “@Jazz.” San Jose.
Every Tues: Pro Blues Jam. Sunnyvale.
O’FLAHERTY’S Thu, 9pm: Live Music. Sun, 5pm: Reggae music. Tue, 6:30pm: Live Irish Rock. San Jose.
PIONEER SALOON Every Sun: Jam Session. Every Wed: Marty and Annika. Every Thu: Pete Weston. Woodside.
THE SADDLE RACK
Wed, Jan 27, 6pm: Loganville. Tue, Feb 2, 6pm: Bean Creek. San Jose.
MURPHY’S LAW
SUNDAY, JANUARY 31st WILDFLOWER
Every Thu: Acoustics Music Nights. Every Fri & Sat: Acoustics/Bands Music Nights. Campbell.
Blues and Jazz every night. Call for info. San Jose.
J.J.’S BLUES
Fri-Sat, 6-9pm: Jazz for dinner. San Jose.
jazz guitar great
ORCHARD VALLEY COFFEE
Every Wed: Blues & Brews w/ Sid Morris & Kyle Jester. Thu, Jan 28, 8pm: Cougar Unleashed. Fri, Jan 29, 7pm: Mighty Mike Schermer Band. Sat, Jan 30, 6pm: Gary Smith & the Blues Band. San Jose.
HUKILAU
MOSAIC
TERRENCE BREWER TRIO
POOR HOUSE BISTRO
Every 1st and 3rd Wed: Jazz Jam. San Jose.
Every Wed, Fri, and Sat, 5pm: Belly dancing. Every Tue, 4pm: Live Jazz Music w/ Johnny Williams. Every Thu: Live Acoustic Guitar Music. Mountain View.
COVER CHARGE $20 | 7:30pm
COVER CHARGE $15 | 6:00pm
Jam. Mountain View.
MOROCCO’S
Japanese jazz vocalist
indie folk rock / jazz
44
Thu, Jan 28, 8pm: Elton John Cover Band. Saratoga.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 29th AYAKO HOSOKAWA
CD Release Concert
COUCHES The San Francisco indie band play Cafe Stritch Jan 29.
Fri, 6-9pm: Live blues, roots and Americana. Morgan Hill.
UNWINED
C&W/Folk
Every Wed, 7:30pm: Country Get Down Wednesday. Every Thu, 7:30: Country Music. Every Fri, 9pm: Country Get Down Friday. Fremont.
THE WOODSHED Every 1st Sun: Doug Young’s Acoustic Guitar Night. $10. Los Gatos.
Open Mic/ Comedy ANGELICA’S BISTRO Every Tue: Open Mic Tuesdays. Redwood City.
7 BAMBOO Mon, 7pm: Musical open mic for singer/songwriters. Sign up at 7pm. Free. San Jose.
BLUE ROCK SHOOT DANA STREET COFFEE Every 2nd Mon, 7pm: Ukulele Jam. Mountain View.
CHARLEY'S LG Every Thu, 7pm: Speakeasy Saloon w/ live Country music. Every Tue, 7pm: Tuesday Bluesday w/ live Blues music. Los Gatos.
MISSION PIZZA Thu, Jan 28, 7pm: Mill Creek Ramblers. Fri, Jan 29, 7pm: Stragglyrs. Sat, Jan 30, 7pm: Beargrass Creek. Fremont.
Thu, 7pm: Musical open mic. San Jose.
CAFFE FRASCATI Every Mon, 8pm: Commediaopen mic for comedy. Every Tue, 7pm: Open mic. San Jose.
CAMERA 3 Fri, 9pm, Sat, 7pm and 9:15pm: Comedy Sportz. San Jose.
CARAVAN Every Wed, 9pm: Comedy Caravan.
50
11 47
1/2h F R I DAY
1/29 1/31 2/2 2/5 2/9 2/15 2/20
ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE DESIGNER: NAME HERE
STEEL PULSE DR. DOG CREED BRATTON
Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
S U N DAY
T U E S DAY
From THE OFFICE: An evening of music & comedy
S U N DAY
Y &T
SATURDAY 1/30
THE WHITE BUFFALO SATURDAY 2/06
YOUNG DUBLINERS LETTUCE MATISYAHU blessthefall YONDER 3/23 MOUNTAIN T U E S DAY M O N DAY
S AT U R DAY
GEOFF TATE’S OPERATION: MINDCRIME (Former lead singer of Queensryche)
FRIDAY 2/12
DEAD KENNEDYS SATURDAY 3/05
PUB DATE: 00/00/15
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE
AD SIZE:
w/ Miss May I
WEDNESDAY
STRING BAND
ISSUE NUMBER: 15XX
48 metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
CONCERT
DOG DAYS Dr. Dog have resurrected and reimagined their first album.
Doctoring The Past CONSIDERING THEIR reputation as folksy, down home and altogether analog, some might be surprised to learn that Dr. Dog got their start composing electronic tunes. To be clear, the very first tracks that the Philadelphia indie rockers ever recorded weren’t club bangers, or even chilly IDM. Still, the founding trio of Toby Leaman, Scott McMicken and Doug O’Donnell constructed most of the songs on Psychedelic Swamp using the lo-fi synth patches and tinny drum loops of a cheap keyboard. With the exception of the vocals and the guitars, Leaman says that just about every tone and tom-tom on the record came from a Casio sound bank. “There’s certainly no live drums on it,” the singer and songwriter says of the 2001 album, which the fledgling group stitched together with a pair of cassette four-tracks and then dubbed to even more cassettes and some CD-Rs.
Happy Hour M-F 4P-7P
Live Music Friday
Karaoke
Tue • Thu • Sat
Open Mic Comedy Monday
Ice cold bottles • 8 beers on tap Sunday-Saturday 2pm to 1:45am
BEST KARAOKE KARAOKE DIVE DIVEBAR BAR 4475 Stevens Creek Blvd. Santa Clara 408.244.2899
They managed to sell a few copies of the album at some of their earliest gigs, Leaman recalls. However, Dr. Dog only kept one song from the sessions in regular rotation at shows. The Dr. Dog sour mash of chintzy keys, the odd effects created by manually mixing down the two four-tracks and many Jan. 31, 7pm, $25 other idiosyncrasies meant that most of the collection The Catalyst, didn’t make sense in a live setting. Santa Cruz For a little over a decade Psychedelic Swamp remained a rarity—lurking in the bootleg collections of Dr. Dog super fans. A few copies remained with the band, as well. Then, in 2015, the Philly-based Pig Iron Theatre Company teamed with Dr. Dog on a live stage and music production for a local arts festival. Pig Iron asked the band to dig up some material that few had heard, and so Leaman and McMicken dusted off Psychedelic Swamp. The play, Swamp is On, provided the impetus for the band to do what it had always intended: re-record their debut—with “a billion more pieces of gear and a billion more years of experience.” The revamped Psychedelic Swamp, which drops on Feb. 15, sounds both old and new. Leaman says he is excited to see how audiences react to the new-old material. At their upcoming show in Santa Cruz he says the band will still very much be working it out. “It’s going to be pretty raw still,” he says. “They’re not road tested at all. It will be interesting to see what catches and what doesn’t.”—Nick Veronin
11 49
M T TH F JAN 28 | 7:00 PM
JAN 29 | 7:00 PM
S SU JAN 30 | 7:00 PM
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
MARKET
WEEK AT A GLANCE
BRAINSTORMER’S TRIVIA MUSIC & MOVEMENT THE DEADLIES THE MARY ELLEN DUEL TRIO THE CRUISETONES WIL ROBERTS Eat, drink, shop & listen to live music all in one place.
JAN 31 | 1:00 PM
Marks Of Art TATTOO
Est. 1994
87 N. San Pedro St. Downtown San Jose • SanPedroSquareMarket.com
Specializing in custom designs, cover-ups, color, and black & gray Friendly, sterile & clean environment Walk-ins welcome 5 artists to choose from Same owner & location for 20+ years 408.377.1924 · 3014 Union Ave, San Jose OPEN 7 DAYS Credit Paintings by Shannon Cullen
20% Off All Tattoos over $150 for Big Game Weekend! (2/6 & 2/7 Only) Now hiring professional & experienced tattoo artists
Thank You for Voting Us Best of Silicon Valley 2015
Follow us on instagram @MarksOfArtTattoo
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | J ANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
50
NNIA ARM A T I S BR
46
THE CATS
EFFIE’S RESTAURANT
Tue thru Sat: Karaoke. San Jose.
Wed-Sat & Tue, 9pm-2am, & last Sun of every month, 2-7pm: B&S Karaoke. Campbell.
Every Tue: Funny Farm hosted by Butch Escobar. Los Gatos.
THE BEARS
CITY ESPRESSO
BENNIGAN’S GRILL
Fri, 7pm: Open mic. San Jose.
FLINT CENTER
British Pub & Restaurant
THE BACK BAR
Fri, 9pm: Karaoke. San Jose. Sat, 9pm: Karaoke evenings. Santa Clara.
Wed-Fri, Jan 20-22, 8pm: Mark Russell. Cupertino.
Watch Sharks games here! Tues
PUBSTUMPERS TRIVIA
wed & sun
KARAOKE w/ DJ Hank
thur 1/28 fri 1/29 sat 1/30
DJ Maniakal Superbad - Live Band Stompbox - Live Band
UFC 196 - FEB. 6TH COVER CHARGE
WERDUM VS. VALASQUEZ HUGE SELECTION OF CRAFT BEERS ON TAP & BOTTLES Lunch & Dinner Breakfast Sat./Sun. Full Menu Traditional Fare & Pub Specialties
britanniaarmsalmaden.com
4 0 8.2 66.0550
5027 ALMADEN EXPWY @ HWY 85
BLINKY’S CAN’T SAY
LIQUID
BLUE MAX
MARMIST COCKTAIL LOUNGE Sun, 9:30pm: Comedy. San Jose.
MONTGOMERY THEATRE
Fri, 9pm: Karaoke Friday Nights. Santa Clara.
BOGART’S LOUNGE
BOULEVARD TAVERN Thu: Karaoke. Los Gatos.
BRANHAM LOUNGE Tue: Karaoke with Medik & Sean Blak. San Jose.
QUARTER NOTE Mon: Comedy. No cover. Sunnyvale.
WOODHAMS LOUNGE Mon: Comedy open mic with Pete Munoz. Santa Clara.
WORKS/SAN JOSE 2nd Thu, 7pm: Words Drawing Music. San Jose.
Karaoke 7 BAMBOO Wed-Sat, 9pm: Karaoke. Tue, 9pm: Karaoke. San Jose.
7 STARS BAR & GRILL
BRIT ARMS ALMADEN Wed and Sun, 10pm: Karaoke w/ DJ Hank. San Jose.
BRIT ARMS CUPERTINO Sun-Tue, 10pm: Karaoke. Cupertino.
THE CARAVAN Mon, 10pm: Mandatory Monday Karaoke. San Jose.
THE CARLOS CLUB
ISLAND CAFE & BAR Fri-Sat, 9pm: Karaoke. Sunnyvale.
Wed & Sun, 9:30pm-1:30am: Karaoke. Campbell.
KC BAR AND RESTAURANT Wed, 8pm: DJ Desmond. San Jose.
KHARTOUM Thu, 9pm: DJ Davey K. Campbell.
KING OF CLUBS Thu & Sun-Mon, 8:30pm: Bruce of KOR Karaoke. Mountain View.
KYOTO PALACE
CHARLEY'S LG
LILLY MAC’S
Tue: Karaoke. Los Gatos.
C&J’S SPORTS BAR Thu, 9pm: Karaoke. Santa Clara.
ALEX’S 49ER INN
Mon, Thu & Sat, 9pm: Karaoke. Campbell.
Every 2nd Thu: Gothic, industrial karaoke. Club Lido, San Jose.
Wed-Thu and Sun, 9pm: Wild Nights Karaoke. Fremont.
Fri & Sat: Karaoke night. San Carlos.
COURT’S LOUNGE
APPARITION
THE HUDDLE
KATIE BLOOM’S
Fri-Sat, 8pm: Karaoke. San Jose. Nightly, 9pm-2am: Karaoke. San Jose.
Fri-Sat, 9:30pm-1:30am: Karaoke. Willow Glen.
Sun: Karaoke for the Industry. No cover. San Jose.
Mon, 7pm: Cavin and King’s Open Mic. Mountain View. Wed, Jan 27, 8pm: New Talent Showcase. Thu-Sun, Jan 28-31, various: Myq Kaplan. Sunnyvale.
THE GOOSETOWN LOUNGE
JOHNNY V’S
RED ROCK COFFEE CO.
ROOSTER T. FEATHERS
Thu-Sat, 9:30pm: Karaoke. Gilroy.
Tue, 7pm: Karaoke w/ Steve Tiger. Cupertino.
PHILZ COFFEE
Tue, 6pm: Open mic. San Jose.
GILROY BOWL
BLUE PHEASANT
Wed, Fri & Sun, 9pm-1am: Karaoke. Sunnyvale.
POOR HOUSE BISTRO
Thu, 9pm-2am: August. Milpitas.
Fri: Karaoke Fridays. Sunnyvale.
Sun, Jan 30, 7pm: Max Amini. Mon, 7pm: Open mic. Free. San Jose.
FIREHOUSE GRILL & BREWERY
GALAXY
Wed, Jan 27, 8pm: Ellis Rodriguez. Thu, Jan 28, 8pm: Brendan Lynch. Fri/Sat, Jan 2930, various: Jon Lovitz. San Jose. Wed, 9pm: Poetic Justice Open Mic. San Jose.
Thu, 8pm: Karaoke. San Jose.
Sun, 7pm-close: Uncle Dougie Show. Palo Alto.
IMPROV
FOOTBALL'S BIG GAME WATCH IT HERE! 21 SCREENS SUN. FEB. 7
EL RANCHO SPORTS BAR
DASILVA’S BRONCOS
Wed, 7pm: Karaoke. Campbell. Thu: Karaoke. Sunnyvale.
LIQUID Tue: Karaoke. San Jose.
MARIANI’S Thu, 8pm: Chris. Santa Clara.
THE NEW JERSEY’S Sat: Karaoke. Campbell.
Wed: Karaoke. Thu, 9pm-1am: Karaoke. Santa Clara.
NORMANDY HOUSE LOUNGE
DIVE BAR
Fri-Sat, 9:30pm: Karaoke. Santa Clara.
Wed, 10pm: Karaoke. San Jose.
52
11 51
Wax Wednesday: All Vinyl DJ Night G | P | S | J | I
M H, F
Downbeat 8:30pm ( unless noted )
THUR 28 Daveed Behroozi Quartet FRI 29 Couches, Rubedo, Holophrase 9pm SAT 30 James Mahone Quartet THUR 4 Eddie Mendenhall Trio FRI 5 Howard Wiley & Extra Nappy SAT 6 Patrick Wolff Quartet E J J SUNDAYS 7 PM T S
374 South First Street | San Jose | cafestritch.com
The Legend Lives On… Huge selection of: •Glass Pipes •Dab Rigs •Waterpipes •Quartz Bangers •Domeless Nails
Titanium • Torches Gifts • Stones Candles • T-shirts Clothes • Posters Incence • Jewelry Tapestries • Fairies Skulls • Dragons
ParamountImports.com 408.286.9839 • 455 Meridian Ave • SJ
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
EVERY WEDNESDAY 9 PM - 1AM
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | J ANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
52
OASIS
Dance Clubs
Wed & Fri-Sat, 8:30pm: Doug. Sunnyvale.
AGENDA
50
Wed, 9pm: Karaoke. Campbell.
Wed: Salsa Wednesdays. Thu: Shakalosos Banda Nights. Sun: Reggae Vybez. San Jose.
THE OFFICE BAR & GRILL
AJ’S BAR
OFF THE HOOK
Tue, 9pm: Karaoke with TJ The DJ. Sunnyvale.
O’FLAHERTY’S IRISH PUB Mon, 9pm: Karaoke. San Jose.
PLAZA GARIBALDI Wed & Sun, 7pm-close: Karaoke. San Jose.
THE QUARTER NOTE
Sexy Costumes & Teddies Dancers Shoes • Bondage DVDs & Magazines Luxury Toy Box Room
& Much More
Thu, 9pm: $5. Club Lido. San Jose.
BAMBOO LOUNGE Fri-Sat: DJ or Live Entertainment. San Jose.
BLUE PHEASANT
RED STAG LOUNGE
Nightly, 7pm: DJ and dancing. Cupertino.
REDI ROOM Thu-Sat, 9pm: DJ Curtis. San Jose.
ROCKBAR Tue, 7pm: Live Band Karaoke. San Jose.
SHERWOOD INN
BRANHAM LOUNGE Wed: Almaden Valley Beer Pong with DJ ONEmanARMY. Thu: Vintage (’80s, ’90s, Pop, Rock, Hip Hop) with DJ David Q. Fri: Quality Control with DJ DLuzion. Sat: Lounge Life with DJ Krucial and DJ NESSrock. San Jose.
BRIT ARMS DOWNTOWN
Thu-Sun, 8:30pm: Karaoke. San Jose.
Wed: DJ 512. Thu: DJ Nico & Neeber. Fri: DJ Benofficial. Sat: DJ Ready Rock. San Jose.
STATION 55
CARDIFF LOUNGE
Thu: JR. Sun: JR Diaz Family Karaoke. Tue: James. Gilroy.
TEQUILA SHOTS BAR & GRILL Mon & Wed, 9pm: Darryl. Milpitas.
THREE FLAMES RESTAURANT
25 E. Santa Clara St. Downtown SJ • 408.292.6494 • Craze4Toys.com
APPARITION
Tue: Karaoke. Sunnyvale. Nightly karaoke, 9pm-1:30am. San Jose.
LET’S PLAY
DJs and dancing every night. Mon-Sat, 6pm-1am; Sun, 8pm-12:30am. San Jose.
Every Mon, Wed, Sun, 8pm to closing: Karaoke. Every Tue and Thu, 9pm to closing: Karaoke. San Jose.
SAN PEDRO SQUARE MARKET Every Thu, 7:30pm-9:30pm: Karaoke Club. San Jose.
Every 2nd and 4th Sun: Return of the Boom Zap, underground electronic music. Campbell.
CHARLEY’S LG Wed: EDM Music. Fri-Sat, 10pm: DJ (follows live music). Los Gatos.
Tue-Thu & Sat: Karaoke. Santa Clara.
THE X BAR Every Fri, 9pm: Karaoke w/ KJ Vinnie. Cupertino.
MILANO Every Fri: Salsa Dancing. Every 3rd Fri: Strictly Freestyle. Every 4th Fri: Fuz. San Jose.
THE MOJO LOUNGE Every Thu: DJ Mist. Fremont.
MYTH TAVERNA LOUNGE Thu, 9pm: Therapy Thursday. Fri, 9pm: Soul Therapy. San Jose.
NORMANDY HOUSE LOUNGE Thu, 10pm: Dancing to DJ BenOfficial & DJ Vex. Santa Clara.
PAGODA LOUNGE Mon, 8:30pm: Vocal DUO. Tue, 9pm: Dueling Grand Pianos. Wed, 9pm: DUO. Thu, Fri & Sat, 9pm: weekly Jazz and Pop Dance bands. Sun, 7pm: Solo Guitarist with Light Vocals. Fairmont Hotel, San Jose.
PURE LOUNGE 408 Fri, Jan 29, 10pm: Henry Fog. Sat, Jan 30, 10pm: Ladies Night. Sunnyvale.
SAN JOSE BAR & GRILL Every Wed: Wingy Wednesdays. Every Thu: Tanked Thursdays w/VJ DVS Dave. Every Fri: VJ One. 2nd and 4th Saturdays, 10pm: Dluzion. San Jose.
ST. STEPHENS GREEN
DIVE BAR
STUDIO8
Thu-Sat, 10:30pm: Rotating Guest DJs.
EL RANCHO SPORTS BAR
Call for info. Evergreen Inn, San Jose.
WOODHAMS LOUNGE
Fri: Loft Fridays w/ DJ Exrated, J-Quest. Sat: The Upstairs Party w/ DJ Howhigh, DJ RQ, DJ Sequence, DJ Christylz. San Jose.
Fri & Sat: Dance Club events. San Jose.
THE ELEGANT PUB
Every Wed at 9:30pm: Karaoke. Willow Glen.
LOFT BAR AND BISTRO
Thu, 10:30pm: Reggae Thursdays. Fri: DJ Tony. Sun, 11:30am: Bottomless Mimosa. Mountain View.
CREEKSIDE LOUNGE
Fri-Sat, 8pm: Old School Dance Party. San Jose.
WILLOW DEN
Girls & Champagne. San Jose.
Fri, Jan 29, 10pm: January Jump-Off. Sat, Jan 30, 10pm: Sage the Gemini. San Jose.
SUMMIT LOUNGE Sat: Club Remix in Summit Saturdays. Four Points Sheraton, San Jose.
JOHNNY V’S Mon: ReToxx. Tue: Trap Shop. Wed: Hip-Hop/Top 40. Thu/Fri/Sat: ’70s, ’80s, ’90s Funk, House. Sun: Slow Jams, Karoake Dance Party. San Jose.
KATIE BLOOM’S Thu-Sat, 9:30pm: DJs and dancing. Campbell.
LIQUID Fri: DJs & dancing. Every 2nd Sat:
WILLOW DEN Every Wed, 9:30pm: Karaoke; Every Thu: $2 Drink Night; Every Fri/Sat: DJs featuring a variety of Top 40, Hip Hop, EDM; Every Sun: Service Industry Night (1/2 off drinks w/industry card). Willow Glen.
11 53
BIGGEST COLLECTION in Town
WE T
T-SHIRT
SHOW
HOT
SEXY DANCER& S ThursdayOsNSTAGE 11 pm Gentlem en Club 's
Monday-Saturday
Shows Start 6pm • $5 Cover after 8:3pm
393 Lincoln Ave. (at Auzerais) San Jose • 408-292-3445
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
High Class & Hot! 18+ Welcome
• Up close and personal main stage • Second stage for parties • Private dances • Bachelors/bachelorettes and • Birthday boys/girls up on stage
6PM-8PM
Find us at facebook.com/pinkpoodlesj Open Sun, Mon, Tue & Wed 6pm-2am · Thu1pm-2am · Fri & Sat 1pm-3am 328 S. Bascom Ave, SJ · 408.292.2685 · pinkpoodle.com · 18 yrs + w/ID
DAILY $5
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
10 54
FREE ADMISSION WITH:
AD SIZE:
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE
STRETCH1/2h INTO IT!
GAY-BI
ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE
A Health Benefit for Men Over 50
- THIS AD - HOTEL ROOM KEY - LOCAL ID UNTIL 10PM
DESIGNER: NAME HERE
PUB DATE: 00/00/15
Meet singles in person at
ISSUE NUMBER: our 63-channel arcade Metro Silicon Valley 15XX 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
FULL BAR (21+) PRIVATE COUCH & VIP ROOMS
Adult World
largest selection of adult toys 3435 El Camino Real • Near Lawrence Expwy. next to carwash • Santa Clara
Numbiya Aziz
NOW AUDITIONING ENTERTAINERS TUE-FRI 6PM-2AM • SAT 8PM-2AM • CLOSED SUN-MON
• Athletic-Thai stretch • Work/sports/golf injury • Holistic fitness • Prostate health • Sciatica/ Arthritis • Diabetes/HBP/nutrition • Pelvic inflammation/hernia • Muscle spasm/nerve damage • Performance anxiety
NOW OPEN IN SAN JOSE! 408.600.1763
menshealthspecialist.org
CUPID’S CORNER 408 Blossom Hill Rd • SJ 408.226.5683
AD SIZE:
ADVERTISER: JJP/C
Evaluations
BE CAREFUL OF IMITATORS! All Recommendations must be done in person by a CA Certified MD or you are NOT legal! If your Rec was done by Skype, Notify the Medical Board.
BY DR. RAJA TOKE
SHOW US ANY COMPETING AD AND WE WILL BEAT IT BY $5!*
*With Purchase of ID Card
YOUR SJ420 EVAL CARD: • Allows you to grow your own Meds indoor or out • Visit any dispensary in California • Legally carry MMJ in California • Issued by a CA Licensed Doctor • Verification by Dispensary or Law Enforcement available 24/7 • Recommendation valid for 1 full year • No hidden extra fees • 100% confidential and hassle free • Most recognized clinic by law enforcement in the Bay Area!
ASK ABOUT OUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY SPECIALS
FREE EVALUATION ION If you don’t qualify ualify
*
SHOW US ANY COMPETING AD AND WE WILL BEAT IT BY $5! Helping Patients Since 2010
408.998.0980 SJ420.com BOOK YOUR APPT ONLINE 24/7
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
San Jose 420
11 55
*With Purchase of ID Card
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon-Sat 10am-7pm Sun 12pm-5pm
Vallejo Location: (432 Tennessee St. • 707.644.1667
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
115 N. 4th St. San Jose (Between St. John & James)
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
56 10
SAN JOSE’S PREMIER COLLECTIVE
GET A
*
FREE GRA M
FOR THE
BI G GA ME
1695 S. 7TH ST. SAN JOSE
...just a stone’s throw from the stadium *Offer valid for first time customers only with purchase 1/5/15-1/7/15- may be subject to change Only individuals w/legally recognized medical cannabis recommendations and/or identification cards may obtain marijuana from medical cannabis collectives/dispensaries.In strict compliance with Prop. 215 and SB420 HS11362.5, HS11367.7.
San Jose’sMost Affordable 420 Cards San Jose
420 Evaluations By Dr. Raja Toke
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
Winter Compassion Deal Medical Marijuana Cards
19
$
99
Starting as low as:
VOTED BEST BEST CLINIC CLINIC IN VOTED IN 2012 2015 IN ALL OF THE BAY AREA! IN ALL OF THE BAY AREA!
*Price does not include Letter of Recommendation. Call for details.
New Patients $48 / Renewals $38
We beat any competitor’s price by $5
*With purchase of cannabis photo id card. Must bring proof. Restrictions apply
115 N. 4th St. SJ (between St. John & St. James) • 408.998.0980 • Mon-Sat 10a-7p Sun 12p-5p
Recommendations are valid for 1 year for qualifying patients Walk-ins welcome all day • If you don't qualify your visit is free Visit our Websit to book your appt now: SJ420.com
SFBAYTHC EVALUATIONS GRAND REOPENING!! $ 95 $ 29.95 NEW Renewals
49
from any Doctor
• Most Trusted • 24 Hours Verification • Phone & Online • Walk-Ins Welcome
OPEN 7 DAYS A WE EK
636 E. Santa Clara St., SJ 95112 (Across the street from old San Jose Hospital) Open Mon-Sat 10:30-6:30, Sun 11-3
Ph: 408.938.0800 • 408.931.2062
PATIENTS CENTER M ED I CA L M AR I JU AN A EVALUAT IO NS
100% Confidential OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! 9AM-7PM
CA-LICENSED PHYSICIANS ONLY. VALID IN ALL OF CA. FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO BOOK AN APPT CALL.
408.658.3226
WE WILL MATCH ANY COMPETITORS PRICE!*
29.95
$
FOR RENEWALS
$ 39.95
LOCATED RIGHT BY HWY 101 & TULLY RD
FOR NEW PATIENTS
1661 BURDETTE DR., STE. F • SAN JOSE 95121 *must show proof of com peting ad. pr icing and discounts subje c t to change. te r ms and conditions apply.
AD SIZE:
ADVERTISER: NAME HERE
GET YOUR 1/2h OWN
ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE: NAME HERE
Super Bowl
PUB DATE: 00/00/15
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
SAN JOSE
11 57
DESIGNER: NAME HERE
Metro Silicon Valley 380 South First St. San Jose, CA 95113 | 408.298.8000
ISSUE NUMBER: 15XX
OF TOP SHELF SOUR DIESEL FOR ONLY $35!
1761 SMITH AVE, SAN JOSE 95112
HazeDispensary
@haze_dispensary
408.266.HAZE
HazeDispensary
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
WE PAY ALL TAXES!
HAZE420.COM
58 10
THE STRAIGHT DOPE
By CECIL ADAMS
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
CECIL@METRONEWS.COM
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
TOPSHELF STRAINS NOW $10/GRAM & $35/EIGHTH
BRING A FRIEND AND RECEIVE A FREE GIFT
FIRST-TIME PATIENTS RECEIVE A FREE GIFT
1014 TIMOTHY DR., SJ 95133 | 408.849.3706 9A-9P MONDAY-SATURDAY | 10A-8P SUNDAY
A friend warns that the impending collapse of the petrodollar, devised by Henry Kissinger as the world’s reserve currency when the United States dropped the gold standard, will bring down the entire U.S. financial system. How worried should I be?—Kingsley Day placed them in U.S. and British banks, How many gallons of water should which in turn used the dollars to make you stock in the emergency cellar? Will loans to developing countries that three AR-15s suffice, or does the wellneeded the money to import oil, the equipped arsenal really demand four? If resulting relationship of indebtedness a these are your concerns, Kingsley, you’ll boon to U.S. global hegemony. Sound a find a fantastic resource in the Internet, bit Kissingerian? Well, the whole thing the petrodollar and the havoc that’ll was Henry’s baby: he called the scheme result from its impending collapse being “recycling petrodollars.” an extremely popular topic among the What relevance does it have black-helicopter set. You can’t go wrong nowadays? Well, to hear the, er, more with freeze-dried peas, I hear. concerned parties tell it, if the oilA calmer assessment reveals a more producing countries decide to stop prosaic concept. What we mean using the dollar for oil transactions— when we talk about petrodollars is switching to, say, the euro—it’ll send international oil sales as transacted in the world economy into a tailspin. U.S. dollars. The dollar has long been the There has been a little attrition, most standard currency for all such dealings. notably in 2000 when the United The primary world reserve Nations’ “oil for food” program gave currency, meanwhile, is the very same Iraq permission to sell its oil for euros; dollar—full stop. The origins of this hardcore skeptics cite this threat arrangement hark back to Bretton to the rule of the petrodollar as a Woods, the 1944 confab of Allied contributing factor in the U.S. invasion. nations where it was decided that the Since then Iran has switched to dollar would be the world’s backup conducting its oil transactions in euros, buck, backed itself by gold at a fixed and recently Gazprom Neft, Russia’s rate of $35 per ounce. International third-largest oil producer, began selling spending, though—and it was a spendy oil to China in exchange for renminbi. era, what with the rebuilding of But an abrupt abandonment of the Europe, the Great Society, the Vietnam petrodollar system is in nobody’s best War, etc—promptly grew to dwarf the interest: since most major nations Fort Knox reserves, which at one point continue to back their own currency held only a third of the gold needed to with the U.S. dollar, everybody’s got a cover the dollars in foreign circulation, stake in keeping that currency stable. prompting fears of a run on the place. That’s not to say the petrodollar In 1971 President Richard Nixon regime isn’t a bit sensitive these days, suspended the direct convertibility but it’s for another reason: fracking. of the U.S. dollar into gold, bringing Environmental implications aside, about a system of floating, rather than hydraulic fracturing has put major fixed, exchange rates. Among other shale oil reserves in play and (for things, this move, the so-called Nixon now, at least) upended the world Shock, increased the ability of the energy market. In 2011, for instance, Federal Reserve to influence monetary the U.S. imported about $360 billion policy, which in turn, decades later, led worth of oil; by 2015, that number yahoos like Ron Paul and Ted Cruz to had dropped to $120 billion. One pine for a return to the gold standard. estimate last year pegged OPEC’s 2015 (Most economists continue to see this profits at $350 billion lower than as a pretty bad idea.) those in 2014—the largest year-overBut the key development of the era, year drop ever. Oil gazillionaires who for our purposes, was a deal where, spent the commodity-boom aughts in exchange for U.S. military support buying up Manhattan penthouses and other preferential treatment, are now rapidly burning through the Saudis agreed to conduct oil their petrodollar savings; if the trend transactions in dollars only. Soon continues, Bloomberg suggested, OPEC as a whole signed on. As prices demand will fall for “everything from shot up in the ’70s, oil-exporting European government debt to U.S. real countries in the Middle East found estate.” Not nothing, in other words, themselves with more dollars than but neither is it global collapse. they knew what to do with. They
11 59
SAN JOSE’S LARGEST TOP-SHELF MENU
Buddy’s Space Oddity
•30+ Strains of Premium Flowers! •BEST Customer-Rewards Program! •Senior Discounts on Wednesdays!
Buddy’s Black Jack
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
BUDDY’S CANNABIS
Buddy’s Gorilla Glue #4
•WIDEST Selection of Edibles! •Food-Truck Fridays: 11:30a.m.-1:30p.m.! •Up to 25% OFF Daily on Top-Shelf Strains!
A Not-For-Profit Collective Operating in strict accordance w/ CA PROP 215 & SB 420 CA HS.11362.5 & HS11362.7
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
OPEN DAILY 1075 N 10th Street, San Jose BuddysCannabis.Com • (408) 298-8837
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
60 10
COME VISITthe
DAILY SPECIALS
NEW LOCATION
Monday Madness
4 Gram 1/8ths (excluding private reserve)
2 Stamp Tuesday
AND RECEIVE A
Get double rewards to earn free medicine faster (Most generous rewards program in the industry)
FREE TOP SHELF GRAM!
Heavy Weight Wednesday
(ALL PATIENTS VISITING OUR NEW LOCATION FOR THE 1st TIME, NEW PATIENTS, & REFERRALS.)
Manager’s choice on top shelf, mid grade, and budget ounces on sale ($99 - $225)
Tasty Thursday
Buy 2 edibles, get 3rd 1/2 off
Foodie Friday
Light lunch provided with purchase (11am - 1pm)
Shatterday
“Largest selection of high quality and affordable medication.”
Super Sunday
752 COMMERCIAL ST. SUITE 20
Manager’s concentrate specials 20% off all connoisseur grade strains
San Jose, CA 95112
(All $25+ purchases receive entry for $150 weekly raffle)
ALL OUR PRICES INCLUDE TAX
10% OFF
OUR EXTENSIVE SELECTION OF CONNOISSEUR ICE WAX, ROSINS, SOLVENTLESS OILS, AND HASH. MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON Expires 2/28/16 subject to availability
buy 2 get one 1/2 off OUR EXTENSIVE SELECTION OF VAPE PEN CARTRIDGES MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON Expires 2/28/16
Purple Lotus Patient Center
subject to availability
25% OFF
(408)456-0420
www.purplelotuspatientcenter.com
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
1 GRAM of LIVE RESIN CO2 SHATTER MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON Expires 2/28/16 subject to availability
#LiveLoveLotus Ask how to join our Mobile VIP group for select SPECIAL OFFERS + DISCOUNTS.
AMPLE ON SITE PARKING
9am-9pm 7 days a week
EASILY ACCESSIBLE 880 680 & 101
INTERSTATES
21+ ONLY Patients with valid cannabis recomendation and ID
11 61
E-Cigs E-Juice Vape Pens Microvapes & Pax Pipes in Glass, Wood & Metal Top Shelf Smoking Accessories
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Paramount Imports The Legend Lives On‌
Rolling Papers Incense Candles Gifts T-Shirts Posters
SJ, CA 95126 408.286.9839
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
455 Meridian Ave.
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
62 10
11 63
ATTENTION: State governmental entities can NOT create or recreate laws that organizations and individuals simply can’t abide by or follow without blatantly violating a superior law known as the Federal (CSA) Controlled Substance Act! The first thing that everyone MUST know and fully understand is the federal “Supremacy Clause.” The Supremacy Clause is the provision in Article Six, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution. This establishes the Constitution, federal statutes, and treaties as the “supreme law of the land.” It provides that these are the highest form of law in the United States legal system, and mandates that all the state judges MUST follow federal law when a conflict arises between federal law and either a state Constitution or state law of any state. Question: How can California establish or recreate any state law or amend the state Constitution without violating the "supreme law of the land" known as the federal Controlled Substance Act? Answer: In our opinion...they can’t! As long as federal laws like the CSA, IRS Rule 280E and federal banking laws exist NO state can lawfully legalize something that is federally illegal! The federal governmental entities may NOT prosecute or pursue the states themselves but they’ve recently made it clear that they will go after organizations and individuals.
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
State Law vs Federal Law
So….We’ll All Take the Fifth! The Fifth Amendment’s right against self-incrimination permits an organization or individual to refuse to follow a law or laws that could be used against the organization or individual in a criminal prosecution. This right is to inhibit the government from compelling a confession or illegal activity through force, coercion or deception.
“Knowledge is power and this is our gift (power) to the People"
patientsrightsmatter.com
CANNABISCONUNDRUM.COM
Copyright DJA 2015
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
Paid Advertisment
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
64 10
21+ Only !
Lowest Prices!
$1 FOR A GRAM* SUPERSIZE YOUR 5 GRAM 8TH FOR A BUCK!
* T H AT ' S O N E $ 1 G R A M P E R 5 G R A M 1 / 8 T H A L L DAY E V E RY DAY !
Highes t Qualit y!
O U R D A I LY S P E C I A L S A R E B A C K !
The City of San Jose “APPROVES” illegal entities (for profit corporations) and their unlawful business activities so they can TAX (also profit) our medicine!
Wednesday & Friday Noon-5pm
In the City's own words: (The Marijuana Business Tax in imposed on every person engaged in marijuana business in the city of San Jose’. Payment of the tax in accordance with Municipal Code Chapter 4.66 does not authorize unlawful business.)
• INDOOR MEDICINE SPECIAL •
33% OFF WHEN YOU GET 5 OR 7GRAMS - LIMITED TIME ONLY
00 Out 5grams = $$5000 The 7grams = 70 Door
AVAILABLE NOW! Call, Click or Come in.
3g KIEF or Hash for $25
Please visit our website for full details, rules & available delivery areas
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
(Only Natural Extracted Concentrates)
Only patients with legally recognized medical cannabis recommendation AND a valid California ID may obtain cannabis products from Medimarts. Medimarts is a non-porfit collective operating in strict compliance with CA Prop 215 and SB420 H&S 11362.5 &11362.7 All New Patients, Seniors, Vets & Disabled Receive a FREE ½ gram added to a minimum $20 donation or a FREE edible or a FREE pre-rolled joint* *(While Supplies Last, One Offer per Patient per Week, All Rights Reserved)
OPEN - Mon-Fri 10am-7pm Sat 12pm-7pm CLOSED-Sunday
1851
LITTLE ORCHARD ST. SAN JOSE CA (OFF CURTNER & MONTEREY) www.medimarts.com Copyright DJA 2015
11 65
Mini Muffin ................. $1 Ganjell-O Shooter ....... $1 Pudding Pot ................ $1 Mini Popcorn Ball ....... $2
Big Game Edibles!
A LT E R N AT I V E MEDICINE
$5 EACH
OPE N - M on - Fr i 1 0 a m -7 p m S a t 12p m - 7 p m CL O S E D - S u n d a y
$1
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
HOME OF THE $5 EDIBLES
10 66
ADVICE GODDESS
By AMY ALKON
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
AdviceAmy@AOL.com
I’m a 35-year-old woman, and I’ve been involved with a guy around my age for almost two years. It’s been “open.” Well, that is, he’s had the freedom to sleep with other people. I haven’t wanted to. I finally realized that I am not happy with this and want more, but he made it very clear that he’s not interested in being monogamous—with me or anybody. I’m having a very difficult time cutting things off, as there’s a lot that’s great about our relationship. How do you leave somebody you really care about who you know is bad for you?—Stuck
Thank You for Voting Us FIRST PLACE for BEST MICROBREWERY & BEST MICROBREWERY FOOD in Silicon Valley!!
Enjoy Dining On Our Patio & Our New Happy Hours Monday-Friday 3:00-6:00, Late Night 9:00-Close Sunday-Thursday & 10:00-Close Friday and Saturday.
LO C AT E D I N T H E P R U N E YA R D
1875 S. Bascom Ave. Unit 700 Campbell, CA 95008 408-377-0707 | RockBottom.com
cubesouls
By John Rasmussen
It isn’t exactly a shocker that the thing you want to be asking your boyfriend when he comes home is not “Hey, cuddlebug, how was your booty call?” There’s this notion that being sexually sophisticated means being all “no probski” about your partner having sex on the “I love a parade” model. But it turns out that jealousy isn’t so easily disabled. Research by evolutionary psychologist David Buss suggests that jealousy is basically love’s burglar alarm—an evolved psychological warning system that goes off in response to threats to a relationship. So, sure, you can try to talk yourself into being cool with the sexual variety pack—just like when you hear your downstairs window breaking, you can try to roll over and catch a little more shut-eye while the burglars ransack your house. It must seem kind of unbelievable to be so miserable yet so unable to keep enough of a grip on that to get out. You can probably blame the limits of what’s called “working memory.” It’s essentially a mental workspace—a kind of whiteboard in your head—where you lay out and kick around a few sets of information.
These info sets are called “chunks,” and one example might be the experiences that make up the idea “he cooks me these wonderful dinners!” But according to research by psychologist Nelson Cowan, working memory holds only about four chunks at once. We also tend to give priority seating to info sets that justify the choices we’ve made. So, all aboard for the he’s a great kisser chunk, the he was really sweet when I was in the hospital chunk, etc., etc. And whoops—whaddya know— seems there’s no room for he insists on having sex buffet-style. You need to look at all the information at once, and this requires a piece of paper and a pen. On either half of the page, list the pros and cons of being with him, giving them blocks of space that correspond to their importance. For example, his home-cooked meals should probably get a sliver of space on the pro side, while his need to go home with Linda should get a big block on the con side. Carry this paper around and look at it until it becomes clear to you that you need to be somebody’s “one and only” and not just the one before their Tuesday tennis lesson.
I’m a 32-year-old guy, and my girlfriend has been complaining that the only time I’m cuddly or affectionate is when I want to have sex. I don’t really see the problem. It’s my way of initiating versus … I don’t know, asking her … which would be weird.—Confused Aw … how sweet … cuddling that comes with a trap door to the sex dungeon! From a woman’s point of view, it’s nice to have your boyfriend, say, grab your hand, and not just because he’d like you to put it on his penis. This isn’t just some mysterious form of sexual etiquette. It comes out of how women evolved to be “commitment skeptics,” as evolutionary psychologist Martie Haselton puts it. Erring on the side of underestimating a man’s level of commitment was how ancestral women kept themselves from ending up single mothers with a bunch of cave-lings to feed.
Economist Robert Frank calls love “a solution to the commitment problem.” As he explains it, being emotionally bonded keeps you from making a coldly rational calculation about who’s got more to offer, your girlfriend or the new neighbor. So, because women are on the lookout for signs that you love them, a hug is a hug is a hug needs to be the deal much of the time. Otherwise, whenever you’re affectionate, it’ll just seem like the boyfriend version of a wino telling a woman she’s beautiful— because it would be really beautiful if she’d give him the last dollar he needs to get drunk on cheapo aftershave.
©2016, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Got a problem? Write Amy Alkon, 550 S. First St., San Jose, CA 95113, or email adviceamy@aol.com.
67
SPRING WELLS DAY SPA
408-826-5197
REAL PEOPLE REAL DESIRE REAL FUN.
STEVENS CREEK BLVD, CUPERTINO
Try FREE: 408-404-7586 More Local Numbers: 1-800-926-6000
Ahora espa単ol Livelinks.com 18+
FREE TRIAL Adult Entertainment Adult Employment
Drivers/Entertainers
First Executive is now hiring men & women entertainers and drivers.310-281-1103 Fetish
Leggy Cougar Over 50
Bambi Loves cream, fetish & Dominating You! Busty 38D-24-36 leggy blonde. Incall.408-605-3465 Male To Male Massage
Nurturing Touch
Mature COUGAR
BAMBI
408-605-3465
Relaxing, discreet full body massage, Body Electric & Esalen Practitioner. Incalls only, open 7 days. 408-515-5778, Pete
A Relaxing Massage
Oil massage. 7 days. 10am9pm. Call Steve, CMT for appt. 408-224-0504
Nice Asian Man
Tall, well built Asian man is offering a nice massage at a discreet location.408-929-2263, John Adult Massage
Beauty Asian Massage
Enjoy a wonderful massage by a sexy Asian lady. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. 101, Montoque & 880408-661-4060
Discreet Chat Guy to Guy
408.342.4129
*Total Relaxation
Attractive Caucasian woman. Safe & discreet. Personal shower, before & after, massage and waxing available. 408-661-3778, Annie
Pretty Asian Lady
Nice place, clean, private, body massage with a soft handed touch. 408-613-6831
Sexy Chinese
Exotic Chinese wants to give you a satisfying, sensual, erotic experience. Come for fun. Private location.408-661-7200
Bella Aroma Spa
FREE TO LISTEN
Great Aroma therapy with Best Relaxation massage! 1765 Scott Blvd. #105, cross street El Camino Real. Santa Clara, 95050. 408-241-8900
AND REPLY TO ADS Free Code: Metro San Jose
$19.99 Massage Free Wax
Sweet Asian girls offer hot stone & cupping, pain relief with a relaxing massage. Private rooms & Tea Shower. Downtown San Jose., near Hwy #87, Hwy #280, Hwy #880 & the 101. 408-630-0982
Enjoy Asian Massage
First time, $10 OFF. Enjoy a nice relaxing massage by nice Asian ladies. Private rooms with shower. 408-777-8078
The hottest place to meet Latinos!
Try FREE:
FIND REAL GAY MEN NEAR YOU
San Jose: 408-380-0587 (408) 514-1111 More Local Numbers: 1-800-831-1111
fonochatlatino.com 18+
Palo Alto:
www.megamates.com 18+
(650) 223-0505
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
$10 OFF 1ST TIME
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
68
classifieds PLACING AN AD 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 550 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
JOBS UX Engineer (UI/Usability/Sys Mgmt Arch/Sr Engr) sought by Tegile Systems in Newark, CA. Req BS in CS, Engg, or rltd + 7 yrs exp. Exp w/ Usr Intrfc frmwrk dsgn. Auth to wrk in US. Aply @ www. jobpostingtoday.com Ref #71647
Member of Technical Staff-UI Engineer at Santa Clara, CA: Resp to turn requirements/mocks into simple, elegant, optimal solutions that balance the needs of the health of the technology stack but always guided by the company’s business needs. Email res to info@cohesity.com. Refer to job#KTR2016. Cohesity, Inc.
Designer/Product at San Jose, CA:
Member of Technical Staff at Mountain View, CA:
Design the User Interface (UI) for Nutanix’s management platform. Res to Nutanix, Inc, 1740 Technology Dr, Suite 400, San Jose, CA 95110. Attn: HR Job#1142016-505.
building a test platform to test all parts of ZeroStack software including automated testing of an Openstack based private cloud, end-to-end testing of Openstack cloud and monitoring layer built as a SaaS offering. Email res to info@zerostack.com. Refer to job#AML2016. Zerostack, Inc.
Software Engineer to design and develop features of F5 Application Delivery Networking products, including design and implementation of current source code. See http://www.caljobs.ca.gov and CA SWA Job Number 14619497 for specific details. FT, San Jose, CA. Apply to: F5 Networks, Inc., Attn Y. Malina, ZZ19831, 401 Elliott Avenue W, Seattle, WA 98119.
Tens of thousands of items, only one you ARE YOU READY?
We’re now hiring part-time seasonal associates in San Jose and looking for fun, problem solvers to join the team
AMAZON.COM/SEASONAL Amazon is an Affirmative Action - Equal Opportunity Employer - Minority / Female / Disability / Veteran
ENGINEERING Zscaler, Inc. is accepting resumes for the position of Senior QA Engineer in San Jose, CA. Define and implement procedures for functional, load, performance, and stress tests. Develop test cases and review test cases developed by other team members to ensure clarity, accuracy, and efficacy. Mail resume to Zscaler, Inc., Staffing Department, 110 Rose Orchard Way, San Jose, CA 95134. Must reference Ref. # SQAE-AK.
Member of Technical Staff at San Jose, CA: Use JavaScript/AngularJS/HTML/Java to develop the Graphical User Interface that allows customers to manage/ configure/monitor a distributed storage system. Email resume to jobs@ pernixdata.com. Refer to job#PDJOB-11 when apply. Pernixdata, Inc.
Engineer/Software at Sunnyvale, CA: Assist the development of the backend systems for the company’s products, including Linux modules, processes, distributed and scalable web services. Email Res to careers@platform9.net. Refer to job#SV-SW-BE-1 when apply. Platform9 Systems, Inc.
Member of Technical Staff (multiple positions) at San Jose, CA: Design software components for a storage system which store and retrieve data in a highly performant and scale-out way. Email resume to jobs@ pernixdata.com. Refer to job#PDJOB-10 when apply. Pernixdata, Inc.
Nokia USA Inc. has a position in Sunnyvale, CA. Research and Development Lead: Work on R&D, product portfolio to include industrial research, image processing software development, computational photography; embedded software & hardware; & other duties/skills. Mail resume to Nokia USA Recruiter, c/o Amelia Gutierrez, 3001 Lava Ridge Ct., Ste 160, Roseville, CA 95661 & note Job ID#:NUS-SV15-RESDL
Business Analyst (Mountain View, CA) sought by ProQuest, LLC. Will apply domain knowl of critical product functionality to identify areas of need & help dsgn solutions, & understand details of bus., identify functionality gaps & provide solution options. Req. Bach. deg & 5 yrs exp. Resume to: ProQuest LLC, Jae Lee, 789 E. Eisenhower Pkwy., Ann Arbor, MI 48108.
Senior File Systems Engineer sought by Tegile Systems, Inc. in Newark, CA to dsgn & dev sftw. MS+5 in CS or rltd. Exp drvng dsgn of nw file sys, file sys featres, & prf. Exp & actl implmt & prod dlvry of de-dup & cmprsn tech into file sys. Exp w/Unix/BSD/Linux sys dvlp. Exp w/usng OS & kernel tools & facilties & enhncng thos facilties fr perf enhncmnts. Knowl of: Unix/Linux memry mgmt, threadng, & state machs; & of Solaris & C dvlp, C++. US wrk auth. Aply @ www.jobpostingtoday.com ID#58383.
Sr. Director, Technical Accounting (Mountain View, CA): Advise clients & consultants regarding complex acctg standards (US GAAP, IFRS) & SEC compliance. Prep for & effect capital raising transactions. Bach’s in Acctg or rltd + 5 yrs exp as Acctg Dir or rltd reqd. Resumes: Accretive Solutions, Northern California, Inc, Attn: Jason DeSoto, jdesoto@accretivesolutions.com
Gold Club San Jose Entertainers Auditioning entertainers. Call for details. 81 West Santa Clara St. 408-294-6666, info@goldclubsj.com
Director of Quality Assurance at Santa Clara, CA: Build a QA discipline within the company & resp for ensuring QA is a consistent factor in all software & hardware development, manage a team of QA engineers & do hands on QA. Res to info@cohesity.com. Refer to job#CRM2015. Cohesity, Inc.
Sr. Integration Engineers Resp for firmware/software systems integration for NextNav’s transmitter & receiver systems. NextNav, LLC, Sunnyvale, CA. c/o jobs@nextnav.com. Ref. 1E
MetricStream Inc. seeks Sr. Software Development Engineers (Job Code: SK) in Palo Alto,CA. Plan, guide & coordinate dvlpmnt of Enterprise Governance sftwre &data mining algorithms using R & JavaScript; Write comp progrms forenterprise governance, risk & compliance apps using R & Linux; Consultw/ stakeholders to assess computing systm reqs & dvlp products usingLinux & JavaScript that fit end user reqs; Review & manage techprojects & evaluate proposals to determine feasible projects goals; &Perform tech dvlpmnt, implemntatn & testing of new programs & systms. Resumes w/ Job Code to HR, 2600 E. Bayshore Rd, Palo Alto, CA 94303.Job details:http://www.metricstream.com
55+ YEARS OLD & SEEKING WORK? FREE job assistance & training. Must meet low-income guidelines. Call SOURCEWISE, Speak with a Community Resource Professional in Senior Employment Services (408) 350-3200, Option 5
Computer Infogain Corp. seeks Consultant (Proj. Mgr.): Manage multiple IT projects. May be assigned to work at client sites in Santa Clara County, CA. Resume to worksite: 485 Alberto Way, #100, Los Gatos, CA 95032, Attn: D. Sharma
MUSIC ThugWorldRecords.com Thug World Records explosive label based out of San Jose CA with major features lil Wayne E-40 Ghetto Politician Punish. Free downloads mp3s Ringtones. Over 22 albums online. Call or log on thugworldrecords.com 408-561-5458 ask for gp
LEGALS & PUBLIC NOTICES FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612072 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Amazing Face Labs, 5393 Silver Trail Ct., San Jose, CA, 95138, Bonnie Griffith. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein 12/5/2015. /s/Bonnie GriffithThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 12/15/2015. (pub Metro 1/13, 1/20, 1/27, 2/03/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612745 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Chavelas Restaurant, 960 S. First St., San Jose, CA, 95110, Gloria S. Orozco, 622 Lotus St., San Jose, CA, 95116. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Gloria S. Orozco This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/07/2016. (pub Metro 1/13, 1/20, 1/27 2/02/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612700 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Dobashi-Kumata Partners, 757 N. 20th St., San Jose, CA, 95112, Perry T. Dobashi, Toni T. Dobashi, Gayle Kumata, 19987 Knollweed Dr., Saratoga, CA, 95070, Conrad Kumata, Amy E. Dobashi, 2332 Loma Park Drive, San Jose, CA, 95124, Tom & Joyce Dobashi, 665 Eisenhower Dr., San Jose, CA, 95128, Joyce, Dobashi. This business is conducted by a general partnership. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein 6/1/04. /s/Perry T. Dobashi This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/06/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
GOT PIANO ? rodinospianotuning.com Start the New Year with a fine tuned piano Expert Piano Tunings All Repairs, Rebuilding, Refinishing Also buy and Sell Used Pianos 40 years Experience PTG Registered Craftsman Call Rich 408-260-2740
STATEMENT OF WITHDRAWAL FROM PARTNERSHIP OPERATING UNDER FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME #612396 The following person(s) / entity (ies) has / have withdrawn as a gerneral partner(s) from the partnership operating under the fictitious business name(s): Valley Hair And Nails, 1175 E. Julian St., San Jose, CA, 95116-1091, Lien Ngoc Tran, 706 Creekland Cir., San Jose, CA, 95133. Filed in Santa Clara County on 5/17/2010 under file #538059 This business was conducted by a general partnership /s/Lien N. Tran This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 12/28/2015. (pub Metro 1/06, 1/13, 1/20, 1/27/2016/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612728 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: QED Environmental, 636 University Avenue, San Jose, CA, 95110, Traid Mark, Inc. This business is conducted by a corporation. Above entity was formed in the state of CaliforniaRegistrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 10/8/2003. Refile of previous file #433900/s/John R. FinniganPresident#C2253981This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/07/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612437 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Silicon Valley Softworks, 1214 La Terrace Circle, San Jose, CA, 95123, Richard V. Nygord. This business is conducted by an individual.Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name (s) listed below on 12/29/2015 first filing./s/ Richard V. NygordThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 12/29/2015. (pub Metro 1/06, 1/13, 1/20/, 1/27/2016)
Carpet Carpet Laminates Center Hardwood
408.871.0792
Vinyl
535B Salmar Ave,#B, Campbell Lic# 792342
All Major Brands Free Estimates Better Carpet • Better Service • Low Prices
Shop at Home
GUARANTEED INSTALLATION
69 JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
NVIDIA Corporation, market leader in graphics & digital media processors, has engineering opportunities in Santa Clara, CA for an ASIC Engr (ASICDE394) Design and implement the industry’s leading Graphics, Video / Media and Communications Processors; Sys Design Engr (SYSDE53) Characterize Tegra Central Processing Unit (CPU), ARM and Denver cores, across different process, voltage and temperature conditions to optimize performance and power; Sys SW Engr (SSWE370) Work closely with both hardware engineers and other software engineers to design, develop, and debug many functional aspects of our multimedia accelerator devices that are used on desktops, notebooks, workstations, and gaming consoles; ASIC Engr (ASICDE395) Design and implement the industry’s leading Graphics, Video/Media and Communications Processors; Sr Sys SW Engr (SSWE351) Design, implement and optimize USB and networking drivers for NVIDIA’s processors; ASIC Engr (ASICDE384) Design and implement the industry’s leading graphics, video/ media & communications processors, including 2d and 3d graphics, mpeg, video, network protocols, and memory subsystem design; Verification Engr II (VERE02) Design and implement the industry’s leading Graphics, Video / Media & Communications Processors including 2D and 3D graphics, mpeg, video, audio, network protocols, highspeed IO interfaces and bus protocols, and memory subsystem design; Sys SW Engr (SSWE354) Design, implement and optimize the driver stack that controls NVIDIA’s GPU hardware; Sys SW Engr (SSWE355) Provide technical support for NVIDIA’s Tegra SOC chip business; Verification Engr (VERE03) Engage in all aspects of verification of CPUs for ASICs targeted at the mobile, automotive, and set top box markets; Sys SW Engr (SSWE349) Engage in complex software engineering projects to support NVIDIA’s high performance SOC business; and Dev Tech SW Engr IV (DTSE05) Work with embedded architectures and data-parallel and/or GPGPU programming. If interested, ref job code and send resume to: NVIDIA Corporation. Attn: MS04 (J.Green). 2701 San Tomas Expressway, Santa Clara, CA 95050. Please no phone calls, emails or faxes.
The
Engineering /Technology
metroactive.com | sanjose.com | metrosiliconvalley.com | JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016
70
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #611618
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #613113
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Paratransit Providers, 32778 Rocky Water Ln., San Jose, CA, 95148, Yihui Lin. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 12/1/2015./s/Yihui LinThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 12/01/2015. (pub Metro 1/06, 1/13, 1/20, 1/27//2016)
The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Pacific Sierra Property Management, 643 N 3rd St., #3, San Jose, CA, 95112, Louis M. Snyder. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name (s) listed below in 1997. Refile of previous file #415429 after 40 days o expiration date./s/Louis M. SnyderThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/20/2016. (pub Metro 1/27, 2/03, 2/10, 2/17/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612462 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: All Bay Demolition, 260 W. Dunne Ave., Apt 36, Morgan Hill, CA, 95037, Abonfilio E. Guzman. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein on 12/30/15. /s/Abonfilio E. GuzmanThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 12/30/2015. (pub Metro 1/06, 1/13, 1/20, 1/27//2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #613002 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Get On Record, 166 Sweetberry Court, San Jose, CA, 95136, Jason Patrick Sayler. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Jason Patrick SaylerThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/14/2016(pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #6125741 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Alison Barker Physical Therapy, 1279 Curtiss Ave., San Jose, CA, 95125, Alison Barker. This business is conducted by an indivdual. Registrant began transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein 1/4/2016. /s/Alison BarkerThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/04/2016. (pub Metro 1/06, 1/13, 1/20, 1/27/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #613242 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Sky Day Spa, 175 S. Capitol Ave., #1, San Jose, CA, 95127, Quan Do, 1741 Homegate Dr., San Jose, CA, 95148.This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name (s) listed herein. /s/Quan DoThis statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/22/2016. (pub Metro 1/27, 2/03, 2/10, 2/17/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612931 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Dong VI, 1310 Tully Road, Suite 105, San Jose, CA, 95122. This business is conducted by a corporation. Above entity was formed in the state of California. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Huyen Thi Kim Bich TranPresident & CEO #3856150This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/12/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612923 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Silicon Valley Audit Group, 1310 North First Street, San Jose, CA, 95131, Technology Credit Union. This business is conducted by a corporation. Above entity was formed in the state of California. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein. /s/Joe Anzalone EVP & Chief Banking Officer #C2122654 This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/12/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #613203 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Le Coucou, 1155 Tasman Dr., Sunnyvale, CA, 94089, eBranding Inc.This business is conducted by an corporation.Above entity was formed in the state of California. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name (s) listed herein. /s/Cien ShenCEO#C3666717This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/22/2016. (pub Metro 1/27, 2/03, 2/10, 2/17/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612818 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Ay Caramba Taqueria La Bamba, 580 North Rengstroff Ave., Mountain View, CA, 94043, Taqueria La Bamba LLC. This business is conducted by a limited liability company. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein.Refile of previous file #545248 refiled prior to expiration date or within 40 days past expiration. with NO CHANGES/s/Oscar E. Munoz President#20415010270This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/08/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT #612819 The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: Taqueria La Bamba Restaurant, 580 North Rengstroff Ave., Mountain View, CA, 94043, Taqueria La Bamba LLC. This business is conducted by a limited liability company. Registrant has not yet begun transacting business under the fictitious business name or names listed herein.Refile of previous file #545247 refiled prior to expiration date or within 40 days past expiration. with NO CHANGES/s/Oscar E. Munoz President#20415010230This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Clara County on 1/08/2016. (pub Metro 1/20, 1/27, 2/03, 2/10/2016)
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY ARIES (March 21-April 19): Do you know Emily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights? At one point, the heroine Catherine tells her friend about Edgar, a man she's interested in. “He wanted all to lie in an ecstasy of peace,” Catherine says, “and I wanted all to sparkle and dance in a glorious jubilee. I said his heaven would be only half alive; and he said mine would be drunk: I said I should fall asleep in his; and he said he could not breathe in mine.” If you're a typical Aries, you're more aligned with Catherine than with Edgar. But I'm hoping you might consider making a temporary compromise in the coming weeks. “At last, we agreed to try both,” Catherine concluded, “and then we kissed each other and were friends.” TAURUS (April 20-May 20): People turn to you
By ROB BREZSNY week of January 27
the last few months of 2015. And right now is when you can lay the groundwork for that future triumph.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Playwright Edmond
Rostand (1868-1918) had a lot of friends, and they often came to visit him uninvited. He found it hard to simply tell them to go away and leave him alone. And yet he hated to be interrupted while he was working. His solution was to get naked and write for long hours while in his bathroom, usually soaking in the bathtub. His intrusive friends rarely had the nerve to insist on socializing. In this way, Rostand found the peace he needed to create his masterpiece Cyrano de Bergerac, as well as numerous other plays. I suggest you consider a comparable gambit, Scorpio. You need to carve out some quality alone time.
Tauruses for help in staying grounded. They love to soak up your down-to-earth pragmatism. They want your steadfastness to rub off on them, to provide them with the stability they see in you. You should be proud of this service you offer! It’s a key part of your appeal. Now and then, though, you need to demonstrate that your stalwart dependability is not static and stagnant—that it’s strong exactly because it's flexible and adaptable. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to emphasize this aspect of your superpower.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “I opened my mouth, almost said something. Almost. The rest of my life might have turned out differently if I had. But I didn't.” The preceding reminiscence belongs to a character in Khaled Hosseini's novel The Kite Runner. I bring it up in hopes that you will do the opposite: Say the words that need to be said. Articulate what you're burning to reveal. Speak the truths that will send your life on a course that’s in closer alignment with your pure intentions.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): When winter comes,
traditional astrologers, you Capricorns are vigilant to avoid loss. Old horoscope books suggest that you may take elaborate measures to avoid endangering what you have accumulated. To ensure that you will never run out of what you need, you may even ration your output and limit your self-expression. This behavior is rooted in the belief that you should conserve your strength by withholding or even hiding your power. While there may be big grains of truth in this conventional view of you Capricorns, I think it's only part of the story. In the coming weeks, for instance, I bet you will wield your clout with unabashed authority. You won't save yourself for later; you'll engage in no strategic self-suppression. Instead, you will be expansive and unbridled as you do whatever is required to carry out the important foundation work that needs to be done.
pine trees that grow near mountaintops may not be able to draw water and minerals from the ground through their roots. The sustenance they require is frozen. Luckily, their needle-like leaves absorb moisture from clouds and fog, and drink in minerals that float on the wind. Metaphorically speaking, Gemini, this will be your preferred method for getting nourished in the coming weeks. For the time being, look UP to obtain what you need. Be fed primarily by noble ideals, big visions, divine inspiration, and highminded people.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): We all go through phases when we are at odds with people we love. Maybe we’re mad at them, or feel hurt by them, or can’t comprehend what they're going through. The test of our commitment is how we act when we are in these moods. That’s why I agree with author Steve Hall when he says, “The truest form of love is how you behave toward someone, not how you feel about them.” The coming weeks will be an important time for you to practice this principle with extra devotion—not just for the sake of the people you care about, but also for your own physical, mental, and spiritual health. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): After fighting and killing each other for years on end, the Roman and Persian armies agreed to a truce in 532 CE. The treaty was optimistically called “The Endless Peace.” Sadly, “endless” turned out to be just eight years. By 540, hostilities resumed. I'm happy to announce, though, that your prospects for accord and rapprochement are much brighter. If you work diligently to negotiate an endless peace anytime between now and March 15, it really is likely to last a long time. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I shiver, thinking
how easy it is to be totally wrong about people, to see one tiny part of them and confuse it for the whole.” Author Lauren Oliver wrote that, and now I'm offering it to you, just in time for your Season of Correction and Adjustment. The coming weeks will be a favorable time for you to get smarter about evaluating your allies—and maybe even one of your adversaries, as well. I expect you will find it relatively easy, even pleasurable, to overcome your misimpressions and deepen your incomplete understandings.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In June 1942, the U.S. Navy crushed Japanese naval forces at the Battle of Midway. It was a turning point that was crucial to America’s ultimate victory over Japan in World War II. One military historian called it “the most stunning and decisive blow in the history of naval warfare.” This milestone occurred just six months after Japan's devastating attack on U.S. forces at Pearl Harbor. To compare your life to these two events may be bombastic, but I'm in a bombastic mood as I contemplate your exciting possibilities. I predict that in the second half of 2016, you'll claim a victory that will make up for a loss or defeat you endured during
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): According to some
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “It seems that the whole time you're living this life, you're thinking about a different one instead,” wrote Latvian novelist Inga Abele in her novel High Tide. Have you ever been guilty of that, Aquarius? Probably. Most of us have at one time or another. That’s the bad news. The good news is that the coming months will bring you excellent opportunities to graduate forever from this habit. Not all at once, but gradually and incrementally, you can shed the idea that you should be doing something other than what you are doing. You can get the hang of what it’s like to thoroughly accept and embrace the life you are actually living. And now is an excellent time to get started in earnest on this project. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Even nightingales cannot be fed on fairy tales,” says a character in Ivan Turgenev's novel Fathers and Sons. In other words, these marvelous birds, which sing sublimely and have long been invoked by poets to symbolize lyrical beauty, need actual physical sustenance. They can’t eat dreamy stories. Having acknowledged that practical fact, however, I will suggest that right now you require dreamy stories and rambling fantasies and imaginary explorations almost as much as you need your daily bread. Your soul’s hunger has reached epic proportions. It's time to gorge. Homework: What could you do to free your imagination from its bondage? Read “Liberate Your Imagination”: http://bit.ly/ Liberate
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
71
metroactive SVSCENE
Greg Ramar
After a little more than a year on the scene, Opal in Mountain View is still one of Castro Street’s hottest nightclubs.
Geoffrey Smith II
Geoffrey Smith II
A fan of The Adicts gets some quality crowdsurfing time in at The Ritz in San Jose.
Punk rock makes us smile. A couple enjoying themselves at The Adicts show at The Ritz.
Sex trafficking will end only when people stop buying sex. Children are being sold for sex at the hands of criminals. And we are not just talking about the traffickers. We are talking about the buyers too.
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 2, 2016 | metrosiliconvalley.com | sanjose.com | metroactive.com
Greg Ramar
It’s all smiles at The Spot in Campbell.
2 N . M A R K E T S T R E E T, S U I T E 1 0 0 , S A N J O S E , C A 9 5 1 1 3 - T E L 4 0 8 . 2 9 3 . 4 2 4 2
UMBRELLASALON.COM