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847 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, CA 95404 Phone: 707.527.1200 Fax: 707.527.1288 News & Features Editor Tom Gogola, ext. 206
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NORTH BAY BOHEMIAN [ISSN 1532-0154] (incorporating the Sonoma County Independent) is published weekly, on Wednesdays, by Metrosa Inc., located at: 847 Fifth St., Santa Rosa, CA 95404. Phone: 707.527.1200; fax: 707.527.1288; e-mail: editor@bohemian.com. It is a legally adjudicated publication of the county of Sonoma by Superior Court of California decree No. 119483. Member: Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, National Newspaper Association, California Newspaper Publishers Association, Verified Audit Circulation. Subscriptions (per year): Sonoma County $75; out-of-county $90. Thirdclass postage paid at Santa Rosa, CA. FREE DISTRIBUTION: The BOHEMIAN is available free of charge at numerous locations, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies may be purchased for one dollar, payable in advance at The BOHEMIAN’s office. The BOHEMIAN may be distributed only by its authorized distributors. No person may, without permission of the publisher, take more than one copy of each issue.The BOHEMIAN is printed on 40 % recycled paper.
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Dear Friend, I wanted to let everyone know what happened while I was in college. It was a moment that changed my life forever. But before I tell you about my experience, I wanted to tell you my story from the start. Let me start by explaining the photo in this letter, I’m the guy in the middle, Dr. Taatjes. You know when I meet people in town and they usually say, “Oh yeah, I know you, you’re Dr. Taatjes. You’ve been in Petaluma for years…” Well, that’s me. Thirty years ago something happened to me that changed my life forever. Let me tell you my story.
I was studying pre-Med in college, in hopes of becoming a medical doctor. Things were looking up, and life was good, until things took a turn for the worse. I began to have terrible back and stomach problems. For a young guy, I felt pretty rotten. My back hurt so badly that I had a hard time even concentrating in class. I was miserable. The medical doctors tried different drugs, but they only made me feel like I was in a “cloud.” I was just not getting better.
A friend of mine convinced me to give a chiropractor a try. The adjustment didn’t hurt, it actually felt good. I got relief, and I soon was off all medication. It worked so well that I decided, then and there, to become a chiropractor myself. Now for my kids, Hayden and Henry. They have been under chiropractic care their entire lives. And, unlike most other kids in their class, they never get the “common” childhood illnesses like ear infections, asthma and allergies. In fact, they have never taken a drug in their lives. And they are now 23 and 24!
It’s strange how life is, because now people come to see me with their back problems and stomach problems. They come to me with their headaches, migraines, chronic pain, neck pain, shoulder/arm pain, whiplash from car accidents, asthma, allergies, numbness in limbs, athletic injuries, just to name a few. If drugs make people well, then those who take the most should be the healthiest, but that simply isn’t the case. With chiropractic we don’t add anything to the body or take
Dr. Taajes with his sons anything from it. We find interference in the nervous system and remove it thus enhancing the healing capacities of the body. We get tremendous results…it really is as simple as that. Here’s what some of my patients had to say:
“I have had a problem with migraines as well as low back pain. Even after seeing doctors and other health professionals, the pains remained. After coming to Dr. Joel, they have helped tremendously. They even take away my migraines. They’re great!” (Judy E.) “I came in pending laser surgery for two herniated discs. Over a few months here the need for surgery subsided, and the pain has subsided to a mild discomfort with occasional morning stiffness. Over all, I feel better visit after visit. It’s a gradual process.” (Jaime O.) Several times a day patients thank me for helping them with their health problems. But I can’t really take the credit. Find out for yourself and benefit from an AMAZING OFFER. Look, it shouldn’t cost you an arm and a leg to correct your health. You are going to write a check to someone for your health care expenses, you may as well write one for a lesser amount for chiropractic. When you bring in this article between November 7 through
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My staff and my associates Dr. Rogers, Dr. Shawn Lorenzen, and I are ready to see if we can help you. Our office is both friendly and warm and we try our best to make you feel at home. We have a wonderful service, at an exceptional fee. Our office is called REDWOOD CHIROPRACTIC. Our office is located at 937 Lakeville Street, Petaluma, phone number is 707-763-8910. We would love to help you. Call Alex, Christine, Brenda or Erica today for an appointment. We can help you. Thank you.
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Doctor’s Confession to Petaluma
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Rhapsodies BOHEMIAN
Catholic Unblock I appreciated very much Tom Gogola’s article about the law firm Jeff Anderson & Associates releasing the names of the Catholic clergymen with sexual-abuse histories (“Roster of Abuse,” Oct. 31). Usually, the names are not mentioned unless an archbishop or cardinal is involved. The sickening switching around of abusers from school to school and
parish to parish has kept the names out of the news. Kudos to the law firm and to the Bohemian.
ANN WOODWARD Greenbrae
Poultry Effort What the author fails to mention in his article concerning chickens at McCoy Poultry Services (“Cage Match,” Oct. 24) is the condition of the 10
THIS MODERN WORLD
chickens rescued from the facility. Their injuries were so severe that they had to be euthanized. Instead of holding a conference on how to “prepare and manage activists,” why doesn’t the Sonoma County Farm Bureau do the right thing and tell farmers they have to treat their chickens humanely?
E. MCGAUGH
Santa Rosa
Fireside Chats By Tom Tomorrow
We live in a country in which the elites are not only out of touch with the lives the rest of us live, but also without any sense that they, too, will be victims of the world they are destroying. For quite a while, some of us have been talking about ways to impede this destruction, through pulling out of the dominant systems and creating new ones, along with activism which educates around the current and impending problems. Conversations Around the Fires is a loosely affiliated group of people who have been holding public discussions of alternative ways of approaching problems, ways that are different from the ones you will hear from corporate media. Our next gathering, “Facing Down the Giants: A Call for Mutual Aid” on Tuesday, Nov. 13, will feature a look at one of the causes and some of the remedies to the sense of impending doom so many of us feel. Sonoma State professor Peter Phillips will discuss his new book, Giants: The Global Power Elite, in which he exposes the most powerful players in global capitalism. As disempowering as it might seem to be faced with so much detail about those who have so much control over the systems which run our lives, Phillips and Conversations Around the Fires hope you will take this knowledge out into the world to help you focus your energy to create something different. After Phillips’ talk, we will hold conversation circles with local groups working to create a better world: Daily Acts, TransitionTown, Rapid Response Network, Public Banking and others. Please join us on Nov. 13 at 6:30pm at Christ Church United Methodist, 1717 Yulupa Ave. in Santa Rosa to find ways to plug in and create an activism that could provide hope for the future.
LINDA SARTOR
Via Bohemian.com
Write to us at letters@bohemian.com.
October 9 - November 27
Justice & Recovery After the fires, a plan for equitable action
The Last Suit
BY MARTIN J. BENNETT AND TERI SHORE
S
ince the one-year anniversary of the Tubbs fire has passed, it’s appropriate for county residents to pause and consider how far we’ve come and where we’re going.
The second Alliance for a Just Recovery forum takes place Monday, Nov. 19, from 6pm to 7:30pm at Christ Church United Methodist, 1717 Yulupa Ave., Santa Rosa (doors open 5:30pm). Visit northbayjobswithjustice.org for more information, or call 707.292.2863. Martin Bennett is co-chair of North Bay Jobs with Justice; Teri Shore is the North Bay regional director for Greenbelt Alliance.
Who Will Write Our History
Keep The Change
Shelter
Let Yourself Go
Sammy Davis Jr.: I’ve Gotta Be Me
Oct 16, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
Oct 23, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
Oct 23, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
Nov 13, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
Nov 27, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
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Just after the wildfires, the Alliance for a Just Recovery (AJR)—comprising every major labor, environmental and faith organization in Sonoma County—formed to ensure that the longterm challenges of soaring inequality, deepening climate crisis, and racial and environmental justice would shape the county’s recovery and rebuilding. The AJR just published a new report, “Voices from the Grassroots,” that advances a comprehensive “common agenda” for a just, equitable and sustainable recovery, and specific policy recommendations for increasing good jobs, affordable housing and environmental restoration. On Nov. 19, the AJR is sponsoring a second forum to consider “State of Working America 2018,” a new North Bay Jobs with Justice report analyzing inequality, poverty and the working poor, and “Meeting Our Housing Needs and Protecting the Environment,” a Sierra Club report on the housing crisis. The forum will also focus on new proposed AJR policy initiatives to address the needs of low- and moderate-income families and root causes of the fire—including urban sprawl, the urban-wildlands interface and intensified climate change effects. The forum will highlight several campaigns that AJR is supporting, and how residents can join: • A citywide $15 hour minimum wage for Sonoma, Sebastopol, Santa Rosa, Novato and Petaluma, phased in by 2020, three years before the current $11-an-hour state minimum reaches $15. • The City of Santa Rosa and other municipalities can extend outgoing Gov. Jerry Brown’s 10 percent post-fire rent increase cap, before its Dec. 4 expiration. • Opposition to new development projects in community separators and burned areas, such as a luxury resort on Redwood Highway in northern Santa Rosa’s Larkfield-Wikiup area. • New policy supporting all-electric-ready housing in the highest fire risk (urban-wildland interface) areas.
Oct 9, 1:00 & 7:00 p.m.
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Paper THE
ENTER SANDBOX Election Day was also a referendum on the charterization of the American public school system.
Midterm Exam
Will progressivism trump privatization in GOP push to destroy public education in America? BY JEFF BRYANT
F
or years now, the policy window for privatizing public schools has been wide open. What was once considered an extreme or at least rare idea—such as outsourcing public schools to private contractors with few strings attached, or giving parents public tax money to subsidize their children’s private school tuitions— has become widespread, as charter
schools are now legal in all but a handful of states, and voucher programs have proliferated in many forms across the country. Politicians of all stripes have been extremely reluctant, especially at the national level, to lean into a real discussion of the negative consequences of redirecting public education funds to private operators, with little to no regulation on how the money is being spent. Candidates have instead stuck to a “safe boilerplate” of education
being “good” and essential to “the workforce” without much regard to who provides it. But policy windows can be fleeting and multiple factors can rejigger the public’s views. Indeed, in campaigns that candidates waged in the midterm elections, one can see the policy window on school privatization gradually shifting back to support for public schools and increasing skepticism about doling out cash to privateeducation entrepreneurs.
‘Vulture Schools’
It is the wave of new progressive candidates who appear to be the ones who are shifting the policy window on school privatization. Take the campaign of progressive superstar Randy Bryce, in his run for the congressional seat Paul Ryan held in Wisconsin. The Badger State recently expanded statewide a voucher program that was confined to Milwaukee and Racine, and charter schools have expanded significantly under the leadership of Republican Gov. Scott Walker. On his website, Bryce provides the usual bromides about “every child deserves a quality education” and “charter, private and traditional public schools can all thrive,” but he then adds the curious statement that “no student should see money taken from their classroom in order to serve another.” What does that mean? Click through the “Learn More” prompt, and you’ll watch a video in which he makes a much stronger statement about the problems of privatizing public schools. “We can’t afford two school systems, a public one and a private one,” he elaborates, and he blasts “vulture schools that don’t have the same accountability and don’t have the same rules.” The example of the school he brings up that closed after head count day and whose owners “moved to Florida” is a real school run by a husband-and-wife team who abruptly closed their Milwaukee private school after taking more than $2.3 million of state voucher money, and moved to Florida to start another one. These sorts of scandals have become nearly daily occurrences in the privately operated school industry.
Schools for Scandals
The latest scandal breaks from Arizona, where the state auditor found that parents who used the state’s voucher-like education savings program spent more than $700,000 on cosmetics, music, movies, clothing, sports apparel and other personal items. Some even tried to withdraw cash with the stateissued debit cards. The state has not recovered any of the money. In California, a recent ) 10
Take That Time.
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Free health services brought to you by the Wildfi re Mental Health Collaborative—an initiative of the Healthcare Foundation Northern Sonoma County. Media campaign supported by the Community Foundation Sonoma County’s Resilience Fund, Constellation Brands and Medtronic.
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After the fires, it takes time to recover.
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School ( 8
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November 12-21
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audit of a charter school found the married couple who ran the school made almost $850,000 in less than two years and secretly hired people and created positions without approval from the school’s board. (There are some 1,200 charter schools in California, and Sonoma County dominates the North Bay with nearly 60 charters currently operational; Napa has three and Marin has four charter schools.) A video from Florida that went viral shows an African-American boy being denied admission to a private school that his parents used public school voucher money to enroll him in. An enormous white cross adorns the school’s front lawn. This and other similar occurrences of discrimination by voucher-funded private schools in the Sunshine State has prompted the NAACP to call for an investigation into all private schools accepting vouchers. Around the same time, an op-ed appeared in a Florida newspaper recounting the scandal of a voucher-funded private school that stiffed teachers and skipped rent payments. Teachers filed formal complaints about a “lack of basic school supplies,” academic “irregularities,” student safety concerns and inadequate staffing. But when the school was evicted, it simply moved to a new location and started the whole flimflam all over again. In Georgia, a police investigation of a charter school found that the governing board had terminated the school’s leader, made no public announcement of the firing and never told parents why. At another Georgia charter school, parents were told to “watch your bank accounts” after 6,000 school records were mysteriously transferred to a personal email account. In Nevada, an analysis of the state’s charter-school industry found they increase racial and economic segregation by enrolling far fewer low-income kids and far more white and Asian students than public schools do. A state audit of a charter school in New Mexico found that tens of thousands of dollars had been stolen by the school’s employees.
Some Regulatory Control, Please
One doesn’t need to cherry-pick to find news stories about waste, fraud, abuse and downright theft in the school privatization sector. The above examples all happened within the last month. Of course, financial scandals happen in public schools too. That’s why they’re heavily regulated. But the notion that “parent choice” can keep charter schools and private voucher schools clean and honest is disproven nearly every day. In Washington, D.C., there now seems to be an inkling to address the mountain of fraud created by charter schools and voucher programs. Prompted by a massive scandal involving an online charter school in Ohio, Democratic senators want the top watchdog for the federal government to investigate the business practices of online charter schools. Their investigations can’t stop there. A recent analysis of states with the most charter schools and the most charter closures finds the federal government dumps millions into these schools but provides little oversight and guidance for what to do when these schools close, leaving millions of dollars in taxpayer money at risk to scamming. The endless revelations of corruptions in the charter school and school voucher racket are now what’s driving policy, more so than dry, empirical studies about whether privatizing public schools “works” academically. Of course, some progressives stick to the old script of “investing in schools” with little regard to who runs them, and a few still cling to the school privatization cause. But the trend that made privatizing public schools an acceptable if not preferential policy has at least stalled, if not completely been thrown into reverse. This article was produced by the Independent Media Institute. Jeff Bryant is director of the Education Opportunity Network, a partnership effort of the Institute for America’s Future and the Opportunity to Learn Campaign. He has written extensively about public education policy. Source: Alternet.
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starts 8 > Viva Open Mic host Dean Martian
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ALIEN HIT RADIO SAT > NOV 17
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Pick Six What’s new at good old Kenwood Vineyards BY JAMES KNIGHT Savory & Sweet treats Seasonal Salads & Sandwiches • cafe catering • pop-up dinners Fine wines • beer 4552 Gravenstein Hwy N, Sebastopol open daily 7–4pm ~ 707.823.3122
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T
he smell of wine hits as soon as I get to Kenwood.
New wine, fermenting wine, the unmistakable aromatic that announces that somewhere, nearby, a lot of yeast is gorging on a lot of grapes. Then, just as I roll into the parking lot at Kenwood Vineyards, I get the unreal impression that I’ve homed in on the very source, as a couple of cellar rats roll out bins of freshly pressed, doubly aromatic pomace. Looking a bit like a crumbly, slightly soggy helping of purple-dyed trail mix, pomace is the leftovers from the making of red wine. Good old Kenwood red? Not that Kenwood red. Last time Swirl popped in at the old wine barn, which was founded in 1906 as the Pagani Brothers
Winery, we praised the stalwart producer’s $7 red table wine, a dependable everyday Zinfandel blend. “Now that red blends are popular, we’re no longer doing that,” Kenwood Vineyards winemaker Zeke Neeley tells me with a lighthearted laugh, as we ride in a luxury van on a press junket to one of the winery’s estate vineyards in the Sonoma Valley. The aim of this adventure is to sell us on Kenwood’s new, upscale Six Ridges label, begun with the 2013 vintage and bottled after the winery’s sale to French beverage giant Pernod Ricard in 2014. When some wine brands sell to the biggies, they wander, get watered down or worse. Seen any Glen Ellen lately? But Kenwood appears to be getting better organized than ever. The new boss has kept valuable favorites like the Jack London single-vineyard series, which is exclusive to the winery, and though Kenwood has discarded the inexpensive red blend, it maintains competitive pricing for what used to be called the “fighting varietal” wines—and these days, holding Sonoma County appellation wine at $15 for Sauvignon Blanc and $22 for Cabernet (later in the day I see the Chardonnay tagged at $12.99 in a local market) is fighting bloody tooth and nail. The Six Ridges series includes an unmistakably “Savvy” Sonoma Coast Sauvignon Blanc; a 2017 Russian River Valley Chardonnay ($26) that tempers toasty notes with a hard-to-place herbal note (I’ll definitely be sniffing the tarragon next time I’m in the produce aisle, just to check); a woodsy, strawberry jammy, incense-and-green-pepper-jellyscented 2014 Dry Creek Valley Zinfandel ($26); a waxy, cherry cola candle of a 2015 Russian River Valley Pinot Noir ($30); and a surprisingly supple, cigar-leafscented 2014 Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($35), all priced quite reasonably—for those who can smell a bargain in today’s wine market. Kenwood Vineyards, 9592 Sonoma Hwy., Kenwood. Daily, 10am–5pm daily. Tasting fee, $15–$25. 707.282.4228.
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Happy Thanksgiving The Bay View Restaurant — The Inn at the Tides November 22, 2018 • Served 1:00–8:00 pm FIRST COURSE Herb Marinated Salmon Carpaccio herbes de Provence and fennel $16 Pumpkin Ravioli
crumbled amaretti, butter and sage, parmigiano $15
MAIN COURSE Traditional Roasted Thanksgiving Turkey
(children under 12, half price) savory apple and prune stuffing, cranberry sauce, mash of potato and yams, giblet gravy, acorn squash with maple syrup and green beans $27
Butternut Squash Soup caramelized apple $12 Lobster Fettuccine $28 Crab, Grapefruit & Arugula $ Petrale Almondine $36 citrus dressing 12 Barolo Braised Lamb Boston Bibb Salad Shank $36 champagne mustard dressing, golden beets, pecans, dried New York Steak cranberry & julienne celery $13 $38
DESSERT Pumpkin Pie
ginger whipped cream $8 Pecan Pie vanilla ice cream and spiced cardamom fudge $8 Pumpkin Cheesecake caramel sauce and speculoos crumble $10
Apple Brandy Crème Brulée $8 Trio of Italian-Style Ice Cream whipped cream and chocolate fudge $8
800 Hwy One, Bodega Bay • 707.875.2751 • www.InnattheTides.com
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Brewery tours daily, book your spot online:
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Art into Action Napa Valley Film Fest takes on timely topics BY CHRISTINA JULIAN
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wo movements have dominated discussions in 2018: gender equality and action over outrage, topics that reign at this week’s Napa Valley Film Festival, running Nov. 7–11.
The fest, now in its eighth year, takes a stand with the #ArtInspiringAction initiative, where provocative, issue-based films amp up theatergoers to take action in support of themes explored in the films. One such documentary, This Changes Everything, features an army of A-list actresses who speak out on gender disparity in the entertainment industry. Actor,
activist and producer Geena Davis (the main subject of the film), will be presented with the Visionary Award on Friday, following the screening. Davis will be honored for her work to further women’s rights and gender equality; as special envoy for the U.N.’s International Telecommunications Union, and through her nonprofit, the Geena Davis Institute. On Saturday, a panel, Women in Film: Shattering the Glass Lens, will further extend the conversation around equality with a lineup of female filmmakers who will discuss their careers and ways we can band together to effect change in the industry. Other #ArtInspiringAction
programming includes Afghan Cycles, about a tribe of Afghan women who, despite cultural barriers, oppression and death threats, rally against the patriarchal hold of the Taliban for the freedom to ride a bicycle. Soufra follows the journey of Mariam al-Shaar, a generational refugee, who spent her whole life in a refugee camp in Lebanon. Over the course of the film, Shaar changes her fate when she builds a catering company and food truck with the help of fellow refugee women. Ask for Jane tells the story of a group of college women who developed an underground abortion network to help over 11,000 women get illegal abortions in Chicago between 1969 and 1973. The film
is based on the real-life activist group, the Janes, who operated a spy network to assist with abortions before being arrested in 1972. A bevy of Bay Area films hit the screen, including Uncrushable, directed by celebrity chef Tyler Florence. The film documents the last year’s wildfires through the eyes of some of those most affected, including victims who lost homes or businesses, first responders, chefs and winemakers. Empire on Mainstreet spotlights serial entrepreneur Crista Luedtke, who changed the face of Guerneville when she opened the Boon Hotel & Spa and El Barrio amid local opposition and a devastating flood. Brewmaster tracks the rise of the craft-beer industry and offers a glimpse into Sonoma County beer brewing in the ’70s and features the New Albion Brewery. And tails are sure to wag at the #ArtInspiringAction screening of Pick of the Litter, as theatergoers see a litter of puppies scrap it out on a quest to become guide dogs for the blind. The movie is directed by Bay Area filmmakers Don Hardy and Dana Nachman. With all the drama on and off screen, festival-goers can laugh it off at a sneak peek of the National Geographic miniseries Valley of the Boom (premiering January 2019). The two-episode screening explores the detonation and disruption of the tech boom and browser wars of the ’90s, weaving scripted dialogue and real-life segments. Bradley Whitford and Steve Zahn star. Funny bones are sure to be flexed at Friday’s special tribute honoring the legendary Groundlings theater group, which launched comedic wunderkinds like Will Ferrell, Lisa Kudrow and Melissa McCarthy. Ferrell said this about his experience at last year’s fest, “I was just happy to be a part of the festival and do a little Q&A but to be honored as well,” Ferrell said about last year’s festival. “It’s great because in the comedy world, we don’t get a lot of awards. It’s nice to have your work recognized.” One of Groundlings’ founding members, Laraine Newman, is expected to attend alongside alums Cheri Oteri, Taran Killam, Stephanie Courtney and Julia Sweeney. At Thursday’s Celebrity Tribute,
NEW RIES CATEGO
The Bohemian Best of 2019
Readers Poll
Vote online at bohemian.com (mailed ballots will not be counted)
As part of the North Bay’s longest running Best Of contest, we turn to you our readers each year to ask you to vote and choose what you think makes the North Bay so great. We then create a fat issue with all the winners and share with the world what you think are the best people, places and things. We love it. Our team gets to tell great stories about winners, make a few picks of our own and learn what’s new and exciting in the Sonoma and Napa counties or what standbys are still beloved. But what’s in it for you? Why should you bother voting? For one, a newspaper and its readers should be in constant conversation about what’s important, what to cover and what’s news. We couldn’t do that without your input and your input means the Bohemian reflects you. It’s a
win-win. Second, our Best Of contest focused on local, independent businesses. No chain stores here. If you value those kind of businesses, and the jobs and regional economic benefits they create, voting for your favorite restaurants, barber shops and shoe stores is one of the best ways to say I support local businesses. And finally, our Best Of issue is kinda fun isn’t it? It reads like a personality test of your fellow North Bay residents. While you might not agree with all the results, it’s insightful to know what is the wisdom of the crowd. We’ve added 32 new categories this year because the greatness of the North Bay just keeps getting bigger. So think about what you love about the North Bay and vote! The deadline is December 31st. —The Editor
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Deadline for online ballots is December 31, 2018
Include your name and a daytime phone number Ballots are confidential, but you may be called to confirm your vote Only 20 ballots per IP address
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Art & Culture Best Art Gallery Best Ballet Company Best Band Best Charity Event Best Cover Band Best Dance Studio Best Festival Best Film Festival Best Indy Filmmaker Best LGBTQ Event Best Media Personality: TV, Radio, Print Best Movie Theater Best Museum Best Music Festival Best Music Venue Best Outdoor Art Event Best Outdoor Music Festival Best Outdoor Music Venue Best Performing Arts Center Best Performing Dance Company Best Place to Dance Best Theater Troupe Best Videographer
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Best Health Club Best Hiking Trail Best Horse Back Riding Best Hot Air Balloon Company Best Martial Arts School Best Outdoor Adventure Tour Best Park Best Personal Trainer Best Pilates Studio Best Skate Shop Best Sports Fishing Charter Company Best Surf Shop Best Swimming Pool Best Tai Chi⁄Qigong Instructor Best Water Sports Company Best Yoga Studio Best Yoga Winery Experience
Food & Drink Best Art Inspired Winery Best Bakery Best Bar Best Bartender Best BBQ Best Beer Label Best Bourbon Best Breakfast Best Brew Pub Best Brunch Best Burger Best Business Lunch
Best Butcher Shop Best Cabernet Best Cafe⁄Coffeehouse Best Caterer Best Chardonnay Best Cheese Shop Best Chef Best Chinese Best Chocolatier Best Cider Best Cocktails Best Craft Beer Selection Best Craft Brew Event Best Craft Canned Beer Best CSA (community supported agriculture) Best Diner Best Dining After 10pm Best Dive Bar Best Eco-Friendly Winery Best Emerging Winery (less than 1 year) Best Farmers Market (specify location) Best Food Producer Best Food Truck Best French Best Fried Chicken Best Frozen Yogurt Best Gin Best Gluten-Free Menu Option Best Happy Hour
Best Ice Cream Best Indian (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Italian Best Japanese/Sushi Best Latin American Best Local Coffee Roaster Best Locally Made Food Product Best Mediterranean (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Mexican (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Micro Distillery Best Microbrew Best New Restaurant Best Outdoor Dining Best Pet-Friendly Winery Best Pinot Noir Best Pizza Best Port Best Ramen Best Restaurant Best Restaurant with a View Best Rosé Wine Best Rum Best Sandwich Shop Best Sauvignon Blanc Best Seafood Best Server⁄Restaurant Best Sommelier Best Sparkling Wine Best Spot to Dine Solo Best Syrah Best Tea Shop⁄Cafe Best Thai (must specify town & complete biz name) Best Vegan Menu Best Vegetarian Best Vietnamese Best Vodka Best Whiskey Best Wine Education Experience Best Wine & Food Experience Best Wine Label Best Wine List Best Wine Made From Sustainably Grown Grapes Best Winemaker Best Winery Event Best Winetasting Room Best Zinfandel
Family
Best Animal Adoption Center Best Animal Hospital Best Animal Rescue Group Best Baby Gift Store Best Birthday Party Place Best Children’s Clothing Store Best Children’s Consignment Store Best Children’s Educational Center Best Children’s Indoor Sports Center Best Children’s Museum Best Dog Obedience School Best Dog Park Best Doggie Day Care Best Kennel Best Pet Boutique Best Pet⁄Feed Store
Best Private School Best Public School Best Summer Day Camp Best Toy Store Best Veterinary Services
Home Improvement
Best Appliance Store⁄Repair Best Architect Best Carpet Cleaning Best Carpeting⁄Flooring Best Cleaning Service Best Contractor (Commercial) Best Contractor (Residential) Best Deck & Fencing Best Demolition Firm Best Electrician Best Green Builder Best Hauling Best Home Furnishings Best Home Improvement Store Best Home Organizer Best Interior Designer Best Kitchen⁄Bath Remodeler Best Landscape Design Company Best Landscape Supplier Best Landscaper Best Locksmith Best Moving & Storage Best Paint Supplier Best Painting Contractor Best Plumber Best Real Estate Broker Best Roofer Best Self-Storage Best Solar Supplier Best Tree Service Best Window Cleaners
Romance
Best Boutique Hotel Best Couples Counseling Best Erotica Store Best Florist Best Lingerie Shop Best Place for Singles to Meet Best Romantic Dinner Best Sex Therapist Best Staycation Best Wedding Caterer Best Wedding Event Planner Best Wedding Photographer Best Wedding Reception Venue
Health & Wellness
Best Acupuncturist Best Allergist Best Assisted Living Facility Best Chiropractor Best Dentist Best Dermatologist Best Endodontist Best ER Doctor Best Esthetic Dentist Best Family Practitioner
Best General Practice Physician Best Health Care Clinic Best Heart Surgeon Best Holistic Herbal Shop Best Holistic Practitioner Best Home Health Care Provider Best Internal Medicine Physician Best Laser Surgery Center Best Lasik Eye Surgery Best Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) Best Local Hospital Best Marriage Family Therapist (MFT) Best Midwife Best Nutritionist Best OB⁄Gyn Best Oncologist Best Ophthalmologist Best Oral Surgeon Best Orthodontist Best Orthopedic Surgeon Best Pediatrician Best Pharmacy Best Physical Therapist Best Plastic Surgeon Best Psychiatrist Best Psychologist Best Rehabilitation Center Best Spa/Hot Tub Store Best Sports Medicine Specialist Best Urgent Care Center Best Wellness Retreat
Cannabis
Best Attorney—Cannabis Best Cannabis Body Care Best Cannabis Event Best Cannabis Label Best CBD Product Best Edibles Best Hydroponic Supply Store Best Medical Dispensary Best Mobile Delivery Best Pipe Shop Best Therapeutic Product
Everyday
Best Accountant Best Antique Shop Best Art Supply Store Best Attorney—Bankruptcy Best Attorney—Business Best Attorney—Civil Best Attorney—Criminal Best Attorney—Divorce Best Attorney—Intellectual Property Best Attorney—Labor & Employment Best Attorney—Real Estate Best Attorney—Trusts and Estates Best Auto Dealer Best Auto Detailing Best Auto Repair Best Bank—Business Best Bank—Consumer Best Barber Best Body-Art Place Best Bookstore—New
Best Bookstore—Used Best Car Audio Best Casino Best Chamber of Commerce Best Church Best Clothing Alterations Best Clothing Store—Men’s Best Clothing Store—Women’s Best Comic Book Store Best Costume⁄Festival Apparel Shop Best Co-Working Office Space Best Credit Union Best Culinary Store Best Day Spa Best Digital Creative Services Best Dry Cleaner Best Ethnic Market Best Event Production Services Company Best Eye Lash Extensions and⁄or Brow Enhancements Best Financial Advisor Best Framing Shop Best Full-Service Beauty Salon Best Furniture⁄Home Furnishings Best Gift Shop Best Green Business Best Grocery Store Best Hair Salon Best Home Audio Best Fashion Jewelry Store Best Fine Jewelry Store Best Insurance Agent Best Judge Best Law Firm Best Locally Made Retail Product Best Massage Services Best Minister Best Motorcycle⁄Scooter Shop Best Musical Instruments Store Best Nail Services Best Natural Foods Store Best New Retail Business Best Nonprofit Best Optical Store Best Piercing Specialist Best Psychic Best Record⁄CD Store Best Recycling Center Best Repair (Computer) Best Repair (Phone) Best Resale Store Best Resort & Spa Best Senior Living Facility Best Shoe Store Best Skin Care Spa Best Spray Tan Best Tire Shop Best Transportation (Taxi/Limo) Best Travel Agency Best Vape Shop Best Vintage Clothing Store Best Waxing Studio
The End...
Vote online at bohemian.com.
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double feature and sport 50 parking spots for cars and bleacher seating for 100, with enough throwback snacks to cure even the meanest case of the munchies. The new Feast It Forward studio in Napa will host the Wednesday-night kick-off party and serve as the down valley hub, with a diverse programing and party scene that includes culinary demos, film inspired wine and food pairings, a filmmaker lounge and live music, all set within a happening indoor-outdoor space. Napa Valley Film Fest runs Wednesday, Nov. 7, through Sunday, Nov. 11, at several venues in Napa County. Visit nvff. org for the full lineup.
Five Easy Splices
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he Stinson Beach Doc Fest, now in its fifth year, offers a truly filmic treat under one roof—and for a good cause. The festival showcases five great documentaries and is devoted to helping fund the Stinson Beach Community Center. This year’s films gained international attention and accolades, and also hit on an issue or ethic near and dear to many North Bay hearts.
Free Solo
Nov. 10, 7pm There’s a line from Freddie Nietzsche where the philosopher points out that if you stare at the abyss long enough, it will start to stare back. With that in mind, there’s no sport like the free-climbing of rocks to make the point about the abyss that looms for one and all—despite the best efforts of the Buck Institute for Research and Aging. Free-climbing has got to be both the dumbest and bravest sport in the world, and every time Netflix puts one of these crazy-climber stories up— you know I’m sitting there, glued to the screen, anxiously puffing away. “Don’t fall, man!” Free Solo tells the life story of Alex Honnold, who set out a few years ago to climb the 3,000-foot El Capitan massif in Yosemite National Park. He set out to do it without a rope. Dude, are you
crazy? Two climbers this year died while climbing El Capitan— with ropes. There’ve been more than two dozen deaths on the iconoclastic massif since 1968. Every time I watch one of those angsty docs about extreme climbers, I die a little too.
ADVERTISMENT
BREWERY TAPROOM & KITCHEN Who is Sandro Tamburino? south, Texas and New Mexico, and of course From Restaurateur to Winemaker, to brewer to Sonoma inspired maker, I enjoy making wine in the fall and brewing beer year-round. My influences hail from my Italian heritage and also from the
Why Old Possum?
Possums are mostly immune to rabies, because of their naturally low body temperature and have superpowers against snakes. They have partial or total immunity to the venom produced by most vipers, and they eat rodents,
Sonoma County. I’m the husband and best friend to a beautiful Sonoma-Italian born gal and father to my daughter Francesca and son Angelo.
insects, snails,slugs, birds, eggs, frogs, plants, fruits and grains. They’re the sanitation workers of the wild and they close their own loops. And so does this small brewery.
How did you get interested in brewing? About 7 years ago I was hired by a restaurant group to design a brewery, so I hired Dan Shulte with Stainless Assets to manufacture the equipment and Paul Fritz to design the space. They both materialized what I had envisioned, yet, at the very end the project never materialized. It was carried through by the Norgrove family, owners of Bear Republic who purchased the equipment
and took over the existing space,which today is called Lakeside Bear republic. The Brewhouse is 10 bbl, four vessel system, with six ten barrels fermentation vessel and 3 twenty barrels fermenters. Also, six 10 barrels serving tanks support the whole system. It’s a dream project come true.
When did you start brewing? Besides the hundreds of homebrew batched conducted in my 20s, inspired by the consumption of thousands of Gallons of Fat Tire, I started brewing at UC Davis on their supreme 2.5 Bbl system. I spent a year studying malting and brewing under Prof, Charlie Bamforth. But commercial brewing took place for the first time, four years ago, when a possibility to transport Wort around the North Bay area for nano-breweries fell in my lap. At first my goal was to transport wort to other breweries without any defects. I took the liberty to develop different styles of wort for production of different
beers. Later I reconnected with Dan Shulte from Stainless Assets and we become partners. We built a two vessel brewhouse system with the intrepid help of John Schallart and his informidable knowledge. Today this Santa Rosa built Brewhouse with American steel can output 30 Bbls of exquisite wort powered by a Low Carbon print conscious heating system. We capture the exchange water and feed our spent grain to a few local ranchers. It all cycles back through our tap room. The kitchen and our butcher preps hams, bacon and schnitzels.
What is the flavor profile of OPB Beer?
RGB
Nov. 9, 8pm To be a fly on the wall at the Supreme Court in recent days is to be squashed like a bug in the crosshairs of a Democracy beset by reptile-brain derangement and wet-brain justice, courtesy of Donald Trump and his various appointments to high positions of power; e.g., Brett Kavanaugh. So it’s cool that the liberal feminist crusader, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an appointee of the philandering gasbag Bill Clinton, is in her mid-80s, has survived pancreatic and colon cancer, lifts weights
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My goal is to produce an elegant beer and get my hands on the best hops our small brewery could afford. Whenever possible I visit Yakima during hop harvest and meet the growers, It’s a magical time and comparable to the grape harvest here in Sonoma. When it comes to West Coast Ales the body of the beer is neutral while the aroma is solely driven by the quality of the hops. While our barrel age beers
are free to roam, the funkiness of the wild bugs is driven by the activity for what is for lunch, I often cycle my winery barrels in the beer souring programs. We have some deliciousness coming up, Sangiovese barrels and elegant pinot barrels from the new established AVA Petaluma Gap with age a delicious spontaneous fermentations, Belgium inspired malt bills, of course.
How is the OPB menu? Our food is derived from the animals that we feed with The Old Possum spent grain produced by the brewing process. Our in-house butcher produces hams, bacon, pulled pork and shredded pork for
our sandwiches. Our meat supplier is Golden Gate and we supplement anything beef and chicken through other local ranches.
So you’re a winemaker also? My personal label is called Anthesis Wines and I look for gripping vineyards, chasing flavors and capturing the character of the fruit in front
of me. I keep wines young and vibrant yet rich and elegant. Don’t be surprised if you catch us stomping our fruit. Come and join us.
HOURS: Thurs-Sat 12pm–9pm; Sun 12pm-8pm DOGS ARE WELCOME ON OUR PATIO! 357 Sutton Place, Santa Rosa | 707.303.7177 | oldpossumbrewing.com
15 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 7-1 3, 201 8 | BOH EMI A N.COM
actor, producer and director Laurence Fishburne will receive the Legendary Actor award, alongside Maverick Award recipient Billy Bob Thornton. Saturday’s Rising Star Showcase will honor up-and-coming talents, including Camila Mendes (Riverdale), Billy Magnussen (Game Night), Rosa Salazar (American Horror Story), Alexandra Shipp (X-Men: Apocalypse), Tye Sheridan (Tree of Life) and Taissa Farmiga (The Nun; What They Had). Two new venues make their debut at this year’s fest. In Calistoga, theatergoers can get rolling at the drive-in theater at the Calistoga Fairgrounds, which will screen a daily
Film Fest ( 15
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16 #chooseSSU
Sonoma State Business Degree, now at College of Marin Ready to complete your degree? Learn how a Business Administration degree can work for you. Join us at an info session—talk to the faculty about the program & meet your peers. Info Session Wednesday, November 14 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. Academic Center, Room #246 College of Marin - Kentfield Campus Interested? Contact Amy Unger: 707.664.2601 sonoma.education/business
and has been pegged with a nickname that invokes a longdead Brooklyn rapper and crack dealer, the Notorious B.I.G, aka Biggie Smalls. They share a lot in common: Ginsburg was also born in Brooklyn. RGB delves into the mystique that attends the elevation of a Supreme Court judge to a position of popculture legend. Much as I totally dig her gestalt, it’s unclear how or why Ruth Bader Ginsburg earned this stature—it’s not just because of her opinions and dissents—but I guess the film will explain everything. It premiered at Sundance this year and has done well at the box office. Here’s to RBG’s continued good health, and to a future filled with films that also celebrate the likes of Snoop Dogg Sotomayor.
Pick of the Litter
Laura Beann, LCSW Psychotherapy & Experiential Shamanism
Individual Healing Sessions Shamanic Workshops & Training laurabeann.com • (707) 888-6813
Nov. 10, 5pm Hey, it was just a couple of weeks ago that we were highlighting San Rafael’s Guide Dogs for the Blind in our Pacific Sun nonprofit issue, and—boom!—just like that, here’s a documentary screening of Pick of the Litter at the Stinson fest that’s all about guide dogs and how their lives unfold. Dana Nachman and Don Hardy have produced a poignant film about would-be guide dogs, and how not every animal makes the cut. The film focuses on the San Rafael training center, where some 800 dogs are born each year—but only a few hundred make the final cut through a rigorous training regimen. The trailer alone to the film is so loaded with puppy love and sloppy beasts by the name of Primrose, Patriot, Potomac, Phil and Poppet—well, it almost makes me want to gouge out my eyeballs, grab a stick and be led around the North Bay by a highly trained Labrador. There are worse things.
Dark Money
Nov. 11, 7pm When most people think about outrageous political conduct in Montana, well, it’s hard to not focus on the Sen. Greg Gianforte beating up a Guardian reporter for daring to ask him a question. Dark Money takes place in Montana and sets out to explain how a thug like Gianforte could be considered for higher office, and the answer is the 2010 disastrous Citizens United ruling from the Supreme Court, which turned corporations into people, then turned electoral politics into a rolling scandal where Gianforte would be celebrated by the likes of Donald Trump for body-slamming the First Amendment—which is pretty much what the Citizens United ruling did.
Evolution of Organic
Nov. 11, 5pm Well, this one looks fun and totally local, keying in as it does on the birth of the organicproduce movement in America— which is to say, at ground zero for organic agriculture in these here United States, Star Route Farms in West Marin. Why, there’s even a local actress of some renown doing the voiceover for Evolution of Organic, and who once starred as a public defender in the hit cop show Hill Street Blues, in the 1980s. Weird, we haven’t heard much from her since she starred in the Steven Bochco drama. But the growth of the organic foods movement since the 1960s is a different story—it has been an accessible and delicious movement for all who dare take a bite. The film features interviews with the likes of Warren Weber (founder of Star Route Farms) and Paul Muller of Full Belly Farm, among others. —Pauline Kale Stinson Beach Community Center, 32 Belvedere Ave., Stinson Beach.
R O H N E R T PA R K
GLEN ELLEN
Art Anniversary
Open House Just as Napa Valley loves Robert Louis Stevenson, Sonoma Valley loves Jack London, the famed author whose former home in Glen Ellen is now the Jack London State Park. This week, the park’s House of Happy Walls, built by London’s widow, Charmian, after his death, reopens after extensive renovation with several interactive exhibits that highlight London’s career and life in the North Bay. A weekend of events marks the museum’s reopening, with a ribbon cutting, tours, readings and more happening Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 10 and 11, 2400 London Ranch Road, Glen Ellen. 10am both days. $10 per car. jacklondonpark.com.
With a history that spans four decades and over 200 exhibitions, Sonoma State University’s Art Gallery observes a legacy of sharing significant works by regional, national and internationally recognized artists at the upcoming ‘40 by 40: The 40th Anniversary Exhibition,’ which showcases one work each by 40 artists whose art has been exhibited in the gallery since its founding in 1978. Celebrate the University Art Gallery’s ongoing contribution to the North Bay art scene when “40 by 40” opens with a reception on Thursday, Nov. 8, 1801 E. Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. 4pm. Free. 707.664.2295.
S T. H E L E N A
P E TA L U M A
Literary Treasures Napa Valley loves Robert Louis Stevenson, the popular 19th-century author who spent a formative summer in the region, and whose life is celebrated at the Robert Louis Stevenson Museum in St. Helena. This month, the museum hosts the third annual Stevenson Week and packs in several special community events around town. At the St. Helena Library, “Stevenson On Screen” exhibits the author’s impact on filmmakers, musicians and other artists, opening Thursday, Nov 8. Other events include the townwide Treasure Hunt on Nov. 10 and RLS’ 168th birthday party on Nov. 13. Times and locations vary. Free. For more info, visit stevensonmuseum.org.
Sci-Fi Pop
MOMS KNOW BEST Moms and funny friends Kristin Hensley and Jen Smedley bring their viral webseries #IMOMSOHARD to the stage on Wednesday, Nov. 14, at the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts in Santa Rosa. See Events, p28.
San Francisco band Vice Reine lists influences like cyberpunk and ’80s anime alongside new wave music and disco, and the group sonically melts synth-pop and electro-funk into a vibe they describe as somewhere “between outer space and in your face.” This week, the group gets freaky and funky in the North Bay, and headlines an eclectic night of music hosted by local radio station KPCA that also features Americana singer-songwriter Ismay, psychedelic outfit Agouti and dark-wave band the Drought Cult on Saturday, Nov. 10, at the Phoenix Theater, 201 Washington St., Petaluma. 8pm. $10. 707.762.3566.
—Charlie Swanson
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Crush CULTURE
The week’s events: a selective guide
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NORTH BAY BOH E MI A N | NOV E M BE R 7-1 3, 20 1 8 | BO H E M I AN.COM
Katie Kelly
Stage
18
HANDYMAN Things get weird between Dean Linnard and his puppet, Tyrone.
Puppet Masters
‘Hand to God’ is devilish good fun BY HARRY DUKE
A Congratulations Brian Griffith Norbay’s Best DJ 2018
…“I’ve got to say WOW, what a fantastic eclectic mix of songs and artists, I’m blown away”…Cindy …“that was one of my favorite radio visits ever. Thanks for making it so enjoyable. You’re great” …Jim Lauderdale …“I think we have to raise our standards”... Ray Wylie Hubbard …“fantastic opening set! What was that first song? I am in love!”...Toni
Brian is the host of this KRCB weekday program:
KRCB Morning Show with Brian Griffith 9am–noon on KRCB 91.1-FM norcalpublicmedia.org/radio
fter 22 seasons of TV’s South Park and 15 years of Broadway’s Avenue Q, audiences may be somewhat desensitized to youngsters dropping F-bombs or puppets vigorously engaged in coitus. Prepare to be re-sensitized. Robert Askins’ Hand to God, running at Santa Rosa’s Left Edge Theatre through Nov. 11, adds blasphemy to the mix, and the end result is one helluva dark, mean and funny play. The play opens in the basement of a rural Texas church. It’s the meeting place of the Christketeers, a Christian puppet club that Pastor Greg (Carl Kraines) thinks is a good vehicle to help recently widowed Margery (Melissa Claire) out of her funk. The club has three members: Margery’s introverted son, Jason (Dean Linnard); the ne’er do well Timmy (Neil Thollander), who’s basically been sentenced to the club; and Jessica (Chandler Parrott-Thomas), the only member who actually has an interest in puppetry, albeit Balinese shadow puppetry. Jason introduces his puppet, Tyrone, to Jessica with a painfully unfunny, half-finished version of Abbott and Costello’s “Who’s
on First?” routine, and the seeds of affection grow between them. Pastor Greg hopes similar seeds will grow between him and Margery, while it’s Timmy’s anatomy that grows when Margery enters his mind. Something else that’s growing through all of this is Tyrone’s “personality,” to the point that his mother thinks the puppet might be demonically possessed. Linnard, a trained puppeteer, really puts his skills to work here, and his ability to play two distinct characters simultaneously is a joy to watch. Parrott-Thomas matches him in puppetry skill in one particularly physical scene. Claire is good as a woman on the verge of collapse who makes some really bad choices, while Thollander (the object of one of those choices) is effectively loutish. Kraines does nice work as the put-upon pastor. Askins’ deeper-than-it-lets-on script, crisp direction by Chris Ginesi, a clever set design by Argo Thompson (leading to some really funny sight gags) and outstanding character work by all lead to a devilishly entertaining show. Rating (out of 5): HHHH ‘Hand to God’ runs through Nov. 11 at Left Edge Theatre. 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. Friday–Saturday, 8pm; Sunday, 2pm. $25–$40. 707.546.3600. leftedgetheatre.com.
19 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 7-1 3, 201 8 | BOH EMI A N.COM
Film
HOLLYWOOD GODS John Huston, Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanovich
pal around on the set of ‘The Other Side of the Wind.’
Old School
Sex, sarcasm and terminal moviemaking BY RICHARD VON BUSACK
O
rson Welles’ Other Side of the Wind is likely the most famous unfinished film ever, blighted with feuding producers and heirs, and shoots that continued over the course of some seven years.
After paying off the participants (including the Shah of Iran’s brother) and satisfying all the parties who had a piece of it, and with money raised from everyone from producer Frank Marshall to a $1 million crowdfunding campaign, The Other Side of the Wind is now available from Netflix, in what the streaming service deems “an attempt to honor and complete [Welles’] vision.” Like Welles’ Mr. Arkadin (1962), The Other Side of the Wind begins with the question of whether a death might or might not be a suicide. The director Jake Hannaford (John Huston as Welles’ alter ego) is found dead in a car crash the night after his wild birthday party in a desert mansion. In mockumentary style, we see the party, crowded with old-time filmmakers, film-school poindexters and young flat-voiced groupies. Hannaford was making a film within a film, which the studio was ready to pull the plug on. When
we visit the set, it is crassness incarnate, with a bevy of topless hippie chicks. But in the screenings, velvety images form, suffused with L.A. beachfront smog. Welles’ mistress (and co-writer), the dark, impassive Oja Kodar, reflects zero emotion as she strides around nude in this blue gloaming. Welles being Welles, he gets into the spirit of the then-modish stuff he was satirizing in a bravura psychedelic orgy scene, all wet silk and ice cubes and violent carnival lights. Here’s what an Orson Welles soft-core porn film would have looked like—better than Radley Metzger and Russ Meyer. Welles’ terminal vision of the studio era was contemporary with titles like The Last Picture Show and The Last Movie, whose directors, Peter Bogdanovich and Dennis Hopper, show up here for Hannaford’s last party. The twilight of the Hollywood gods is embodied by Kodar, solitary, striped with shadows from the laths of ruined, wobbling backlot movie sets. In this evocative satirical drama, Welles demonstrates a last magic act. He was still ahead of his time even at the end of his career. ‘The Other Side of the Wind’ is now streaming on Netflix.
® BRINGING THE BEST FILMS IN THE WORLD TO SONOMA COUNTY
Schedule for Fri, November 9 – Fri, November 15
DINE-IN CINEMA Bruschetta • Paninis • Soups • Salads • Appetizers Bargain Tuesday - $7.50 All Shows Bargain Tuesday $7.00 All Shows Schedule forFri, Fri,April Feb -16th 20th Thu, Feb 26th Schedule for –– Thu, April 22nd Schedule for Fri, June 22nd - Thu, June 28th
Academy Award “Moore Gives Her BestNominee Performance Foreign Language Film!Stone In Years!” – Box Office “RawBest and Riveting!” – Rolling Demi MooreWITH DavidBASHIR Duchovny WALTZ A MIGHTY HEART (1:00) 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:15 (12:20(12:30) 2:40THE 5:00) 7:257:20 9:45 R RR CC DV JONESES 2:45 5:00 9:45 (12:30) 2:40Noms 4:50 Including 7:10 9:20 2 Academy Award BestRActor! Academy 8 Great Beers on Tap +Award Wine byNominee the Glass and Bottle
CAN YOU EVER FORGIVE ME? BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
2 Academy Award Noms Including Best Actor!
“A Triumph!” – New “A Glorious Throwback ToYork The Observer More Stylized, THE WRESTLER (1:30 4:20) 7:10 9:50 PG-13 CC DV Painterly Work Of Decades Past!” – LA (12:20) 5:10 9:45 R Times LA2:45 VIE EN 7:30 ROSE (12:45) 3:45 6:45 9:45 PG-13 THEAward SECRET OF KELLS 10 Academy Noms Including Best Picture! (1:00)4:10) 3:00 7:05 5:00 9:30 7:00 9:00 (1:10 R CCNRDV SLuMDOG MILLIONAIRE “★★★★ – Really, Truly, Deeply – “Superb! No One4:00 Could Make This Believable 7:10 9:40 R DV NR One of (1:15) This Year’s Best!” – CC Newsday If It Were Fiction!” – San Francisco Chronicle
BEAUTIFUL BOY
FREE SOLO
(12:10 2:20 4:40) 6:50 9:05 ONCE 8 Academy Award Noms Including 8 Academy Award Noms Including PRODIGAL SONS
(1:00) 3:10 5:20 7:30 9:40 R
(1:00) 3:10 R Best Picture, Best5:20 Actor7:30 & Best9:40 Director! DV 9:10IS NRBORN No 9:10 Show R TueCC or Thu A(2:20) STAR MILK
MILK (1:00 4:00) 7:05– 9:50 “Haunting and Hypnotic!” Rolling Stone
“Wise, Humble and Effortlessly (1:30) 4:10 6:45 Funny!” 9:30 R – Newsweek
THE GIRL WITH THE TATTOO Please Note: 1:30 Show Sat, No Show Please Note: No No 1:30 ShowDRAGON Sat, No 6:45 6:45 Show Thu Thu THE GIRL IN THE WAITRESS
WAITRESS (1:10) 4:30 7:30 NR (1:30) 4:00 7:10 9:30 R Picture! 5 Academy Award Noms Including No Best Passes “★★★1/2! AnFROST/NIXON unexpected Gem!” – USA Today
SPIDER’S WEB
FROST/NIXON (1:20 4:15) 7:15 9:55 R CC DV
(2:15)Mysterious, 7:20 R GREENBERG “Swoonly Romatic, Hilarious!” (12:00) 9:50 R – Slant5:00 Magazine
11/9–11/15
Honorable
Can You Ever Forgive Me? – CC & AD R 10:45-1:30-4:15-7:00-9:25 Boy Erased – CC & AD R
10:30-1:15-4:00-6:45-9:15
Beautiful Boy – CC & AD
R 10:15-1:00-3:45-6:30-9:10, Weds 11/14 and Thurs 11/15: 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:10
Tea With The Dames – CC 11:00-3:15
NR
Free Solo – CC
PG13 10:30-12:45-3:30-6:00-8:15
First Man – CC & AD PG13 8:30pm The Old Man & the Gun – CC & AD PG13 1:00-6:15
551 SUMMERFIELD ROAD • SANTA ROSA 707.525.8909 • SUMMERFIELDCINEMAS.COM
DR REVOLuTIONARY SEUSS’ THE GRINCH ROAD
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THE presents GHOST Kevin Jorgenson the WRITER California Premiere of (1:15) 4:15 7:00 9:30 R THE NUTCRACKER AND THE (2:15) 7:15 PG-13 PuRE: REALMS A BOuLDERING PGFLICK CC DV FOUR Michael Moore’s Feb 26th at 7:15 THE Thu, MOST DANGEROuS
Fri-Wed: (12:05 2:20 4:40) 7:00 9:10 SICKO MOVIES THE MORNING MAN IN AMERICA Thu: (12:05 2:20IN 4:40) Starts Fri, June9:30 29th! Final Week! Fri, Sat, Sun &PENTAGON Mon DANIEL ELLSBERG AND THENow PAPERS Advance Tickets On Sale at Box Office!
Closed Caption and Audio Description available for all films
COLETTE
Bohemian Rhapsody • A Star is Born The Nutcracker and the Four Realms Can You Ever Forgive Me?
THE OLD MAN AND THE GUN
Bistro Menu Items, Beer & Wine available in all 4 Auditoriums
Advance Tickets On Sale Now at Box Office! 9:50 AM (12:10) 4:30 6:50 6:50 Show Tue or Thu FROZEN RIVER (12:00) 2:30 NR 5:00No7:30 10:00 Fri-Mon/Thu: (12:00 4:30) In9:10 R10:15 CC DV AM VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA Their First Joint Venture 25 Years! 10:20 AM CHANGELING Tue: CHEECH 9:15 Wed:AND 10:00 Must Glenn End Soon! Venessa Redgrave Meryl CHONG’S Streep CloseAM 10:40 RACHEL GETTING MARRIED HEYSHORTS WATCH THIS 2009 LIVE ACTION (Fri/Mon Only)) 10:45 AM EVENING 10:45 Sat, Apr17th at 11pm & Tue, Apr 20th 8pmAM PG-13 CC DV 2009 ANIMATED SHORTS Only) Starts Fri,(Sun June 29th!
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Outdoor Dining Sat & Sun Brunch 11–3 FRIDAY
NOV 9
TAINTED LOVE
COVERS⁄ TRIBUTE • DOORS 8PM • 21+
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Annette Moreno 8:00
“The Original Rancho
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Nov 17 Allstars 20 Years Later”
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SUNDAY
X WITH ELETTRODOMESTICO
Nov 24
NOV 28
LOS LONELY BOYS WITH BANG DATA
ROCK • DOORS 8PM • 21+
11⁄30 The Travelin McCourys & special guest David Grisman, 12⁄1 Petty Theft, 12⁄2 Whitey Morgan w ⁄ Alex Williams, 12⁄7 Andre Nickatina w ⁄ J.Lately, 12⁄8 The Grain w ⁄ The King Street Giants & The Big Fit, 12⁄9 The Slackers w ⁄ The Aggrolites & Viernes 13, 12⁄15 Poor Man's Whiskey, 12⁄21 Blind Boys of Alabama Christmas Show
WWW.MYSTICTHEATRE.COM 23 PETALUMA BLVD N. PETALUMA, CA 94952
for Our Traditional Call for Reservations
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WEDNESDAY
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Thanksgiving Dinner
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PUNK • DOORS 8PM • 21+
Pa
ur with Dallis Craft, Mike ForYocing n a Duke, and Angela Strehli D asure! 8:00 Ple
T SISTERS W⁄ BEN & ALEX
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Debu
n ce Nov 10 Stompy Jones featuring Da rty! Sat
ROCK • DOORS 7PM • 21+
(OF THE BROTHERS NOV 24 MORRISON COMATOSE) FOLK • DOORS 7:30PM • 21+
7th Annual “Leftover’s Party” Nov 23 The Mad Hannans feat Jerry Hannan 8:00 Vegas Comes to Nicasio Sat
SONGWRITING BLITZ Eric Earley (center) of Blitzen Trapper was ‘consumed
by music’ when he wrote celebrated album ‘Furr’ in 2008.
Bud E Luv’s 14th Annual “Holiday Party” 8:30
20th Anniversary Weekend!
OU T !
Anniversary Show S OL D Nov 30 Paul Thorn Band Sat Dec 1 Elvin Bishop’s Big Fun Trio e Sun D a nc Dec 2 HowellDevine Party! Thu
Nov 29 Fri
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On the Town Square, Nicasio www.ranchonicasio.com
Fri 11⁄9 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $20–25 • 21+
Soul Ska's Tribute to Coxsone Dodd's Legendary Studio One
HAPPY HOUR
Thu 11⁄15 • Doors 7:30pm ⁄ $15–20 • All Ages
The Soul Travelers feat Austin & Caroline de Lone, Amber Morris, April Grisman, Jimmy Dillon & many more
TWO SHOWS!
MON—FRI 4PM—6PM
Fri 11⁄16 • Doors 5:30pm ⁄ $15 • All Ages "Superhero Kids Show" & Fri 11⁄16 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $27–32 • 21+ Foreverland An Electrifying 14-Piece Michael Jackson Tribute Sat 11⁄17 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $17–19 • All Ages Corduroy A Pearl Jam Tribute Band
Alice in the Garden
Tribute to Alice in Chains & Soundgarden
Sun 11⁄18 • Doors 1:30pm ⁄ $12–14 • All Ages
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Tyler Kohlhoff
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Rock The Ages Rock & Roll Senior Choir
Tue 11⁄20 • Doors 8:30pm ⁄ $75–120 • 21+
2nd Annual Send It Super Jelly feat George Porter Jr., Eddie Roberts,
Adam Deitch, Jennifer Hartswick, Joe Taton, Mike Ohlmos & Benjamin Andrews Wed 11⁄21 • Doors 8pm ⁄ $24–28 • 21+
Vinyl Black Wednesday Party www.sweetwatermusichall.com 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley Café 388-1700 | Box Office 388-3850
Staying Power Blitzen Trapper mark a decade of ‘Furr’ BY CHARLIE SWANSON
T
he year 2008 feels like a long time ago to songwriter Eric Earley, frontman of Portland, Ore., folk-rock group Blitzen Trapper—though it was a monumental one for the band. It was the year they released their acclaimed breakout fourth LP, Furr, via Sub Pop and gained an international fan base.
“I remember being pretty consumed by music at that time, writing and recording it. There wasn’t a whole lot else,” says Earley. Having fronted Blitzen Trapper for nearly a decade already at that time, Earley was living in inner city Portland, and capturing slices of life in the city, both the good and the bad, through narrative songs that resonated with audiences then and now. This year, Furr gets the deluxe treatment in an expanded 10-yearanniversary reissue that contains all 13 original tracks as well as 10 bonus songs recorded around the same time, and two live tracks. To celebrate the reissue, Blitzen Trapper are on a major U.S. and Canadian tour performing the album in its entirety. The band storms into the North Bay to play the HopMonk Taverns in Novato
and Sebastopol on Nov. 10 and 11, respectively. While Furr depicted a Portland that has certainly changed in the last decade, Earley’s songwriting has remained true. “I’ve cycled through different ways of writing, but ultimately I’m still writing a lot of story-songs, folk songs,” he says. “I still like to dabble in other genres here and there, and that’s the cool thing about playing Furr live—the record touches on a lot of different things, different genres. It remains interesting for us to play every night.” In the last decade, Blitzen Trapper have released eclectic records and experimented with the art form on such records as 2017’s stage-playturned album Wild & Reckless, which Earley describes as a companion piece to Furr. Currently deep on the tour, Earley has heard from longtime fans how Furr touched their lives. “Some of those songs seemed to have helped people through difficult times,” he says. “To hear people’s stories on [the album] and about their lives which is pretty amazing.” Blitzen Trapper play at 9pm on Saturday, Nov. 10, at HopMonk Tavern, 224 Vintage Way, Novato (415.892.6200) and at 8pm on Sunday, Nov. 11, at HopMonk Tavern, 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol (707.829.7300). $15–$18.
present Warren Miller’s
Pre-Party!
for NorCal Film release “face of winter”
Winter starts with Warren Miller
Win new gear and get ready to shred this winter!
© Chad Chomlack
Free admission
We will show some of his daredevil movies. Enjoy a clip of the 2018 film “Face of Winter” HUGE RAFFLE GIVEAWAY— 3 tickets for $5 Tickets sales support SSU Snow Club.
wed Nov 14
Prizes include:
• Film tickets for Nov. 17 Mystic Theatre, Petaluma and Nov. 23 Marin Center, San Rafael film premieres • Film DVDs • Blizzard Tecnica skis • 2 Marmot featherless jackets • Hydration packs • Snow apparel
5:00–7:30
two lions Band at 4:20 at Lagunitas Petaluma Tap Room 1280 N McDowell Blvd Petaluma
info 707.527.1200
21 NO RTH BAY BO H E M I AN | NOV E M BE R 7-1 3, 201 8 | BOH EMI A N.COM
and Ssu Snow Club
Calendar Concerts SONOMA COUNTY California Banjo Extravaganza
ON SALE NOV. 16 AT NOON
Members Buy Early! JOIN TODAY:
Seventh annual fest features all-stars Ned Luberecki, Chris Coole and Bay Area favorite Bill Evans. Nov 11, 7pm. $25$27. Sebastopol Community Center Annex, 425 Morris St, Sebastopol. 707.823.1511.
lutherburbankcenter.org/join APRIL 25
Scotty McCreery
The Sam Chase & the Untraditional San Francisco folk-rock bandleader celebrates his birthday with a concert featuring support from the Crux. Nov 9, 8pm. $15. HopMonk Sebastopol, 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. 707.829.7300.
JUNE 12
RAIN A Tribute to the Beatles
Vice Reine Bay Area disco-punk party band rocks the North Bay with openers Ismay, Agouti and the Drought Cult. Nov 10, 8pm. $10. The Phoenix Theater, 201 Washington St, Petaluma. 707.762.3565.
ON SALE NOW! NOVEMBER 18
Righteous Brothers Bill Medley & Bucky Heard 1
A Magical Cirque Christmas
NOV 30 - DEC 2
Transcendence’s Broadway Holiday Spectacular DECEMBER 3
Big Bad Voodoo Daddy Wild and Swingin’ Holiday Party DECEMBER 4
LeAnn Rimes You & Me & Christmas special guest Barry Zito
bestof 2018
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Tony Bennett
Anniversary Issue: November 28 Reserve by November 21
707.546.3600 lutherburbankcenter.org
MARIN COUNTY Everyone Orchestra
NOVEMBER 23
SERVING SONOMA & NAPA COUNTIES | MARCH 21-27, 2018 | BOHEMIAN.COM • VOL. 39.46
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The Struts
Rock ‘n’ rollers have perfected a sing-along-ready and riff-heavy sound. Nov 12, 8pm. Sold-out. JaM Cellars Ballroom at the Margrit Mondavi Theatre, 1030 Main St, Napa. 707.880.2300.
Clubs & Venues SONOMA COUNTY 2 Tread Brewing Company
Nov 9, Buck Nickels & Loose Change. Nov 10, Timothy O’Neil Band. 1018 Santa Rosa Plaza, Santa Rosa. 707.327.2822.
The Big Easy
Nov 8, Funkschway. Nov 10, the Pulsators. Nov 11, Fly by Train. Nov 14, Wednesday Night Big Band. 128 American Alley, Petaluma. 707.776.7163.
All-star ensemble features Michael Kang and Jason Hann (String Cheese Incident), Dan “Lebo” Lebowitz (ALO), Robin Sylvester (Rat Dog) and others. Nov 8-9, 8pm. $35. Terrapin Crossroads, 100 Yacht Club Dr, San Rafael. 415.524.2773.
Elephant in the Room
Mike Lipskin & Dinah Lee
Nov 8, Jewish Music Series with Veretski Pass. Nov 9, Symphonic Chorus and Concert Choir. Nov 11, 2pm, SSU Brass Ensemble. 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.
The jazz pianist and vocal powerhouse are joined by saxophonist Leon Oakley for an afternoon of classic songs. Nov 11, 4pm. Free. Rancho Nicasio, 1 Old Rancheria Rd, Nicasio. 415.662.2219.
Soul Ska Bay Area favorites perform a tribute concert Studio One, home to the Skatalites, Bob Marley & the Wailers and others. Nov 9, 9pm. $20-$25. Sweetwater Music Hall, 19 Corte Madera Ave, Mill Valley. 415.388.3850.
NAPA COUNTY Baskery sales@bohemian.com | 707.527.1200
and Sunniva Bondesson playing a mix of traditional and dance music. Nov 10, 8pm. $20. Silo’s, 530 Main St, Napa. 707.251.5833.
BottleRock presents Sweden trio of siblings Greta, Stella
Nov 9, Nick Otis and Matt Silva. Nov 10, David Dondero. Nov 11, 6pm, Dark Bright and the Spindles. 177-A Healdsburg Ave, Healdsburg. elephantintheroompub.com.
Green Music Center Schroeder Hall
Green Music Center Weill Hall
Nov 7, Kenny Barron Quintet. Nov 8, Kurbasy. Nov 9, Peter Serkin. Nov 10, 3pm, Santa Rosa Symphony Youth Orchestra. Nov 11, Joan Baez “Fare Thee Well” tour. Soldout. 1801 East Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park, 866.955.6040.
HopMonk Sebastopol
Nov 8, Donna the Buffalo with Raye Zaragoza. Nov 11, Blitzen Trapper and Luluc. 230 Petaluma Ave, Sebastopol. 707.829.7300.
Lagunitas Tap Room
Nov 7, Nick Foster. Nov 8, Hot Grubb. Nov 9, Anthony Presti & the Tusslers. Nov 10, Flowtilla. Nov 11, Jinx Jones. Nov 14, Two Lions. 1280 N McDowell Blvd, Petaluma. 707.778.8776.
Luther Burbank Center for the Arts
Nov 7, Paula Abdul. Nov 10, Celtic Thunder. 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.546.3600.
Mystic Theatre & Music Hall
Nov 9, Tainted Love. Nov 10, Southern Culture on the Skids. Nov 11, Eli Young Band. Nov 12, Suicide Girls: Blackheart Burlesque. 23 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. 707.775.6048.
Occidental Center for the Arts
Nov 10, “West County’s Got Talent” fundraiser. 3850 Doris Murphy Ct, Occidental. 707.874.9392.
Redwood Cafe
Nov 8, the Meditations. Nov 9, Afrofunk Experience. Nov 10, Illeagles. Nov 11, Irish jam session. Nov 12, 12pm, Matt Maeson. Nov 13, 6:30pm, Play It Forward student showcase. 8240 Old Redwood Hwy, Cotati. 707.795.7868.
The Reel Fish Shop & Grill
Nov 8, Joni Mitchell tribute with Kimberly Ford. Nov 9, Buck Thrifty. Nov 10, Flytrap. Nov 11, 2:30pm, Sideline. 401 Grove St, Sonoma. 707.343.0044.
SOMO Village Event Center
Nov 9, Playboi Carti. 1100 Valley House Dr, Rohnert Park. somoconcerts.com.
Twin Oaks Roadhouse Nov 7, honky-tonk night. Nov 8, Levi’s Workshop. Nov 9, Caitlin Jemma & the Goodness. Nov 10, the String Rays. Nov 12, the Blues Defenders pro jam. 5745 Old Redwood Hwy, Penngrove. 707.795.5118.
Whiskey Tip
Nov 9, ladies night with Tazzy Taz. Nov 10, the Mood. 1910 Sebastopol Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.843.5535.
MARIN COUNTY HopMonk Novato Nov 10, Blitzen Trapper and Luluc.
) 24
23 Reality Itself Is Always Already The Case.
NOVEMBER 16–19 9AM–4PM WINNER IN FIVE CATEGORIES
Students will have the opportunity to work on a long pose painting or drawing. Nathan will be painting along with the students and giving critiques as needed and requested. Proportions, gesture, form, color, and light are some of the areas that will be discussed. 1-hour lunch break. $
350⁄4DAYS, $100⁄ONE DAY
126 North St, Healdsburg 707.791.4028 healdsburgartatelier.com
BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
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Senior International Advisor— Museums, Archaeology and Cultural Policy—UNESCO
HE A LDSBURG
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Dog training the with love, natural way not treats
Three-time Billboard Music Award winner, Musician/composer/producer
Offering:
• private sessions • boot camp
an intensive 3 week in board program with unlimited owner follow-up
TRAINING EVALUATIONS always FREE by appointment We have over 45 years of experience training dogs and their people. From helping you raise a well adjusted puppy to resolving serious behavioral issues—our expertise gets RESULTS!
incrediblecanine.com • 707.322.3272
Thursday, October 11, 7:15PM Thursday, November 15, 7:15 PM The Rialto Cinemas Thursday, November 15, 7:15The pmRaven Film Center 6868 McKinley St, Sebastopol, CA 95472 415 Center St, Healdsburg, CA 95448
The Raven Film Center
Tickets: 707 525-4840
415 Center St, Healdsburg, CA 95448Tickets: www.EventBright.com Tickets: www.EventBright.com
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Portraiture Nathan Sowa
Calendar ( 26
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224 Vintage Way, Novato. 415.892.6200.
Throckmorton Theatre Nov 10, Danny Click & the Hell Yeahs. Nov 14, 12pm, Amy Zanrosso with Alisa Rose and Michael Graham. 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.
NAPA COUNTY Blue Note Napa
Nov 13, Ragtag Sullivan. Nov 14, Manzanita. 1030 Main St, Napa. 707.880.2300.
Trains,” exhibition organized with the Walt Disney Family Museum explores the influence that railroad trains had on Walt Disney’s life and work. Reception, Nov 10 at 4pm. 55 Presidents Circle, Yountville. Wed-Sun, 11 to 4. 707.944.0500.
St Helena Library Nov 7-30, “Stevenson On Screen,” exhibit features works of Robert Louis Stevenson that inspired modern movies, television, theater and music. Reception, Nov 8 at 6:30pm. 1492 Library Lane, St Helena. 707.963.5244.
Comedy Gallery Openings Fenix Comedy Night SONOMA COUNTY Pie Eyed Open Studio Nov 10-11, “Lauri Luck & Ronnie Sampson Exhibit,” both artists share an affinity for the overlooked and imperfect. Reception, Nov 10 at noon. 2371 Gravenstein Hwy S, Sebastopol. Sat-Sun, 12pm to 4pm 707.477.9442.
Riverfront Art Gallery
Nov 7-Jan 6, “Late Fall Show,” featured artists Dan Kabanuck and Billy Korbus show stunningly vibrant and unique “acrylic pours.” Reception, Nov 10 at 5pm. 132 Petaluma Blvd N, Petaluma. Wed, Thurs and Sun, 11 to 6. Fri-Sat, 11 to 8. 707.775.4ART.
Santa Rosa Symphony Administrative Offices Nov 13, “Santa Rosa Symphony Art Exhibit,” local artists Lilly Collis and Donna S Schaffer display their paintings. Reception, Nov 13 at 4pm. 50 Santa Rosa Ave, Ste 410, Santa Rosa. 707.546.8742.
University Art Gallery
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Nov 8-Dec 9, “40 by 40: The Fortieth Anniversary,” exhibition presents one work each by 40 artists featured in shows since SSU’s gallery opened in 1978. Reception, Nov 8 at 4pm. Sonoma State University, 1801 E Cotati Ave, Rohnert Park. Tues-Fri, 11 to 4; Sat-Sun, noon to 4. 707.664.2295.
NAPA COUNTY Napa Valley Museum
Nov 10-Mar 31, “Walt Disney’s
See standups Oliver Graves (“America’s Got Talent”), Mario Dion Hodge (“Kevin Hart Show”) and others. Nov 11, 6:30pm. $15. Fenix, 919 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.813.5600.
Tommy Lama Comedy Experience Enjoy a self-help comedy satire from the veteran performer. Nov 9, 8pm. $20$30. Throckmorton Theatre, 142 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. 415.383.9600.
Events The Big Give-Back Monthly benefit program raises funds for local nonprofits with live music and pop-up sample shop. Sat, Nov 10, 1pm. Free admission. Hanna Winery, 9280 Hwy 128, Healdsburg. 800.854.3987.
Brick Palooza Huge exhibition of LEGO art, play areas, hands-on activity booths and more for the whole family. Nov 11, 9am. $15, kids 4 and under Free. Veterans Memorial Building, 1351 Maple Ave, Santa Rosa. thebrickhutt.com.
Facing Down the Giants Event calls for mutual aid in the face of the global elites, with networking, music, refreshments and more. Nov 13, 6:30pm. Free. Christ Church United Methodist, 1717 Yulupa Ave, Santa Rosa.
House of Happy Walls Grand Re-Opening Weekend of events welcomes new exhibits at the museum that celebrates the adventurous and inspiring
story of Jack London and his wife, Charmian. Nov 10-11. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen. 707.938.5216.
#IMOMSOHARD
Mom bloggers Kristin Hensley and Jen Smedley bring their uniquely hilarious outlook to the North Bay. For mature audiences only. Nov 14, 8pm. $45 and up. Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.546.3600.
Laternenfest
Centuries-old German tradition of songs and brightly colored lanterns includes parade and hot chocolate. Nov 10, 5:30pm. $5. Santa Rosa Christian Church, 1315 Pacific Ave, Santa Rosa.
Native American Art Auction Dinner
Handcrafted works, food and local wines, drumming and more raise funds for Native land project Suscol House. Nov 10, 5pm. $75. Yountville Community Center, 6516 Washington St, Yountville. 707.256.3561.
Robert Louis Stevenson’s Birthday
Museum dedicated to the author stays open late with cake and light refreshments. Nov 13. Free. Robert Louis Stevenson Museum, 1490 Library Lane, St Helena. 707.963.3757.
Film The Bourne Identity
Spy thriller is the subject of a film class by Ian McIver. Nov 13, 1pm. $10. Cameo Cinema, 1340 Main St, St Helena. 707.963.9779.
Brewmasters
Documentary on beermaking is followed by Q&A with filmmakers and beer makers. Nov 12, 7:30pm. $15. Sebastiani Theatre, 476 First St E, Sonoma. 707.996.9756.
Jewish Film Festival
Annual film screening series returns with films from around the globe. Tues, Nov 13, 7pm. Rialto Cinemas, 6868 McKinley St, Sebastopol. 707.525.4840.
Napa Valley Film Festival
The ultimate film, food and wine experience features
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See a restored version of the 1977 Italian comedy “A Special Day” with lecture and discussion. Nov 14, 6pm. Carole L Ellis Auditorium, SRJC Petaluma Campus, 680 Sonoma Mountain Pkwy, Petaluma.
The Reluctant Radical Occupy Sonoma County hosts showing of film about climate change activist Ken Ward. Nov 8, 7pm. donations welcome. Arlene Francis Center, 99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa. 707.877.6650.
Rockin at the Lark See the concert film “Soft Cell: One Final Time.” Nov 8, 7:30pm. Lark Theater, 549 Magnolia Ave, Larkspur. 415.924.5111.
Stinson Beach Documentary Film Festival Three days of docs includes popular films, live music and more. Nov 9-11. Stinson Beach Community Center, 32 Belvedere Ave, Stinson Beach. stinsondocfest.org.
Thank You for Your Service Mental health and military doc screens for Veterans Day. Nov 10, 4:30pm. Free. Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S High St, Sebastopol. 707.829.4797.
Tombstone Rashomon Filmmaker Alex Cox presents and discusses his retelling of the fabled Gunfight at the OK Corral. Nov 14, 7pm. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.454.1222.
Wild Strawberries Swedish film icon Katinka Faragó presents and discusses this early masterpiece by Ingmar Bergman. Nov 8, 7pm. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St, San Rafael. 415.454.1222.
Wilder Than Wild Award-winning documentary on fire suppression and climate change screens with discussion. Nov 8, 7pm. $5. Fairfax Women’s Center, 46 Park Rd, Fairfax.
Petaluma Copperfield’s Books
Traditional in-the-cellar celebration features aged wines and current releases alongside a special chef’s dinner. Nov 10, 6:30pm. $175. Robert Biale Vineyards, 4038 Big Ranch Rd, Napa.. 707.257.7555.
Nov 10, 3pm, “Season: Wine Country Food, Farming & Friends” with Jackson Family Wines. 140 Kentucky St, Petaluma 707.762.0563.
Spanish Cheese & Jamón Pairing
Disney’s Aladdin Jr
Theater
Travel through Spain via five limited-production wines and artisanal cheeses from Freestone Cheese Company. Sat, Nov 10, 11am. $35. Marimar Estate, 11400 Graton Rd, Sebastopol. 707.823.4365.
Pied Piper Productions takes on the popular musical hit filled with magic and adventure. Nov 8-10. $18-$22. Marin Center Showcase Theatre, 10 Avenue of the Flags, San Rafael. 415.499.6800.
Sushi + Splashes
God of Carnage
Chef Ed Metcalfe hosts an afternoon of delicious bites and wine. Nov 10, 11am. Viansa Winery, 25200 Arnold Dr, Sonoma. 707.935.4700.
Lectures Rising Up: Art & Resilience
Roundtable discussion features artists Brian Fies and Alan Crisp and poets Ed Coletti and Maurine Killough, all of whom lost homes in the 2017 fires. Nov 10, 3pm. Free with admission. Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, 551 Broadway, Sonoma. 707.939.SVMA.
The Secrets of the House of Happy Walls
Former Sonoma County poet laureate Iris Jamahl Dunkle talks about Jack london’s wife Charmian Kitteridge London and see the renovated museum. Nov 10, 1pm. Jack London State Park, 2400 London Ranch Rd, Glen Ellen. 707.938.5216.
Sonoma County, One Year Later
Santa Rosa Mayor Chris Coursey, Sheriff Rob Giordano and Supervisor Shirlee Zane reflect on efforts to rebuild after last year’s wildfires. Nov 8, 6:30pm. Free. Finley Community Center, 2060 W College Ave, Santa Rosa. 707.579.1500.
Readings Art Museum of Sonoma County
Nov 9, 6:30pm, “The Wonder
25
Seekers of Fountaingrove” with Gaye LeBaron. Free with admission. 425 Seventh St, Santa Rosa 707.579.1500.
Two sets of parents try to civilly discuss a problem between their kids, but the night devolves into chaos in this biting comedy. Through Nov 11. $21-$27. Novato Theater Company, 5240 Nave Dr, Novato. 415.883.4498.
Hand to God Left Edge Theatre presents the award-winning comedy featuring a hand puppet possessed by the devil. Through Nov 11. $25-$40. Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Rd, Santa Rosa. 707.546.3600.
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Uncle Vanya Birdbath Theatres presents a new, surreal look at Chekhov’s classic tale of provincial Russian life. Through Nov 18. 415.426.0269. The Belrose, 1415 Fifth Ave, San Rafael. 415.454.6422.
The BOHEMIAN’s calendar is produced as a service to the community. If you have an item for the calendar, send it to calendar@bohemian. com, or mail it to: NORTH BAY BOHEMIAN, 847 Fifth St, Santa Rosa CA 95404. Inclusion of events in the print edition is at the editor’s discretion. Deadline is two weeks prior to desired publication date.
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Astrology For the week of November 7
BY ROB BREZSNY
ARIES (March 21–April 19) In 1994, Aries pop diva Mariah Carey collaborated with an associate to write the song “All I Want for Christmas Is You.” It took them 15 minutes to finish it. Since then it has generated $60 million in royalties. I wish I could unconditionally predict that you, too, will efficiently spawn a valuable creation sometime soon. Current planetary alignments do indeed suggest that such a development is more possible than usual. But because I tend to be conservative in my prophecies, I won’t guarantee anything close to the $60 million figure. In fact, your reward may be more spiritual in nature than financial.
his friends and associates. “People tell me they open my e-mails first,” he says, “because they aren’t demands and you don’t need to reply. They’re simply for pleasure.” He also enjoys giving regular small gifts. “I draw flowers every day and send them to my friends so they get fresh blooms.” Hockney seems to share the perspective expressed by author Gail Godwin, who writes, “How easy it was to make people happy, when you didn’t want or need anything from them.” In accordance with astrological omens, Libra, I suggest you have fun employing these approaches in the coming weeks.
TAURUS (April 20–May 20)
SCORPIO (October 23–November 21)
An interactive post at Reddit.com asked readers to write about “the most underrated feeling of all time.” One person said, “When you change the sheets on your bed.” Another extolled “the feeling that comes when you pay all your bills and you’ve still got money in the bank.” Others said, “dancing under the rain,” “physical contact like a pat on the back when you’re really touch-starved” and “listening to a song for the first time and it’s so good you just can’t stop smiling.” I bring this to your attention, Taurus, because I suspect that the next two weeks will bring you a flood of these pleasurable underrated feelings.
GEMINI (May 21–June 20) “Beer makes you feel the way you ought to feel without beer,” wrote Gemini author Henry Lawson. Do you have any methods for making yourself feel like you’ve drunk a few beers that don’t involve drinking a few beers? If not, I highly recommend that you find at least one. It will be especially important in the coming weeks for you to have a way to alter, expand or purify your consciousness without relying on literal intoxicants or drugs. The goal: to leave your groove before it devolves into a rut. CANCER (June 21–July 22) Study the following five failed predictions. 1. “There is no likelihood man can ever tap the power of the atom.”—Robert Miliham, Nobel laureate in physics, 1923. 2. “This ‘telephone’ has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.”—Western Union internal memo, 1876. 3. “Rail travel at high speeds is not possible because passengers, unable to breathe, would die of asphyxia.”—Dionysius Lardner, scientist, 1830. 4. “There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home.”—Ken Olson, president of Digital Equipment Corporation, 1977. 5. “Most Cancerians will never overcome their tendencies toward hypersensitivity, procrastination and fear of success.”—Lanira Kentsler, astrologer, 2018. (P.S.: What you do in the next 12 months could go a long way toward permanently refuting the last prediction.) LEO (July 23–August 22) German scientists have created cochlear implants for gerbils that have been genetically modified, enabling the creatures to “listen” to light. The researchers’ work is ultimately dedicated to finding ways to improve the lives of people with hearing impairments. What might be the equivalent of you gaining the power to “hear light”? I understand that you might resist thinking this way. “That makes no sense,” you may protest, or “There’s no practical value in fantasizing about such an impossibility.” But I hope you’ll make the effort anyway. In my view, stretching your imagination past its limits is the healing you need most right now. I also think that doing so will turn out to be unexpectedly practical. VIRGO (August 23–September 22) Here’s useful wisdom from the poet Rumi. “Our defects are the ways that glory gets manifested,” he said. “Keep looking at the bandaged place. That’s where the light enters you.” Playwright Harrison David Rivers interprets Rumi’s words to mean, “Don’t look away from your pain, don’t disengage from it, because that pain is the source of your power.” I think these perspectives are just what you need to meditate on, Virgo. To promote even more healing in you, I’ll add a further clue from poet Anna Kamienska: “Where your pain is, there your heart lies also.” (Rumi is translated by Coleman Barks; Kamienska by Clare Cavanagh.) LIBRA (September 23–October 22) Artist David Hockney is proud of how undemanding he is toward
I am not currently a wanderer or voyager or entrepreneur or swashbuckler. But at other times in my life, I have had extensive experience with those roles. So I know secrets about how and why to be a wanderer and voyager and entrepreneur and swashbuckler. And it’s clear to me that in the coming weeks you could benefit in unforeseen ways from researching and embodying the roles of curious wanderer and brave voyager and savvy entrepreneur and prudent swashbuckler.
SAGITTARIUS (November 22–December 21)
“The best thing one can do when it is raining is let it rain.” That brilliant formulation came from poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Does it seem so obvious as to not need mentioning? Bear with me while I draw further meaning from it, and suggest you use it as an inspiring metaphor in the coming weeks. When it rains, Sagittarius, let it rain; don’t waste time and emotional energy complaining about the rain. Don’t indulge in fruitless fantasizing about how you might stop the rain and how you’d love to stop the rain. In fact, please refrain from defining the rain as a negative event, because after all, it is perfectly natural, and is in fact crucial for making the crops grow and replenishing our water supply. (P.S.: Your metaphorical “rain” will be equally useful.)
CAPRICORN (December 22–January 19) “Every true love and friendship is a story of unexpected transformation,” writes activist and author Elif Shafak. “If we are the same person before and after we loved, that means we haven’t loved enough.” I bring this to your attention because you’re in a phase when your close alliances should be activating healing changes in your life. If for some reason your alliances are not yet awash in the exciting emotions of redemption and reinvention, get started on instigating experimental acts of intimacy. AQUARIUS (January 20–February 18) I suspect you will be an especially arousing influence in the coming weeks. You may also be inspiring and disorienting, with unpredictable results. How many transformations will you unleash? How many expectations will you dismantle? How many creative disruptions will you induce in the midst of the daily grind? I hesitate to underestimate the messy beauty you’ll stir up or the rambunctious gossip you’ll provoke. In any case, I plan to be richly amused by your exploits, and I hope everyone else will be, as well. For best results, I will pray to the Goddess of Productive Fun, begging Her to ensure that the commotions and uproars you catalyze will be in service to love and kindness. PISCES (February 19–March 20)
Gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson wasn’t always a wild and crazy writer. Early in his career he made an effort to compose respectable, measured prose. When he finally gave up on that project and decided he could “get away with” a more uninhibited style, he described it as being “like falling down an elevator shaft and landing in a pool full of mermaids.” I foresee a metaphorically comparable development in your future, Pisces.
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.
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