c typaper [ P H I L A D E L P H I A ]
➤
NEWS | A united Germantown in peril?
FOOD | Fruits of Tunisia in South Philly ✚ ARTS | Good as nude
30 YEARS OF INDEPENDENT JOURNALISM
www.citypaper.net
! G 3 / @ A = 4
4==2
July 14 - July 20, 2011 #1363 |
BVS 4]]R 7aacS 6O^^g # bV PW`bVROg 0OaaSbba 4`WROg AObc`ROg Ac\ROg Z]]Ya POQY @Sbc`\ b] bVS PO``W]
| P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e | feature
the naked city
the naked city
feature | a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
| P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e | feature
the naked city
We made this
feature | a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
Publisher Nancy Stuski Editor in Chief Theresa Everline Senior Editor Patrick Rapa News Editor Isaiah Thompson Associate Editor and Web Editor Drew Lazor Arts & Movies Editor/Copy Chief Carolyn Huckabay Associate Editor Josh Middleton Staff Writers Holly Otterbein, Daniel Denvir Assistant Copy Editor Carolyn Wyman Contributors Sam Adams, A.D. Amorosi, Janet Anderson, Rodney Anonymous, Mary Armstrong, Nancy Armstrong, Justin Bauer, Shaun Brady, Peter Burwasser, Anthony Campisi, Mark Cofta, Felicia D’Ambrosio, Jesse Delaney, Adam Erace, M.J. Fine, David Anthony Fox, Cindy Fuchs, K. Ross Hoffman, Deni Kasrel, Gary M. Kramer, Gair Marking, Robert McCormick, Andrew Milner, Michael Pelusi, Nathaniel Popkin, Robin Rice, Lee Stabert, Andrew Thompson, Tom Tomorrow, Char Vandermeer, John Vettese, Bruce Walsh, Julia West Editorial Interns Darren Ankrom, Emily Apisa, Megan Augustin, Diana Campeggio, Matt Cantor, Ryan Carey, Peter Chawaga, Clare Foran, Khoury Johnson, Jessica Leung, Esther Martin, Martin Martinez, Kelsey McGlynn, Grace Ortelere, Cassie Owens, Andy Polhamus, Nicole Rossi, Eric Schuman, Christopher Seybert, Anjali Tsui, Brian Wilensky, Dylan Williams Associate Web Editor/Staff Photographer Neal Santos Production Director Michael Polimeno Editorial Art Director Reseca Peskin Senior Editorial Designer Alyssa Grenning Senior Designer Evan M. Lopez Designer Alicia Solsman Contributing Photographers Jessica Kourkounis, Mark Stehle Contributing Illustrators Jonathan Bartlett, Ryan Casey, Don Haring Jr., Thomas Pitilli, Matthew Smith Human Resources Ron Scully (ext. 210) Accounts Receivable Coordinator Tricia Bradley (ext. 232) Circulation Director Mark Burkert (ext. 239) Advertising Director Eileen Pursley (ext. 257) Senior Account Managers Nick Cavanaugh (ext. 260), Kevin Gallagher (ext. 250), Sharon MacWilliams (ext. 262), Stephan Sitzai (ext. 258) Account Managers Sara Carano (ext. 228), Chris Scartelli (ext. 215), Donald Snyder (ext. 213) Business Development Manager Nicholas Forte (ext. 237) Office Coordinator/Adult Advertising Sales Alexis Pierce (ext. 234) Founder & Editor Emeritus Bruce Schimmel
the naked city
cpstaff
citypaper.net
Philadelphia City Paper is published and distributed every Thursday in Philadelphia, Montgomery, Chester, Bucks & Delaware Counties, in South Jersey and in Northern Delaware. Philadelphia City Paper is available free of charge, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies may be purchased from our main office at $1 per copy. No person may, without prior written permission from Philadelphia City Paper, take more than one copy of each issue. Pennsylvania law prohibits any person from inserting printed material of any kind into any newspaper without the consent of the owner or publisher. Contents copyright Š 2011, Philadelphia City Paper. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. Philadelphia City Paper assumes no obligation (other than cancellation of charges for actual space occupied) for accidental errors in advertising, but will be glad to furnish a signed letter to the buying public.
contents 30 never tasted so good
Naked City ...................................................................................6 30 Years of Food ...................................................................14 Arts & Entertainment.........................................................16 The Agenda ..............................................................................28 Food and Drink ......................................................................34
Cover PhotograPh by neal santos design by reseCa Peskin
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
123 Chestnut Street, Third Floor, Phila., PA 19106. 215-735-8444, Tip Line 215-7358444 ext. 241, Letters to the Editor editorial@citypaper.net, Listings Fax 215-8751800, Classified Ads 215-248-CITY, Advertising Fax 215-735-8535, Subscriptions 215-735-8444 ext. 235
classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e | feature
the naked city
naked
the thebellcurve CP’s Quality-o-Life-o-Meter
[ - 3]
Philadelphia’s 18-day summer school program will cost the city $18 million. “Which is like a thousand dollars an hour,” explains star pupil.
[ +1 ]
Census data reveals that the number of people raising children in Center City is on the rise. Yeah. If you can afford to live there, you can afford private school.
[ +1 ]
The city will begin listing on its website deadbeats who haven’t paid their water and gas bills. Man, it’s just like the old days when they’d put you in the stocks, except no one will notice and it’s not even mildly uncomfortable.
[ -1 ]
Thieves are targeting copper gutters from Main Line homes. Psst. Hey criminals, the good shit is inside.
[ 3] -
J U l Y 1 4 J U l Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
[ -4 ]
| P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
city
[ -3 ]
The new state secretary of education says he’s concerned that a 2009 report that cited dozens of Pennsylvania schools for cheating on assessment tests was left unaddressed. “My larger concern remains, of course, that holy shit the entire school system is going to go fucking bankrupt.” A federal transit administrator pulls pieces off a crumbling SEPTA bridge in Norristown to illustrate the need to repair the country’s infrastructure. Then he eats it. Dude’s a troll, BTW. The Red Cross says blood supplies in the area are critically low. “Especially Christian blood,” says spokesperson, also a troll.
[ -1 ]
A father whose apparent road rage got him shot in the head by a schizophrenic driver is sued by his own 11-year-old daughter who suffered psychological trauma during the incident three years ago. “Look, I know I’ve made some mistakes,” the man sighs. “For instance … ” And then he just kinda nudges his head at the kid.
[ +1 ]
Philadelphia Media Network, which owns the Daily News and Inquirer, will begin offering cheap tablet computers to longterm digital subscribers. Hey wait, these are just laminated newspapers!
This week’s total: -9 | Last week’s total: -30
THE BUCK STOPS: Protesters this week at the site of a planned Save-A-Lot and Dollar Tree stores. neal santos
[ deja vu ]
A G-TOWN DIVIDED A group meant to bring Germantown residents together is driving them apart. By Holly Otterbein
G
ermantown is haunted — not by spirits, but by the specter of years of insider politics, manipulation and division that final ly culminated in 2010 in the dismantling of the Germantown Settlement community development corporation. Under the leadership of Emanuel Freeman, whom his own accoun tant later likened to dictator Robert Mugabe, the housing and social service agency defaulted on millions in bank and government loans, had $2 million in tax liens placed against it, and was found to be mis sing or misappropriating $1 million. The agency left the community in the dark about its plans, let prized properties in Germantown fall into disrepair, and became the target of a federal probe. Despite all this, the organization continued to receive help (and Freeman continued to drive a MercedesBenz), including mil lions more in public funds, largely thanks to politicians such as Councilwoman Donna Reed Miller and former Mayor John Street. Finally, though, at the end of 2010, a bankruptcy judge ordered the agency shut down, adding that letting Freeman continue about his business would be like “leaving a fox in a hen house.” Vilified as Freeman became to much of Germantown, residents also blamed themselves for being too fractured as a community: In meetings during the past few years, they vowed to band together
and fight off ruthless developers in the future. Germantown Settlement’s end seemed to be the start of the community’s rebirth. But now, a controversial development plan is threatening to unravel that unity — and, some say, causing the community to make the same old mistakes that landed it in the Germantown Settlement mess. Achieving unity in Germantown is inherently difficult. In a di verse city, the area is uniquely diverse: “It’s so diverse that I almost liken it to America” itself, says community member Malik Boyd. But more than two years ago, in the wake of the Germantown Settlement revelations, various neighborhood activ ists created a group called Germantown Community Connection to create a uni fied voice. “We said, ‘We’re not going to do development like we did in the past,’” says longtime activist and cofounder Betty Turner. “You can’t talk to the community after the fact anymore.” Members from more than 100 neighborhood civic groups, busi nesses, families and faithbased organizations all signed on and met under one tent at its monthly meetings. An arts district was planned. A federal agency designated the neighborhood as one of Greater Philadelphia’s few “Classic Towns,” a classification meant to draw in historyminded tourists. Then came the supermarket fiasco. In March, developer Pat Burns abruptly closed his Fresh Grocer, located at Chelten and Pulaski av enues and open for about five years. Then — only after
Are the same old mistakes being made again?
>>> continued on page 8
the naked city
[ a million stories ]
WhO GIveS a Frack? last month, members of Congress from New york, Maryland and Massachusetts demanded an investigation of the natural gas industry following a New York Times report uncovering evidence that drillers are inflating projected reserves. So what were Pennsylvania’s elected officials doing? Three western Pennsylvania congressmen were writing a letter to President Barack Obama asking for more drilling with less oversight in the Marcellus Shale. While not joining the call for more drilling, Philly’s representatives have been far less active than New york’s in defending the city’s drinking water supply, which drilling upriver could endanger. Rep. Allyson Schwartz’s spokesperson wrote that the Delaware River Basin Commission “has yet to determine how to proceed … currently, there are no threats from hydrofracking to the Philadelphia water supply.” Rep. Chaka Fattah’s spokesperson wrote that the congressman was busy “protecting the Environmental Protection Agency from attacks on its regulatory role.” But he went on to stress that “if the state refuses to protect the water supply then … the EPA must.” Sen. Bob Casey did introduce legislation that would require companies to reveal what chemicals they use to frack (that’s right: they are not already required to do so). And Congressman Bob Brady, according to a spokesperson, is the only Pennsylvanian to sign on as a co-sponsor of the House version of the bill, the Fracturing responsibility and awareness of Chemicals act of 2011. When did he sign on as a co-sponsor? last week — after City Paper contacted his office.
Republican Mike Fitzpatrick, who represents a sliver of far Northeast Philly, did not respond to requests for comment.
manoverboard! By Isaiah Thompson
—daniel denvir
SNOOZING
SuSpect thy NeIGhbOr Are we actually the City of Brotherly distrust? The other day the Public Health Management Corporation released an analysis of the data from its 2010 Southeastern Pennsylvania Household Health Survey. While perusing the data, a set of statistics caught our eye. To wit: More than one-third of young adults 18 to 29 has feelings of distrust of their neighbors (34.5 percent). More than half of black young adults (53.1 percent) and latino young adults (51.2 percent) have feelings of distrust of their neighbors, compared with a third of Asian young adults (33.7 percent) and nearly a quarter of white young adults (22.5 percent). That’s a lot of suspicion floating around out there in the fivecounty region surveyed last year. Or is it? Alas, when asked if there were any comparable statistics from other areas, PHMC’s Nicole Dreisbach responded that she knew of none. Charles C. Branas, associate professor of epidemiology at Penn, is working on a study that measures exposure to violence in Philly based on where people spend their time. “The social and physical attributes of communities have profound implications for health,” he and co-author Douglas J. Wiebe write. High levels of neighborly distrust would seem to be right up his alley. “Interesting,” noted Branas when he saw the data. “this is relevant to our research but I don’t have a lot to add. One thing to consider is that distrust maybe affects poor health but also that poor health maybe affects distrust.” Either way, it’s unfortunate. —theresa everline
photostream ➤ submit to photostream@citypaper.net
Matt Cohen/ MCohen123
Isaiah Thompson is no snooze. Email him at
isaiah.thompson@citypaper.net.
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
“Old Man & Cop”
➤ WAA WAA WAA W-zzzzz. WAA WAA W-zzzzz. Whoops! Sorry, Pennsylvania, Man Overboard! is pounding away on the ol’ Frackalarm’s “snooze” button — but it keeps waking me up again. This weekend, our state was the subject of rare national media attention for both of the only two things we ever seem to get national media attention for: our dirty, campaign-contribution-limit-lacking politics and our dirty, regulation-and-taxation-lacking natural gas industry — all in one story! This bargain of embarrassment came thanks to public radio show This American Life, which featured a full hour of stories on Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale gas industry, including a long segment about University of Pittsburgh professor Dan Volz, who felt compelled to resign after vocalizing early warnings about the potential environmental impacts of hydraulic fracturing in our state. Volz, who says he was openly warned by university officials to hold back on remarks that could anger the gas industry, was compared to Penn State scientist Terry Engelder, whose work championing natural gas drilling as an economic windfall for Pennsylvania was paid for (in part) by natural gas companies and wholeheartedly supported by officials at industry-dependent Penn State. WAA WAA WAA W-zzzzz. Sorry again. That got me thinking of a front-page New York Times story from about two weeks ago that somehow seemed to drift quietly over Pennsylvania despite its implications that the entire Marcellus Shale “boom” is a kind of Ponzi scheme that excites much investment, results in many wells, waste and ruined water supplies and such — but produces little gas, in the end, and little lasting wealth. A Ponzi scheme always needs new customers. Which reminds me of the recent hullabaloo from gas companies about yet another shale — the “Utica” shale, even deeper than the Marcellus. WAA WAA WAA W-zzzzz. By the way, in case you missed it, The Great Sentence — the claim, that is, by the Marcellus Shale gas industry that … let me get it just right here … there have been “no confirmed cases of negative groundwater impacts from hydraulic fracturing” — has been directly contradicted again (besides, that is, the case of Dimock, Pa., which had to have its water replaced after drilling there), this time by Duke University researchers who reported “systemic evidence” of a link between Marcellus Shale drilling and methane contamination of drinking water in Northeast Pennsylvania. WAA WAA WAA W-zzzzz. There we go, Pennsylvania, I turned the snooze off: Wake up or go back to sleep as you please.
feature | a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
[ has yet to determine how to proceed ]
the naked city classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e | feature J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
| P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
A G-Town Divided <<< continued from page 6
community members pushed him to reveal his plans for the site — he announced he would erect a Save-A-lot grocery and a Dollar Tree in its place. The news incensed many residents, who argued that Save-A-lot stores don’t provide enough fresh food, and the neighborhood doesn’t needed another dollar store. They were also furious that Burns had kept community members out of the loop. What’s more, it became clear that Burns was someone (like Freeman) who seemed to know how to get strings pulled at the top. Since 2006, he’s obtained numerous public dollars to finance his plan for a supermarket at Chelten and Pulaski. He received tax forgiveness for about $166,000 at the site. He got $800,000 in government loans and grants to build Fresh Grocer in order to “provide families with increased access to healthy fresh foods” — only to suddenly close it a few years later. Now he’s set to get $3 million in state Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP) funds for his Save-A-lot and Dollar Tree project — and, City Paper found out this week, the Corbett administration is currently considering another RACP grant for $1 million. Burns likes certain officials back: He’s donated to politicians such as state Rep. Dwight Evans and state Sen. Anthony Williams. The fact that politicians had rolled out the green carpet for Burns’ project inspired residents to action. Several community groups, including members of Germantown Community Connection, amassed more than a thousand of signatures against it and sent letters to state and local representatives, demanding that they withhold funds from Burns. At Chelten and Pulaski, they have been protesting against the project for weeks. At an April Germantown Community Connection meeting, members voted unanimously to oppose the project. Suddenly, Germantown Community Connection had been thrust into its first big fight.
A few leaders of Germantown Community Connection — including Turner, lawyer Irv Ackelsberg, urban planner David Hamme, and Boyd, the group’s secretary — cornered Burns and, as they tell it, forced him into a June meeting with them. Afterward, they announced on their website they had made an agreement: Though Burns wouldn’t stop the Save-A-lot and Dollar Tree, he’d rent space in his plaza to a food co-op headed by Weaver’s Way — provided the neighborhood raise $300,000 by October. Instead of being met with cheers, the group leaders who had talked with Burns were publicly derided by residents, many of them their own members and friends. Donna uetwiller, who’s attended the group’s meetings, claims that the Germantown Community Connection’s rank and file “never gave permission to them to negotiate” and thinks it’s impossible to raise $300,000 in that time period. yvonne Haskins, a Germantown Community Connection member, says, “They met behind closed doors. Emanuel Freeman used to meet behind closed doors.” Ed Feldman, host of G-town Radio’s Morning Feed, likened the group to “pigs in the farmer’s clothing.” In the time between their June discussion with Burns and the next group meeting, which is set for this week, rumors swirled, including that Boyd and Ackelsberg, who have both run for public office, had their own political futures in mind (both deny this). Germantown Community Connection leaders say this is all a big misunderstanding fueled by the neighborhood’s bad memories. It’s a “new day,” says Boyd, and it would be foolish to not speak with Burns. Some group leaders suggest that their critics tend to be affluent. As Turner puts it, “Even though most people showing up to meetings don’t shop” at a nearby Save-A-lot, “a lot
They were never given permission to negotiate.
[ the naked city ]
of people in Germantown do.” No matter whose side you’re on, it’s hard to deny that Germantown unity is taking a beating. last week, for instance, seven organizations — including civic and business groups, a developer and a CDC — opted to take a different route and appeal with the city’s Zoning Board of Adjustments, arguing that Burns falsely claimed on a zoning permit that the Dollar Tree was a “grocery store” — because variety stores, they point out, are barred in that part of Germantown by city law. (Carl Primavera, Burns’ attorney, argues that the Dollar Tree is a grocery store because it offers food and “other products found in grocery stores.”) When Haskins, the groups’ lawyer, asked Germantown Community Connection to join her in the complaint, the coalition declined. But group leaders say it’s because they simply see this as a poor legal strategy. The rift, says Boyd, is the result of a “community being hurt for so long, and when you’re hurt, you tend to react strongly to anything similar to the source of that pain.” He adds, “The big question is, when all this is over, are we willing to come together?” (holly.otterbein@citypaper.net)
the naked city
feature | a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
the naked city classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e | feature
[ the naked city ]
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Everything You Always Wanted For Sex*
0CB E3@3 B== /4@/72 B= =E<Âś
VENUS VIDEO A d u l t
S u p e r
S t o r e
10 | P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R |
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T
*NoVeltIeS * dVds $5.99, 4 for $20 ANd up * lINGerIe * CAlIForNIA StYle MoVIe BootHS * oN SIte pArKING lot
couples welcome
prIVAte VIp rooMS WItH lIVe dANCerS AVAIlABle MoNdAY-tHurSdAY 11am to Midnight. FrIdAY and SAturdAY 11am to 1am
open 24 hours
6301 pASSYuNK AVeNue, pHIlAdelpHIA pA VISA/MASterCArd. 215-937-1545. AtM StIFF NIGHtS 2pack $14.99!
ly l i Ph
S D Ai t
f i RXW
] r J [ K th WP ,NUN
R 8YNW M W 0[J
Friday, Saturday & Sunday July 15-17 FOOD, MUSIC, SALES PRIZES, SURPRISES & MORE!
check out our other two locations!
Be there...You Dirty Little Cheapskate
FANTASY ADULT CENTER
Mon-Sat 9am to Midnight. Sunday Noon to Midnight (215) 781-9943 829 New rogers road.- Bristol, pA
FANTASY BOUTIQUE
Mon-thurs 10am-11pm. Fri & Sat 10- Midnight. Sunday 12pm-8pm (484) 540-7340 426 So. GoV. printz Blvd , tinicum, pA
Bring this Ad For
20% oFF the entire Store!
710 S. 5th Street Philadelphia, PA 215.922.3186
N[ \QXY MXWJ]N _XU^W]N www.PhillyAIDSthrift.com
the naked city feature | a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
E
IN
RY DA
A LM
Y
VE
15 -9 22 -231 7~
FRE
GT
RM
&
â&#x20AC;&#x201C;5 N9
12TH
SH & LO
SU
&
O N â&#x20AC;&#x201C; S AT 8 ~M â&#x20AC;&#x201C;6
E
IN ~ READ
!% # $% &# %$ # !" ' #* % ! % "#! !% ! " # % % # % !# % &% $%# % # $ %( " % ( % ' % ! #! " #% " % # $% &# %$
R
CH
CAL
# ! * ! $ !% & % ) ! ! !# # %& %* $ #' % ! $ $%#! * !&# $ % # $% &# %$ # % *
A
& $ # % ! " !
ARKET.OR
G~
2
# ! " $ !
11
Park for $4
P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R | J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T |
the naked city feature classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
12 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
1=C<B3@ =443@( BVS 0OaaSbba abO\R Ob @SORW\U BS`[W\OZ ;O`YSb Âż`ab ]^S\SR W\ &'! <3/: A/<B=A
:]\U BS`[ 4`]hS\ /aaSba
0OaaSbba¸ T`S_cS\bZg ^SOQVg a][SbW[Sa `]QYg `]OR b] Wba # bV PW`bVROg 0g 1O`]Zg\ Eg[O\ When the Bassett family first began selling ice cream in Philadelphia, Abraham lincoln was president. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There are only two ice cream makers in this country that date back to the 1800s and are still run by the same families,â&#x20AC;? says Ellen Brown, who surveyed creameries around the country for her new book, Scoop. â&#x20AC;&#x153;One is Graeterâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s of Cincinnati. The other is Bassetts â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and Bassetts is older.â&#x20AC;? The company might have been first on the local ice cream scene â&#x20AC;&#x201D; showing up the year the Civil War started â&#x20AC;&#x201D; but that didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t last long. By the turn of the last century, Philadelphia was the ice cream capital of America, with
Bassetts facing competition from Breyers, Abbotts, Dolly Madison, Suppleeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and dozens of other brands. They are all now either defunct or made differently elsewhere. Bassetts is the last ice cream brand standing in Philly and the first in the country to mark a 150-year anniversary, which happens this Saturday with a celebration at Reading Terminal Market. The company still makes an authentic Philly-style vanilla with specks of vanilla bean. It carries on with old-fashioned flavors like rum raisin, egg nog and Champagne (sorbet). Their Reading Terminal stand didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t offer cones until 1970, 66 years after their invention. Sundaes came on permanently in the early â&#x20AC;&#x2122;90s, but currently account for less than 10 percent of sales to Bassettsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; consumers, clearly a tradition-loving bunch. Banana splits
have never been an option and likely never will be. What accounts for this longevity? Simply put, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all in the cold stuff. Bassetts stands out because it â&#x20AC;&#x153;continues the tradition of quality ice-cream-making that once distinguished Philadelphia,â&#x20AC;? according to Brown. That quality carries through to â&#x20AC;&#x153;every single ingredient. The cherries in their cherry vanilla, for instance, are big, super-ripe and delicious.â&#x20AC;? James Beard Award-winning GQ food critic and former Philadelphia resident Alan Richman once called Bassetts â&#x20AC;&#x153;the only commercial ice cream worth eating.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;I still think itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s wonderful,â&#x20AC;? he enthuses, â&#x20AC;&#x153;up there among the best foods you can get in Philly.â&#x20AC;? Ask fans of the Reading Terminal stand and the word
the naked city feature
0OaaSbba abO`bSR Oa a summer business for a Salem, N.J., schoolteacher with some dairy cows and a mule to pull the crank on his backyard ice-cream-making machine. The first of a number of Bassetts named lewis, he sold the results at several Philly locations before setting up behind the marble counter in 1893 in the thenbrand-new Reading Terminal Market. lewisâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; son, also named lewis, died young, but in a move unusual for the time, his wife ran the stand until her son, lewis lafayette Jr. (aka l.l. Jr.), was old enough to take over. He is the person current family members credit with perfecting the companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s all-natural base, as well as many of its best-loved and wackiest flavors. â&#x20AC;&#x153;He used to wander the aisles of the market for ingredients,â&#x20AC;? recalls his daughter Ann, resulting in the short-lived kiwi, yellow tomato, papaya and borscht (to wow a visiting Nikita Khrushchev). Ann says her father
created Beckerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s beloved Irish coffee flavor as a peace offering after a fight with her whiskey-loving mother. Ann came into the business in 1974, and within two volatile years â&#x20AC;&#x201D; â&#x20AC;&#x153;I quit almost as many times as my father fired me,â&#x20AC;? she says â&#x20AC;&#x201D; became president. She expanded Bassettsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; restaurant and scoop shop business and packed Bassetts in pints for the first time. But her plans to expand the brand westward literally blew up: Covers on pints popped off when trucks got to high-altitude Colorado. Today, more than half of Bassetts is still sold within a 50-mile radius of Center City Philadelphia. The company has had its share of dips, so to speak. Shortly after Annâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s son, Michael Strange, took over, making him the companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fifth-generation successor on the wholesale side, two of its biggest distributors, representing almost 80 percent of its business, went under. It was a week before Christmas 1983, and in a scene right out of Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a Wonderful Life, the bank called to say they were pulling Bassettsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; credit line. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We were able to pull out of it without declaring bankruptcy,â&#x20AC;? Michael says, but it took years. Since then, the company has introduced only a few new products, including one developed in 2006 with WMMR radio hosts Preston and Steve known as Gadzooks! â&#x20AC;&#x201D; popular with customers but not with the standâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s employees, who spend much of their day reciting its ingredients (chocolate ice cream, peanut butter brownies, chocolate
Ultimate Philadelphia Ice Cream Festival celebrating Bassettsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 150th anniversary, Sat., July 16, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. (ice cream cake cutting at 2 p.m.), Center Court, Reading Terminal Market, 12th and Arch streets, 215-922-2317, readingterminalmarket.org, bassettsicecream.com. Michael Strange will also be part of the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Conversations on Cool: The Delicious History of Warm Weather Treatsâ&#x20AC;? discussion moderated by the Food Networkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Marc Summers on Wed., July 20, 6 p.m., $10, Philadelphia History Museum, 15 S. Seventh St., 215-6854827, philadelphiahistory.org.
AE33B E633:A( :WYS bVS SO`Zg ROga []ab 0Oa aSbba ^`]RcQba O`S a]ZR eWbVW\ O # [WZS `ORWca >@=D7232 0G 0/AA3BBA
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
you hear most often is â&#x20AC;&#x153;creamy.â&#x20AC;? like Haagen-Dazs and Ben & Jerryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, Bassetts is high in butterfat (it has 16.5 percent, or pretty much the max). But Bassetts has more air than its national super-premium competitors. In fact, Bassetts contains more than twice the air as HaagenDazs, which is therefore denser. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Some people say that heavier ice cream is always better. Wrong!â&#x20AC;? says Roger Bassett, a fifth-generation family member who manages the Reading Terminal stand. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I remember my grandfather used to tell us, â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t push down too hard when youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re packing. youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll push the life out of it.â&#x20AC;&#x2122;â&#x20AC;? In fact, Arun Kilara of Penn State universityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s famous one-week ice-cream-making course once told the Inquirer that extra air is the reason that â&#x20AC;&#x153;Bassetts instantly hits the tongue and starts to melt, while releasing a very fresh, creamy taste.â&#x20AC;? Some have been savoring that taste for decades, such as Bob Becker, 88, who was introduced to the brand on boyhood train trips to Philadelphia from his familyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s New york home, a perk of his fatherâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s job with the Reading Railroad. â&#x20AC;&#x153;At that time a big dish of ice cream, with two scoops, was 12 cents,â&#x20AC;? Becker says, â&#x20AC;&#x153;and the gentlemen behind the counter would sling them down the marble counter right to where you were sitting like barkeeps used to do with pints of beer.â&#x20AC;? Having moved here in the 1940s, Becker is now the three-times-a-week regular known as â&#x20AC;&#x153;Irish Coffee Bobâ&#x20AC;? at the Bassetts stand because of his flavor preference, made with real Jameson Whiskey. But much to Beckerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s chagrin, the Irish coffee flavor has just gone on indefinite hiatus. â&#x20AC;&#x153;They tell me Guatemalan ripple [a chocolate-coffee flavor] is similar,â&#x20AC;? he says, without conviction.
a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
¾7 R]\¸b Y\]e WT eS¸dS SdS` VOR O TZOd]` bVOb eOa\¸b a][S]\S¸a TOd]`WbS œ
chunks, caramel swirl). The companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s other new flavors â&#x20AC;&#x201D; green tea, pomegranate blueberry crunch and mango â&#x20AC;&#x201D; were created for Bassettsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; fast-growing Chinese export business. â&#x20AC;&#x153;The fact that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Americaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s oldest commercial ice-creammaker is actually a bigger selling point there than it is here,â&#x20AC;? Michael says. But new flavors can mean the end of not-as-popular old ones, about which Michael gets endless grief. Judging by complaints, choco orange flake (orange ice cream with chocolate flakes) is the mostmissed flavor, although, Michael says, â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know that weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve ever had a flavor that wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t someoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s favorite.â&#x20AC;? As the president and CEO of a small company (at its summer peak, Bassetts employs only about 20), Michael is where the buck stops in any crisis, which, in his business, usually involves melting ice cream. The companyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s modest â&#x20AC;&#x2122;70s-era paneled office on Chestnut Street is filled with memorabilia, which Michael, 52, delights in showing off, including a recently acquired Bassetts milk jug bearing a four-digit phone number. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Before I got this I didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t even know we ever sold milk,â&#x20AC;? he says. The company might be notable for its long history, but Roger Bassett points out the here-and-now joys of being in the ice cream business: â&#x20AC;&#x153;People rarely walk up to an ice cream counter frowning. you get a lot of positive feedback. I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t wait to get in here every day.â&#x20AC;? (cwyman@citypaper.net)
13
the naked city feature
Nearly 40 years in, Friday Saturday Sunday ain’t slowing down. By Drew Lazor
14 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i T y Pa P e r |
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i T y Pa P e r . N e T
classifieds | food | the agenda | a&e
[ veterans ]
[ the covers ]
Weekend Warriors
Aug. 5, 1988 ➤ Salad Daze: It started
F
They’re not suffering from that problem, as or the hospitality-industry lab coats who developed fine my frenetic Friday indicated. “The destinadining’s hoary “steps of service,” and for every restaurant tion restaurant is dead,” Weaver concedes. operator who treats those stuffed-shirt recommendations “Fortunately, we’re not really that.” like they’re The Beatitudes, Friday Saturday Sunday (FSS) should What FSS is, for sure, is a place that probably be filed under H, for “hemorrhage-inducing.” understands what it does well. The cream On a recent Friday, when nearly every seat in the dining room of mushroom soup and pâté maison that was occupied, we were drive-by greeted, warmly but briskly, by have been on since the outset. An old-school Danny Promutico, who nodded to our seats as he tore across the 6-ounce filet with a red wine demi. floor. Maria Marioletti showed up soon after to take orders An older-school chilled poached for cocktails, making a couple stops (including one to salmon with dill crème fraîche. joke with her friends seated across from us) before (“Her name was Rosie, the those brimming glasses materialized. salmon that gave her life From here — it’s a bit of a blur, I blame the for you,” Sarkis intoned in beastly Manhattan — a zig-zagging combinamock eulogy when he saw tion of visits from servers Russell Meyer and Bill my already-stuffed dining Sarkis resulted in us pulling the trigger on a botcompanion hadn’t made tle of Pinot Noir ($10 above cost, their set-in-stone much of a dent in her fish.) policy), starters, a mid-course, entrées and dessert. An oldest-school chicken No Windsor-knotted managers came over to emptily Dijon. Chef Reese Skulteti schmooze. No one “crumbed” the table. No one folded also offers nightly specials, my napkin when I walked off to the restroom. scribbled up on a board in And it was fun as hell. neon script. Like those wellCelebrating its 38th year in 2011, FSS has gotT h e Ta p e s T r y b a n heeled FSS servers with ten to where it is by remaining unequivocally queTTes, mirrored their regulars, you recognize surrounds and itself, a welcoming, eccentric and slightly dated candlelighT inviTe them all. Rittenhouse corner rowhome, run by a long-tenured dinner à deux as Lilley laughs when asked staff that stands out in this era of front-of-house T h e y a lw ay s h a v e , if he’s considered opening a impermanence. (Meyer, for example, has worked and The service is second restaurant. No way there for 34 years; Promutico for 28.) u T T e r ly r e l a x e d , — keeping this one exactly b u T e f f i c i e n T. “When we opened, there were 10 restaurants —maxine Keyser, where he and his diners in Center City,” says owner Weaver Lilley, a phooct. 19, 2000 want it to be kept is enough tographer who in 1973 partnered with six friends for him. “It’s always a proto open FSS. He bought them all out a few years cess of reinventing yourself without changlater; in 1978, he purchased the building. “Now there are probably ing who you are,” says Lilley, now 67. “It’s 400 restaurants in Center City, and some damn good ones, too.” really not much different than it is for any So what helps fill the seats at FSS? Proper hours, for one: During young person — you’re always changing. the restaurant’s infancy, it was open only on the busiest nights of But there’s part of you that stays the same.” the week, hence the name. Didn’t last too long: “That showed a level (drew.lazor@citypaper.net) of naïveté,” chuckles Lilley. “If you’re gonna make any money, it’s gonna be on the weekdays. The weekends just pay the bills, [when] you’re supposed to be busy — if you’re not, you have a real problem.”
Friday Saturday Sunday, 261 S. 21st St.,
215-546-4232, frisatsun.com.
in New York — salads bars and green groceries owned by Korean-Americans. Now, these businesses are sprouting up all over Center City. By Michael McGettigan | Then: “Riding behind a wave of concern for fitness, these businesses are packed at lunchtime with people wielding giant tongs and scoops, dishing up individualized blends of food,” wrote McGettigan of “weigh-and-pay” salad bars, which were a brand-new fixation in the late ’80s. Now: “You want interactive? Forget portable media — try the total immersion of an hour down at the Food Distribution Center,” says McGettigan, now owner of Trophy Bikes in University City. The only business in the story that’s still operating in its original location is VIP Market at 1314 Walnut. MArch 3, 1995 ➤ Mucho Gusto! Holly
Moore’s guide to the best eats in the barrio. By Holly Moore | Then: Former City Councilman Angel Ortiz led Moore, CP’s first food critic and columnist, on a serious eating tour of Philly’s Latinoheavy northern sector. Among the highlights: alcapurrias de yuca, pasteles, mondongo and morcilla. Now: Moore says the barrio is “still one of my favorite areas to go for comfort food.” Most all the restaurants profiled in the piece, including Porky’s Point, El Bohio and Freddy and Tony’s, are still going strong today. Aug. 1, 2002 ➤ Awesome Powers:
Inquirer critic Craig LaBan can make or break a restaurant. No wonder spotting him has become a high-stakes game. By Marc Kravitz | Then: An examination of the influence Inquirer food critic Craig LaBan has on the success of the region’s eateries; unsurprisingly, more than a few of Kravitz’s subjects directly attribute restaurant closures to the fiercely anonymous Bell-toller. Now: “Nothing has changed in terms of Craig’s power and influence,” says Kravitz, who now runs the restaurant mystery-shopper firm i-SPY. The critic, however, is quick to point out that food-scene discourse has ballooned in the digital age. “People read what I do and care about it, but there are so many other voices out there now,” says LaBan. “There is no one person anymore that is the all-telling voice and influence on people.” Nov. 22, 2007 ➤ Caffeine Rush: Meet
A LITTLE VINO: Weaver Lilley has owned Friday Saturday Sunday since 1973. |
PhoTo by Neal SaNToS
the local company that has its sights set on becoming Starbucks’ biggest competitor. By Drew Lazor | Then: Acquired by Philly developer Joe Grasso in 2007, Saxbys Coffee made a splash when it trumpeted its intentions to grow large enough on a national level (2,000-plus locations) to compete with Starbucks. At the time, Saxbys had 30 locations in 13 states. Now: There are currently six franchises in Philly, 15 in the Philadelphia region and 33 nationwide. “This very brutal recession helped us realize that quality matters so much more than quantity,” says Saxbys CEO Nick Bayer.
the naked city
Call Us Today For A Free Estimate!
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;University City, undoubtedly, is the best nearby place to eat strange.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Harry Deratzian on Philly ethnic food, March 4, 1988
â&#x20AC;˘ Hot Roofs(tar)
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;The bar is a well-known least-kept secret, with a crowd thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s young, artsy, integrated, moneyed, chic, off-handedly fetching and happy to be fetched.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Jim Quinn on Opus 251, May 8, 1997
â&#x20AC;˘ Coatings, Hot or Cold
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;Sing, goddess, of Stephen Starr. Sing of his uncanny ability to put his finger directly on the pulse of our desires. In a city that seems to have more Italian restaurants than downtown Naples, he has convinced us that we need one more â&#x20AC;&#x201D; badly.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Maxine Keyser on Angelina, Oct. 16, 2003
â&#x20AC;˘ Doors & Windows
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;I did not get to try the $60 Wagyu steak, which seems like your typical high-priced beef item designed for male patrons with fragile egos and black AmEx accounts. (Does anyone else ever fall for these gimmicky dishes?)â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Elisa Ludwig on Cebu, Jan. 25, 2007
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;Many folks, for example, are accustomed to being served meat thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s neatly processed â&#x20AC;&#x201D; off the bone or, at a minimum, visually distanced from the animal it came from. Wokanoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s duck tongue, however, is not served that way. Twenty or more 2-inch blades of muscle â&#x20AC;&#x201D; bone-in and lightly sautĂŠed in soy sauce â&#x20AC;&#x201D; canvassed a large plate. You couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t see any taste buds, even if you looked closely. But there was no mistaking it: You were about to eat a miniature tongue, one that looked remarkably like your own.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;David Snyder on Wokano, Nov. 20, 2008 â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;Since P.Y.T. opened in July, Up has made more bids for attention than a 6-year-old who just poured ants into his underwear.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Trey Popp on P.Y.T. owner Tommy Up, Sept. 3, 2009
â&#x20AC;˘ Skylights & Siding â&#x20AC;˘ Shingles, slate â&#x20AC;˘ Roof Repairs
7 \b`]RcQW\U 1Wbg >O^S`¸a 6O^^g 6]c`a a[O`b^V]\S O^^
FREE
BVS QWbg^O^S` VO^^g V]c` O^^ W\abO\bZg UWdSa g]c SdS`g VO^^g V]c` W\ bVS QWbg abO`bW\U eWbV bV]aS QZ]aSab b] g]c G]c QO\ TWZbS` g]c` aSO`QV W\ O \c[PS` ]T eOga ASO`QV T]` PO`a eWbV O TW`S^ZOQS ]cbR]]` aSObW\U OaWO\ QcWaW\S eObS`T`]\b dWSea SdS\ aSO`QV ]\Zg PO`a eWbV eWTW
â&#x20AC;˘ Metal, Gutters & spouts
215-289-5650
We Do It Right The First Time!
Discount to Police, Fireman and Seniors! 15 YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL ROOFS
BVWa Wa bVS []ab Q][^`SVS\ aWdS RObOPOaS T]` VO^^g V]c`a g]c eWZZ TW\R O\geVS`S /\R T]` g]c b`OdSZS`a Wb e]`Ya W\ SdS`g [OX]` [Sb`]^]ZWbO\ O`SO W\ bVS Q]c\b`g
+X ?Z]MKVO -YX]SQXWOX^ =RYZ Located By The Philadelphia Museum Of Art
/D/7:/0:3 =< W>V]\S /\R`]WR O\R 0ZOQY0S``g =@ A3/@16 =<:7<3 /B 17BG>/>3@ <3B
DOWNLOAD IT NOW! 6BB>( 6/>>G6=C@A 17BG>/>3@ <3B >67::G ;=07:3
VO^^g V]c`a a[O`b^V]\S O^^ P`]cUVb b] g]c Pg
AO ]OVV QOX^Vc
_]ON P_\XS^_\O
6Y^] YP WSN MOX^_\c
WYNO\X S^OW] KMMO]]Y\SO]
KXN QSP^ S^OW] `S]S^ _] K^ PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE WWW.FAIRMOUNTUPSCALECONSIGNMENT.COM
Y\ ]OK\MR PY\ _] YX FACEBOOK.COM ZRYXO 215-235-2386
15
Wed-Sun 12 to 5
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
â&#x17E;¤ â&#x20AC;&#x153;Next up was the worst lobster I have ever put in my mouth. With a rubbery texture that suggested the sole of a flip-flop sandal, it may well have been frozen and thawed. The main question was: What would happen if I dropped it on the floor? Fie on my mother for teaching me good manners; I think it would have bounced.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Trey Popp on Tavern 17, July 12, 2007
â&#x20AC;˘ Rubber Roofs
a&e | the agenda | food | classifieds
residential / commercial
THE CRITICS
feature
.: 1)*--: 300'&3 $0.
16 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
classifieds | food | the agenda
a&e
feature | the naked city
a&e
artsmusicmoviesmayhem
icepack By A.D. Amorosi
➤ Without sounding too much like the
protagonist of LCD Soundsystem’s “Losing My Edge” — you know, the jaded guy who made every scene known to music-kind — I can remember going to U2’s Bijou Café show of March 1981 as an underage attendee and loving it. Icepack photographer Scott Weiner does, too, and has the snaps to show for it. Check Icepack Illustrated (citypaper. net/criticalmass) on July 14 for those. WMGK’s Cyndy Drue remembers, too; she interviewed Bono for her then-KYW-TV program The Rock n’ Roll Show. “He was cute and young, close to my age, and very self-assured,” says Drue now about the curiously wide-eyed frontman who hitched a ride with the radio jock to the Bijou for his firstever Philly show. “I watched them go from being a new, unknown band that played for 50 people at the Bijou to a well-known band that played the biggest venues in the world in a relatively short time.” Drue recently re-aired that interview during Larry Kane’s Voice of Reason on CN8. U2 will celebrate the 30-year anniversary of that gig (more or less) July 14 at the Linc. ➤ After delays in construction and getting the cream filled in all of its pourers, Milkboy at 11th and Chestnut will be ready to go (the first-floor bar, at least) on Aug. 1. “We’re not called Milkboy Coffee,” says Milkboss Tommy Joyner of the Center City bar/live venue that follows in his suburban shop’s footsteps. “But as a nod to our history as a coffeehouse, we will still do coffee service starting at 6 a.m.” The secondfloor live venue, booked by Bryan Dilworth, will start in September with its first shows acting as after-parties to the Popped! fest: Sept. 23 is Yuck and Sept. 24 is Black Landlord. Meanwhile, the soon-to-open Twisted Tail live blues-and-charcoal-grilled stop (with chef Michael Stevenson) on Headhouse Square just got a new façade and signage. ➤ Azuka Theatre artistic director Kevin Glaccum just named Natalie Diener as Azuka’s new general manager. If that name sounds familiar it’s because she plans weddings in Philly, was production and company manager for the Philadelphia Shakespeare Fest and was marketing director for — huh — City Paper. ➤ It’s a night of local spazz and soul at the Troc’s Balcony July 16 when the R&B-hop of Wyldlife and the skanky synth-pop of Snakes Say Hisss join forces. The Snakes release their messy, dancey debut CD, Right Behind You, next week on the Famous Class label. ➤ Roving DJ Lee Jones is thisclose to moving his Sundae party’s daytime event from Shampoo to Table 31 at the Comcast Building. “When it finally happens I’m bringing in four DJs from around the planet to kick off our new home,” says Jones. (a_amorosi@citypaper.net)
THIS IS WHY I’M HOT: John Rosenberg’s Hella Fresh Theater Co. presents Queen of All Weapons at a time when most stages are dark for the summer. Mark Stehle
[ performance art ]
Gut CheCk An impetuous playwright takes a radical approach to independent Philly theater. By Bruce Walsh
J
ohn Rosenberg nervously peels blue gaff tape off the floor of the Papermill Theater, but his gaze never strays from the action in front of him. On stage, Sebastian Cummings recites a crucial monologue in Rosenberg’s latest play, Queen of All Weapons: The character has been pushed to the brink, feeling the blows of a crushing indignity. Rosenberg’s body convulses with each delicate transition in the text. A moment later, a piece of tape flies through the air, hitting Cummings in the leg. The actor pauses briefly to look at the wad at his feet, but then launches into the remainder of his monologue with a new sense of purpose and fury. The tactic was impulsive and crude — but effective. And that, you might say, is this writer/director’s mantra in both theater and life: impulsive and crude — but, above all, effective. Rosenberg’s heroes, such as John Cassavetes and Charles Bukowski, turned crass impudence into sublime poetry (and fought tooth and nail to get their voices heard). It’s a style Rosenberg emulated in San Francisco, where he co-founded Sleepwalkers Theatre, a Bay Area indie forerunner. “There’s a lack of pretension that drew me to John — both personally and in the writing,” says Tore Ingersoll-Thorp, a
Sleepwalkers co-founder. “He doesn’t put on airs, even though he is a highly skilled writer. I think he wants to be perceived in the way he writes: uncomplicated and unadorned. Even in his marketing, his style is intentionally messy and unrefined.” But independent theater is a different game in Philly, where even the smallest companies often model themselves on regional theaters, put a greater emphasis on production values and strictly follow Equity rules (read: no throwing gaff tape at actors). Philadelphia is a more conservative artistic community than San Francisco, but Rosenberg is hoping we’re ready for a new, raw, fromthe-gut independent voice. “Self-producing just always made more sense to me,” says Rosenberg, sitting on the edge of a chair just outside the rehearsal. “I don’t think I could do it the other way: I mean, you’re supposed to write scripts and send them out and hope somebody you’ve never met will produce your shit? unless your shit’s incredible, you just become a bitter dick.” Since landing in Philly a little over a year and a half ago, Rosenberg has been working at breakneck pace. A friend gave him space in an old paper mill near Kensington and lehigh, and he has already converted the lower level into a 50-seat theater. He has also produced two of his own works in that time, designing the sets and lighting for both. This month Rosenberg will find out just how ready Philly is for
“Unless your shit’s incredible, you just become a bitter dick.”
>>> continued on page 19
the naked city | feature
[ the juxtaposition of eros and social commentary ] ➤ world/fusion
The only people who care about county lines are sheriffs and folk singers. And, judging by the old-school, stripped-down Wit’s End (Domino), Cass McCombs is one of the two. When he’s not letting his breathy vocals echo off quarry walls, he’s strumming mellow, amber-tinted acoustic melodies and, sometimes, thumbing his guitar for percussion. And yeah, there’s a county line or two in there somewhere. The album came out way back in April; McCombs plays Johnny Brenda’s this Sunday (July 17, johnnybrendas.com).
Slapped across the cover of red Baraat’s Bootleg Bhangra (Sinj) like an afterthought, “lIVE” is the most important part of the story. Forget those other world fusion groups who can’t bring it outside the studio — this drum ’n’ brass hybrid works flawlessly, tightly and precisely. The drum is the North Indian dhol, worn and played on both ends by founder Sunny Jain who has gathered about him a big, hyperfunky brass band. The complex Indian rhythms played by a wall of brass may well trigger flashbacks to Balkan weddings, as well. Hot stuff complete with a little freestyle MCing here and there, calling out to the dancers. —Mary armstrong
➤ rock It’s a shame long Beach noodly noisemakers Crystal antlers have saddled themselves with the blandest, Pitchforkiest name they could muster, because the new self-released Two-Way Mirror is a nice slice of psych/garage rock. They’re at their best when the percussion’s clacking, the synths are building a wall and Jonny Bell’s just belting his head off. Nothing crystal about it. How about —Patrick rapa just antlers made of antlers?
flickpick
Robin Rice on visual art
—Patrick rapa
➤ traditional/klezmer On the new On the Road of Life (Soundbrush), the Frank london Klezmer Orchestra reimagines composer/pianist roger davidson’s originals in an avant-garde style. But check out “Dance of Hope,” which segues seamlessly to a traditional circle dance. On the same cut listen for Richie Barshay, known around here for his Brazilian shows with Matuto, as he works cuica into this Jewish dance with a Brazilian beat. Introspective tunes abound. london’s trumpet and Joshua Horowitz’s cymbalom delicately invite us to ponder the concept “Equal in the Eyes of God.” —Mary armstrong
[ movie review ]
harry potter and the deathly hallows: part 2 [ B+ ] PRESSING THE AIR out of the previous seven movies like an enchanted paper-
JD Dragan: MoDern Slave | Artist talk, Sat., July 16, 3 p.m., free, exhibit through July 30, AxD Gallery, 265 S. 10th St., 215-627-6250, a-x-d.com/gallery
➤ THE ALLEGORICAL REPRESENTATION
of the nude in art can be confusing. That’s why Sir Kenneth Clark wrote a book about it. Blame it on the Greeks and on our consequent European heritage — everyone understands why we like looking at attractive naked people, but would clothing get in the way of representing “free speech” or “sacred burden”? Only if what you really want to see is a lot of well-defined muscles. Sometimes it feels like JD Dragan is asking us to process too many ideas in one picture. The juxtaposition of eros and social commentary in his show at AxD Gallery can be awkward and unconvincing, but Dragan shouldn’t be casually dismissed. He is a skilled photographer, a white man who has photographed nude black men for three decades, often in classic, bodybuilder-style calendar pictures. Most of the images in this show, however, incorporate props such as shiny chains, guns, swords and nooses. The representation of domination and subjugation can be ambiguous. Are these depicted roles actually erotic elements in themselves? Kara Walker, a contemporary artist who blends political commentary and sex, shares a bit of conceptual bias with Dragan. The deliberately crude execution of Walker’s silhouette compositions is far from Dragan’s suaveness, but the union of lascivious and sadistic slave imagery strikes a similar discordant note. Walker’s multi-figure compositions are bizarrely detailed and narrative, but both artists engage stereotypes in a provocative context that can bemuse the viewer. Dragan says he aims to depict social and psychic violence inflicted on black men in our culture. His elegantly composed metaphors for a legacy of
17
>>> continued on page 20
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
weight, the final Harry Potter film marks not only the mournful conclusion of a venerated franchise — it also represents a shift in how, and for whom, J.K. Rowling’s lore is rendered for the screen. Plenty of book-to-film adaptations are lambasted by ardent print fans who rag on studios (they don’t read, man!) for cutting corners in the name of cinematic and commercial efficacy. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 doesn’t fit that bill: In contrast, it skews to the bookworms, painting in playful strokes often recognizable to hardcore fans only. you’re outed as a Muggle or Squib if half the audience laughs or cheers at something you don’t get. Not that the core story is difficult to digest: With lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) in possession of the powerful “Elder Wand” and our hero (Daniel Radcliffe) on a frantic search for the last of the Horcruxes (erstwhile fragments of lV’s soul that allow for his sprightly, demonic demeanor), most Part 2 scenes are building blocks for the climactic Battle of Hogwarts, where the two factions finally dance, blowing up a shitload of Scots Baronial architecture in the process. Though there are snack-size portions of the youthful, magic-charged mischief that four-time Potter director David yates is so good at staging, there’s simply no time for Hermione and Ron (Emma Watson and Rupert Grint) to shoegaze or for Harry to sulk — yates is too busy marching the kids through the thickets of death, remorse and salvation, a candid, intermittently maudlin journey that should spark empathy in superfans and front-runners alike. Same goes for Alan Rickman, whose meaty performance as the tortured Severus Snape seals his status as the best overall actor in the series. —Drew Lazor
Simply no time to sulk.
THEM’S FIGHTIN’ WORDS: Most scenes in Part 2 are building blocks for a climactic battle in which the two factions, headed by Harry Potter and Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes, right), finally dance.
Body of proof
the agenda | food | classifieds
➤ folk/rock/pop
a&e
re:view
[ disc-o-scope ]
18 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
classifieds | food | the agenda a&e
feature | the naked city
<<< continued from page 16
Cover That Ugly Radiator… Free Estimates, Delivery Installation.
the agenda | food | classifieds
a different way of doing things. His Hella Fresh Theater Co. is presenting Queen of All Weapons at a time when nearly every other local company is dark for the summer. Queen is jam-packed with the usual rhythms of Rosenberg’s visceral, wry language. But it’s also a departure from the personal tack in his other work. The play takes place in 1977 — set entirely in one apartment — as a pair of small-time drug dealers are confronted by a violent political extremist. “I went to Berkeley, and I understood that it used to be this hotbed of radicalism. But it’s not anymore,” says Rosenberg. “I had friends who were hard-core activists — trying to keep it going. It always fascinated me how lonely those people were — these people who are so committed to solidarity. So I was interested in writing about what radicals went through directly after the revolution’s heyday.” In Philadelphia theater, a lot of fuss is made over press releases; small companies spend countless hours developing über-slick one-sheets. The release for Queen of All Weapons looks a little
unusual: It’s a ransom note by the main character of the play — a somewhat mentally unstable German — typed on a sheet of loose-leaf paper. It ends like this: Let the raging fires release your fucked slaves to the hell of which they can perform servantry for the victims of your illegal war in Indochina. And Jew atrocites in mnazi ocuppied israel. Beneath it, Rosenberg scrawled the title of the show, dates and website in his chicken-scratch handwriting. (He omitted the address of the theater.) Some editors and critics may have dismissed the release out of hand, but Rosenberg has already received more press in Philly than he did in San Francisco. It was crude but effective — and, above all, inspired. (editorial@citypaper.net)
RADIATOR COVERS
a&e
Queen is packed with visceral language, but it’s a departure from Rosenberg’s other work.
[ arts & entertainment ]
the naked city | feature
Gut Check
BORNMANN MANUFACTURING CO. INC. 3731 Old York Rd., Phila. Pa 19140, 215-228-5826 www.customradiatorcovers.com
Queen of All Weapons runs through
July 31, $10, Papermill Theater, 2825 Ormes St., 510-292-6403, queenofallweapons.com.
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
19
<<< continued from page 17
20 | P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R |
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T
classifieds | food | the agenda
a&e
feature | the naked city
[ arts & entertainment ]
Body of Proof
racism and slavery are also portraits of a sort. He says he gets to know his models as individuals and poses them in ways that have meaning for them. But faces are not always in the picture. One series contrasts three simple photographs of a naked groin and hands with three identical close-ups posed behind prison bars. The impersonality contributes to the workâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s effectiveness. What difference do prison bars make to our understanding of a man â&#x20AC;&#x201D; rather than an individual personality? A man urinating on a Bible, one of a 10-part series called â&#x20AC;&#x153;Modern Slaveâ&#x20AC;? (also the name of the show), perhaps intentionally evokes Andres Serranoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s scandalous Piss Christ. That image of a crucifix suspended in the artistâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s urine initiated the 1989 controversy that ended federal funding of some art. Draganâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s intent here may be to reject a Christianity that says homosexuality is a sin or that is used to justify racial violence. Defiling the Bible may be titillatingly transgressive to some people, but it will violently enrage others. Letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not even think what might happen if that Bible were a Quran.
Dragan must also be compared to Robert Mapplethorpe. A 1988 Mapplethorpe retrospective organized by the Institute of Contemporary Art here in Philadelphia included the photographerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s celebrated (and castigated) images of black male nudes, bondage and sadomasochistic situations. The show was well-attended and reviewed locally, but in 1989 it ran into trouble in Washington, D.C., where Mapplethorpe and Serrano became censorship poster boys. Dragan, like Mapplethorpe, composes with exquisite formal beauty. Mapplethorpe, however, was unconcerned with embodying a message. His focus on beauty brought its own problems. When there isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t a â&#x20AC;&#x153;higherâ&#x20AC;? message, too much beauty just feels wrong to a lot of people. Like Mapplethorpe, who was a successful commercial photographer, Dragan could sell plenty of pictures without trying to say something profound. Sometimes, as with Prometheus Transcended, a hand-tinted photograph notable for its dramatic diagonal composition, he succeeds in presenting a strong visual idea seemingly without effort. Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s when the nude suddenly makes sense. (r_rice@citypaper.net)
1 = ; 7 < 5 A = = < (
8/4/11
EDUCATION GUIDE ISSUE 4`SS /RdS`b]`WOZ eWbV O & ^OUS 1]Z]` OR ]` ZO`US` 1]\bOQb Sara Carano T]` W\T] O\R `ObSa( 215-825-2484
AEGLive.com
the naked city | feature
veryone E r o F g in th e m So
a&e the agenda | food | classifieds
AUG 16 • 8PM
SEPT 21 • 8PM
OCT 20 • 8PM
SAT SEPT 17 • 8PM
SAT SEPT 24 • 8PM
OCT 5 • 8PM
OCT 6 • 8PM
OCT 9 • 7:30PM THE WORLD’S FOREMOST PINK FLOYD TRIBUTE BAND & LIGHT SHOW
NOV 17 • 8PM
D CONCERT
IVING WEEKEN
NKSG ANNUAL THA
FRI NOV 25 • 8PM
EASTON RD. & KESWICK AVE., GLENSIDE, PA
TO VIEW ALL UPCOMING SHOWS
visit keswicktheatre.com
21
GET TICKETS ON-LINE: keswicktheatre.com + email concert updates! FREE PARKING BOX OFFICE: 215-572-7650 TICKETMASTER: 800-745-3000 ticketmaster.com myspace.com/Keswick_theatre
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
SAT AUG 27 • 8PM
feature | the naked city a&e classifieds | food | the agenda J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
22 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
YOU AND A GUEST ARE INVITED TO ATTEND AN ADVANCE SCREENING
For your chance to win passes for you and a guest to an advance screening, visit www.citypaper.net/win TEN LUCKY WINNERS WILL RANDOMLY BE CHOSEN TO WIN A T-SHIRT! NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. PASSES ARE AVAILABLE WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. ONE (ADMIT TWO) PASS PER WINNER. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. SEATING AT SCREENING IS NOT GUARANTEED. THIS FILM IS RATED R.
GET SOME JULY 22!
the naked city | feature
movie
shorts
a&e
Films are graded by City PaPer critics a-F.
the agenda | food | classifieds
How to Live Forever
New A Better Life|B
HArry Potter ANd tHe deAtHLy HALLows: PArt 2 Read Drew Lazor’s review on p. 17. (Pearl, Roxy, UA 69th St., UA Grant, UA Main St., UA Riverview)
wiNNie tHe PooH A haiku: An English forest with a kangaroo never did make any sense. (Not reviewed) (Pearl, UA Riverview)
ACHER” E T D A B “ Z A I D M E R O N N D J A S O N S EG E L A C N O I T C U D O R P C S A I M I C H A E L H I G G I N S A WS O M A S T N E ES R P RES DRE HN COLUMBIA PTIICMTUBERLAKE LUCY PUNCH JTOOM WOLFE MUSICBY MICHAEGL AGNENE STUPNITSKY JUSTIN VISMIOUNSICBY MANISH RAVAL KASDAN LEE EISENBER DAVID HOUSEHOLTER SUPER AKE PRODUCEDBY JIMMY MILLER J S E D N A C A E K V TI U A I EXEC GEORG ENBERG S I E PRODUCERS E E L & Y K S T I WRITTENY GENE STUPN B DIRECTEBDY JAKE KASDAN
CoNtiNuiNg BAd teACHer|B-
As he remembers his late mother’s “downward slope,” Mark
A lowbrow, lowballing comedy whose characters are dead
check local listings for theaters and showtimes
23
How to Live forever|B-
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
The story of Carlos (Demián Bichir) could not be more timely or timeless. A Mexican immigrant who has lived for decades in East l.A., he’s made a point of keeping his head down and working hard, all to keep his u.S.-born son luis (José Julián) safe. When his longtime employer sells his pickup truck and landscaping business, it means a chance to move to another neighborhood and ensure that luis won’t fall in with a gang at his school. But everything begins to go wrong, and the movie shifts from an effective, low-key character study to a series of episodes, some antic, some predictable and some desperate. But if the film is uneven, and sometimes clichéd, Belchir is wonderful throughout, his ache and charm remaining subtle even as the melodrama seems overwhelming. As he gazes out the city bus window — with long panning shots intimating his heartbreak and wonder at all manner of people on the street or on suburban sidewalks, people who are living the life he imagined for luis — you see the film’s unresolved dilemma: Carlos’ experience is too familiar and also too often forgotten. He understands how he’s seen, how he’s feared and reviled, and all he wants is to look and live like those who would judge him. When Chris Weitz’s film keeps that focus, it’s poignant. But it’s just as often overly conventional, as if not to frighten away judgmental viewers. —Cindy Fuchs (Ritz Five)
Wexler’s camera scans a series of photos of her: “I prefer to remember her like this — high-spirited, creative, young.” The scene sets up a tension in Wexler’s documentary, between yearning for long life and dreading old age. The film rushes from one interview to another, from gerontologists and funeral directors to fitness expert Jack lalanne (who died in January) and Suzanne Somers (at 100, she says, “I want to play Chrissy Snow again as a really, really smart old lady”) — and lots of old people. They describe how they’ve lived or how they imagine dying. “I have a stick with a nail in it, and I go through life jabbing it at truths, and I keep them in a garbage bag,” says Ray Bradbury in not precisely a prescription, but something like an apt summation. Some say longevity might be achieved through nanobots in the blood or pet robots; other eat fish or smoke cigarettes and drink. As Wexler worries about forgetting, declining health and crass advertising geared toward baby boomers, he doesn’t come up with a compelling story or, for that matter, refined questions. you get an idea of where he might begin when writer Pico Iyer asks, “Mark, what moves you to make this movie?” He comes back to his mom, and how she looked to him as she was aging. But you get the feeling that other answers remain out of reach. —C.F. (Ritz at the Bourse)
24 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | j u l y 1 4 - j u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
classifieds | food | the agenda a&e
feature | the naked city
the naked city | feature a&e
the agenda | food | classifieds
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | j u l y 1 4 - j u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
25
feature | the naked city a&e classifieds | food | the agenda
also Playing Beginners | BRitz Five Bridesmaids | AUA Riverview Buck | B+ Ritz Five cars 2 | B UA Grant, UA Riverview green Lantern | C UA Riverview transformers: dark of the moon | D Pearl, UA Grant, UA Riverview Showtimes at citypaper.net/movies.
from the neck up, Bad Teacher is lazily written and indifferently directed, but itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s still a fitfully engaging showcase for a handful of razor-sharp comic talents. As an unrepentant gold digger saving up for a pair of fake tits, Cameron Diaz flaunts her lack of redeeming qualities, showing her seventhgrade students Dangerous Minds while she sleeps off a hangover at her desk. The movie is full of discarded plot threads and half-sketched characters, which is actually more offensive than its scattering of scatalogical jokes, but youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d have to have a strong will to resist the sight of Diaz jamming a corn dog into the mouth of a mustard bottle and tearing off a blissfully unhealthy bite. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Sam Adams (Pearl, UA Grant, UA Riverview)
26 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
Horrible bosses|C+ Jason Bateman, Jason Sudekis and
Charlie Day plot to permanently dispose of their, letâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s say, unpleasant supervisors, in the feature debut of King of Kongâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Seth Gordon. The manipulative tyrant (Kevin Spacey) and the vengeful cokehead (Colin Farrell) are one thing, but Dayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s saddled with an even worse fate: a hot boss (Jennifer Aniston) who wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t stop trying to jump his bones. Sexual panic figures heavily in the script â&#x20AC;&#x201D; three writers, sitcom vets all â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and not just Dayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s screeching, either. As they proceed with a plan to criss-cross murders, thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a lot of low-stakes humor, occasionally brought off by a mostly ingratiating cast. Day, however, brings the film to a shuddering halt every time he leaps into his falsetto shtick, which is roughly every 90 seconds. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hard to remember the last time an actor so over-estimated his onscreen charisma. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;S.A. (Pearl, Roxy, UA Grant, UA Riverview)
MidnigHt in Paris|B+ No filmmaker has been so self-aware and yet so trapped by his own neuroses as Woody Allen. Midnight in Paris is his latest auto-diagnosis, recognizing his chronic discontent and romanticization of an ideal other time, other place. That would be 1920s Paris, which screenwriter Gil (Owen Wilson) pines for as his own gilded age. Despite his role as chronicler of modern intellectual life, Allen has never shied away from leavening his films with fantasy, and the latest iteration results in his best film in recent memory, light and amiable but honestly funny. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;S.B. (Ritz Five)
Page one|BAndrew Rossi spent a year inside The New York Times and emerged with a sporadically engaging but largely flaccid portrait of journalism done right. Rossiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s decision to focus on the
Timesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; media desk, particularly the slobby, scratchy-voiced and irresistible reporter David Carr, should put the film in the thick of the changes roiling the industry, but instead he opts for the far less enlightening tack of showering hosannas on the paperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s coverage, which is a little like pointing out that, hey, the yankees are a pretty good team. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;S.A. (Ritz Five)
tHe tree of life|ATerrence Malickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s phenomenal, phenomenological The Tree of Life tells the story of Jack, whose father (Brad Pitt) drills his three sons ceaselessly on his version of proper behavior. His wife (Jessica Chastain) is a less defined presence, powerfully emotive but hazily sketched. The opening narration lays out a struggle between the principles of grace (formative, forgiving, divine) and nature (earthly, destructive), attributes which sync loosely with the parents themselves. Malickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s reach extends far beyond the confines of time and place, to the edges of the universe and the dawn of life. There hasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t been anything like The Tree of Life in years, and until Malick makes another movie, there wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t be. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;S.A. (Ritz at the Bourse)
tHe triP|B+ Road trips offer freedom of exploration, unscheduled days â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and the occasionally hellish confinement of being trapped in a tiny space with another person. Comedians Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon swerve between both extremes while traveling through the British countryside, carping at each other, riffing on inane comic concepts and sinking into self-absorbed silences. In short, itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s just like any long car trip â&#x20AC;&#x201D; with the added neuroses of two professional comedians. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;S.B. (Ritz at the Bourse)
[ movie shorts ]
ZookeePer|F Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s unclear why zookeeper Griffin (Kevin James) wants to marry Stephanie (leslie Bibb), a fashion designer, in the first place. So when she dumps him â&#x20AC;&#x201D; cruelly â&#x20AC;&#x201D; the premise becomes even fuzzier. The animals under his care, so it seems, want to help him win her back. Voiced by celebrities, these creatures come up with a series of terrible ideas. While it wants to be Night at the Museum meets Dr. Dolittle, Zookeeper is relentlessly stupid and badly put together. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;C.F. (Pearl, UA Grant, UA Riverview)
rePertory filM aMbler tHeater 108 E. Butler Ave., Ambler, 215-3457855, amblertheater.org. A Star is Born (1954, u.S., 181 min.): Judy Garland made a real-life comeback with this film about a Hollywood starletâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rise to fame. Thu., July 14, 7 p.m., $9.75. Little Lebowski Fest Along with a screening of The Big Lebowski (1998, u.S., 117 min.), this festival features movie-themed games and costume competitions. Wed., July 20, 7 p.m., $9.75-$15.
andrewâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Video Vault Rotunda, 4014 Walnut St., armcinema25Âş.com. Workout Videos: you may not break a sweat, but youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll bust a gut laughing at old-school workout videos like Dance! Workout with Barbie (1991, u.S., 30 min.), starring Jennifer love Hewitt, and the MTV-produced The Grind Workout: Fitness with Flava (1995, u.S., 54 min.). Thu., July 14, 8 p.m., free.
awesoMe fest Piazza at Schmidts, Second and Hancock streets, theawesomefest.com. Se-
cret Screening. So far the Awesome
Fest screening choices have been solid. Trust them on this one. Thu., July 14, 7:30 p.m., free. Reindeerspotting (2010, Finland, 84 min.): Tired of his hard-partying lifestyle, a 19-year-old addict embarks on a train tour across Europe. Sun., July 17, 8 p.m., free.
tHe balCony 1003 Arch St., 215-922-6888, thetroc. com. Conan the Barbarian (1982, u.S., 129 min.): â&#x20AC;&#x153;Harm my flesh and you will have to deal with the dead!â&#x20AC;? Mon., July 18, 8 p.m., $3.
bryn Mawr filM institute 824 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, 610527-9898, brynmawrfilm.org. Strangers on a Train (1951, u.S., 101 min.): A socialite and pro tennis star join forces to plan the perfect murder. Hitchcock directs. Tue., July 19, 7 p.m., $10.
Colonial tHeatre 227 Bridge St., Phoenixville, 610-9171228, thecolonialtheatre.com. FailSafe (1964, u.S., 112 min.): Director Sidney lumetâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s thriller that contemplates WWIII and the destruction of the world. Sun., July 17, 2 p.m., $8. E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial (1982, u.S., 115 min.): â&#x20AC;&#x153;I just hope we donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t wake up on Mars or something, surrounded by millions of these little squashy guys.â&#x20AC;? Tue., July 19, 10:30 a.m., $9.75.
County tHeater 20 E. State St., Doylestown, 215345-6789, countytheater.org. On the Waterfront (1954, u.S., 108 min.): Marlon Brando won an Oscar for his portrayal of an ex-prize fighter turned
&
eee U]T]P] Q][ @AD> 17BG2D6: Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t miss the brand new soundtrack to the upcoming hit movie â&#x20AC;&#x153;Captain America: The First Avengerâ&#x20AC;? from Marvel Studios. Soundtrack by Academy AwardÂŽ nominated composer Alan Silvestri features 26 tracks and is available 7/19. No purchase necessary. Limit two tickets per person while supplies last. Theatre is overbooked to ensure a full house. Arrive early. Tickets received through this promotion do not guarantee admission. Seating is on a first-come, first-served basis, except for members of the reviewing press. This film is rated PG-13. Anti-piracy security will be in place at this screening. By attending, you agree to comply with all security requirements. A recipient of ticket assumes any and all risks related to use of ticket and accepts any restrictions required by ticket provider.
IN THEATRES JULY 22 CaptainAmerica.Marvel.com
INVITE YOU AND A GUEST TO A SPECIAL ADVANCE SCREENING
For your chance to win a pass for a screening on Tuesday, July 19th at 7:30pm at the RITZ FIVE, go to the contest page online at:
WWW.CITYPAPER.NET/WIN NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST. ONE ENTRY PER PERSON OR ADDRESS. WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN AT RANDOM. EACH WINNER WILL RECEIVE ONE (ADMIT-TWO) PASS. TICKET DOES NOT GUARANTEE SEATING. THIS SCREENING IS OVERBOOKED TO ENSURE A FULL HOUSE. YOU ARE ENCOURAGED TO ARRIVE EARLY TO RESERVE YOUR SEAT. SEATING IS NOT GUARANTEED.
OPENING IN PHILADELPHIA ON JULY 22ND
Check out City Paper’s
longshoreman who gives his corrupt union bosses the what-for. Tue., July 19, 7 p.m., $9.75.
win blog
movie passes, concert tix, DVDs
Jeff Craig, SIXTY SECOND PREVIEW
citypaper.net/win “THE MOST THOROUGHLY ENJOYABLE MOVIE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!” Steve Persall, ST. PETERSBURG TIMES
INDIE FILM SERIES
“THE PERFECT CLIMAX TO A CLASSIC SERIES.” Larry King, CNN
“YOU MAY NEVER SEE SOMETHING QUITE LIKE THIS AGAIN.”
the agenda | food | classifieds
”
“
a&e
“A MAGICAL HEART-STOPPING ADVENTURE.” Pat Collins, FOX 5 NEWS
FAIRMOUNT WATER WORKS INTERPRETIVE CENTER 640 Waterworks Drive, 215-685-0723, fairmountwaterworks.com. Home (2009, U.S., 95 min.): As a part of its monthlong Discover the Earth’s Problems and Solve Them series, FWWIC is screening this doc by Yann ArthusBertrand that, through aerial footage of 54 countries, shows the effect humanity is having on the ecological balance of the planet. Sundays in July, 1:30 and 3:30 p.m., free.
‘‘THE LAST ‘HARRY’ IS THE BEST ‘HARRY’!’’
the naked city | feature
[ movie shorts ]
Leonard Maltin, MALTIN ON MOVIES
“A ONCE IN A LIFETIME FRANCHISE COMES TO AN AWESOME FINALE.” Steve Weintraub, COLLIDER.COM
Headhouse Square, Second between Pine and Lombard streets, 215625-7988, southstreet.com. Night Catches Us (2010, U.S., 90 min.): Shot locally, this film is set in racially divided Philadelphia following the Black Power movement. Wed., July 20, 8 p.m., free.
“THIS ‘POTTER’ IS PERFECT.” Ryan Jay, PREMIERE RADIO NETWORKS
FRIENDS OF THE PHILADELPHIA CITY INSTITUTE LIBRARY Free Library, Philadelphia City Institute Branch, 1905 Locust St., 215-6856621, freelibrary.org. Garden of Evil (1954, U.S., 100 min.): While vacaying in rural Mexico, three American tourists are hired to rescue a local from the Apaches. Wed., July 20, 2 p.m., free.
MEGA-BAD MOVIE NIGHT
WOODEN SHOE 704 South St., 215-413-0999, woodenshoebooks.com. I Am Curious (Blue, Part. 2) (1968, U.S., 107 min.): The same crew as I Am Curious (Yellow) analyzes relationships, religion, prisons and sex. Sun., July 10, 7 p.m., free.
COLUMBIA PICTURES AND METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PICTURES PRESENT A BROKENMUSICROAD/HEY EDDIE/HAPPY MADISON PRODUCTION MUSIC KEVI N JAMES “ Z OOKEEPER” ROSARI O DAWSON SUPERVISION BY MICHAEL DILBECK BY RUPERT GREGSON-WILLIAMS EXECUTIVE PRODUCED PRODUCERS BARRYBERNARDI JEFF SUSSMAN CHARLES NEWIRTH JENNIFER EATZ BY TODD GARNER KEVIN JAMES ADAM SANDLER JACK GIARRAPUTO WALT BECKER STORY SCREENPLAY DIRECTED BY JAY SCHERICK & DAVID RONN BY NICK BAKAY & ROCK REUBEN & KEVIN JAMES AND JAY SCHERICK & DAVID RONN BY FRANK CORACI A FILM BY FRANK CORACI
More on:
citypaper.net CHECK OUT MORE R E P E R T O R Y F I L M L I S T I N G S AT
NOW PLAYING CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATERS AND SHOWTIMES
EVERYWHERE FRIDAY, JULY 15 – CHECK DIRECTORIES FOR LISTINGS
27
C I T Y PA P E R . N E T / R E P F I L M .
P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R | J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T |
Academy of Natural Sciences, 1900 Ben Franklin Parkway, 215-2991000, ansp.org. Mega Python vs. Gatoroid (2011, U.S., 90 min.): Monstrous pythons ravage the Florida Everglades’ alligator population. They leave the old people alone, though. Sun., July 10, 7 p.m., free.
a&e | feature | the naked city
agenda
the
lisTings@ciTypaper.neT | July 14 - July 20
classifieds | food
the agenda
[ life and most of its facets ]
CIAO, BELLA: Annette Alessi’s oil-on-canvas Vintage Elegance is featured in the Da Vinci Art Alliance’s 80th anniversary exhibit, on view through July 31.
The Agenda is our selective guide to what’s going on in the city this week. For comprehensive event listings, visit citypaper.net/listings.
28 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
iF yOu Want tO Be liSted:
Submit information by email (listings@citypaper.net) to Josh Middleton or enter them yourself at citypaper.net/submit-event with the following details: date, time, address of venue, telephone number and admission price. Incomplete submissions will not be considered, and listings information will not be accepted over the phone.
Thursday
7.14 [ dj nights ]
SnackS Every week the people behind Making Time and Rvng Intl. turn it out proper in Voyeur’s Ruby lounge basement. This week is extra special because they have Tigersushi Records’ head honcho, Joakim, laying
down the peak-hour sounds. Hailing from Paris, Joakim just released the single “Forever young” from his upcoming album. And if that’s not enough, Portland’s Matthew Quiet will guest-DJ. All this radness is free, people, and it’s going late. —Gair “dev 79” Marking Thu., July 14, 10 p.m.-3:30 a.m., Voyeur, 1221 St. James St., 215-7355772, voyeurnightclub.com.
[ visual art ]
Da Vinci From its brick front, the Da Vinci Art Alliance looks like any other South Philly home on a nice wide block. That’s good — for 80 years now, it’s always felt more like a familial place than a cold gallery space. This nonprofit, founded by a group of Italian-Americans, has a locals-only focus and concentrates on all forms of art, workshops and off-site collaborations. To celebrate eight decades, Da Vinci hosts the
“80th Anniversary Members Exhibition: Then and Now,” an insular multimedia show featuring all manner of Italians. Abbondanza. —a.d. amorosi Through July 31, free, Da Vinci Gallery, 704 Catharine St., 215-8290466, davinciartalliance.org.
Friday
7.15 [ theater ]
Winter’S tale The Delaware Shakespeare Festival might have chosen this year’s show just for the title: With any luck, The Winter’s Tale will bring the July heat index down a few degrees. An appropriately magical romance for the beautiful sylvan setting, Winter’s
a fairy-tale adventure about a suspicious king who accuses his queen of treason. Pre-show picnicking is encouraged and rewarded with an orientation discussion for those curious and/or nervous about their Shakespeare.
an open environment for all visitors — from cool kids to kids who only wish they were.
[ sports ]
HiStory of BMX Get lessons in cool from two guys who know it best: John Swarr and Mark Eaton, two former BMX stars who’ve been with the sport since its inception on suburban streets. The duo’s film, Joe Kid on a Stingray: The History of BMX, explores the history of BMX, its riders and where the sport is now. A Q&A with the filmmakers follows the screening, held at a new South Philly skate shop, Community, which offers
—Shaun Brady
—Meg augustin Fri., July 15, 7 p.m., free, Community Bikes and Boards, 712 S. Fourth St., 267-861-0544, communitybikesandboards.com.
—Mark Cofta July 15-30, $10-$12, Rockwood Park, 610 Shipley Road, Wilmington, Del., 302-764-0113, delshakes.org.
end Bootsie Barnes, bassist lee Smith and pianist lucas Brown.
[ jazz ]
PHilly Joe JoneS triBute Plenty of jazz icons have come out of Philadelphia, but only one shares its name. On what would have been his 88th birthday, Jazz Bridge will honor Philly Joe Jones and raise money to help local musicians in need. The evening begins — appropriately enough when paying tribute to one of the music’s greatest drummers — with the rhythm-heavy sounds of Sticks & Tones Percussion. After that, one of Philly Joe’s torchbearers, the great Mickey Roker, will lead his quartet with local sax leg-
Fri., July 15, 8 p.m., $20, Chris’ Jazz Cafe, 1421 Sansom St., 215-568-3131, chrisjazzcafe.com, jazzbridge.org.
saTurday
7.16 [ fashion party ]
neo-Vintage at Dorian’S Parlor Once a month, a perfectly unsuspecting hotel ballroom gets transported to a bygone era. This is Dorian’s Parlor, “a social fashion aesthetic that grew out of a literary genre,” according to emcee G.D. Falksen. Check out Dorian’s neo-vintage fashion show, plus music from This Way to Egress, Voltaire and DJ Dave Ghoul. Guests are
shoppingspree By Julia West
AMBER KIRyLAK
food | classifieds
If you think punk and femininity are forever enemies, you’ve never met Candy Depew.And we’re not talking about some awful leather-studs-and-pink-bows Hot Topic hybrid; she’s the real deal, a DIY silk-screener with a keen sense of ethics and aesthetics. No one does the hard-meets-soft, rock-meets-posh act better than Depew, a local artist who’ll give a free screen-printing demo at Art Star Gallery & Boutique this evening (July 14). Witness firsthand the fruits of handmade labor — and the sense of accomplishment that comes from creating your own rad designs. If the spirit moves you, sign up for one of Depew’s classes, which she holds all summer at her Studio School of Decorative Art in Old City. If you’re more of a consumer than a constructor, don’t sweat it — this week’s Thirsty Thursday shindig at Art Star will also make available Fat Quarters, Depew’s newest line of punchy graphic yardage. Pick up fabrics adorned with goldfish, diamonds and regal flowers, all created in colors that pop. The end result may seem simple, but the way Depew organizes and executes her patterns is nothing short of sophisticated:The linear movements are thoughtful and the color palette, saturated and sexy. Where does she draw inspiration? Well, pretty much everywhere: “They come from recollections, color combinations seen, observing plants grow, understanding how learning changes peoples’ lives,” she says.“From hearing stories on public transit, riding bikes on a perfect day [or] evening with a gentle summer breeze, symbols from ancient times, life in general and most of its facets.” Demonstration and Thirsty Thursday event, Thu., July 14, 5-8 p.m., free, Art Star Gallery & Boutique, 623 N. Second St., 215-238-1557, artstarphilly.com, candycoated.org. (julia.west@citypaper.net)
the agenda
➤ Candy depew: Candy Coated
the naked city | feature | a&e
[ the agenda ]
Have an upcoming shopping event? Give it here. E-mail listings@citypaper.net.
—Grace Ortelere Sat., July 16, 8 p.m., $25, Doubletree Hotel, 237 S. Broad St., doriansparlor.com.
Sunday
7.17 [ folk/rock ]
Chapin SiSterS The title of the Chapin Sisters’ new album, Two, has a double meaning: It’s their sophomore release, but it also marks their paring down to a duo after the departure of their half-sister/ Wes Craven’s daughter Jessica
Craven. But the eeriness that marked their debut didn’t leave with her; their haunting harmonies now suggest Alan Lomax discovering the Shining twins, Appalachian folksiness blended with ghostly plaints. —Shaun Brady Sun., July 17, 8 p.m., $12-$15, with Sean Rowe, World Café Live, 3025 Walnut St., 215-222-1400, worldcafelive.com.
[ sports ]
Down & Dirty MuD run It’s too late to sign up for Sunday’s Merrell National Down and Dirty Mud Run, but spectators who don’t mind getting a little filthy are welcome to watch the race’s wealth of muddy escapades. Expect rapid river crossings, obstacle courses, cargo-carrying expeditions
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u L y 1 4 - J u L y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
asked to don outfits inspired by the Victorian and Edwardian eras. Nothing to wear? Snag something new from a vendor specializing in steampunk.
29
a&e | feature | the naked city the agenda classifieds | food
and, of course, mud. More than 5,000 runners have signed up for this 5- or 10-kilometer kneedeep trudge-tastic adventure, and proceeds support overseas troops. So dish out a little love for the runners â&#x20AC;&#x201D; just bring a change of clothes. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Khoury Johnson Sun., July 17, 7 a.m.-12:30 p.m., free, Fairmount Park, Belmont Plateau, Belmont Mansion and Montgomery drives, 818-707-8866 ext. 32, downanddirtymudrun.com.
Erika M. Andersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first solo album after the breakup of her band Gowns, the singer/guitarist channels an emotive intensity and stark (though rarely simple) directness reminiscent of PJ Harvey, Chan Marshall and Patti Smith. For all of their raw, borderline assaultive noisiness (and almost equally discomfiting quietude), and
harmony â&#x20AC;&#x201D; feel less like confrontation or splenetic fury than piercingly vital catharsis. This stuff is uncompromising yet compelling, rendered indelible and even inviting thanks to her honesty, wit, sonic invention, magpie referentiality (drawing on everything from â&#x20AC;&#x153;Camptown Racesâ&#x20AC;? to Chicago) and genuine melodic sweetness. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;K. Ross Hoffman Mon., July 18, 8 p.m., $10, with Helado Negro, Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 877-435-9849, kungfunecktie.com.
[ the agenda ]
term. The Asteroid No. 4 can tell you all about it, man. Their most recent album, Hail to the Clear Figurines, will paint paisley patterns all over your brain with their spacey, fuzzy (check â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wicked Wireâ&#x20AC;?) shoegazing rock. The torch is held high for all the other Philly psych rockers. Or maybe thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a joint. â&#x20AC;&#x201D;Brian Wilensky
MONDAY
7.18 [ rock/pop ]
EMA
3dS`g ESR\SaROg Ob 5`Sg A]QWOZ(
On Past Life Martyred Saints (Souterrain Transmissions),
TUESDAY
unflinching examinations of violence, lust, abuse, nausea, alienation and lost love, Andersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s songs â&#x20AC;&#x201D; forged from drone, lo-fi, folk, grunge-informed artpunk, spoken-word poetry and even shape-note-style choral
Tue., July 19, 8 p.m., $7, with Far-Out Fangtooth and Lantern, Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 877-4359849, kungfunecktie.com.
7.19
[ rock/pop ]
BIG BUSINESS
[ rock/pop ]
THE ASTEROID NO. 4 Psychedelic is a complicated
Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not like Big Business could get heavier, exactly. True, the onetime power duo looks like a
8/HH eWbV R`c[[S`
>3>>3 ;3@=::/
TSObc`W\U bVS Âż\Sab XOhh [caWQWO\a T`][ >VWZZg O\R <G1 E32<3A2/G 8C:G B6 '^[ O[ >3>>3 ;3@=::/ B@7= 43/BC@7<5 A7<53@ 8C:73 16/@<3B :WdS [caWQ % \WUVba O eSSY TSObc`W\U bVS V]bbSab bOZS\b Z]QOZZg O\R \ObW]\OZZg
! 1VSab\cb Ab`SSb Â&#x2019; # ' # !!%'
A Beer Bar Over 100 Beers!
www.southphiladelphiataproom.com 1509 MIFFLIN ST. â&#x20AC;˘ 215-271-7787
Open For Lunch!
30 | P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R |
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T
Philadelphiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Most Award Winning Brewery
$4 HAPPY HOUR Monday â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Friday 5-7pm Sunday â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Thursday 11pmâ&#x20AC;&#x201C;1am
FOODht Nightly S S A K nig KIC w â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;til Mid f Dre By Che ri. & Sat.) m 0a F (1:3
ZO m QUaIZ ys at 9p Sund
NORTH R O T C I V Y SUNDA RUNCH arys B JAZZosas & $4 Bloody M $4 Mim
Brewery & Restaurant 1516 Sansom Street â&#x20AC;˘ Philly 215.569.9525 www.noddingheadphilly.com
[ the agenda ]
sit back and take it. —Shaun Brady
7.20
food | classifieds
Wednesday
the agenda
Tue., July 19, 8 p.m., $12, with Torche and Helms Alee, First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St., 877-4359849, r5productions.com.
the naked city | feature | a&e
much more conventional rock band these days, supplementing the core rhythm section (which also serves as half of the Melvins) with a couple of guitarists. But given the sledgehammer force they were already wielding, the band could really only expand in breadth. So there’s a lot
[ rock/dance ] more going on these days, as evidenced by the filigree licks spinning off of the trademark riffery on their new Quadruple Single EP, but these boys are gonna steamroller over you no matter their numbers, so just
GanG GanG Dance “It’s everything time,” says a voice at the start of “Glass Jar,” the 11-minute synth-seance/tribal trance/polyrhythm
$2 TACOS EVERY SUNDAY
FROM 7-MIDNIGHT!
GREAT FOOD AND BEER AT SURPRISING PRICES HAPPY HOUR 5-7
Seven Days a Week. ½ OFF ALL DRAFTS! Kitchen open till 1am every night. Open 5pm-2am 7days a week. CHECK OUT OUR UPSTAIRS: Pool Table, Darts, Video Games! Corner of 10th and Watkins . 1712 South 10th 215-339-0175 . Facebook.com/watkinsdrinkery
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
31
a&e | feature | the naked city the agenda classifieds | food
TM
SaX]Z TPc 7P]V 7XST
Open everyday 5p-2a Kitchen Open All Night Happy Hour Everyday 5p-7p
NOT GUILTY
SundayS SundayS
THURSDAY
Wired 96.5 on the Main Floor House Music on The Roof Thursday Birthday - bottle of champagne and cake on the house!
FRiDAY
Hip Hop on the Main Floor House Music on The Roof
SATURDAY
House Music on the Main Floor Hip Hop on The Roof
SUNDAY
House Music on the Main Floor Q102 on The Roof
MONDAY
Gro
up Therapy
B ar
JOIN US THIS SUNDAY TO CELEBRATE THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE INVENTION OF THE SEWING MACHINE!
Latin Night/Free Lessons On the Main Floor Mixed Music on The Roof Hip Hop on the Main Floor w/Strength Dance Competition/ Pole Dancing Oldies Music on The Roof
704 Chestnut St. 215.592.9533 L a s Ve g a s L o u n g e . c o m
WEDNESDAY
Continuation of Center City Sips 5p-7p Hip Hop on the Roof & Main Floor 116 S.18 th Street 215-568-1020 www.vangoloungeandskybar.com
32 | P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R |
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T
HAPPY HOUR MON â&#x20AC;&#x201C; FRI 5-7 FRIDAY 7/15, 10PM Taxicab Racers Bad News Bears SATURDAY 7/16, 9PM YO MOMMAâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S BIG FAT BOOTY BAND Dirk Quinn Band Agent Moosehead SUNDAY 7/17, 8PM Open Mic Night hosted by BoyWonder MONDAY 7/18, 9PM Open Jam hosted by Tony Catastrophe TUESDAY 7/19, 6PM-12AM BEAR LAKE WEDNESDAY 7/20, 7PM The Hype Stoplight Party 215.625.0855 117 Chestnut St.Philadelphia, PA triumphbrewing.com facebook.com/triumpholdcity
THURSDAY HOOKAH HIP-HOP NIGHT BRING IN THIS AD FOR A FREE HOOKAH* 10-1 FRIDAY HIP-HOP & HOUSE SATURDAY WORLD MUSIC SUNDAY GREEK / MEDITTERANEAN NIGHT Free Belly Dancing lessons 9:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 10:30 pm MONDAY LAID BACK HOUSE TUESDAY OLD SKOOL HIP-HOP WEDNESDAY HOUSE MUSIC 1/2 Price Drinks with Student ID 10-1 116 S. 18th Street 215.568.3050 www.byblosphilly.com *restrictions apply
~TUESDAY~ $5 Burgers $3 Victory Pints ALL DAY! $2 Well Drinks and $5 Layered Pints 10pm-12am Manayunkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Best Pub Quiz Starts @ 9pm ~WEDNESDAY~ $6 Beer Infused Mussel Bowls $3 Rotating Craft Beer Pints (ALL DAY) $2 Blue Moons and $2 U-Call Its10-12am ~THURSDAY~ $2 Miller Lite ALL DAY ½ Price Drinks (All Drinks) 9-11pm ½ Price Irish Craic Nachos ~FRIDAY~ $9.99 Fish and Chips New Friday Happy Hour $1 High Life and $3 Jameson and Ginger from 6-8pm Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s in the Box Promotion 7-10pm. Buy an Irish Pint and win. $3 Coors Lights ALL DAY!
TUESDAY
OF OVERPRICED BOOZE!
~MONDAY~ WING NIGHT... $0.35 Wings $2 Yuenglings ALL DAY! $3 Smithwicks and $2 Wells 10-12am
DOWNSTAIRS
ON The CORNeR Of
9Th & ChRISTIAN
12STepSDOWN.COm TWelveSTepSDOWN@AOl.COm
215.238.0379
~SATURDAY~ DJâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s @ 10pm $3 Miller High Life ALL DAY $9.99 Boxyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Skillet Brunch til 3pm ~SUNDAY~ Skillet Brunch until 3 pm. $9.99 Celtic Cuisine $3 Bloody Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Mary ALL DAY $ 3 Stella Pints & $4 Guinness Pints 9-11p.m
SILKCITYPHILLY.COM 5TH & SPRING GARDEN
THURSDAY 7/14 MO $$ NO PROBLEMS FRIDAY 7/15 SO SPECIAL BO BLIZ & DJ MANIK SATURDAY 7/16 DJ DEEJAY
./7 /. 4!0 FLYING FISH FARMHOUSE ALE MAGIC HAT WACKO PBC FLEUR DE LEHIGH VICTORY HOPDEVIL
(!009 (/52 EVERYDAY 5-7PM. FREE PIZZA $2 BEER OF THE WEEK $2 WELL DRINKS
4(523$!9
SUNDAY 7/17 SUNDAE PM
HORIZONTAL ACTION
GUEST DJ BLACK COFFEE
THUGGINâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; STILETTO
MONDAY 7/18 MASS APPEAL DJ FREDDY FIGGS DJ CRU CUT
GOOD TO YOUR EARHOLE
DJs LEE JONES & DIRTY
WEDNESDAY 7/20 â&#x20AC;&#x153;LIP SERVICEâ&#x20AC;? LES PROFESSIONNELS GUEST DJ SYLO DAPPER CADS (LIVE)
&2)$!9
3!452$!9 45%3$!9
LIVE WITH JOHN MOLNAR
Passyunk ave (7TH & CARPENTER)
215.465.5505
myspace.com\thedivebar
Old School Limbo in the Biz: Mikey Ears & DJ Butch Mayo
Monday Monday
Hold-em Poker
THU
â&#x20AC;&#x153;lETHAl POPâ&#x20AC;?
14
lOWBEEzY & DIRTY SOUTH JOE NO COVER
15
FRI
TueSday TueSday
SaSo: Sabrina, Sophia & DJ Jay M
WedneSdayS WedneSdayS Summertime: DJs Adrian Hardy and Manny Romano
ThurSdayS ThurSdayS
MICHAEl JACKSON MADONNA, PRINCE $5
16
SAT
DARK WAVE PARTY DENNIS WOlFFANG, JHN RDN JANE PAIN $5
17
SUN
Drug Bunny Cabaret: Live Acts & DJâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
FridayS
The Unusual Suspects: DJ Bobby Startup
SaTurdayS SaTurdayS
Hang & Hide in the City: DJ Bruce
KEVIN C & â&#x20AC;&#x153;STEADYâ&#x20AC;? EDDIE AUSTIN DOllAR DRINKS TIll 11 NO COVER MON 18
TIGERBEATS INDIE DANCE PARTY, NO COVER TUE
Private
19
Party
No Cover Happy Hour 5-7 Daily WED
20
11 S. 21st St (@ Ludlow) 215.561.1193 roguesgallerybar.com
80â&#x20AC;&#x2122;S/90â&#x20AC;&#x2122;S DANCE PARTY ROMES & TOO DOPE. NO COVER
Tues, July 26th, 8pm, No Cover SMILE .  NewRecordParty w/WilH&SteadyEddieand Friends-spinning,BLUES& RHYTHM,ROCK&ROLL, PSYCH,GARAGE,SURF&SOUL DrinkSpecials8-11pm Sat, July 30th 9:30pm $5 BLOWUPAGOGO!WiththeBiters, GoldCrownsandRocksOffDJs DanKishbaugh,ErickKohlhofer& BillCoburn Every Tuesday, 8pm KingoftheHillPoolTournament Wed Nite Open Mic â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Original Musicâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 9pm w/DaveRobins orAbetheRockstarr Happy Hour Mondays-Fridays5-7pm $2.50KenzingerPints&More! Beer of the Month Narragansettâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;sSummerAle FREEWI-FI
—Janet Anderson
Wed., July 20, 9 p.m., $14, with Total Freedom and Nguzunguzu, Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 877435-9849, johnnybrendas.com.
[ dance ]
July 20-24, $30, Wilma Theater, 265 S. Broad St., 215-546-7824, balletx.org.
tary about how other countries provide their citizens with health care — a valuable lesson, considering that Keystone Research estimates that almost 15 percent of Philadelphians are uninsured. The members of HCAP hope to further healthcare reform by educating the public. “The screening is part of an effort to bring information into local communities,” says longtime member Linda Beckman, “especially those that are not affluent.”
food | classifieds
—K. Ross Hoffman
[ the agenda ]
the agenda
is finding new work.” Enter Belgian choreographer Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, whose Castrati explores the old Italian practice of castrating singers to attain the desired soprano voice; Roger C. Jeffrey, director of New York dance collective Subtle Changes, with a soliloquy among many; San Franciscan Amy Seiwert, who brings the pas de deux It’s Not a Cry, performed to Jeff Buckley’s version of “Hallelujah”; and Gabrielle Lamb, who delivers en dedans, a filmed exploration of what dancers dream. Says Cox: “This is what happens when you tell inspired choreographers, ‘Do whatever.’”
the naked city | feature | a&e
party that kicks off Gang Gang Dance’s delightful 4AD debut, Eye Contact. While the long-running New York indie weirdos haven’t exactly gone normal on us, they’ve created their most palatable and streamlined effort to date. Still, they manage to cram a sizable smattering of everything into their globe-traversing grooves, from the jump-up bashment bass of “MindKilla” to the swirling Eastern inflections of “Chinese High” to the abstracted quiet storm R&B of “Romance Layers” — and through it all, the spine-tingling wails and simpers of the legitimately Björk-like Lizzi Bougatsos.
—Andy Polhamus Wed., July 20, 5:30 p.m., free, Free Library, Coleman Branch, 68 West Chelten Ave., 215-685-2150, phillyhealth.org.
[ health/screening ]
BalletX
Sick around the World
When asked why neither she nor her co-artistic director, Matt Neenan, are showcasing their own pieces in BalletX’s Summer Series, Christine Cox is frank: “Our passion
Health Care for All of Philadelphia (HCAP) wants you to get sick of being sick. That’s why the organization is hosting a special screening of Sick Around the World, a PBS documen-
More on:
citypaper.net For comprehensive event listings, visit c i t y pa p e r . n e t / l i s t i n g s .
P H i l A d e l P H i A C i t y PA P e R | J u L Y 1 4 - J u L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y PA P e R . n e t |
33
the agenda | a&e | feature | the naked city food classifieds J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
34 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
f&d
foodanddrink
portioncontrol By Nicole Rossi
lithe sentence ➤ Lauren Boggi, owner and creator of
Lithe Method, a women’s fitness regime based on cardio, cheer and Pilates, started her company, Lithe Inc., in 2005 with a single studio in Northern Liberties. Since then, she’s expanded to locations in Rittenhouse and Old City; founded Lithe Pink, for post-operative breast cancer survivors; Lithe Wear, an apparel collection; and now Lithe Foods, a new grab-and-go health-food line she launched in April with the help of Lauren Hooks and Kim Osinski, both experienced restaurant and private chefs. “I wanted to create a healthy, sustainable way of eating, and I wanted it to be a lifestyle,” says Boggi. So in partnership with Hooks and Osinski, she constructed a seasonal, organic and mostly vegan menu based on products supplied by Fernbrook Farms, a chemical-free herb/vegetable farm in Bordentown, N.J., and Zone 7, a farm-fresh distribution center that links farmers and chefs throughout Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania. Lithe Foods are handmade and prepackaged by Hooks and Osinski in Fernbrook Farms’ kitchen and sold at Boggi’s Old City and Rittenhouse studios. Boggi’s desire to create meals that were “nonprocessed, locally sourced … calorically correct, full of flavor and free from preservatives” has its roots in her farm-life upbringing. Fine-tuned throughout a year of tossing around ideas and testing recipes, Hooks and Osinski’s portion-controlled summer menu offers a range of options for breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacking, like Blissful Berry Quinoa, a blend of strawberries, almond butter, coconut water, flax seed and agave. The menu provides an assortment of salads, wraps, egg and tofu dishes, as well as my personal favorite,The Herbie, a “Lithe Roll-Up” of seitan, zucchini, mushrooms, sun-dried tomatoes, onion and pesto in a whole-wheat Lavash tortilla. Lithe’s “Bento Box” contains roasted chickpeas, kale chips, granola and couscous for snacking. Boggi is continuing to create new Lithe Foods beyond the savory realm, too — she also has Lithe Smoothies and Lithesicles, 50-calorie popsicles, in flavors like cucumber-lime and lavender-lemon, which are due to come out this month. Boggi hopes to make her Lithe brand more accessible by getting Lithe Foods into local fresh-food stores. For now, though, Boggi and her chefs are discussing the idea of developing custom meal plans for clients, and Hooks hopes to get into the kitchen and teach vegan cooking classes in the near future. “We’re loving the new additions,” she says. To keep tabs on what Boggi is thinking up next, visit fithiphealthy.com. (nicole.rossi@citypaper.net)
GO FISH: The crispyskinned whole trout at Al Zaytouna, slow-marinated in lemon, olive oil and cumin before grilling, is worth seeking out. JessiCa KourKounis
[ review ]
Green Olive The Eastern Mediterranean Al Zaytouna has promise, but needs some practice. By Adam Erace
al Zaytouna | 906 Christian St., 215-574-5040. Lunch and dinner
served Sun.-Thu., 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Fri.-Sat., 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Appetizers and salads, $2.95-$9; sandwiches and entrées, $5.95-$15.95; dessert, $3.50. BYOB.
L
ike restaurants, olives require work. you can’t just pick a teeny arbequina or a chubby cerignola off a tree and chomp it like a ripe grape or kumquat. Olives, one of the most widely cultivated crops in the world, make their admirers, however indirectly, pay for their affection. From the chichi picholines of Di Bruno’s and Garces Trading Co. and the wrinkly gaetas sold by the plastic cup More on: in smelly Italian delis to the pimento-stuffed orbs wondering what’ll kill them first, the Grey Goose or the businessman’s molars, all but a few varieties of olives must be cured or fermented before eating. unlike slutty peaches and apples, the olive is a fruit you need to woo. Al Zaytouna, the Tunisia-inspired month-and-a-half-old ByO on a block better known for stuffed French toast than kebabs, is named after the ancient center for Islamic learning in the North African country’s capital of Tunis. But the literal Arabic translation is “the olive,” and this trim 30-seater is not unlike the fruit in
citypaper.net
its raw form. Though it’s got plenty of go-to potential — aside from Bitar’s, Mideast options are lacking in South Philly — Al Zaytouna hasn’t quite finished curing. Owner Koubeil Benayed grew up in Tunis, about 10 minutes from the resort town of Sidi Bou Said, where his father ran (and brother currently runs) a Mediterranean restaurant. When Benayed landed in Philly in 1995, he brought with him firsthand experience he parlayed into front- and back-of-the-house turns at Bistro St. Tropez, la Terrasse and Brasserie Perrier before riding solo on the old Mew Gallery space Al Zaytouna now occupies. Benayed has transformed the artsy-craftsy emporio, now decluttered of peacock-feather earrings and recycled-paper birthday cards. The only clue you’re in the same place are the sidewalk lingerers, just in view outside, waiting for a table at Sabrina’s. Where the handiwork of local artists once lined the hardwood-plank walls, now hang tourist-bureau posters of Sidi Bou Said, its whitewashed beach homes making it look like an appealmore food and ing honeymoon destination. With the heat drink coverage hanging in the restaurant like wet laundry, at c i t y p a p e r . n e t / I almost felt like I was there. m e a lt i c k e t. Chef Noomen Abed, a longtime veteran of Alyan’s on South Street (and fellow Tunisian), cooks everything in the skinny open kitchen just inside the front door. That’s got something to do with the heat — so does the door, propped open to catch an imaginary Philly summer breeze. Walking inside, you can feel the radiant warmth as Abed grills various meats over glowing coals and carves others from a rotating shawarma spit. Al Zayouna’s open kitchen is nice, and so is the welcoming, >>> continued on adjacent page
the naked city | feature | a&e | the agenda
[ food & drink ] MIDDLE EASTERN & LEBANESE CUISINE SINCE 1986
Green Olive <<< continued from previous page
I certainly would be happy if this hummus showed up at my door.
Hummus, Kibeh, Kabob, Grape Leaves, Falafel, and Seafood specialty 616 S. 2nd Street 215.925.4950 www.cedarsrestaurant.com
gracetavern.com
Check out City Paperâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
food blog news
recipes menu exclusives
ticket
classifieds
' 0 ! ))2 !(.+ ,) " %,
food
&FE;8P -?IL I@;8P GD ( %% + -, 0 %% +"'$, % ,, , ( 0"' ,) " % (& ,-" ,
8 ;@==<I<EK 9FKKC< FE JG<:@8C <M<IP ;8P
%% ' 0 ! ))2 !(.+ )) -"3 + & '. ' 0 %.' ! ,) " %, &FE;8P K?IL I@;8P KF ( %% , ' 0" ! , ( %% '-+ ,
citypaper.net/mealticket
+.' ! , - ,.' - & )& 637 N. 3rd Street . PHILADELPHIA
215-627-6711
# G3/@A =4 5@3/B 033@A /<2 ;3;=@/0:3 1633@A
3D3@G 6=C@ 7A 6/>>G 6=C@ dWaWb ]c` TOQSP]]Y ^OUS T]` b]ROgĂ&#x201A;a a^SQWOZa
P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R | J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T |
35
flung-open door. But sweating into your hummus isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t. Not when the hummus, smoothed in Tunisian fashion with lots of tahina, is this soothing. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s extra lemony, which is how I like my hummus, as well my Diet Coke. I dragged each point of warm pita â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Benayed gets it from a Middle Eastern bakery in Whitehall Township â&#x20AC;&#x201D; through the well of olive oil like a kid at the beach digging for sand crabs. Benayed says his primary business is takeout and delivery; I certainly would be happy if his hummus showed up at my door. While carry-out business booms â&#x20AC;&#x201D; during our interview, I had to call Benayed back on his cell because the restaurant line kept blowing up â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Benayed plans to improve the eat-in experience. The place could definitely use more decoration, as the Coca-Cola fridge really doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t qualify, and service, though warm, was somewhat jumpy. But based on my meal, it was the cooking in need of the most finesse. The parlsey-and-cilantro-greened falafel, for example, possessed an attractive herbal flavor but not enough of it to mask the taste of fryer oil. That the exteriors arrived nearly black should have been a clue. Foul mudammas (fava beans crushed into a paste with garlic, lemon and olive oil) could have used a stronger dose of the ras el hanout Benayedâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mom sends via FedEx monthly from the motherland, and the grilled lamb chops that shouldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve been luscious were instead scrawny and tough. The rice, served with all entrĂŠes, is doctored Uncle Benâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s, and the trout comes from the restaurant wholesaler Jetro. Despite its provenance, I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t hate on the Jetrout. It was the knockout of the night, a fine specimen measuring a full foot from nose to fin and served whole. Given Tunisiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s location on the Mediterranean, seafood is a staple of the countryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s diet, and Al Zaytouna treats its daily fish in the traditional manner, marinating it in lemon juice, extra-virgin olive oil and a sprinkle of cumin for â&#x20AC;&#x153;no less than three hoursâ&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Benayed is adamant about that. Al Zaytouna should capitalize on unexpected dishes like this one. Crispy-skinned after a pan-sear and packed with sweet, flaky white flesh, the trout didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t seem like standard kebab-shop fare. (Theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve got some satisfying kebab, too, the best of which are the steak and chicken.) Speared with a few leaves of salad slicked in punchy lemon vinaigrette, the fish tasted electric. I want more Tunisian secrets and specialties like this. Sure, all the settlements along the shores of the Mediterranean share some culinary overlap, but highlighting and celebrating the distinctions of Benayed and Abelâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cradle would seed Al Zaytouna in its own conference. Those recipes are on the way, Benayed promises, but for now, youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll only get to try their housemade red couscous with braised lamb shank (as one big birthday booking did recently) with a large party and plenty of advanced notice. Looks like I know where Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll be celebrating next year. (adam.erace@citypaper.net)
Mediterranean Cuisine .Open 7 days a week
26
27 31
34
32
By Matt Jones
35
“nose Job” — whADDyA sAy?
m arket place
➤
adoptions Adoption
on June 24, 2011 Articles of Incorporation were filed with the Department of State for Accountability PA a nonprofit corporation organized under the provisions of the Pennsylvania Nonprofit Corporation Law of 1988, for the purpose of promoting the principles of good government and good citizenship by educating citizens about the availability of public records and other information regarding the actions and policies of elected officials, government employees and corporations . SAWMiLLS
Adoption
WAntEd
ADOPT:Athletic devoted couple love & laughter, large extended family, will cherish your baby. Expenses paid. Caroline & Mel. 1-866-812-0650.
from only $3997-MAKE MONEY & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill-Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE info & DVD: www. NorwoodSawmills.com/300N 1-800-578-1363 Ext. 300N BUYING COINS- Gold, Silver & ALL Coins, Stamps, Paper Money, Entire Collections worth $5,000 or more. Travel to your home. CASH paid. Call Marc 1-800-488-4175.
Adoption
ADOPTION IS LOVE. 1st time mom & dad promise your baby a secure, happy life. Expenses paid. Theresa & Evan, 1-866664-1213. pREGnAnt? ConSidERinG Adoption?
Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions 866-413-6293.
Public notices nonpRofit
Notice is hereby given that
Across
Complete Genetic material Reasons Anne Rice vampire Lovemaking
Down 1 Agree 2 First name in mystery authors 3 “Love Is a Wonderful Thing” singer Michael 4 Mimic 5 Auction section 6 “Hey, over here!” 7 Take ___ in the dark 8 Actress Kaley ___ of The Big Bang Theory 9 “...sure plays ___ pinball” 10 Sports announcer Scully 11 Question asked many times in Marathon Man 12 Reversal of Fortune family name 13 Wreath-like garlands 18 Back muscles 22 Non-solid state: abbr. 25 Taco ___ 26 Stomach trouble 27 Quite 31 Possess, to a Scotsman 32 ___ Khan 33 Birth control option 34 ___ World Peace (Ron Artest’s newly-proposed name) 36 Talk smack about 37 Image worship
Greek wrap Anorak, e.g. Didn’t attract attention Traditional Japanese drama Tall tale They’re playing to the camera Lying on one’s back Pelvic floor exercise Fame actress Cara Egg holders Astronaut’s outerwear Lay’s competitor to Pringles “___ in ‘zebra’” Shooting org. Hill Street Blues rank: abbr.
lAst week’s solution
AAAA+ Donation. Donate Your Car, Boat, or Real Estate. IRS Tax Deductible. Free Pick-Up/ Tow. Any Model/Condition. Help Under Privileged Children. Outreachcenter.com. 1-800-597-8311.
CAREER tRAininG
NEEDED: People to train as a CARDIOVASCULAR SONOGRAPHER! Train in this exciting career and you could help save lives! Call now to get started! 888-361-8333 Sanford-Brown Institute 3600 Horizon Blvd., Suite GL-1 Trevose, PA 19053 sanfordbrown.edu MAGAzinE nEEdS WoMEn
to model, any age, shape, size. GentsClubMagazine.com REGULAR MASSAGE thERApY
Special Price! Call (215)-8734835. 1218 Chestnut St.
➤
jobs
from Home. *Medical *Business *Paralegal *Computers *Criminal Justice. Job place-
Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified-Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (888) 8349715. GEnERAL hELp WAntEd
$9/hr Plus Bonus. Interview Today, Start Tomorrow. PT/FT. 215-271-0188 hELp WAntEd
CHECK THIS OUT!!! Just completed high school and looking for your 1st phenomenal opportunity. Travel while earning big $$$$. No experience. Paid training. 1-877646-5050. hELp WAntEd dRiVER
$2000 Sign-On Driver, 43.7 Per Mile. $7500 Sign-On Teams, 51.3 Per Mile. With Only 1 Year of OTR. CDL-A HazMat. 1-877-628-3748. hELp WAntEd dRiVER
Driver-CDL-A; Experienced OTR Drivers. Regional Lanes. HOME MOST WEEKENDS! Up to $3000 BONUS. Up to $.50 Per Mile. 888-463-3962. 6mo. OTR. exp. & CDL Req’d. www.usatruck.jobs hELp WAntEd dRiVER
help Wanted
Drivers-Flatbed & Reefer: Average $1.12 to $1.24/mile (+fuel surcharge) Paid Training Late Model Equipment, Benefits. Call Prime Inc. Today! 800-277-0212 or www. primeinc.com
ACtoRS/MoViE EXtRAS
hELp WAntEd dRiVER
Business Services AttEnd CoLLEGE onLinE
AiRLinES ARE hiRinG:
Needed immediately for up-
Drivers-No Experience-No
43
©2011 Jonesin’ Crosswords (editor@jonesincrosswords.com)
38 39 40 43 45 46 47 49 50 51 52 56 58 60 61
AUtoS WAntEd
Train in DIAGNOSTIC MEDICAL SONOGRAPHY Also known as Ultrasound and you could help track the growth and health of babies or help doctors diagnose injuries and illness! 888-361-8333 Sanford-Brown Institute 3600 Horizon Blvd., Suite GL-1 Trevose, PA 19053 sanfordbrown.edu
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
1 Hit in the ring 4 Llama look-alike 10 ___ la Vida or Death and All His Friends (Coldplay album) 14 “Can ___ now?” 15 Play ___ (feign death to trick a predator) 16 “The pressure ___” 17 Black Swan footwear 19 NPR correspondent Totenberg 20 “I’d Rather Go Blind” singer ___ James 21 L.A.’s area 23 Schedule abbr. 24 Emotional debate topic 28 Photographer Adams 29 Apprehensive feeling 30 Toast at a bar mitzvah 35 Business execs who crunch numbers 36 Bubble gum sold in pouches 40 Tramp’s companion 41 Do story time for (the kids) 42 Deck out 44 Packs down 48 It may be answered with “Who, me?” 53 1988 Dennis Quaid remake 54 “___ Johnny!” 55 Cough syrup amts. 57 Figure skating move 59 What you might say after hearing 17-, 24-, 36- or 48-across? 62 Other, in Spanish
63 64 65 66 67
automotive Marketplace
BoY oR GiRL?
coming roles $150-$300/day depending on job requirements. No experience, all looks, 1-800-560-8672 A-109. For casting times/locations.
classifieds
UNIQUE ADOPTIONS. Let us help! Personalized Adoption Plans. Financial assistance, housing relocation and more. Giving the gift of life? You deserve the best. Call us first! 1-888-637-8200 24-hours hotline.
ment assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 888-220-3984 www. CenturaOnline.com.
the naked city | feature | a&e | the agenda | food
jonesin’
22
@2?C602@
HELP WANTED DRIVER
William A. Torchia, Esquire ConCierge LegaL ServiCeS generaL PraCtiCe â&#x20AC;&#x201C; eState & tax PLanning
1420 Walnut Street, Suite 1216 215-546-1950; watorchia@gmail.com Williamtorchiaesquire.vpweb.com
Driver-CDL-A; Experienced OTR Drivers. Regional Lanes. HOME MOST WEEKENDS! Up to $3000 BONUS. Up to $.50 Per Mile. 888-463-3962. 6mo. OTR. exp. & CDL Reqâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d. www.usatruck.jobs HELP WANTED DRIVER
Drivers-Pyle Transport needs OWNER OPERATORS &
COMPANY DRIVERS! Regional Truckload Operations. HOME EVERY WEEKEND! O/O Average $1.78/MILE. Steady, Year-Round Work. Requires CDL-A, 2 Years Experience. 888-301-5855. www.DriveforPyle.com HELP WANTED DRIVER
Get All You Need to Succeed! Van and Flatbed Divisions. Great Starting Pay! Plus Lots of Extras. $500 Sign-On for Flatbed. CDL-A, 6 mo. OTR. 888-801-5295. HELP WANTED SALES
Combined Insurance is look-
ing for agent candidates. Minimum guaranteed income for up to 13 weeks, training, benefits, leads. Contact Rebecca at 412-443-8376. EOE $$$HELP WANTED$$$
Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operator Now! 1-800-4057619 Ext. 2450 http://www. easywork-greatpay.com $$$HELP WANTED$$$
Extra Income! Assembling CD cases from Home! No Experience Necessary! Call our Live Operator Now! 1-800-405-
7619 Ext. 2450 http://www. easywork-greatpay.com NOW HIRING:
Companies desperately need employees to assemble products at home. No selling, any hours. $500 weekly potential. Info: 1-985-646-1700 DEPT. PA-1017
real estate
â&#x17E;¤
Make $1,000 a Week mailing brochures from home! Guaranteed Income! FREE Supplies! No experience required. Start Immediately! www.homemailerprogram. net
2-BR ROXBOROUGH ROWHOME
LAND FOR SALE
Lake Sale, NY: 6 Acres on Lake Morris $29,900. 11 Acres on Lake Pennock $39,900. 10 acres 2,300/ft Waterfront Penninsula $59,900. Land First. www.WaterfrontPropertyNY. com 1-888-683-2626.
By Emily Flake
To advertise, call Chris at 215-825-2486.
STOP
BILL COLLECTORS FROM CALLING & HARASSING YOU, RECEIVE UP TO $1,000. NO ATTORNEYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S FEES/COSTS TO YOU.
DENIED SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? CALL TODAY! WE CAN HELP*
â&#x20AC;&#x153;As long as I have any choice, I will stay only in a country where political liberty, toleration, and equality of all citizens before the law are the rule.â&#x20AC;? - Albert Einstein
THIRD FLOOR CONDOMINIUM
at the Arts Condominiums. Clean, newer flooring and newer bathroom. $825/month. 1 months rent, last months rent, 1 month deposit. Call 856- 786-0436. griffinneuman@aol.com
Roommates ALL AREAS-ROOMATES. COM
Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: http:// www.Roommates.com.
Real Estate Marketplace REAL ESTATE
North Carolina Lakefront lots... Never before offered, new gated waterfront community, 13 dockable lots with up to 300â&#x20AC;&#x2122; of shoreline. Financing available. Call Now 1-800-709-5253.
3:31B@717/<
Free Consultation....Good Customer Service....Reasonable Prices.....Fights vigorously for Clients.
â&#x20AC;˘ All types of electrical work â&#x20AC;˘ Small or large jobs â&#x20AC;˘ City violations corrected â&#x20AC;˘ State and city licensed and Insured
1500 Market Street, 12th Floor, East Tower, Philadelphia, Pa 19102 (267) 702-2026 jlee@bralawfirm.com
Call
LAW OFFICES of MINSTER & FACCIOLO, LLC
# &$' """
Barryâ&#x20AC;&#x153;LOWEST Fisher Electrician PRICES IN THE CITYâ&#x20AC;?
gently moving your earthly possessions
â&#x20AC;˘100 Amp Circuit Breaker â&#x20AC;˘Ceiling Fan Installation â&#x20AC;˘Outlets â&#x20AC;˘House Wiring â&#x20AC;˘AC/WD Lines â&#x20AC;˘Home Inspection Repairs
www.mambomovers.com
www.BarryFisherElectrician.com (215) 927-0234
Infinity Health & Wellness
COLON HYDRO THERAPY CENTER 215-338-9455
521 S. 2ND St. PhilA.,PA â&#x20AC;˘ APPt. AlSO AvAil iN DE & Nj
Condos
Move right in to this beautiful home! One block from a quick train ride to center city, and minutes from dining and shopping in Manayunk. Available 8-1-11, great for a new family or students looking to share. Contact Michael Salvi today to schedule a visit! For more info visit www.MikeSalvi. com and click the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Featured Listingsâ&#x20AC;? link.
Criminal Law, Family Law, Immigration and Personal Injury
215-627-8200 Pa â&#x20AC;˘ 302-777-2201 De
STUDIO/ 9TH & PINE
3BR, 2 1/2 BTH, LARGE MANAYUNK HOME, W/D, FREE PARKING
and Associates
Spacious, sunny 4 Bedroom Newly Renovated, A/C, W/W Carpet, Eat in Kitchen, Dishwasher, G/D, W/D $1,650 11th Tree Street. Available Now! Contact: 267-242-4911.
Studio/ Efficiency
Three+ Bedrooms
Brooker, Richardson, Dickerson, Lee
HOUSE FOR RENT !
Modern 3 Bedroom, hardwood floors, 2 full baths, jacuzzi, finished basement w/bar, porch, washer/dryer, fridge, $1,050. Call Pete: 267-307-0371
9th/Pine: Studio Apt in Vintage Brownstone Minutes to PA Hospital, HW Flrs, Lrg Open Floorplan, Onsite Laundry, GREAT Location. $780/Mo. Avail Sept. 215-735-8030. Lic # 216245
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Beautiful 2-BR Rowhome in Roxborough/top of the hill, 15 mins. to all schools. 5 mins. to public transportation, walk to shops/Ridge ave. Monthto-Month lease. No smoking. Pets OK. Gas heat and cooking. Tenant pays gas and electric. Landlord pays water. $1,000 a month. 1 month security. 215.847.8706
SOUTH PHILLY
STUDIO/ 9TH & PINE
215-364-4900
Wills & Estates â&#x20AC;˘ Custody â&#x20AC;˘ Child Support â&#x20AC;˘ Small Business Divorce â&#x20AC;˘ Real Estate â&#x20AC;˘ Civil Actions â&#x20AC;˘ Auto Accidents Power Of Attorney â&#x20AC;˘ Domestic Partners
rentals
9th/Pine: Charming Studio in Brownstone, Hi Ceilings, HW Flrs, Sep Kitch, Intercom Entry, Onsite Laundry. $745/Mo. Avail Sept. 215-735-8030. Lic # 216245
BLITSHTEIN & WEISS LAW OFFICES
J U L Y 1 4 - J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C I T Y PA P E R . N E T
Homes
Land/ Lots for Sale
â&#x17E;¤
44 | P H I L A D E L P H I A C I T Y PA P E R |
Keller Williams Real Estate (215) 464-8800 http://www.MikeSalvi.com
PAID IN ADVANCE!
lulueightball
classifieds
food | the agenda | a&e | feature | the naked city
Problem. 100% Paid CDL Training. Immediate Benefits. 20/10 program. Trainers Earn up to $.49 per mile! CRST VAN EXPEDITED 800-3262778 www.JoinCRST.com
Constantly tired, lower back pain, bloated, over weight, muffin top, constipated, gas, headaches, skin problems, digestive problems, allergies, low energy, irritable bowel? The list goes onâ&#x20AC;Ś All are conditions that respond well with Colon Hydro Therapy. Listen to your gut! Give us a call.
Colon Hydro Therapy Infinity Health & Wellness Center @ Sherman Mills 3502 Scotts Lane Phila 19129 267-338-9455 www.infinityhealthwellness.com
Over 42 Yrs Exp! All Work Guaranteed. Immediate Service. Licensed & Insured. Licensed #16493. PA-040852
215.670.9535
Wayneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s World
A BETTER WAY TO MOVE
J.L. MOVING Best Move Possible 15 Years Experience
Call: 215-989-5069
24 Hr. 215-669-3415
Piano Specialist! Great Rates! LAST MINUTE JOBS ALWAYS AVAILABLE
the naked city | feature | a&e | the agenda | food classifieds
merchandise market No Rs Xsor¡½ PY Tttzqs½ az s s A ²ÍëÄ7 ï uo s ²Í ½ ×Í 7çïÂ7 ï ï
9 qors zrs uo s z po oqwz s { }sp 7 [ ors t z z u s z ¨ r o z ¡/o 7q Íï7ë(Â7 ( Â
;X9hGNG9R ANTTXGRB Âlç ½ pso zt ½ ² 7ï t » Íï«Â×ï¨ï( × <9;GR?[Y BN9h?= <E?XXe ; o r s ½ zr rlr s oz 7 < rz u7 <o orr p oq tz }z qws < ²×ç 7 Ys ²ÍïÄï7 ×Í ¨Äï ¨  No =s } A Yo s 7 \ ×Í ¨×Âë¨ë×ïë UTTN [9;N? B us (° zr r Í o s½ w q} ½ rsq su oqqs l R sr½ ²çï ½ Ys ²ÍçÄï7 ×Í ¨çëר(((Ä
B o rto ws < q}W ÍÄ(ç ët 7 Xzrus o¡½ s tsq q rz z ½ ²Íï 7 »(ï׫((ĨïÂÍë
;=XP Y?[W Y zr <ws ¡ Y szuw ;sr½ = s s ½ Pz ½ <ws ½ Rz s Y o r 7 Ezuw V o z ¡7 T s w r½ P s 7 < ²× o }7 ²Íï 7 ×Í ¨Äï ¨ ÂÂ
a9R[?= ¨ <9YE U=
ETYUG[9N ;?= ¨ ? qs s q rz z ½ ² ï ½ <o Íï¨(ëë¨ ÂÂ
Please be aware Possession of exotic/wild animals may be restricted in some areas.
Yzo s s Mz s PlA 9 swsor½U sp sr½ Eso w B o o ssr ²ç 7 ×Í ¨×Ä ¨×ç (
<TNNG?Y or ½ ? q o z ¡½ 9M<½ p s½ z op s »(ï׫( ï¨ç(ï×
=oqw w r ½ PlA½ p } o ½ u w 7 Í w ½ ²çï 7 »×Í «×ÂĨ(× Â
=9<EYE\R=Y w woz sr o s ts o s ½ ( } r½ ²ç 7 ×ë¨ï רç ×Í = ps o U 9M<½ oz q o r s½ l ½ Po s As o s ëÍë7( (7Â× ?RB7 ;\NN=TB U\UY½ 9M< <wo ; sr½ E s oz sr½ ² ï l p 7 Íï¨ë(ĨÍ(((
E [ p ÍÍ rs × s Y z z o s 7 A ¡ orsr l o 7 q s < ²× Ys ² ëï ×Í ¨Äï ¨ ÂÂ
Bs o Yws ws r = u <h?<E7 U9X?R[Y GPUTX[?= =T; ïl ïlÍÍ aTXMGRB U9X¨ ?R[YlYGX?= a=A <EUR ÍÍ7 ²Í 7 Íï¨çÄ(¨Í(× Bs o Yws ws r U 7 9<9 su7½ 9 ¨ z w Xoz sr½ ²ï <o w ¡ ëÍë¨ï ĨÂ( Bs o Yws ws r U ; }l[o u so s ½ s ¨qwsq}sr Í w sr½ 9M< o s z s (ïרëëר×ÍÂ(
Bs o Yw woz sr U z s ½ 9M<½ çP½ ×A½ qwo 7 poq}u r½ z s wz s½ Í w ½ sr ²ï 7 Íï7ÂÂÍ7Íç× B rs r r s zs ²Í \Y= U sp sr 9M< su7 o s s z s 7 < so q o 7 [ oz z u z z o 7<o Yo r¡ ç(ç¨ÄÄͨ(ïëÍ o rz w s/q qo 7 s BTN=?R=TT=N?Y½ Pz z Y o ro r½ AÍ AÍ;½ o s s s z ½ wso w u o o ¨ ssr½ ²( ¨²Íç 7 »×Í «(×Ĩ(((Â
B rs Xs zs s zs ¹ 9M< o s ½ to z ¡ oz sr½ sor¡ ¹  ¨(Â(¨ï ï 7 K9<M X\YY?NN [?XXG?X U ½ w zs ½ PlA½ sor¡ u ² ëï7 Íï¨ï ĨïÄ(Ä
ÂÂ çï Xsq r Ezuws ² Xso ¡ Uozr
ê ê ; p ×Í ¨ï ¨Äç ( ê
; } ¨[ oz ¨Pouo¢z s ¨[ ¡ ¨ = ¨ P rs Mz ×Í ¨×(Ĩ(çë× Cameras, Clocks, Toys, Radios, Dolls, Porcelain, Magazines, Military I Buy Anything Old...Except People! Please Call Al 215-698-0787
N9;Y ¨ 9M<½ qw q o s½ ? u z w qwo ¨ z p r z s ½ q}¡ z w p or wsor ½ s qs s to z ¡ s ½ o s s ½ wz wso w u o ½ ²( 7 t z t s oz W us o /q qo 7 s ëÍë¨Âïç¨ ×ëç
P9N[?Y? U ½  Po s ½ 9M<½ wso w¡½ sor¡ ëlÍ(½ qo Íï¨ïÍĨ×ïÄÍ P o ztt 9M< Xsor¡ u ¹ Uo s s z s 7 Po}s u r u o r r u 7 Í w ½ z u o r o s 7 ²(ï 7 z z ¨ sr su7l²Íï t su7\Y= »(ï׫ ÄĨ ÍÂ×× s oz s7t q / s z¨¢ 7 s
PGRG Yqw o ¢s U ¨ w sr½ Po sW ²Âï ½ As o sW ²Âëï½ ×Í ¨Ä× ¨ïçëÍ R suzo ? }w r 9M<½ PlA½  eso t w 7 ë ¨ëÄ(¨çëëÄ
< z ½ < s q¡½ B r½ [ ¡ ½
[ oz ½ E s ½ Y <o r 7 <o ws N qo Ezuws ; ¡s ½ ë =¡ la}
= 7 Y wsz ½ (ïרÄ(ͨÂÂÄë
=G9;?[G< [?Y[ Y[XGUY a9R[?=7 P ; o r 7 [ ²Íëlp 7 = u »( « ×(ͨïÍï K\RM <9XY a9R[?= \ ² ï t K } <o Íï¨(((¨(×× Nz s l9 A ¡s l[ oz lE aw ²²²² 9 o [Ks l9Ac [ ¡ <o Íï¨ÂÄרÍÄ Â Y9cTUETR?Y½ aaGG½ YaTX=Y½ s o ¨ sr z s ½ Ns ¡Â×ÍÄ/o × Ä7ï(Í7( Ä
personals
U?MGRB?Y? U\UYW B us o s ts o s ½ ² Äï7 ×ë¨ ç¨Äï × UG[;\NN U ¨  As o s½ 9=;9 suz ¨ s sr½ 9qs qwo p r z s½ ×Í ¨ï(רÍÍÍÍ UG[ ;\NN U\UY ¨ ; s½ \M<½ Yw ½ ²× s p r z s ½  ¨ ëï¨(ëÄ ï ¨Í Ä U s o zo U zs t o s ²Â ;7T7 ×ë¨×ÂרÂï Í UTP?X9RG9R U\UYW 9<9½ to z ¡ oz sr½ wso w u o ½ s ¡ q s ² ëï½ ×Í 7ïÄÂ7ëç( U s o zo ½ 9M< ²ÂÄï7 _s ¡ q s½ <o Íï¨çï¨((çë U r s U W Y o ro r½ 9M<½ qwo ½ q so ½ p oq}½ p s½ »× Ä« Ä(¨ (Ä
K\B U W p } p ½ or op s½ ½ o s z s½ ²ëï7 »×Í « ë¨ÂïÂ(
Ywzw [¢ le }zs Pz U zs ½ { u ¨ us ½ s w ½ qo ×Í ¨çÄë¨Â ÄÂ
Nop 9M<7 <wo z s 7 o q ½ wso w qs 7 p q}¡l q}¡ p z r wsor ½ s 7 ïë ¨ïçĨ×( 7 7s op or 7q
Yw }zs¨[¢ U ½ o s o z u ²ï ½ tz o qz u o ½ qo w rz q ç(ç7Äïï7×Âë(
N9; U\UY Í B\9X X?9=e RTa P\Y[ <TP? Y??¹¹¹¹ ²ç 7 Íï¨ë×(¨çÂçç
eTXMYEGX?½ P½ A½ l o s ½ Í w sr7 Í ss} 7 ²çï 7 (ïרç ר ×
Íï w awo Í ;X ²× ï8uo ls sq r t ½ st° s 7 (ïרç×ï¨Âç×ç ( awo ;X s ¡ s o sr½ Íï¨ï( ¨(×(×
²×ï
ÍÍ Y ï( w Y 7 Y rz ½ Íp p o s ¡ s ½ zq ÖÂ× Í ×ë¨ë×ë¨×ÄïÄ ï w ;o z s Í;X ²ï ¨²ïï 8 z r  r t ½  7 rs 7 » Íï« Âë¨çëÂë ×Ä w ? r Íp ²çÄï8 z o us Í t z w ¡o r½ » Íï«( ͨ((ï( 9z 9 so zqs ;X ²ëëï8 r s ½ olq½ uo ½ p 7 <o (ïרÂçר ëçë
Íç R7 ï r Y 7 Í ;X ²× r t ½ ²Í( s z ½ ×Í ¨çïç¨ Ä Íç R ïç w Y Íp ²ï 8 z r t ½ s ¡ s o sr½ ?GM½ z o s s ¨ ¡½ q srz qwsq} s z sr½ » ×ë«Ä(ç¨(ÂÍ
Â(ç U o p ²× 8 z u s ¡ s r t o ×ë¨ (¨çïÂ( çÄï No qo s Í ;X ²×ï ¡ o ½ p o r ½ Es ¡ ×ë7Äëç7Ä ëÍ ï w Eo s t r Í;X ²ïï Nu }z qw po w½ sq8 s 7 Íï¨ëçë¨ç çÄ ïï Bz o r 9 s7 ;X ²ëï 8 z ² ï s z ½ P Yss¹ Íï¨ (ç¨ëÄçç ïÄ ( <ws ;X ²ë l qo s ½ s o q so ½ Íï¨çëͨÍÂÍç
Gt o ¡ s } ws ws sop t Pzqwos _7 <o zs ½ so s q oq wz s ws o W qqo s { w /o 7q
9XPTRGT½ XTXe 9G=9½ U so s <o K s »Us z u« Bo qzo »ïç «Ä ï¨ÄÂëÂ
jobs
U\BBN? <EGE\9E\9 U\UUG?Y < s o¡t ½ ²Âï ¨²ï ½ ëÍë¨Â¨ÍÂë× Ywzw [¢ ½ Po s ½ p oq} wz s p z r s wz s7 ²çï 7 »×Í «×ÂĨ(× Â
Í Y7 Íë w p ²ï(ï8 s oz qo s ½ qo ×Í ¨ëÍ ¨ÍÄ(×
Eso w 9zrs½ G E s t s rs ¡ o 7 × ro¡ l }7 ëW o ¨× 7 Y s s sq¨ s o ¡ }z u ls rs ¡½ » ×ë«ÄÂç¨çÍ Í
× [E <9NNTaEGNN Íp ²ïï z z zs z q rsr½ r t ½ Íï¨(ë(¨ï Äë × <o wo z s ;XlÍ ;9 ²ë ï8 z r½ q s o ½ Ysq ( } Íï¨(×(¨ ç(Í < pp < ss} _zqz z ¡ Íp zs ½ s ¡ s ½ u ;X½ ?GM½ u NX½ ²×ëï8 z ½ q s zs p zq o 7½ o \ z s z zs <<½ Í s sq½ T s w s ëlĽ Í o¨Â » Íï«(( ¨ ×Í
ç Eo s t r 9 s7 Í ;X ²ïëï8 z Ys z so s½ qo ×ë¨× ͨ×(ïï Xs zrs zo NztsW Y rz ½ Íp Íp 8rs o ½ Y oqz ; zuw ½ so Us l= s s Xsuz o Nso z u Tttzqs¨ Í× Y7 ç( w Y 7 <o < s z P¨A Äo¨ï ×ë7ç×ë7Ä×(Í ² tt Í wW V o ztzsr 9 zqo
; ¡ Po 9 7½ Í ;X ½ wr r t ½ ²×ë 8 q } uo s sq 7 Íï¨ çë¨ ×ë
Í× a7 E z ur Íp ²ç ï8 z s ¡ s ½ ²Í ëï s z Íï7ïïÄ7Ä (Ä ÍÄ w _s o u zq7 Íp ?ttzqzs q¡ ²ïÍ z q rs z ½ s rs sr7 Íï¨ ×¨ ï × r Y s s p pz¨ s s ½ ²ë 8 z ² Í ½ s z s z sr » Íï« Âë¨çëÂë ïÂ( R Íï w ;X ²× o oz 7 z sr7½ so o » Íï«×( ¨ ïÂ( ×ÍÄ R Âç w Y ;X ²ïëï8 z r t ½ ²Íë ï s z ½ Íï¨×Äç¨× ( Ä w Bz o r Í ;X ²× z w z q½ Í s ½ Í sq½ (ï×¨× ë¨ëÄëÄ Â ; or Y 7 ?ttzqzs q¡ ²çëï8 z Í 7 s ½ Í 7 sq½ ×ë¨Äëï¨(ï Í ÂÂçÄ R Í( w Y 7 Íp ²ïëï8 z r t ½ s ¡ s o sr½ Íï¨ë×ï¨ï ( Âë R Í( w Y 7 Í7ï ;X ²ïï 8 z ²Í s z s ½  r t » ×ë«× ¨ÂÂ × w ? zs Í7ïp ²ççÄ8 z Í t ½ u r q rz z » Íï«ëï(¨ï(ïï Ä Yz s Y us sttzqzs q¡ z w lr½ulr½ s½ z s½ st zus o ½ qo s z u½ olq½ o }¨z q s ²çï s sq¨ ×ë¨ç (¨ïÄïÍ =9\UEGR Y[ s ¡ s o sr o us sttzq½  r t 7 pso zt }z q½ [s s [ o 7 ²ç 8 z ½ » ×ë«ç ë¨ÄÄ ×
Ä Nswzuw 9 s Íp ?ttzqzs q¡ ²ç 8 z Í l o l sq7  r t o } » ×ë« ïï7 Íëç
ç(ïÍ R7 ë w » « ; 9 ²× sttzqzs q¡ ²ç ï7 s ¡ s o sr½ l qo s 7 <o ×ë¨ï( ¨((çÍ
ï R7 ; or Í ;X t ½ t }z ½ 9<½ [_ ½ s q7 ×ë7çÄ×7×çç(
Xs zrs zo NztsW Y rz ½ Í; ; o Y oqz ; zuw 9 so NoYo s \ z 7 Xsuz o Nso z u Tttzqs¨ï× Tu ¢ 9 s <o < s z P¨A Äo¨ï Íï7 ë×7ï× Í P w A ss V o ztzsr 9 zqo
Y o } Y 7 Í ;XlÍ ;9 ²× A ¡ Xs o sr7 <o Íï¨(ï ¨ÄëÂ(
Âç R7 E s ;X lÍ ;9 ²× ï s o sr½ u r o r r½ » Íï«× ͨïÍ(
× a Kstts Y 7 ;X ²ë z 7lÍ t 7 r s l² Í s z lqo Íï¨çëë¨×ÍÄ× < o z lE s}ss s z ss}z u o z z }z u z w ws s rs ¡7 Í ¡so s l u so st 7 ×ë¨ïÄͨÄÍ × UN\P;?X =s z s U z z la } ¨ ;o w Mz qws < s zq 7 Íï¨Â Ĩ ÍÂ(
R × r½ ×ç w ïï w Y 7 Y rz ½ Íp p ²çï ¨ ²×ï ½ 7 sq7 s 7½ z q o s ½ oqz ½ Í t z o oz 7 Íï¨çë¨ ÍÂ×
_o z ͽ  ;X 9 ²ë 免(ï 7 s s zs 7q Íï7ëç 7çÄ
Í ;X ;X 9 ²×Ä免(Âï oqz ½ u so q7½ u orsr½ wso z q ½ UE9 qws oqqs sr Íï¨Ä×רÄÂëÍ
45
<o s < ½ su½ s qw}r½ o q ¨ ½ p çl Ä7 ²Ä p 7 Íï¨Â× ¨çë ë <o o zs Mz u <wo s Y o zs U ½ Xs z sr 9r Xs q s ½ Rs Nz s 9 oz ²( ¨²Íï ½ Íï¨ïÂ(¨ ÍëÄ <ws o so}s ;o¡ Xs zs s U ½ 9M<½ qwo z z s ½ to oz sr½ çÍ 7ç( 7ëÂë× <wzw ow o U zs Pz z Uz qws U ¨ zs ½ <o ×ë¨ïÄë¨ × <wzw ow o U W ( } r½  P½ qw q ¨ o s o ½ ²ïï ½ qo X p½ »(ï׫(Âç¨( ( <T<M?X YU9RG?N U ½ E s Xoz sr½ qwo z p r z s 7 (ïר ÄĨ çïÍ
? u z w ; r ul; s Pz U w s oz sr½ Yla½ s qs 7½ ²( 7 ëÍë7ççï7Ä ÄÍ
ê ê ê Íï¨ ¨ Ä ê ê ê
apartment marketplace
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
9MG[9 U\UUG?Y ¨ 9<9½ to z ¡ oz sr½ w sr½ ²× ½ ëÍë¨ë×(¨ Íë 9 s zqo ? }z U zs ¨ sp sr½ s qwsq}sr½ Í w ½ s ¡ q s½ wz s½ » s s¡s p oq}«  P½ Í A ×Í 7ÂïÂ7 Í ( ;?9BN? U\UY ¨ 9M<½7 As o sW ²Âï ½ Po s W ²Â ½ sor¡ ×lÍë½ Íï¨ïçë¨×ÂÍç ;zqw lU zs ½ P A½ 9<9½ w ½ sr qsr½ so pso zs 7 »(ï׫ëç ¨ÄÂ×Í ;Tc?X U\UUG?Y ¨ Xsor¡ ël ½ to ½ p z r s 7 <wo 7 p r z s½ ç us s o z ½ wso lwz qs ztzsr7 9M<l  ¨çÄç¨ïÍ ë½ Â ¨(Âç¨ ×Í×½ (ïרçïͨ çÂÂ( 7 o o oo r {p s 7q ; s U ½ Ä ss} ½ o s ²Âï 7 ¡so r ? u z w ; r u½ o wz s½ ²( 7 <o » ×ë«ë(ç¨ëÄç× ;Tc?X U\UY 9M<½ ï o s ½ ts o s ½ p z r s½ Í w ½ s qwsq}sr½ sr½ to z ¡ oz sr½ ²ïëï7 »ëÍë«Â(¨ ç <o s < U zs 9<9½ to z ¡ oz sr½ w l sr½ sor¡ (lç7 »ëÍë«ë×(¨Âç×ç
<9NN Íï¨××ĨÍÄ çM  çï Xsq r 9p s Ezuws ²
everything pets pets/livestock
BUYING EAGLES SBL’s
food | the agenda | a&e | feature | the naked city classifieds
apartment marketplace a Uwz o sr q so o oz R o Íï¨çÄç¨(ëÄç
Â× a a9NR\[ NR sttzqlÍp t ²ïç YU?<G9NY 9_9GN9;N?¹ EGY[TXG< 9U[Y < s o 7 Íï¨(çĨë × çÄçÍ X\;G<9P Y 7 Â;X Y oqz T s qw½ poq}¡o r Íï¨(¨ç Äë çÄ R7 ÍÍ w Y 7 Íp ²ïëï z q s sq p ²×ëï8 Í l o l sq7 Íï¨çïï¨Í ï ao¡ s 9 s7 Y rz Í ;X s ¡ swop½ NzqÖ ï ëï×(½ ×ë7ë×ë7×ÄïÄ ïÂ Í ao¡ s 9 s ?ttzqzs q¡ ²ïï Íp ²× ½ p ²ë 7 » Íï«ëë×¨× ëë ×ÂÍ a Uo } No s ;X ²ÍMl w \ z 7 Rs ¡ Xs o sr Eo r r A ½ Y oz s Y ss 9 ½ Xsqs sr Nzuw ½ <s o zq Mz qws o r ;o w½ ao ws l= ¡s ½ Bo ous ss o }z u7 Pz s t B t½ Ez}z ul;z}z u [ oz ½ U p zq [ o 7 <o ×ë¨ (¨ï 7 9 oz op s 7 Bs o Íp ²×ëï z z q 7 Í t ½ ¡o r½ <o ×ë¨ï(ͨÄ×ï× BX??R? E9X_?e ¨Y\PP?X YU?<G9N¹ N 7 Í;X°Y Rs ¡ rsq½ l ½ ulr½ olq½ qo ¨ p s sor¡½ No r ¡l;so ¡ o l tt }u7 Íï¨ ëï¨Íçïë Íï¨ Â¨ÂÂ
ÍÍ P 7 9z ¡ 9 s Íp ²×ï 8 z rs ½ o o qo s ½ al=½ tt Y }u7 Íï¨Ä ¨ï Äë½ so s s ous7 Í Â <ws s Í ;X ²×ëï ²( q s s ¡ s o sr½ qo Íï¨ (ç¨ïÂÄç
Íç a7 ëÍ 9 s Í ;X ²× ï z z zs z q rsr½ q s o o z o r w z u7 <o Íï¨ïëç¨ ÍÍÍ ×ïÍï R ( w Y 7 Í ;X Rs ¡ s 7 NzqÖ Í ë ï½ ×ë¨ë×ë¨×ÄïÄ ×ëïÍ R Í w p ²ïÄï8 s oz qo s ½ <o Íï¨ÂÍרëÍÍë ×( R7 ; or Í ;X ²×ï 8 z Í t ½ oqz ½ wo r r t ½ s }z qws 7 P\Y[ Y??¹ <o Íï¨ïçĨÍçïç
P w Y 7 Íp p ²ïëï s rs sr½ sq z ( }½ ×ë¨Ä(ç¨(ï
ç×ç( ?r r Y 7 p s ¡ s ½ Ysq ( }½ ×ë¨ ïë¨ Íçç ç×ïÄ Us Y 7 Â; ²( wso z q 7½ ²Í× s¨z 7 ×ë¨ ïï¨× ç(ç T t r 9 s Y rz ½ Íp p o Nr ¡½ çlë qo zqÖ ÍçÂç ×ë7ë×ë7×ÄïÄ
a Ya Uwz o Rs ¡ s ½ wo s }z qws po w½ o z z q 7 Íï7ë×(7ë ïÄ Ns s  ;X ²Í 8 z qlo½ lr w} ½ tt }u½ (ïר ×ç¨ (Â
Po o¡ }W ²×ï ½ z q rs z z zs <o » Íï«Â ¨ÄïëÂ
J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t
Âç ( Xwo Y 7 Í;XlÍ;9 ²×ï ×ë¨Â ¨×ÂÍÍ Âï Xe9R 9_? Íp r t ²×ï 8 < o A o }t r _zq7 ×ë¨ëÂרÄ(× ïÄ Esus o Íp ²ï ï8 z }u½ o r ½ ous ×Í 7ëÍ 7ÍÄ(× ×(Í =z o Y 7 Í ;X }u½ r ¡ toq7NzqÖ Í ëïÍ ×ë¨ë×ë¨×ÄïÄ ; zrus U o  ;X ²×ï 8 z q s zs qo z ½ s ½ <o ×ë¨ëçר(×Ä× Íï¨×ͨ(Ä(Ä B s zs Y 7 ;X ²( ï lr½ rl ½ qs o oz ½ s l ½ so < o Po ½ qo Íï¨(ï(¨ÍÍ×ç
Po¡toz Í ;X½ r t ²×ï 8 z o ws lr ¡s ½ s ½ Íï¨Äçרë ëÄ UEGNPTR[ E?GBE[Y ;X r t ²ëÄï s }z qw½ l oz ½ uo ½ ×ë7ç×ë7ÍïÄ× Xsr Nz ? Ms zq} ;X ²ëëï8 z o us o ½ q s zs qo z ½ s ½ <o ×ë¨ëçר(×Ä× Íï¨×ͨ(Ä(Ä Y s p l po ²( 8 z Í t ½ uo ous½ o zo qs » Íï«× Ĩ( ëÄ
a9XPGRY[?X Nu ;X ²ëÄÄl ²(ÄÄ z w AGXY[ PTR[E AX??¹¹ Us }z u }7 as } z w q srz p s 7 <o t rs oz 7 T ws z z¢s o oz op s½ qo Íï¨çç¨Äï
home improvement
ïÄç ;z uwo Y 7 Â;XlÍ;9 ²Ä ;so 7 s }z lpol oz l u lt l sqs sr zuw uo u s Kz ¡ Íï¨Ä ¨(ÂÄë Az qws 9 s Â; lÍ7ï;o ²Ä Ysq z ( TM7 <o » Íï«çïĨçÍëë
çç R Íë w7  ;XlÍ ;9 ²×ëï s o sr½ u r o r r½ » Íï«× ͨïÍ(
çç R7 A o } z Y 7  ;X ²ëï Ysq z ( }½ s ¡ s ½ Íï¨ ×¨Âçë(
Í w ? zs½ o t z wsr ½ ²Âï ¨²ç 7 <o ×ë¨çÍç¨ç(ÍÄ ÍÍ w [z uo½ Ä w < ps o r7 t z w¨ sr ½ YYG TM7 <o ×ë¨ Âͨ×(ÍÍ ÍÍ R ïï w Y 7 Yz u s ½ ²ç ½ A z¢s psr½ r s s ½ t zrus½ YYGlYY= }7 a½ Ya½ R Uwz o <o » ×ë«ë ë¨×Í Ä Íï [z uo Y 7½ u ½ s ¡ s ½ l ½ t ½ ss½ ²Í l } Íï7ïï 7ï Í× Y7 Í( w Y 7 P rs zr z¢s ½ l q ½ so o o z 7 » Íï«ë× ¨ï Â Í R7 Uo ss as Uwz ¡ 9 so Í;X Í;9 ²( 7 s ss} Íï¨Â(ç¨ÂÄ ë7 ç o oz op s7 < s ï r o r Po }s 7 Í a E z ur ½ Y rz ½ ;9½ ? Mz ²Í l }½ ²ÂÄ z ½ ×ë7 ï 7 ë×Í r =o wz t s ²ëï¨ ²Í 7 ²Â s z 7 ×ë¨Äë ¨ (ëç r E z u Uo }½ s ½ u ½ t ²(免Äï } r ss} t ss Íï7Ä× 7Í× ï w e } ¨ }z qws s½ z q s s ztz¨ qo z ½ ²Í ïl }½ } rs ½ ×ë7ÂÍï7Ä ï ë×ç R7 Es ps us Y 7½ X t s ½ o z u ²Â 7 <o ×ë¨ ïë¨Â×Í ë R7 T t r Y ½ s ¡ s ½ wo sr }z qw po w½ ²Äï¨²Í l } ×ë7(Í×7 ï(
ç Eo s t r 9 s7 X ½ q }z u½ zq o s½ ²ç l ½ ×ë¨× ͨ×(ïï ç Uo Y 7 t ²Í l }7 Í } s 8 } sq7 × Ä7×Íë7(×ÂĽ (ï×7ç×ç7 Ä ç r Po }s ¨ ²ç ï u wo s }z lpo l Í ws s 7 Íï¨(( ¨ÍÍ(( çï R7 Íë w Y 7 ²Âï l 7 s ¡ ½ A ss <op s¹ Eo }½ ×ë¨Äëç¨Ä ëÍ çï w No qo s < 9 suws ¡ Í PqMso Í w e }7 » Íï« Ä ¨(ë ïï wl[w t ²ÍÍ l²ÍÂï } t zu zq z s ² sq Íï¨ïë ¨(( ïï B ss s Y ½ u½ ¡½ t ½ s ½ ²Í l } ½ z z q ½ Íï¨ (ç¨çÄ Í ï× w N q W u q so ½ }z qws z 7½ ²ï l ½ ss¹ ç(ç¨ ÂͨÍï Ä
Íë ?7 < ps o r ;X Rs ¡ s 7 ×ë¨ë×ë¨×ÄïÄ zqÖ Âï× ï(
46 | P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r |
ÍÍçÄ a7 _s o u s s ;X7 Í ½ o 8Í sq7 ²× l Íï¨ (¨ëïçÂ
9Í Rzqs½ s oz oz sr ½ R a Uwz o7 Y o z u / ²ÍÍïl } ×Í ¨××ë¨ Í Í ; or T s¡ rs s t z s 7 ²ÍÍ l } Ysq ² 7 Íï¨ïë ¨((ÂÂ
; ¡ Po Y p p U z s ½ Ys s s½ olq½ <op s½ Rso [ o ½ }z qw o ¨ r ¡½ R Y }z u½ ²ç l ×Í ¨ï ï¨ïë×ï A o }t r o so ²(ï ²ÍÂï } s ¡ s Ysq rs s Íï¨ç ¨ï×Âë A o }t r½ t ½ r u ½ so ? ½ z o ½ ²Ä l }8 ² ï sq7 Íï¨ï רÍçïï B?XP9R[TaR ¨ ²Í l }½ ²Â r ½ so o o o z ½ ×ë¨Â¨ïç(( Bs o 9 soW RG<?½ < ¢¡ X U z o s s ¡½ r u » Íï«ïç(¨× ( Bs o R ws Nzps zs W o z u / ²Â l 7 ×ë¨ ç¨ÍëÄ NoYo s < sus o so ¨ t °r l s t }z q7 ²Í l }7 Xst° 7 ×ë¨×Ĩï Ä R? UEGN9=?NUEG9 }z qws z z q r½ ²Í ïl }78 ²Í ï rs z 7 Íï¨ï ͨ ëëÍ R?W \ t 7 A 7½ o ½ }z qws s½ ²Í ïl }7 }z u½ ×ë¨ ç ¨Ä Ä RTX[E UEGN9=?NUEG9 ²Í ïl ss} \ z z zs z q rsr7 < s q sus qo s 7 <o » Íï«×(ͨÄ××Ä R Uwz o A ½ U z ? ²ëï ½ YYG _s }½ o 7 9 z sr Íï7ë×Â7ïï×ï T s¡ so o l w z u qs s ½ ²Äï ss} z q ° z » Íï«Â ç¨ Y7 Uwz o½ Í Y7 × wW s ¡ s ½ oqz ½ o }¨z q s ½ Íï¨ç×ë¨ï×(ë Ya Uwz ors wzo X t s 7 ² ï s z ½ wo s }z po w7 ×ë¨ ïͨ ëçÄ
E s < so z uW G tts o w s q so z u s zqs z w ¡so ¡ s s zs qs7 eT\X ETP? aGNN YEGR? ?_?Xe _GYG[¹¹¹ Gt ¡ o wo s o q so w s so s qo 9 s o W ×ë ×Í çïÄÂ7
9Í <o s ¡½ U pz u½ az r ½ r ½ }z qw ;o w° ½ N zqs ½ zqs sr z sr½ A ss s z o s 7 » Íï«(ë(7ÍÍ×
Â(ÂÄ ? o Y 7 [ z Xo qw N ² M ëlÍ ATX Y9N? ;e TaR?X Íï¨ç ͨÂÍ t w lrs oz w Wll z ¡ 7q lÂ(ÂÄs o
Po owo }z Â;Xl 7ï;9 ² ïï½ ao s t < z ¡ P;X Í t ¨ o s t 7 <o s × Ä¨ë ¨ ÍÂë7
homes for rent
ï ( [oq o Y 7 ;XlÍ;9 ²×Ä \[GN ET\Y?7 NX½ =X½ MG[½ YP e9X=½ al= ETTM¨\U7 Íï¨ç ¨ëÄïÄ7 9_9GN GPP7 ×Í PqPow Âp lÍpo s 7 w uw ½ sq ( } Íï7(ÂÂ7ï ( ( U zqs Y 7 o Âp ²((ï lr½ 7 sq½ Í 7 s Íï¨ïç(¨çï(Í
R7 az r r 8p o t ²ÄÄl zuw p q} pqwlp o r o } × Ä7ë Ä7 ï×Í Tqso <z ¡½ RK Â; o ëlÍ ¨Íë½ ëlÍë¨ ç Xsr qsr ²(ï 7 <o »× Ä«ÂÄĨÂÍ×( aGN=aTT= q so ¨Âp ½ o s a} ¡ <op s½ }u½ psoqw × Ä¨ï ¨ë×ë( ; zuo z s ;X U zqs ; so}W 9 u¨²Ä ïl } ½ so psoqw (ï×7ÂÄë7 ×Í×
;XGB9R[GR? Us TM7 K ¡ ç¨ÂÍW ²Í 7 9 u ͨ (W ²Í 7 Ys 7 ç¨ÍÍW ²Í ï7 7; zu;7q »(ï׫ Íë¨ ï P9XB9[?½ RKW ;9eAXTR[ R?a <\Y[TP ;\GN= ïp lç7ïpo½ ss} ¡½ w ¡ s t so / »²Â }l p 7« »× Ä«çç ¨ïÂ( Tqso <z ¡ W ¡ r s ½ olq½ o }z u½ Í ;X l t W op ro¡ ¨ ²ï wo t so ²Â(ï 7 »× Ä«ÂÄ(¨ÍÂç( T7<7 RK ¨ ç w Y 7 çp l po psoqwt o oz } t ëlÍ×½ ² ëï 7 ×ë¨ ç ¨ïÄÄÍ
ïï ; o}s s Â; ²ëï 8 s q qw½ so ¡r½ sq ( } ×ë7ÄÄ 7 ÂÂ
9 o z u 9 suws ¡ Âp lÍpo ²ëï 8 sqs ¡ s rs sr½ Íï¨ïë ¨ ç ë
U Xzqw r ;XlÍ;9 ²( l Rs Xswop7 <s o 9z 7 Eo r r½ Rs Mz qws ½ A zus½ B o z s7 ×ë¨ Í ¨ï(Í
çë Us Y 7 çp l po Ysq z ( }½ <o » Íï«××ĨÍ ç
ïç Ms sr¡ Y 7 Âp lÍpo ²( s ¡ s r½ tz z wsr po s s ½ o r ¡½ olq½ r }z qw½ uo plrz » Íï«Â ë¨ Â Â ÂÍ Y z z u Y 7 Âp Ysq z ( }½ <o » Íï«××ĨÍ ç ×ç No us Y Âp ²(ëï8 zqs½ s oz ½ o oz ×Í 7ëÍ 7ÍÄ(× =z Y 7 Â; ²Í½ ï z w s ÄÍë7 ë7( ( ÄÍë7ëïë7 (×
Íëcc Y7 EG<MY Y[7 Â;X½ s oz l qo s ½ ²Ä 8 ×ë¨×çï¨Äç Í Í( Y7 ï w Y 7 u  ;X pz¨ ²Äï rs }z qwl;9½ Ysq ( }½ Íï7ëç(7 ë×
resorts/rent
<TRYETET<M?R Â;Xl 7ï;9 U }u7 ²ÍÄï R s 7 Íï¨ç(ï¨ Íï
T<½ RK ;soqwt ï;Xlç;9 ²ç ëlÍרël Â7 ÄëÂ7ïÂ(7ëÍë× × Ä7ç ï7 Íë× Yso G s <z ¡W ç r Y 7 p ²ÍÍ l } olq½ ½ (lÍ (l »×Í «çÄç¨ë ç Y s Eo p ç ;Xl ;9 ²Í× K ¡ Í× Â½ <o »× Ä«Â×(¨ë ç az r rW < s s 9 s Í ;X ²(( l } 7 p 7q lÍ ï ë Íï¨ç ¨× Í az r r < s ç ;X E s ss} ¡ R Us ½ < s [ ;soqw½ (ëë¨ ë¨ ëçÂ
; zs < s W ï ;X½ ss Í 7 Yo < ss}½ Âp (½ a} a}s r ½ × Ä¨ï(ë¨ÄçÄÂ
ë w Xssr  ;X Ysq ( } s s ½ ss7 Íï¨((ï¨Íë
Í Y ïÍ ç ;X ²(ëï8 z s ¡ s ½wr r t q ½ Íï¨çÍרï(× Í( Y7 es ro Y 7 ;Xl;9 ²× ï 8 z Rs qo s ½ s ¡ oz sr½ z w s ¡ s rs sr }z qws 7 ? q sr qw7 < s p zq o o z o r w z u7 Yqw so p¡7 as s z s w s o r s w sq z ¡7 ×ë¨ïçĨÍÍÍÂ
YMGUU9<M Âp 7ïpo½ rsq}½ q ë z ous ²Íç 8 ×Í ¨çï(¨( ï
×Âcc aE??N?X u Â;X½ s oz l q ½ ¡o r½ ²ëëï87 ×ë¨×çï¨Äç Í ×ç B s s 9 s ;X ²×ï 8 z l q ½ lr w} ½ sq7 ( } ×Í 7 7Ä(ÂÂ
Âï 9 s ;X ²çÄï8 Âï w Bz o r so h ½ Íï¨ë ͨë ë× ×Í No qw r Âp lÍpo ²(ï 8 z qw½ p}¡r½ ²Íë s z ×ë7 Í 7Â(ÄÄ
ï R7 Yz Y ss Âp lÍ7ïpo ²(ï 7 s s zs 7q Íï7ëç 7çÄ
 R B o ¢ Y Âp ²×ëï8 z Xs o sr½ <o » ×ë«ïÄͨ Í ï R ; zs Y Âp lÍpo ²ëï 8 z o us s ¡ s o sr½ » Íï«(Íë¨Í(ï(
R9h9X?[E Â;Xl 7ï;9 ²Í½× =s 7 [ w½ Xsrq ztts½ p ½ Í qo uo ous½ Í ¡so so s½ q srz qwsq}7 o ë ¨ëÍ ¨ ïïÂ
ao wz u [ 7 Âp l 7ïpo ²ÍÄ 8 z ½ Íqo uo ous½ s (ïר( ¨ Â×× az zo s ¨ç ;X ²Í( uo ous } w ½ qo ÄÍë¨×ï¨ ë
; zuo z s½ RK Yz u s ç;Xl ;9 ²Â ï} < s qw ½ po¡½ psoqw7 Xsqs ¡ s o sr ͨ( ¨ïï ï
< s s ÍÄÄÍ < o zq l s op s o s ½ oz q rz z z u½ zuz o z s ½ ¨ qo ²Ä(ï » p o zo ¡ s wo p } o s« 7 <o » Íï«Ä (¨Ä×Â
9qq r ?c ²×× l p 7 orsr½ s q q r½ Ä(} z7½ »×Í «ï(ï7 ïÍ
=GY<T_?Xe Y? ²ïÄëï ¡ ç r o s o ½ zu z s ½ sqs ¡ s zqsr½ zq} z o s o s Íï¨× ë¨Í(Íç
ç Y ÍÄÄç ²×ï lps tts u so q r7½ p } lu o¡ z » ×ë«ÄëÂ7ç(çç
7ïc ë ²Íç½ l p ï r½ Í ÂM z½ t½ o ¡ w ½ ר<= qwo us ½ Yz z ½ so ×Í ¨×ïĨÄ(ï×
ATX= ?q z s ÍÄ× ²çÄÄï ï z r l ½ u so ½ × Ä¨( (¨(ïÂë [ z w [X× ÍÄë ²Íç½Äï } l ½ sr z s z s ×Í 7ççÄ7ëÍÂ
² ëï \ A K } <o <o Íï¨ë ¨ ÍÍÍ 9NUE9 <TR_?X[?X G q7 Ys [ws =z sq ½ ; ¡s t Yq o <o o ¨ ¡ zq < s s ¨ ;o s zs ¨ 9 z Xz ¨ 9 Xor 7 <o (ïרÂïë¨ÂÄë
K } <o [ q} ao sr½ $400, Call 856-365-2021
K } <o ao sr çlë Xs o 7 <o ×ë¨Âëë¨Â ((
T<?9R <G[e½ P= Âp ²Í½ (½ Í p } pqw½ K ¡¨Ys 7 » ×ë«ÄÂç¨ÂëÍÍ ETR=9 <G_G< Nc ° ç Äë z ²ë½ Íï¨×× ¨ï Íï
automotive
Eo s¡ N Xzrs Ac=N ÍÄÄ( ²×½Ä Íë½(( z7½ s qs s q r7 Íï¨Ä רÄç ï
=o p¡½ U9  o ;XlÍ;9 ²ëëï8 z 9ç Â7 < s zp s ë ² ï½ Í7ï 7 sq7½ l ½ olq½ zqs p}¡r½ w ¨ Âç} z½ orsr½ s q7 q r7½ ×Í 7çë×7çÂÄ( uw poq}u r qwsq} (ïרïͨ Ä Â \ s =o p¡ Â; lÍ;o X ²Ä 8 z uo ous½ poq}¡o r½ <o »×Í « ¨Ä Ä
;o o <¡ ¡r çp l 7ïpo ²Â qwo z u szuwp w r »ÂÂ׫ïçĨÍ( Eo s Íp lÍpo q r ²(ï 8 z Rs ?GM½ t }u½ u NX ×Í 7Ä×ç7 ïïç
=s z s =[Y ²ëÂ Í s ½ s q q r½ Í çM z½ Íï7(ëë7ï(ëÄ
T o r AN½ p l po z s wo s ²ïÄÄl } s o oz opz z ¡½ as uo s [ <s s ½ ¡ ï z s =z s¡ »(ï׫ë ë¨ïÍïÍ
ÍÄÂ× Bs z Y 7 p lÍpo X ²ëï 8 z s o sr½ ¡o r½ wr r t (ïר( ¨ Â×× Í Po Y Âp lÍpo ²(ï 8 z s ¡ s r½ wr r t ½ s }z lu o z s q s ½ s ;9 » Íï«ÄÍë¨Í ÄÍ
Yï Ä ²ï×½ l p (} z s ½ p }½ z ½ orsr  ¨ç ¨Âë×ë
E= Es z ous Y t oz ç ²Í ½ï ï} z s ½ z q rz z ½ Ez s z s ½ so z s ½ qo × Ä¨çëÍ¨× ç
low cost cars & trucks
ç Yc Y? ÍÄÄ( ²ï ÍÂÄM z½ ï ssr½ p oq} l p oq} z s z ½ orsr½ s ¡ u r q r7½ Íï¨ç(ë¨ ×× ; zq} Xsuo ÍÄÄÄ ²Íçï u r½ q r olq½ × Ä¨ ͨëç ë ; zq} Xsuo Nz z sr ÍÄÄ× ² Äï ç } zu z7½ z q r½ ×Í 7××ë7ç( Ä <orz oq <o s o ?q ¡ Y ?rz z ç r ½ t½ zuz o z s ½ ¨ o z ¡½ ²çÄ(ï7 Y sqzo qo t o zq o p ¡s 7 <o Íï¨× Ĩ × <ws ¡ <o o zs XY < s zp s °Ä ²(ï = rus T z ÍÄ(Ä ²(ï p w ç q¡ s qs s ½ Íï¨× ¨ÄÂ(Â
<E?_e _o ÍÄÄ ²Í×ï u r q r½ ÍÂëM½ G sq sr Íï¨×ïë¨×ëÂë <EXeYN?X Ysp z u Kc ²çï _×½ o l T=½ ×ÄM z½ UN½ Ua½ q z s½ z ½<=½ q q s 7½ Íï7×ÂÄ7Â×Â( A r ? srz z ç ²ççÄ ça=½ u o o ssr o ½ q Íï7ç 7Í (Ä A r A¨Íï Uzq} q} ²çÄ(ï N ¡½ s s rsr p r¡½ t s ½ olq½ zuz o z s ½ uo ous }s ½ s oq z¨ tzqs ro¡ t q zrs op ¡ s wo p } o s½ qo » Íï«Ä ¨ Í×ï
A r P o u B o rs °×Ä ²ï p zu  ½ o ½ E s¡ çp ½ B[ç wsor ½ s o oz ½ qo (ïר(ïç¨× ÄÄ
BP< Âï <o u _o ²Âç Ä }½ z ½ oq} l ws s ×Í 7( ï7Âï ETR=9 9qq r ?c ÍÄÄ( ²Â(Äï ï r½Yr ½N orsr½B us ç(ç7Ä ç7(ëÄï Kss <ws }ss Y ç ç ÍÄÄ× ²çÄï lp ×q¡ ½ z½ s z ½ z Íï7× Í7×××ï Po¢ro U sus ÍÄÄ× ²Í×ï ï r½ q r 9<½ Âç u½ s z ½ s o q so ½ ssr wz u7 <o Íï¨× ¨ÄÂ( P?X<?=?Y ÍÄ ? ÍÄÄ ²Â½ï X u so ½ t½ Íç } z s ½ o 7 <o Íï¨× ë¨ëççç
Pz pz wz Bo o B[h Í ²çÄÄï uo } ½ z}s s ½ ss ×Í 7ç 7×( RGYY9R V s ²Â s q q r½ ÍÍï} z½ Í s ½ Íï7Ä 7× ÄÄ Yo YN ÍÄÄë ² ÄÄÄ ur q r½ ur uo z7½ Í ï} » Íï« × ¨(×(( [ ¡ o <o ¡ cN? ÍÄÄç o zqs ²Íïï o s ½ q r olq½ t Íï¨× ¨ÄÂ( _ } ous Uo o ÍÄÄÄ ²ç Äï p oq}½ zq}½ z ½ Íç }7 z7 Íï¨ ÍĨ(ëëÍ
: 2 ;
9
classifieds
<
8
the naked city | feature | a&e | the agenda | food
7 3 8
8 5 5
3 < 3 7 8 2 8 8 7 2 3 2
5 3 6
8 6
2 3 2 4 3 4 3
! " #! $%& ' &( )$ *+, &'-&%!. $'. $## !"&$%!. / !+!"% * .!+( $+ )&%0 $ ($+!( $(( "&$%! 1 .!%$&+(
P h i l a d e l P h i a C i t y Pa P e r | J u l y 1 4 - J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 | C i t y Pa P e r . n e t |
47
billboard [ C I T Y PA P E R ]
J U LY 1 4 - J U LY 2 0 , 2 0 1 1 CALL 215-735-8444
B E E R B A R TA Q U E R I A EVERY MONDAY AT 10PM ITâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S NACHO CITY!
with DJ Apt One & DJ Danophonic. Half priced nachos & $5 margaritas. JULY 24TH FROM 5-10PM
Live Music w/ Cranston Dean & The Philly Pholks with special guest Elle King. $5 â&#x20AC;&#x153;session beer & shotâ&#x20AC;? special.
215.545.4101 â&#x20AC;˘ 263 S. 15th Street â&#x20AC;˘ josepistolas.com
41035:4 $"'c featuring the girls of
=>36/>>9 ACâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S NEWEST HOT SPOT
B= 3<B3@) B= 0@7<5
8:00pm â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 5:00am
5)634%": ° 46/%":
R abSa V]
Protect Your Pad While Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Away
Available to watch and care for your home while youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re away. All Center City Locations. References Available. Call Robert Small: 215-640-0975
115 S. 22nd Street 8am-9pm Mon-Fri, 9am-6pm Sat-Sun May not be combined with other offers. Visit www.volpecycles.com for details.
Opening Reception for Philadelphia Based Artist Randi Lawson
TEQUILA SUNRISE RECORDS
Saturday, July 16th, 6-10pm Lucifer Philadelphia 350 S. 15th Street Philadelphia, PA luciferphilly.com
525 West Girard Ave VINYL AND CD SPECIALISTS CLASSIC & MODERN GLOBAL SOUNDS HOUSE TECHNO DUBSTEP DUB DISCO FUNK SOUL JAZZ DIY PUNK LSD ROCK AND LIGHT HARMONY ROOTS BLUES NOISE AVANT AND MORE TUESDAY-SUNDAY 12-6PM 01-215-965-9616
Bachelor Party Headquarters All Nude, All The Time Home Of The 5 min. Lap Dance
Nowi n g H iO\rQS`aa S a
BICYCLE TUNE UPS $55 plus tax VOLPE CYCLES
185 South Carolina Ave. Atlantic City (South Carolina & Boardwalk)
SILK CITY
Â&#x2DC; Â&#x2DC; FRIDAY 7.15
STUDY GUITAR W/ THE BEST All Styles All Levels. Former Berklee faculty member. Masters Degree with 25 yrs. teaching experience. 215.831.8640 www.davidjoel.net
609-340-8820
TOP PRICES PAID. No collection too small or large! We buy everything! Call Jon at 215-805-8001 or e-mail dingo15@hotmail.com
Executives, Etc. Massage Services, Etc.
WEEKDAYS 5-7PM
17 Rotating Drafts Close to 200 Bottles
www.devilsdenphilly.com www.facebook.com/devilsdenphiladelphia www.twitter.com/devilsdenphilly
HOOKAH BAR/RESTAURANT
SATURDAY 7.16
BIG BEAUTIFUL WOMEN PAGEANT Looking for Contestants
F
SUNDAY 7.17
Quality Company. Quality Time. YOUR Location, 24:7 Cash & Credit Cards Accepted Call Now: 215-969-4759 edenlove.friendlynow.com
Open every day 4pm - 2am Sat & Sun Brunch 10am - 4pm 5th & Spring Garden www.silkcityphilly.com
MEET OR BEAT ANY PRICE
GREAT AMERICAN GUITAR SHOWâ&#x20AC;&#x201C; OAKS, PA. July 16-17, Greater Philadelphia Expo Center.
DANCERS WANTED
Flexible hours, will train, no experience necessary, excellent pay, safe/secure environment. Call (609) 707-6075
LOCAL . DELICIOUS . FUN TRADITIONAL PUB : SPECTACULAR FOOD OVER 50 CRAFT BOTTLED BEERS 10 DRAUGHTS LOCAL FREsH FARE DAILY SPECIALS DINE IN . TAKE OUT LIVE MUSIC PRIVATE PARTY FACILITY UPSTAIRS
215.242.1818 www.campbellsplace.com 8337 GERMANTOWN AVE. CHESTNUT HILL PA
Citypaper is very pleased to bring you our very first smartphone app! Just go to www.citypaper.net and click our martini glass icon to find out more, or type in â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Happy Hours in the app store, android marketplace, or blackberry app world. Click the orange martini icon and get drinking. No matter where you go or when you go, you can find the nearest happy hours to you with a single click! You can even sort through bars by preference or neighborhood.
r r
FRANKINSTIEN BIKE WORX 215-893-0415 1529 SPRUCE STREET BREAK AWAY FROM BOUTIQUE PRICES AND SERVICE!
FREE DRINKING SMARTPHONE APP!!!
HIDDEN CAFE 328 SOUTH STREET (215) 413-2486
5 n
I BUY RECORDS, CDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S, DVDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S
½ PRICED DRAFTS
THE EL BAR
Sat, July 30th 9:30pm $5 BLOW UP A GO GO! With the Biters, Gold Crowns and Rocks Off DJs Dan Kishbaugh, Erick Kohlhofer & Bill Coburn
100 Station Ave. Oaks, PA. Route 422, Exit at Oaks. Sat. 10-6, Sun. 10-4. 100â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s of exhibitors, 1000â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s of instruments. Mega Show! Adm. $10. Bee-3 Vintage (828)298-2197, www.bee3vintage.com
Size 14 and Above Also Accepting Vendor Applications Sponsorships Available Enter Now: 215-222-7127 www.wilkesproductions.com
Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re Not A Tech Head....
but youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;d like to make life easier with the help of technology. Donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know where to start? Whether you own a small business, or just need some advice for home, Guidewire can help. Let Guidewire assist you in finding the perfect technology oriented solution you need today. wayne@guidewireservices.com
Sexual Intelligence
Guaranteed-quality, Body-safe, Sexuality Products, Lubricants, Fetish Equipment, Educational Resources SEXPLORATORIUM 620 South 5th Street www.passionaltoys.com
7&3: (00% â&#x20AC;&#x153;..#&&3 -*45 )"4 (308/ 50 &1*$ 1301035*0/4 ,*5$)&/ )"4 "%%&% "/ &953" #&-- 8*5) 1&3)"14 5)& $*5:Âľ4 #&45 '3*5&4 40.& 45&--"3 #&&3 #"55&3&% '*4) "/% 7&3: (00% .644&-4Âł Craig LeBan, Philadelphia Inquirer, Revisited April 2007
(*'5 $&35*'*$"5&4 "7"*-"#-&
#%( 5:7EF@GF EF B:;>367>B:;3 $#' &#% #+#* D7E7DH3F;A@E 3F,
iii Wg^aYkTSd Ua_