JULY 2-8, 2014 I VOLUME 39 I NUMBER 27
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HOW TO FIGHT OFF DRONES, LEGALLY PAGE 5 | CONVERGENCE OF THE SCI-FI SCRIBES! PAGE 20
PLUS Our
THE FREEDOM TO MAKE BAD DECISIONS THE 4TH OF JULY ISSUE
Featuring GRILLING DOS AND DON’TS, How to AVOID FIREWORKS DISASTERS, and a Guide to the NORTHWEST’S WORST POLITICIANS.
EDITOR SHOOTS A GUN! And AARON RODEN Lets His Freedom Flag Fly!
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inside» July 2–8, 2014 VOLUME 39 | NUMBER 27
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news&comment 5
UNIONS VS. CITY BY NINA SHAPIRO | A guide to
November’s competing child-care initiatives. Also: Drone warfare!
6
THE GLORIOUS 4TH BY SW STAFF | Meet the Northwest’s
worst politicians and celebrate the wonders of democracy! Also: Our editor gets over his gun issues; cookout menu ideas; a cautionary fireworks tale; and cover model Aaron Roden’s tips for a kick-ass Fourth.
food&drink
17 GOING PAST PASTA BY NICOLE SPRINKLE | Looking for
a decent trattoria outside the Ethan Stowell-sphere—and finding great coffee cocktails. 17 | FOOD NEWS/THE WEEKLY DISH 18 | CITIZEN FOOD 19 | MORE RESTAURANT BREAKUPS
arts&culture 20 SCI-FI & FANTASY
BY BRIAN MILLER | The Clarion West
reading and workshop series turns 30. 20 | THE PICK LIST
23 FILM
OPENING THIS WEEK | Melissa
26 MUSIC
BY GWENDOLYN ELLIOTT | Sharon
Van Etten’s songs come from an intensely personal place—and Cher’s and Cyndi Lauper’s from a fabulous public one. 28 | THE WEEK AHEAD
odds&ends 31 | CLASSIFIEDS
»cover credit PHOTO OF AARON RODEN BY MORGEN SCHULER
Editor-in-Chief Mark Baumgarten EDITORIAL Senior Editor Nina Shapiro Food Editor Nicole Sprinkle Arts Editor Brian Miller Entertainment Editor Gwendolyn Elliott Editorial Operations Manager Gavin Borchert Staff Writers Ellis E. Conklin, Matt Driscoll, Kelton Sears Editorial Interns Terrence Hill, Reut Odinak Contributing Writers Rick Anderson, Sean Axmaker, James Ballinger, Michael Berry, Sara Billups, Margaret Friedman, Zach Geballe, Dusty Henry, Megan Hill, Robert Horton, Patrick Hutchison, Sara D. Jones, Seth Kolloen, Sandra Kurtz, Dave Lake, John Longenbaugh, Jessie McKenna, Jenna Nand, Terra Clarke Olsen, Brian Palmer, Kevin Phinney, Keegan Prosser, Mark Rahner, Michael Stusser, Jacob Uitti PRODUCTION Production Manager Sharon Adjiri Art Director Samantha Wagner Graphic Designers Jennifer Lesinski, Brennan Moring Staff Photographer/Web Developer Morgen Schuler Photo Interns Anna Erickson ADVERTISING Advertising and Marketing Director Jen Larson
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SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
McCarthy writes her own ticket, Sebastian Junger goes back to Afghanistan, and Keira Knightley sings.
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SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
news&comment
Cleaning Up the Child-Care Mess The City Council and workers’ unions are trying to bring universal pre-K to Seattle. But they aren’t working together.
4 Lessons in Drone Self-Defense
BY NINA SHAPIRO
BY MATT DRISCOLL
ast week, Seattle City Council members voted to put two preschool and childcare proposals on the November ballot. They also decided to pit the measures— one drawn up by the city, one by a partnership of two unions—against one another. It is, in short, a confusing mess, one that city officials are still trying to sort out, never mind voters. To help, SW spent some time talking to the players involved.
he future is here, and it can be downright creepy sometimes. The most recent reminder came just last week, when a woman called to complain of a drone hovering outside her 26th floor apartment. Naturally, the flying camera freaked her out. As a public service, we called the police to get some tips on dealing with drones. Here are a few things to keep in mind.
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T
How did we get here? A couple of years ago, City
NEON TOMMY VIA FLICKR.COM
sweeping plan, now known as Initiative 107. It would, of course, create the professional development institute they were pushing. And it would affect absolutely all child-care facilities, including centers, home-based businesses, preschools, and before- and after-school programs for older kids. The city’s plan, in contrast, applies only to 3- and 4-year-olds in bona fide “classrooms,”
ting a drone with a BB gun is much harder than it looks. Secondly, according to Seattle Police spokesperson Sean Whitcomb, you’d be putting others at risk and opening yourself to possible criminal charges. “We would recommend against the use of any firearm—pellet or otherwise—in the city limits,” he explains.
not covering home-based facilities. It’s also essentially a pilot program that starts small and ramps up, to 2,000 children in four years. Both plans aim to keep costs for parents affordable. The city plan would be free to families earning less than 300 percent of the federal poverty level (roughly $72,000 for a family of four), and would charge those earning more according to a sliding scale. I-107 states that “No family should pay more than 10 percent of income on child care.”
What’s this I hear about a minimum-wage clause in I-107? Didn’t we resolve that issue already? Indeed, we did—at least if the City
Where will the money come from? Good ques-
How will the measures be presented to voters? That’s still up in the air. Word around
tion! In the city plan, the source of funding is made clear: a property-tax levy that would cost owners of a $400,000 house $43 a year. I-107, though, contains no funding mechanism. That leaves open the question of whether the initiative really will keep costs down. The city claims that the 10-percent provision amounts to an unfunded mandate that could give rise to lawsuits from families having to pay more. Not at all, says Strickland, who adds that the provision is not an enforceable mandate but an “aspirational” goal. The city would be left to figure out how to achieve it, with no particular timetable specified. In this way the city’s plan is far more concrete, though it fails to address astronomical child-care costs outside the narrow slice of the market that overlaps with preschool.
Water balloons. Throwing water balloons at a drone seems like a much better idea—but risks are still involved. Gravity comes into play, Whitcomb explains, as do property rights. “It’s just being aware of who’s below,” he says of throwing water balloons or causing a disabled drone to fall from the sky. Whitcomb also reminds us that if a drone isn’t being employed for criminal ends, damaging one could result in misdemeanor charges against its attacker.
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Council’s $15-wage plan, passed last month, survives a variety of attacks underway, including a competing initiative and a lawsuit. But the unions filed their initiative before the city’s wage plan was hammered out, and then got locked into its language. Now they’re in the tricky position of defending a separate, faster track of wage hikes for child-care workers.
the Council is that the ballot will first ask voters if they approve of either measure, and then, in a separate item, instruct approving voters to pick one of the two. Got that? The unions are saying that they are still exploring whether voters could choose both, despite a Council vote that seeks to rule that out. City Attorney Pete Holmes’ office, which makes the final call, is not commenting at this point.
Can this get any more confusing? Probably. As election season gets underway, the city and unions will likely campaign not only for their measure, but against the competing measure. For two plans with similar goals, this is a train wreck. E
nshapiro@seattleweekly.com
sportsball » The Legacy of the Sonics Lives On, But for How Long? Last week, Bothell High’s Zach LaVine (pictured) became the latest Seattle-area kid picked in the first round of the NBA draft. That makes 11 first-rounders in the past 10 years, an unprecedented yield of basketball talent. It might just be coincidence, but the childhoods of the 11 first-rounders all coincide with the thrilling, volatile era of Sonics basketball when Shawn Kemp and Gary Payton ruled the court. The correlation doesn’t prove anything, but the connection between the mid-’90s Sonics and the area’s basketball flowering is more than correlative. Payton served as a mentor to many young Seattle hoopsters. But now that Seattle is indefinitely NBA-less, will talented athletes move in a different direction? Read the complete column at seattleweekly.com. SETH KOLLOEN
BALLOON BY GEORGE PATTERSON, WC TOILETS BY PATRICK TROUVÉ FROM THE NOUN PROJECT
What is the difference between the two measures? In the end, the unions drew up their own
1
A BB gun. First of all, hit-
A citizens arrest. If you do believe a drone is being used for illegal purposes like voyeurism, Whitcomb says seizing the flying machine is perfectly within your rights. “Let’s say you’re sunbathing in your yard, you see a drone, and you think it’s being used for criminal activity,” Whitcomb says. “You can smack it with a tennis racket, then hold it for police.” Or if you live in a high-rise, Whitcomb says simply, “Just close your blinds and call police.”
3
4
A full-frontal attack.
In case you’re wondering, it’s totally legal to be naked in your apartment 100 percent of the time. While many seem to be frightened by the idea of a drone snapping nude photos of them, it’s also true that a drone might think twice about peering into apartment 2B if it gets more of a look-see than it bargained for. “Nudity in your own space is completely legitimate,” Whitcomb reminds us. Good to know. E
mdriscoll@seattleweekly.com
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
Council started working on a plan for universal pre-K, a concept that has been catching on around the country as a way to close the achievement gap and make sure all students are ready for school. Spearheaded by Councilmember Tim Burgess, the idea focused on quality. Among other stipulations, teachers would be required to get college degrees in early-childhood education, and would be compensated with salaries matching those of K-12 teachers. That raised concerns among two unions, SEIU 995 and the American Federation of Teachers, who had formed a partnership aimed at organizing preschool and child-care workers. The unions worried that existing workers would be “thrown under the bus” by the new plan, as Karen Strickland, president of AFT Washington, puts it. Many such workers wouldn’t be able to meet the higher expectations in the four-year time frame laid out by the city proposal, the unions reckoned. They also wanted a broader plan that tackled pay and professional development for all child care, not just the narrow segment of “preschool” that caters to 3- and 4-yearolds, which is all the city wanted to take on. So the unions and the city met a number of times over the past year to try to come up with a plan both could support. They couldn’t. The unions insisted that they (or a group like them representing workers) participate equally with the city in a new professional development institute that would set staff requirements, among other functions, seeing this as giving workers a voice. The city, according to Burgess, saw this as giving the unions a no-bid contract and “veto power” over essential standards.
5
The Northwest’s Worst Politicians (Whom You Elected)
A horndog, a boozer, two sleazebags, and a bounty of blowhards who disgrace our democracy.
G
BY SW STAFF AND CONTRIBUTORS
ood people elect bad politicians. This truth knows no borders and no political affiliation. In the pursuit of the public power afforded by our great democracy, jackasses abound, and every once in a while—perhaps quite often—some of them fool us into believing they’re interested in serving the public, rather than their own puerile needs. And they do fool us. When Idaho Republicans elected John McGee to the State Senate, they didn’t expect him to one day drunkenly careen into a constituent’s yard in a stolen SUV. And Snohomish County voters couldn’t have known that they’d be paying for the intimacy kit that their county executive Aaron Reardon purchased to assist in his affair with a bodybuilder. So it is on this Independence Day that we present the Worst Politicians of the Northwest. We’ve asked reporters and editors from our fellow alternative weeklies to share the two lowest bottom feeders who have somehow risen to the top in each of their states. Read, be dismayed, and try to do better come this November. Mark Baumgarten
Washington
by Ellis E. Conklin, Seattle Weekly
HORNDOG
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
Former Snohomish County Executive Aaron Reardon
6
Reardon was the golden boy, the rising star of the Democratic Party in Washington state. Brash and cocky as a rooster, sure, but someday, most political observers agreed, he would sit in the governor’s mansion. When he was sworn into office in 2004, Reardon was the youngest county executive in the nation. His fall from grace began a couple of years ago when a very tan bodybuilder named Tamara—also a county social worker—came forward to reveal her long affair with Reardon, a married man with two young children. There were junkets, most of them put on the county’s credit card, and even an intimacy kit containing condoms and lubricants purchased during one of their trysts at a boutique hotel in Washington, D.C. In Chicago, he skipped out on the Democratic Leadership Council conference by faking a headache, then hailed a taxi to have dinner and drinks with Tamara. Reardon weathered scandal after scandal—the out-of-control drunkard
of a planning director he hired who groped a building-industry lobbyist on a golf course; allegations of using county resources for his campaign; a Washington State Patrol investigation into his travel. Then came the final straw, which smacked of Nixonian politics: One of his staffers concocted a phony name and made publicrecords requests of county employees’ conversations with police about Reardon’s involvement with Tamara. His staff was also tied to Web pages that attacked Reardon’s political opponents. Reardon resigned last year and called for an independent investigation into “false and scurrilous accusations.” He is said to be living in exile somewhere in Arizona.
BLOWHARD
State Senator Pam Roach
Pam Roach has the temperament of a thundercloud, with an in-your-face personality and a penchant for screaming at and berating staff members and fellow lawmakers that once got her banned from Republican caucus meetings. Roach, who has represented a conservative suburban district southeast of Seattle for 24 years, cemented her Rottweilerian reputation in 2006 when she threw a tantrum after someone removed a bouquet of roses from her Senate floor desk. Rising red-faced from her seat, she bellowed, “I am incensed that anyone would move or touch anything on a senator’s desk, and I want to find out who took my flowers and moved them, and I intend to take action.” Roach has no off switch. She works without a net—or a filter. She is constantly gaveled down. Legislative reporters grab their notepads when she gets up to speak, for who knows what will come out of her mouth. On her blog, Pam Roach Report, she has written, “It is women like me who pass on the genes we hope our sons have when they go to Iraq or Afghanistan. It is women like me who do not show fear.” She’s been reprimanded repeatedly for her tirades, and was told on one occasion to seek professional help after staffers accused her of illegally obtaining employees’ e-mail messages and brandishing a handgun at one of them. One Olympia aide said her verbal attacks were commonplace: “We call it ‘being Roached.’ ”
ILLUSTRATIONS BY ALAVARO DIAZ-RUBIO
Idaho
by George Prentice, Boise Weekly
BOOZER
Former Senator and GOP Majority Caucus Chairman John McGee
McGee began winning elections before he was 20 years old and didn’t stop until he became chairman of the Idaho Republican Majority Caucus; he had become the face of what many considered the future of the Idaho GOP. But today, at 41, McGee has had that face plastered on more mug shots than campaign posters, and is considered a political pariah. Following a June 2011 drunkdriving arrest, McGee admitted to imbibing a bit too much at a Father’s Day golf tournament. He was also charged with stealing an SUV that night (complete with a utility trailer) and crashing it in a neighbor’s front yard, prompting a bathrobe-clad woman to rush to her bedroom window. Police said McGee emerged from the wreckage, mumbled something about the woman being an angel, made some passing remarks about driving the stolen vehicle to Jackpot, Nevada, and promptly passed out. McGee, who by then was an Idaho state senator, saw that his political career was hanging in the balance. So he underwent a series of mea culpa TV interviews in which he spoke in hushed tones about how eager he was to “move forward.” But after he retained his Republican leadership and returned to the Idaho statehouse politically unscathed, it turned out that some of McGee’s moves were more than forward—they were inappropriate. A female staffer said he had sexually harassed her on several occasions at the state capitol; according to her, McGee exposed himself, asked for sex, and groped her. He was sentenced to 90 days in jail, but released after 44 days “for good behavior.” He hasn’t been heard from, at least publicly, since.
SLEAZEBALL
Former House Representative Phil Hart
Hart represented Idaho’s panhandle for four terms in the state House of Representatives. But he spent almost as much time in state and federal courtrooms as in the capitol. Hart appeared on most citizens’ radar with his sponsorship of something called the Idaho Silver Gem Act, which would have allowed Idahoans to pay taxes
using silver bars—mined in his home district. But Hart had no intention of paying his own taxes; he stopped filing returns in 1996. At last count, the IRS says, Hart owes feds around $500,000, and the state of Idaho says he owes about $53,000 to its tax commission. But Hart’s real chutzpah came when he regularly argued that his status as a state legislator granted him protection from dealing with tax authorities. Meanwhile, he continued to tangle with the Idaho House ethics committee, which ultimately decided to let its fellow legislator skate away unscathed. Perhaps most important, Hart was regularly re-elected to the legislature by wide margins.
And in a peculiar twist, he was reportedly found asleep in his car at a rural rest stop in April 2012 where a woman had been shot. Idaho police ended up clearing Hart and sending him on his way, saying it was just a bizarre coincidence. Too many scandals eventually caught up with Hart, and he lost a 2012 GOP primary. But his epitaph is far from being written: Federal authorities say they’re still laying the groundwork for criminal tax charges against the former lawmaker.
Montana
by Alex Sakariassen, Missoula Independent
BLOWHARD
State Representative Jerry O’Neil
In fall 2012, O’Neil, a Republican from Columbia Falls, drew national media attention when he requested that the state pay his legislative wage in gold and silver. But his letter to Montana Legislative Services was largely laughed off. The response was in keeping with the public reaction to much of O’Neil’s 12-year legislative record. During the 2013 legislative session alone, he introduced bills to eliminate the minimum wage for high-school dropouts, limit the federal government’s ability to regulate firearm restrictions, and allow criminals to opt out of jail time by submitting themselves to corporal punishment. Of the last proposal, O’Neil famously told the Associated Press in January 2013: “Ten years in prison or you could take 20 lashes, perhaps two lashes a year?” Professionally, O’Neil calls himself an “independent paralegal.” He has been at odds with the Montana State Bar and the state Supreme Court’s Commission on Unauthorized Practice ever since 2001, when a district judge wrote a letter stating O’Neil was engaged in the “unauthorized practice of law.” All this adds up to a long and predominantly
$20
Well-Child Appointments
July 1-Aug. 30, 2014 unsuccessful career of comical yet troubling policy attempts. But O’Neil is determined to keep trying: He’s campaigning for his seventh term in the Montana Legislature.
by Aaron Mesh, Willamette Week
SLEAZEBALL
BLOWHARD
State Senator Art Wittich
The call for campaign finance reform has escalated dramatically since the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in the Citizens United case. Much of the concern centers on the shadowy world of so-called dark-money groups—politically active nonprofits that aren’t required to disclose their donors. No politician in Montana is more closely tied to dark money than Wittich, a Republican from Bozeman and the 2013 state Senate majority leader. For years, Wittich’s law firm acted as the registered agent for the Colorado-based American Tradition Partnership (ATP). Formerly known as Western Tradition Partnership, the nonprofit was featured in a 2012 exposé on Frontline. Wittich’s firm also represented ATP in its challenge to Montana’s Corrupt Practices Act, which barred corporate spending in state campaigns for a century. The act was overturned. Relying in part on information contained in several boxes of documents recovered from a meth house in Colorado, Montana’s Commissioner of Political Practices has issued eight rulings of campaign-practice violations against ATP over the past year. One of them was tied to Wittich’s 2010 primary bid. The commissioner also ruled this year that Wittich violated campaign law during that race by coordinating with and accepting corporate donations through ATP. A District Court judge recently declined a recommendation that Wittich be removed from the 2014 ballot. So the senator will again bid to run—in a district where he does not reside.
Oregon
Includes free pediatric vitamins
Oregon Republican Party Chairman Art Robinson
Give the Oregon GOP credit for thinking outside the box. They could have chosen just any old Tea Partying climate-change denier as a leader. Instead, they found Robinson. A chemist and newsletter publisher who bases his operations in Cave Junction, Robinson has been spreading the gospel of nuclear power and Christian homeschooling since the 1980s. He ran two losing challenges to U.S. Representative Peter DeFazio—campaigns that brought fewer votes than headlines about his views on public schools (they’re child abuse) and nuclear waste (a little exposure is good for us). He has advocated sprinkling radioactive waste over the ocean from airplanes to strengthen our immune systems. Robinson might just be your run-of-themill country kook—Grizzly Adams meets Dr. Strangelove—except that his views have tapped a lucrative vein of the paranoid style in American politics. (He raised about $1.2 million in each of his congressional races.) That fundraising power was too much for the cash-strapped state GOP to resist—it elected him chairman last fall, deciding that extremism in the pursuit of money is no vice. Robinson immediately proved he isn’t shy about asking for contributions. Weeks after his appointment, he mailed every household in Josephine County and requested a urine sample. He explained the fluids would be used in tests that would “improve our health, our happiness, and prosperity.”
5. Listen to Lynyrd Skynyrd. Don’t worry, it’s still in the CD player. 6. Yell. A LOT. 7. Drink more cheap beer. You’re not getting any younger. 8. Go to your nearest Walmart and buy the biggest, most expensive American flag you can find. Because you know what, buddy? Freedom ain’t free, bro.
» CONTINUED ON PAGE 9
Aaron Roden’s Guide to Packing More Freedom Into Your 4th
MORGEN SCHULER
Aaron Roden is the host of KIRORadio.com’s Air-Raid Podcast, which can be found on iTunes, on any decent podcast player, or just at air-raid.net. * Seattle Weekly does not suggest following any of this advice; we only let him write this column to be nice after he filled in for our real cover model.
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SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
The time has come, folks. Soon your neighbor, Terry, will be trying to pawn off his wife’s “special” deviled eggs. And with those eggs will come the opportunity to reflect on this wonderful nation’s history. If you are anything like me, then each Fourth of July you may be asking yourself, “How do I pack all the freedom into just one day?” Well, fear not, my dear reader, for I have made this easy to follow 8-step guide on how to get the most bang for your buck this Fourth of July.* 1. Buy fireworks. Not the wussy ones . . . the real big fuckers. 2. Get rid of your healthcare policy. There is nothing more American than not having health insurance. 3. Eat all of your neighbor’s deviled eggs. You know what? They’re actually pretty good! 4. Drink A LOT of cheap beer. Duh.
Offer good for children 14 and younger
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AUG 14 blossom Sugar ray, gin ker krac with un cle ps ns, The four to The Temptatio N OF THE Supremes D MARY WILSO SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
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northwest’s Worst Politicians / from page 7
BLOWHARD
Clackamas County Chairman John Ludlow
Portland may be known nationally as a frivolous paradise of banjos, naked bike rides, and fairtrade coffee. But its commuter communities have nourished a resentful Republicanism dead serious about stopping what they call “Portland creep.” The face of this anti-Portland movement is Ludlow, a brawny real-estate broker with a shaved head that suggests Lex Luthor as a high-school coach. His bid for Clackamas County chair was funded by a timber magnate and propelled by a populist revolt against light rail. Once elected, he tried to break contracts the county had signed years earlier to extend rail lines south from Portland. But it’s his demeanor in Clackamas—a largely rural county of 380,000 that’s becoming more Stepford all the time—that’s been the most embarrassing. In a planning meeting last summer, he yelled, “Do you want a piece of me?” at a fellow commissioner. You can’t say voters weren’t warned. When he ran for county chair in 2012, lawn signs went up
that declared, “John Ludlow is a bully.” Ludlow had previously been removed from the planning commission in Wilsonville, where he served as mayor, for what one city councilor called “rude, combative, argumentative, and disrespectful” behavior toward the public. Ludlow sued, and in 2003 a judge restored him to his position, ruling that his objectionable ways were actually protected speech. A personnel complaint filed by the county’s lobbyist in April claims that when news broke about the Boston Marathon bombing, Ludlow declared it was likely the work of “a damn A-rab.” Of suspects in a local shooting, he allegedly said, “I bet they were Mexicans.” And when former county board member Ann Lininger was appointed to an open state legislative seat this year, Ludlow said she succeeded because “she does a good job of sticking out her perky titties in people’s faces.” Ludlow apologized for his statements while denying making the comments about the state legislator’s breasts. An investigator cleared Ludlow of violating any county rules—but added that, when it came to the “perky titties” comment, Ludlow’s denial was probably a lie. E
JUL 17 THE LEGO MOVIE
THURSDAYS
Seating opens: 7 PM
$5 - live acts | trivia | fun Movies start at dusk
Jonathan Malindine may not be the poster child for fireworks safety, but he’s got advice to share anyway.
CIRQUE PERFORMERS TAST Y FOOD TRUCKS
MOVIE TRIVIA DOG FRIENDLY
JUL 24 GRAVITY JUL 31 SIXTEEN CANDLES AUG 7 JURASSIC PARK AUG 14 PITCH PERFECT AUG 21 THE LITTLE MERMAID AUG 28 GHOSTBUSTERS
M ov iesatM agn uson .com - Faceb o o k / M ovi es at M agn us o n - Tw i t ter / Epi cEvent s NW
BY GWENDOLYN ELLIOTT
onathan Malindine is a man with a lot going for him. He lives in one of the most gorgeous cities in the country—Santa Barbara, Calif.—and is on a Ph.D. track in cultural anthropology at UCSB. His wife has an established career as a private chef for some of Hollywood’s biggest names, and his darling 2½-year-old is currently collecting likes by the hundreds on her dad’s Facebook page. But there’s something Jonathan doesn’t have that most of the rest of us do: two hands. I came to know Jonathan from the time I spent in Alaska, that “last great place,” where the days can be so rowdy—considering variables like wild animals, terrible weather, and the kind of binge drinking that gives Robert Downey Jr. a run for his money—that you’re lucky to make it out alive. This is a reality Jonathan knows quite intimately: On July 4, 2000, his right hand was blown off by commercial explosives in Craig, in southeast Alaska. “I’m a little wary about being a poster child for fireworks safety,” he wrote when I reached out online, “only because I didn’t lose my hand to fireworks. It was commercial explosives.” Because it was the Fourth of July, he writes, everyone just assumes that’s what happened. At the time of the incident, he too thought he was lighting harmless fireworks. “It was 2 a.m. and everyone was drinking,” he tells me via phone a few hours later. “Some outlaw had stolen these commercial explosives off his logging job site, and he gives one to me. It just looked like an awesome firework to me,” he says. For some perceived slight, this person had it out for Jonathan, and rigged the bomb with a quicklighting fuse. “It had this really long fuse and I thought I’d have more than enough time to light
it and get away.” He only had “a second” before it exploded, he says. “That guy told me he was trying to kill me.” #onlyinalaska A difficult recovery followed. “At the time I was working on fishing and diving boats, pulling in lines and helping divers with their hoses. I couldn’t do that anymore,” he says. He incurred PTSD as a result, too. “To this day, it freaks my body out when I hear loud, unexpected noises. It’s this body-memory thing.” But he admits that back in his early 20s, he thought he was invincible. “I was reckless with my body,” he says. Now, as a husband and father, it’s difficult for him to imagine putting himself in another situation like that. “I have lots of new responsibilities, and it would be crazy to act like what I do doesn’t matter to my family.” That said, Jonathan offers three tips for celebrating safely with fireworks—provided there are no sociopaths in your circle with access to anything more potent: “Don’t light anything you can’t identify. Don’t light fireworks while they’re in your hand. Whatever you’re lighting, do it and move away.” With such a painful chapter firmly behind him, you’d think the man would have written off Alaska for good. When I ask him what he’s doing this coming holiday, he laughs. “You know what? I’m going to be back in Alaska, in Craig, where all this happened. As part of my doctoral work, I’m helping that community work toward creating a Native Alaskan Cultural Center and Museum.” Will he be celebrating with any fireworks? “You know, I used to light a firework once a year on July Fourth, as an act of self-defiance. To get back on the horse,” he says. “I don’t really do that anymore.” E gelliott@seattleweekly.com
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
BOTTLE ROCKET BY DAN HETTEIX FROM THE NOUN PROJECT
JUL 10 GREASE
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PLAYING WITH FIRE
J
presented by
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COOKING WITH FIRE
How to put together a killer barbecue without killing anybody. BY NICOLE SPRINKLE
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Just in time for the Fourth of July, here’s your essential guide to throwing a blowout bash—or just finding the perfect dish or refreshment to bring to any party. Meat, sides, dessert, booze—we’ve got all your barbecue needs covered. And to ensure your backyard dominance, we talked to the experts: Jason Wilson, Maria Hines, Jason Brzozowy, Jen Doak, Charlie Garrison, Nick Novello, and Kyle Nicholson.
So let’s get the main dish out of the way. Who better than the guy who cooks over fearsome flames at Miller’s Guild or the chef who made eating an entire pig’s face at Radiator Whiskey popular to tell you what hunk of meat to choose?
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From Jason Wilson of Miller’s Guild: “Lamb
necks: Get them from your butcher and have them boned out into ‘steaks.’ The neck is supertender and delicious. I usually do a garlic and rosemary sea-salt rub and grill it. “Bavette steak: a hanging flab meat that is gaining popularity, it’s so well-marbled that it takes very little cook time. So don’t overcook it; let it rest once medium-rare and give it some nice olive oil and sea salt. Again, ask your butcher for the cut.”
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STEAK AND MUSTARD BOTTLE BY TOM GLASS, JR., BURGER BY PATRICK TROUVÉ FROM THE NOUN PROJECT
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
THE BEST BURGER
PROUDLY POweReD bY YOU COUlD a sTaRbUCks GIfT CaRD! ThewIN Jewish FeDeRaTiOn OF GREATER SEATTLE OF GReaTeR seaTTLe
THE SAUCE
THE MEAT
Of course you can never go wrong with a juicy burger. Well, actually you can, but not if you follow these dos and don’ts from Nick Novello, supervising chef de cuisine of Skillet Diners and maker of one of the best burgers in town. DON’T go to the freezer.
DO check out your neighborhood butcher. Don’t skimp on quality—get a nice 80 percent beef/20 percent fat all-natural beef patty.
DON’T overcook your burger. Constantly flipping your patty and pressing it on direct flames will squeeze all the juices out and cause flare-ups on the grill, all that flavor burning right up.
DO cook it medium rare. Flip your burger once! Really, just once. I wait for signs that it’s ready to be flipped: blood cooking through, change in color. Once this happens, flip it. Then add cheese; use something like a blue, fontina, or brie. When the cheese is melted, you’ve got medium rare.
DON’T use a bunch of spices.
DO keep it simple: freshcracked black pepper and kosher salt. Anything more and you’re making meatloaf.
You don’t have to make a sauce from scratch— or even serve one at all, since the meat’s natural juices and flavors should really steal the show. But there’s no shame in being a finger-lickin’ sauce lover. One easy, homemade version: Just grill some fruit (like peaches) and onions and add vinegar to taste. Or try taking your favorite store-bought sauce and giving it a blast of bourbon or beer, as Jason Brzozowy of Tilth does. If you tend to go for spicier, heavier sauces, a few dashes of fresh citrus can brighten them up.
OFF THE GRILL If you really want to surprise (and hopefully delight) people, you might forgo the grill altogether and serve your meat inside the Northwest Vietnamese Crepe that Kyle Nicholson from San Juan Island’s Duck Soup Inn makes. Stuffed with smoked pork shoulder (which I recommend just buying from Bourbon & Bones) and spot prawns, it’s an interesting and really delicious take on surf & turf. The beauty of this recipe is that the crepe batter can be premade and brought in a cooler on camping trips. The crepes can even be cooked in a pan over a fire pit. NORTHWEST-STYLE VIETNAMESE CREPES
(Yield: 1½ qts) INGREDIENTS
½ cup dry split mung beans (or substitute lentils) 3 cups coconut milk (or substitute rice, almond, or dairy) 2 cups rice flour (or substitute wheat or other grain) 1 tsp. ground ginger 1 tsp. ground coriander ½ tsp. salt 2 tsp. sugar 1 tsp. ground turmeric 2 tsp. canola oil
FILLING
Cleaned spot prawns Smoked pork shoulder or belly Various herbs and greens such as pea shoots, miner’s lettuce, and wood sorrel
» CONTINUED ON PAGE 12
Cooking With Fire » FROM PAGE 10 DIRECTIONS
Place dried mung beans in blender with ¼ of the liquid, and purée until smooth. Add the remaining ingredients and continue to purée. Heat skillet over medium heat and coat generously with oil. Nonstick pans work well. Pour batter into hot pan and distribute evenly. When edges of the crepe are set and start to crisp, begin to add your prawns and pork over half the crepe. Cover the pan with a lid or place in a hot oven for 2–3 minutes to cook the prawns. Place herbs over proteins and fold in half like an omelet. Serve as is, or with a dipping sauce such as nuoc cham or vinaigrette.
THE BOOZE Sangria is pretty much sacrosanct in summer. But again, you don’t have to play it safe. Over at Brimmer & Heeltap they’ve devised updated red and white versions. WHITE SANGRIA
K E E W L L A S R U O T E S R F RE U O H D E D N E S G EXT N I T S A T K S A C h t E 2 L 1 G N Y ys. L SI U J Y T R eawa v A i g P d n a E er, whiskey 5 door. om. S A E L E R ith food, be dvance / $2it peat week.c $2 0 a t ic k e t s v is i t il s a nd a t e d r Fo
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
W
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peatweek.com PLEASE DRINK RESPONSIBLY © WESTLAND DISTILLERY LLC 2014
WINE GLASS BY DAN HETTEIX, SALAD BY EDWARD BOATMAN JR., MARSHMALLOW BY MILK – DIGITAL INNOVATION FROM THE NOUN PROJECT
THE SIDES Whether served before the meal or right alongside it, indulgences like coleslaw and potato salad never go out of style. But you can add a tasty twist to them—or try something completely out-of-the-box. Maria Hines and Jason Brzozowy at Tilth make a slaw out of Brussels sprouts (below) and do a “smoked” potato salad (for the recipe, go to seattleweekly.com/food). For something really inventive, go with Wilson’s “Grilled Guacamole”: Simply grill avocados (on all sides), red onions, jalapeños, and a lime. Chop them all together with some fresh cilantro. Another fun twist on Mexican: Take a traditional pico de gallo salsa recipe and swap out cubes of watermelon for the tomatoes (or let the two fruits co-exist; yes, the tomato is a fruit). The rest is the same: serranos, onion, lime juice, salt. BRUSSELS SPROUT SLAW
(serves 4–6)
INGREDIENTS
2 lbs. Brussels sprouts, outer leaves removed, thinly sliced 1 cup thinly shaved radicchio 1 cup thinly shaved fennel 1 Honeycrisp apple, thinly sliced, julienne 1 bunch picked italian parsley leaves ⅓ cup apple cider vinegar 1 tsp. caraway seed 2 tsp. Dijon mustard 1½ cups olive oil Salt and fresh black pepper
DIRECTIONS
In a mixing bowl, combine sprouts, radicchio, fennel, apple, and parsley leaves. In a small bowl, whisk together caraway, Dijon, and olive oil to make a vinaigrette. Lightly dress the slaw and season with salt and lots of fresh black pepper.
THE DESSERT
(makes one batch or eight servings) 4 bottles of inexpensive dry white wine 1–2 cups pear brandy (to taste) 1 cup Domaine de Canton (ginger liqueur) 6 bottles San Pellegrino grapefruit soda ½–1 cup shrub* of green apple, grapes, and fennel Serve on rocks with 2 tsp. fruit mixture. RED SANGRIA
(makes one batch or eight servings) 4 bottles of inexpensive dry red wine 1–2 cups brandy (to taste) 6 bottles San Pellegrino blood-orange soda ½–1 cup shrub* of strawberries and rhubarb Serve on rocks with 2 tsp. fruit mixture. * Though either of these recipes will taste just fine without the shrub, it’s pretty simple to make. It’s just the remains of fruit that’s been fermented for at least a week in vinegar and sugar. A general ratio to go by is 1 part fruit/1 part white vinegar/a quarter-part sugar. Mash the fruit of your choice with sugar and refrigerate overnight. Then add the vinegar and let sit refrigerated for 1 week. Strain and serve, or keep refrigerated until ready to use. BEER SANGRIA
(makes one batch or eight servings) In this version of sangria from our drink columnist, Zach Geballe, you get the best of both worlds: beer and wine. Instead of wine, use a Belgian beer for your base (about 8 pints). Add cut-up apples, stone fruits, and fresh strawberries, and about an ounce of brandy per serving. Says Geballe: “It’s a strange yet captivating drink: fruity but dry, refreshing yet a bit potent.” WINE SPRITZERS
These are the easiest of all to make: combine your favorite white wine with soda water, 1 cup wine to ½ cup soda. Liven it up by choosing a flavored soda or adding a splash of a fruity liqueur. I like to then add frozen blueberries in lieu of ice cubes (which also make a nice addition to a glass of non-alcoholic lemonade). No Fourth of July bash is complete without s’mores. But take them to the truly decadent side and replace the graham crackers with your favorite cookies (like ginger snaps). You can smash the traditional marshmallow between them, but instead of plain old Hershey’s squares, go with a rich chocolate truffle. For an even more over-the-top version, throw in a grilled apple or pineapple ring. Don’t even try to eat it daintily. E
nsprinkle@seattleweekly.com
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SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
ntil last month, there were two things I had never done in my life of which I was particularly proud. I had never watched Titanic—still haven’t, actually. And I had never touched a gun. A real gun, that is. I had a dalliance or two with a BB gun while tromping about the Wisconsin farmland of my youth. But live firearms are another story. As a child I didn’t hate guns; they were as American as the Walmart out north of town. It’s just that, as my friends bonded with their fathers by sitting with them in cold, damp hunting shacks, I connected with mine while reading the newspaper at McDonald’s, talking about sports and war and politics. At that point, the late ’80s and early ’90s, shooting massacres were a rarity, and the 24-hour news cycle that churns those massacres for ratings was just being born. I can recall only one conversation about guns: My dad recounted a day in the ’60s when a student brought a revolver to my hometown’s junior high school and shot the vice principal dead. We had a gun—a .22 caliber rifle that my father inherited from my grandfather, a farmer. Only once do I remember my father using it. On a summer’s night, coyotes began yipping in the distance. As their shrieks grew closer, my father went to his and my mother’s bedroom and emerged with the gun. I watched out the window as he marched to the field’s edge and looked out to where the livestock grazed. No coyotes. He never fired. I remember, while snooping, finding the .22 in my father’s closet, leaning against an inside wall. I never touched it. I wonder now if it was loaded. As I grew older, the fact that I had never touched a gun became more than a curious detail in my life—something much larger than never having seen the second-highest-grossing film of all time. When two students entered Columbine High School in 1999 with an arsenal and murdered a dozen students and a teacher, I remember sitting next to a friend training to be a teacher. He was in tears. From that moment forward, I openly
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SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
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What About a Gun » FROM PAGE 13 argued in favor of gun-control measures; I viewed my inexperience as evidence of my conviction. As we all know, massacres have only grown more common. As the body count has increased, my relationships with my old neighbors who once sat in hunting shacks with their fathers has become strained. After the Sandy Hook elementary-school shooting in 2012, I raged against friends online and expected my representatives to do something. When they didn’t, I finally shut down out of exhaustion. Scores of school shootings later, I am still exhausted. But I am also scared. My wife is a school teacher. I work in a part of town where gunfire is familiar. I know that, by count, there is a gun for every American in this country. I don’t have one, which means that someone else has two (or likely 27). I will survive without seeing Titanic, but will I if I don’t know how to use a gun?
As I get comfortable with the weapon, my fear fades. My blood pressure drops. And so I called my friend Rick and asked him
mbaumgarten@seattleweekly.com
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
to take me to the range. Rick is the most responsible guy I know—a former Marine who’s settled down with a young family, a few firearms, and a disaster-preparedness plan that makes mine (two gallon jugs of water in the basement) look as pathetic as it is. He says yes. I show up at Rick’s for a safety course before we head to the range. He has a couple of requests: that I don’t name him in this article (Rick is not his real name) or share the number or specific details about his guns. And he has a few rules: “Treat every firearm as if it were loaded.” “Do not point the muzzle at anything you are not willing to destroy.” “Keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to fire.” “Be sure of your target and what’s behind it.” Then he places an unloaded .45 on the table in front of me. I pick it up, feel its weight in my hand—and just like that, my high ground is ceded. But as I go through a few drills with Rick, something replaces my self-righteousness: know-how. As I get comfortable with the weapon, my fear fades. My blood pressure drops. I feel confident. Then I start telling Rick about my dad, suddenly remembering his deeper history with guns. My dad was in the Army during the Vietnam War. He never saw combat, but during a brief stint in artillery earned the designation of sharpshooter—even though he’d shot a gun only a couple of times in his life. “He didn’t have any bad habits to fix,” Rick says. At the range, I am following my father’s footsteps. With Rick’s excellent tutelage and my lack of bad habits, I am punching round after round through the middle of the target (pictured on the previous page). It’s exhilarating—not because of the power in my hand, exactly, but because I am actually pretty good. After I empty the magazine, Rick taps me on the shoulder. “Hey, I just want you to take a moment and look around,” he shouts. “See, these aren’t ‘gun people,’ ” Rick says. “These are just regular people.” I agree with him. This place is like a bowling alley, I think, each stall filled with people popping off rounds while friends and family look on. And yet I could never imagine spending an afternoon with my father here. It’s just too loud to have a decent conversation. E
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Corretto’s One-Two Punch Solid trattoria fare and killer coffee cocktails.
BY MEGAN HILL
The brewing cooperative Flying Bike has announced it will open a bricks-and-mortar location in Greenwood. After a year of searching, the group’s board of directors is settling down and hoping to open its doors in early 2015.
BY NICOLE SPRINKLE
O
The Ballard Beer Company will be opening any day now, and when it does, you’ll be able to knock back several pints from local breweries without leaving your bar stool. The watering hole will dedicate several of its 15 taps to beers from neighborhood breweries. Wine Enthusiast has released its picks for America’s 100 best restaurants for wine; Canlis and Wild Ginger made the cut for Seattle. Elsewhere in Washington, Walla Walla’s The Marc and Woodinville’s The Herbfarm also made the list. Skillet has launched a happy hour at its Ballard and Capitol Hill restaurants. The “Golden Hour” menu is available daily 3–6 p.m. and 10 p.m.–close, and features “re-imagined Skillet favorites” like a smokedlamb corndog, new cocktails, and cold beer. Happy hour is also new at Tilth, every day from 4:30–6:30 p.m. on the patio, at the counter, and in the sunroom. The menu consists of classics like duck burgers, Theo Chocolate ganache cake, and Skagit River Ranch steak tartare, plus monthly seasonal specials. A rotating drink menu currently includes a lavender daiquiri and a Pimm’s Cup. E morningfoodnews@seattleweekly.com
MORGEN SCHULER
TheWeeklyDish Cherry and Basil Shaved Ice at Little Uncle BY NICOLE SPRINKLE
Top: vintage vibes. Bottom, l-r: white-bean bruschetta; spiked espresso with tiramisu. So back to those coffee cocktails: Four are
available daily, listed on a chalkboard behind the marble-topped bar. Served in flutes, each is filled with belly-warming alcoholic goodness: a mix of espresso, grappa, and various Italian liqueurs, some with cream. They are sweet enough to pass for dessert, yet not so sweet as to forgo pairing with a slice of tiramisù cake—nicely structured (instead of a moussey mess) and topped with a generous layer of bittersweet chocolate. Bewitching, dark, and smooth, the drinks alone are worth the visit. But come too for the easygoing, yet attentive service; food that’s a comforting, familiar part of the Italian-American lexicon; and a Capitol Hill vibe that keeps this new trattoria full and bustling with young and old on weeknights and weekends alike. You won’t go away discussing the sublimity of a particular dish, but that’s OK. You’ll be too full and happy to care. E
nsprinkle@seattleweekly.com
CORRETTO TRATTORIA & BAR 416 Broadway E., 328-7817, correttoseattle.com. 4 p.m.–midnight Sun.–Thurs., 4 p.m.–2 a.m. Fri.–Sat.
Forget ice cream and fro-yo. The best icy treat this week is Little Uncle's shaved ice in Pioneer Square—seasonally updated with plenty of big chunks of Rainier and Bing cherries. Layered into the ice, which is pulverized by an antique ice-grinding machine the owners bought in Thailand— green with a gold dragon on it—are the cherries, their sweet juice, and the sweeter condensed milk. Topping it all off are tiny basil seeds. Asian shaved ice is usually too cloyingly sweet for me, but the addition of cherries here gives it a slightly sour edge. Get one while you can; owner Wiley Frank can’t commit to its being on the menu next week, though he says that of course cherries will still be in season. E MORGEN SCHULER
4:30 p.m.–close on Mondays. On my first visit, I ordered the spring onion soup special, expecting it to be of the disappointing cream-laden potato-leek ilk. Instead, the bowl of light-green broth, made from a housemade veggie stock, was sweet and redolent of onion. It wasn’t there on my next visit, but I hope it comes back. Standards like the rigatoni al sugo (with meat or marinara) or the pesto gnocchi bring no surprises but are pleasantly stalwart. The lasagna, unfortunately, was on the dry side. A more “inspired” ravioli dish, with mushrooms, Treviso, and spring vegetables, is unique for its unapologetic vegetable-forward flavor, but a bit of fat would bring a modicum of decadence. Aside from pasta, the seared lamb chops with roasted fennel served over a faro salad with vinaigrette were cooked perfectly and needed only a dash of salt. The brightness of the faro coordinated happily with the lamb. The classic involtini di pollo—rolls of chicken breast filled with prosciutto, asiago, herbed ciabatta, and braised greens—didn’t fare as well. But while the chicken was slightly overcooked, it was hard not to take solace in the rich filling.
nsprinkle@seattleweekly.com
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
ne thing that immediately stood out when I moved to Seattle from New York was the scarcity of Italian trattorias. I wasn’t looking for anything earth-shattering, just a place that was dependable and homey. In New York, between the awful touristy restaurants in what’s left of Little Italy and the hallowed temples of Mario Batali’s Babbo or Del Posto, there exist hundreds upon hundreds of these small, inviting “red sauce” restaurants. Head to any neighborhood blindfolded, throw a stick, and it’s sure to land in a bowl of Bolognese. Here in Seattle, however, a small Italian population means that when you want Italian, you usually head to an Ethan Stowell place, Il Corvo (if you can get a seat), or somewhere more inventive (and expensive) like Spinasse or Agrodolce. Speaking of Italian immigrants: In the early 1900s, Rainier Valley was the largest enclave of them, though now most reside on the south side. In fact, Seattle Weekly’s very first issue, March 31, 1976, contains a restaurant review of Filiberto’s in Burien (still open) titled “Life Is One Long Search for a Good Italian Restaurant.” That search continues. That’s why I was excited to try Corretto on Capitol Hill. Housed in the former Panevino spot, the restaurant, owned by Travis Rosenthal (of Rumba and Tango), has as its main conceit Italian coffee cocktails (caff è corrètto is coffee “corrected” with a dash of liqueur), which were developed with Brandon Paul Weaver of Slate Coffee. (More on those later.) But what really makes Corretto stand out is its casual but funky atmosphere: a focal wall of black-and-white floral-patterned wallpaper with a real Italian bicycle suspended in the center; deep navy-blue walls opposite it charmingly crowded with goldand black-framed photographs of the rustic Italian countryside and Roman ruins (some from Rosenthal and his wife’s honeymoon). That cozy, quirky ambience extends to the food itself: non-fussy Italian standards from chef Laura Licona (formerly of Osteria La Spiga) with enough details to bring distinctiveness. While bruschetta has long since given up any pretentions to cool, Corretto reminds you just why it became so popular in the first place. One night I was there it was served in the traditional Caprese style, toasted with roasted tomatoes, mozzarella, and slivers of basil. The tomatoes were skinned, though, which made them extremely juicy and spreadable—a very nice touch. Another evening it was served with a whitebean purée and delicious bits of crispy fried leeks. I would say that this simple appetizer was the epitome of summer, except I reserve that designation for Corretto’s Soliloquy in CM cocktail: gin, apricot liqueur, simple syrup, muddled basil, and the juice of cherry tomatoes served in a dainty vintage crystal glass (most of their glassware is, delightfully, of the Italian-grandmother variety). The bruschetta, by the way, is part of the happy-hour menu, offered 4:30–6:30 p.m. and
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CitizenFood
V Smiley’s Jammin’ Side Business BY MEGAN HILL
CORINNA JOHNSON
Smiley’s jams include pear, Persian lime, and vanilla marmalade.
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Smiley was determined to make her jam with honey, a departure from traditional recipes using sugar. Her interest in jam started as a hobby when she landed her first job on a strawberry farm in New Haven, Vermont. She continued perfecting her recipes after moving to Seattle and working as a cook at Sitka & Spruce. “Preserves were the calm counterpart to line work,” she says. Later, working in the kitchen at Theo Chocolate, she learned the ropes of product development, food production, and marketing, and came across Rachel Saunders’ The Blue Chair Jam Cookbook—a veritable bible for jam makers.
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rowing up on a Vermont farm, Seattle jam maker V Smiley hated canning. She recalls “weekends of humid, sticky work, furious in pace because of a sale on peaches at the market or all our tomatoes ripened at once. I hated peeling tomato and peach skins. If I could go back in time, I’d tell my dad to buy nectarines. They’re much easier to work with.” Still, those sticky weekends imparted an appreciation for preserving the seasonal bounty, which she has made into a side business, V Smiley Preserves. Her fascinating flavors and use of local ingredients have led to extraordinary products you can find on the menu at The Whale Wins and on sale at the West Seattle and Madrona farmers markets and a growing list of local shops like Metropolitan Market and The London Plane. Smiley also sells subscriptions at vsmileypreserves.com.
“I wanted to start a side project—not necessarily a jam company, but a way for me to cook a lot of jam, learn the subject in depth, and share the product with friends,” Smiley says. But Smiley was determined to make her jam with honey, a departure from traditional recipes using sugar. Though she had read it would add an unwelcome flavor, she was drawn to the local availability of honey and enjoyed its biological link to fruit flowers. “But would anyone who knew way more about cooking than me think me a fool for jamming with honey?” says Smiley, who studied writing and art history in college. She spent a year and a half making 40 different jams and marmalades, each with honey. She chooses fruit that pairs well with honey, and considers texture and pectin content when coming up with flavors like pear, Persian lime, and vanilla marmalade. She makes every ingredient—for example, candied ginger— from scratch, with the exception of the liquor component in the liqueurs she sometimes incorporates. Smiley also sources close to home: “Except for California citrus, all the produce comes from Washington State, is often organic, and always sustainably farmed,” she says. When she first got going, Smiley found support in Renee Erickson and Marie Rutherford, chef de cuisine at The Whale Wins, where Smiley now works. “They knew I was at home making stupid amounts of jam. I brought in a variety of flavors for Marie and then-sous chef Bobby Palmquist [now chef of Barnacle] to taste,” she says. “It was winter at the time, but when spring came they offered to put my apricot jam on the menu with Little Brown Farm chèvre. Renee and her partners are very supportive of the entrepreneurial spirit.” E Citizen Food features willful adventurers in food culture—who typically have a day job outside a kitchen. Know someone who fits that bill? If so, send info to nsprinkle@seattleweekly.com.
Why Seattleites Broke Up With Restaurants BY NICOLE SPRINKLE
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ecently, I posed this question to our Seattle Weekly food panelists: Have you ever broken up with a restaurant? I had my own story to tell alongside theirs; read them all at seattleweekly.com/restaurants. Our readers had a lot to say on this topic too—and here are some of their comments (edited for length). To share your own story, head to the url above.
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“A few years after my husband and I got married, we went to a well-known seafood restaurant in Seattle . . . Our waiter was extremely drunk. He forgot bread service, drinks, and more. When he came to get our dinner order, he sat down and
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It was just so surreal that my normal attitude was blown away. And they sent out farm-raised salmon. It was obvious. I did complain about that. Last straw: As we were leaving, there was an uneven [floor] (not marked/dark lighting) and my husband ran into it [and] broke his toe. Oy!”
“My family and I have been loyal customers of an Italian restaurant in Seattle for years . . . We dined there on average three times a month with an average tab of $400 with tip. However, three weeks ago we arrived on our usual day and time and did not see our ‘People’ . . . My daughters
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dropped off the edge of the earth and were never attended to by the staff until I stood up and demanded our bill for the food we had eaten.”
“When dining alone I am particularly aware of the quality/amiability of service . . . Does the host/hostess seat the solo diner facing the back wall or the restrooms? Does the server grab a halfused, fingerprint-covered water jug from the adjacent table and plunk it unceremoniously in front of you, or does s/he bother to bring you a fresh one? When I have politely declined these situations, I often get the eye-rolling treatment from waitstaff. I have genuine sympathy for restaurateurs who get conned by abusive customers, but at the point where they cannot distinguish between abuse and legitimate objection, it’s probably time for them to reconsider their career choice.” E
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“As a daughter of a restaurant owner, I have seen so many customers who are also downright rude and condescending . . . Ideally, the manager will take the food off your bill (if of course you haven’t eaten all your food), or offer some sort of 50 percent or a free meal on your next visit. All you need is one bad apple, and everybody loses that privilege. But I completely understand and agree that pleasant service is important. Restau-
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ThisWeek’s PickList
Clarion West marks its 30th summer reading series and workshop. But what is Clarion West? And might one of its graduates create the next Game of Thrones?
WEDNESDAY, JULY 2
Iman Raad & Shahrzad Changalvaee
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place where people feel welcome.” Besides McIntyre and Butler, she cites local authors including Greg Bear, Terry Brooks, Neal Stephenson, and Matt Ruff—many of whom have taught at or done drop-by lectures at Clarion West. (Here I’ll advance my own theory about our D&D-playing, sci-fi/fantasy-reading demographic hotspot: It’s partly the weather, which forces people indoors to read. Romance and mysteries are two other categories that do well in the Northwest. But I also point to Boeing, and later Microsoft and Amazon. The postwar years drew many engineers, and their bookish sons and daughters, to the region; and our booming software/tech industry likewise skews readers toward the nerd side of the bookstore.) HOME BOX OFFICE
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
E
very few years, in regular cycles, we’re reminded of the power of genre fiction. The success of Star Wars made sci-fi a mainstream phenomenon in the ’70s. Once dismissed as Beowulf-lite, the Lord of the Rings cycle became a paperback bestseller in the ’60s, then the movies created an even bigger readership. Harry Potter made the jump out of the juvenile aisles of the bookstore; and, more recently, the Hunger Games and Twilight adaptations have proven the power of the YA category. Then there’s the current HBO hit Game of Thrones, a very adult-oriented show based on the fantasy series A Song Emilia Clarke as Game of Thrones’ Daenerys Targaryen. of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin. Suddenly a pop-culture figure after our 30th anniversary,” says Bobanick. “What a decades toiling in TV, sci-fi, and fantasy writing, lot of people don’t realize is that there’s this tiny Martin visited Seattle two summers ago for a little local organization and it’s known internasold-out reading at Town Hall. What fans of the tionally. It’s like Pilchuck.” show and his books may not have noted, however, Bobanick continues, “The organization has an was that Martin was also here to teach a writing interesting history. It was first started by female class at the Clarion West Writers Workshop, writers at a time when not a lot of women were writing sci-fi. It’s very focused on diversity. Hiswhich has been bringing such noted authors to torically this has been a male-dominated field Seattle for the past 30 years. (Neil Gaiman, Ursula and a white-male-dominated field. We try to K. Le Guin, and Chuck Palahniuk are other past recruit an equal ratio of male and female stuprominent visiting instructors; the late Octavia Butler liked Seattle so much that she moved here.) dents.” (Tuition runs $3,600, with some scholarship money available.) This July is no different. Out-of-town scribes drop in to teach writing students in one-week shifts, then do a Tuesday-night reading at UniverNeile Graham was once a Clarion West student sity Book Store. These events are typically well(in ’96) escaping poetry-land and her MFA; attended, which speaks to the enduring popularity today she runs the summer workshop, which of sci-fi and fantasy in the Northwest (more on goes something like this. Eighteen students are that below); also, many past Clarion students have accepted from 100-plus applicants from the U.S., settled in Seattle, so each summer’s residency proCanada, the UK, and countries as disparate as gram is something like a homecoming. Nigeria, Brazil, and Malaysia. They live together But, for those of us outside the “speculative in a rented UW sorority house, take classes daily, fiction,” community, we might well ask, What is write a short story a week (in English), and criClarion West? tique one another’s work. (The instructors lodge nearby and keep office hours.) “It’s really intense because of the schedule,” says Before her hiring nine months ago, “I’d never Graham. “You are taken out of your day-to-day life, heard of it,” says executive director Caroline and writing becomes your main vocation.” Also, the Bobanick. That’s because if you’re not already a 18 students are forced into sudden community, like fan, the sci-fi/fantasy community is a somewhat college freshmen. “They’ve seen the same shows closed, hermetic world (especially before the and read the same books,” but they’re also still Internet). What she learned was that Clarion strangers, Graham notes. “Usually we have two or actually dates back to 1968, when it was founded three locals, as well as international students.” by Robin Scott Wilson at Pennsylvania’s Clarion Why, besides the draw of Clarion West, is State College. One of the students attending, there such a concentration of fantasy and sci-fi Vonda N. McIntyre, came to Seattle and estabreaders and writers in the Pacific Northwest? “It’s lished Clarion West in 1971–73. A student from a wonderful mystery. I wish I knew why,” says ’73, J.T. Stewart, then relaunched Clarion West in 1984 (with Marilyn J. Holt), and it’s been run- Graham. “A lot of our grads end up here. There’s a big fan community as well. It has become a ning continuously ever since. “We just celebrated
And, related to that pet theory, when did the old sci-fi and fantasy categories get umbrellaed under the catchall of “speculative fiction?” “ ‘Speculative fiction’ is just more inclusive,” says Bobanick. Besides sci-fi and fantasy, “it also includes magical fiction and horror and slashfic.” During the last decade, she particularly credits “the Harry Potter effect” for steering young writers into the magical realm. Even so, “Most of our students are in the science-fiction and fantasy genres,” says Bobanick. “The focus of Clarion West is short stories. A lot of these writers will go on to publish in magazines like Asimov and Lightspeed.” And, no surprise given the success of Game of Thrones, “We’re thinking about adding screenwriting workshops.” Hollywood is certainly giving the sword-andscepter genre a hard look; and one of McIntyre’s historical novels from the ’80s, The Moon and the Sun, has already been filmed, starring Pierce Brosnan as King Louis XIV, with a release date set for next year. Graham also mentions Clarion West grad Christopher Barzak, whose paranormal novel One for Sorrow has been adapted into the Liv Tyler-starring movie Jamie Marks Is Dead, which premiered at Sundance this year. Reading next Tuesday will be Irish author Ian McDonald, whose YA adventure series Everness features both spaceships and dinosaurs. E
bmiller@seattleweekly.com
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 4326 University Way N.E., 634-3400, bookstore. washington.edu and clarionwest.org. Free. 7 p.m. Tues. through July 29.
SHAHRZAD CHANGALVAEE
BY BRIAN MILLER
One of Changalvaee’s poster designs.
The poster work of Raad and Changalvaee is full of gorgeous, flowing Arabic script, mystical daggers, and, perhaps most interesting, a distinctly modern sense of layout and design. The clash of ancient cultural tradition with today’s visual sensibilities is what gives their work such a distinct air. (Examples were on view during last weekend’s Iranian Festival at Seattle Center.) Now based in Connecticut, the married artists give a talk tonight, sponsored by the local chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts. Two-Headed Imagomancy will be both lecture and performance, incorporating the old Persian storytelling art of Pardeh-khani, in which an illustrated curtain accompanies a spoken tale. Raad and Changalvaee, modern through they are, will “reappropriate” the traditional form by throwing in multimedia visuals. Folklore and myth, it seems, are increasingly freeing themselves from the ancient and reinstating themselves in the here and now. Tether, 316 Occidental Ave. S. (third floor), 5186300. Free (RSVP via seattle.aiga.org). 7 p.m. KELTON SEARS
THURSDAY, JULY 3
The Art of Gaman
The subtitle of this group show reveals its sad starting point: Arts & Crafts From the Japanese-American Internment Camps, 1942–1946. That shameful, illegal episode in American history has been well documented by historians and novelists (e.g., David Guter-
Kinoe Adachi’s samurai figure at BAM.
Beatles played Seattle on August 21, their third stop on a 23-city tour. But what if you weren’t lucky enough to live in one of those cities? Or what if you needed extra incentive to purchase the records, buy concert tickets, or watch their Ed Sullivan appearances? That’s what A Hard Day’s Night, cannily released in August (with STARTIN G the eponymous album), was all about. It’s both a genius marketing device and an enjoyably shaggy comedy-with-music. American teenagers already knew the songs in ’64 (“Can’t Buy Me Love,” “She Loves You,” etc.), and they’d seen the Beatles on newsreels and TV. But what the first Beatles movie did was cement these four personalities in the public imagination. Never mind that John, Paul, George, and Ringo were the somewhat-manufactured roles devised by Brian Epstein, their manager; A Hard Day’s Night gave these characters room to roam. Director Richard Lester and screenwriter Alun Owen built upon each moptop’s popular persona, layering gag upon gag on what we thought we knew about them. Was Ringo really the lazy, irresponsible one or George the quiet one? No, and it really doesn’t matter. The Beatles were cheerfully selling themselves in a vehicle that combines English music-hall humor with the cinematic energy of the French New Wave. Fifty years later, we’re still happily buying. (Through Thurs. Also plays SIFF Cinema Uptown.)
S N O Q U A L M I E C A S I N O | M O U N TA I N V I E W P L A Z A
SUMMER
S ER IE S
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TERRY HEFFERNAN
son’s Snow Falling on Cedars, about the forced deportation of Bainbridge Island residents). And certain renowned visual artists (Morris Graves, Roger Shimomura, etc.) have referenced that period in their work. But this is a broader show, more folk art than fine art. Over 120 objects will be on view, many of them humble wood carvings, furniture, even toys made from scrap items at Minidoka or Manzanar. The more polished drawings come from professional artists like Ruth Asawa, Jimmy Tsutomu Mirikitani, Chiura Obata, and Henry Sugimoto. Some of the more touching items—like a samurai figurine made from wood scraps, shells, and bottle caps—come from family collections, not museums; they’re precious keepsakes from a shameful historical era. As for the show’s title, gaman roughly translates as “enduring the seemingly unbearable with patience and dignity.” (Through Oct. 12.)
AU
6 AMAZING 70’S BANDS
HAPPY TOGETHER TOUR 2014 FRI | JULY 11 | 7PM
MONDAY, JULY 7
Seattle Chamber Music Society
BLUE COLLAR FUNNY MAN
FRIDAY, JULY 4
A Hard Day’s Night
(C) BENJAMIN EALOVEGA
The festival’s artistic director, James Ehnes.
BRIAN MILLER
The pleasant surprise for the SCMS’s 33rd summer festival is a strong focus on vocal music: songs and song cycles by Schumann, Brahms, Vaughan-Williams, and others. (The voice recital, once a cornerstone of America’s concert life, has all but vanished outside academia.) The format is the usual: performances on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, July 7–Aug. 2 (except for the closing week), with a informal solo recital at 7 followed by a full-length concert at 8. The recitals are where musicians get to step off the beaten path and share their personal enthusiasms—like the Mystery Sonatas for solo violin by quintessentially Downtowny composer David Lang ( July 7, played by Augustin Hadelich, who premiered them in April) and a selection of Bartok’s gnomic violin duos ( July 11, with James Ehnes and Amy Schwartz Moretti). Concert highlights include Stravin-
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BILL ENGVALL
SUN | JULY 13 | 7PM
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SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
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The music business is fond of remastering old tracks and selling us new versions of familiar songs. You get that, plus a full visual restoration, in this 50th-anniversary edition of A Hard Day’s Night. Beatlemania was famously launched in the U.S. with the band’s February 1964 appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show and mini-tour. Returning to the States that summer, the
TH R
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SIFF Film Center (Seattle Center), 324-9996, siff.net. $6–$11. 4:45 & 7 p.m. BRIAN MILLER
Bellevue Arts Museum, 510 Bellevue Way N.E., 519-0770, bellevuearts.org. $5–$10. 11 a.m– 6 p.m. Curator talk by Delphine Hirasuna at 7 p.m.
The Fab Four prepare for a take.
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(7/7) Michael Waldman ‘The Right to Bear Arms’
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» FROM PAGE 21
Find out about upcoming performances, exhibitions, openings and special events.
sky’s mini-opera The Soldier’s Tale for narrator and septet ( July 11); Shostakovich’s Seven Romances on Poems by Alexander Blok ( July 18); Haydn’s “Emperor” Quartet, with its heartstopping slow-movement variations ( July 21); and this season’s premiere, a piano trio by Derek Bermel intriguingly titled Death with Interruptions ( July 14). Benaroya Recital Hall, Third Ave.
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Urban styles merge with cultural traditions. Hip Hop, Contemporary & International Dance from Benin, Togo, Zimbabwe, Georgia, India, Mexico & the Philippines
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SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
(7/16) John Foreman Big Data’s Possibilities and Our Fears
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(7/10) Paul Greenberg Saving Local Seafood
Michael Waldman
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After the Newtown, Connecticut, school shooting in December 2012, President Obama tried to get some mild form of gun-control legislation through Congress—and we all know how that turned out. Given the forecast for this fall’s midterm elections, no further progress on that front can be expected. So how did we get into this muddle of guns versus public safety? That’s the subject NYU law professor Waldman addresses in The Second Amendment: A Biography (Simon & Schuster, $25). Why the curious subtitle? Because amendments, like laws, are living, breathing, mutable creatures. Since its birth in 1789, Waldman convincingly argues, the Second Amendment has grown into something quite different than the founders intended. All can agree we started with this: “A well regulated militia, being necessary for the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed,” though scholars can debate the placement of a few commas. For the next two centuries, Waldman writes, bearing arms was understood not to be an individual right but a matter of public self-defense. Nor did the National Rifle Association consider it an individual right until 1977, when insurgent leadership began funding new legal theories and backing Republican politicians. Those politicians appointed judges sympathetic to those new theories, and all those forces precipitated the District of Columbia v. Heller decision, six months before Obama’s 2008 election. If there’s a positive takeaway from Waldman’s rather depressing account, it’s that the NRA got what it wanted in only 31 years. Old amendments can be redefined in a single generation. Town Hall, 1119 Eighth Ave., 652-4255, townhallseattle.org. $5. 7:30 p.m. BRIAN MILLER E
» Film
Opening ThisWeek
Jacob (Wiggins) as boy at risk.
Begin Again OPENS WED., JULY 2 AT GUILD 45TH AND OTHER THEATERS. RATED R. 104 MINUTES.
LAUREN LOGAN/IFC/SUNDANCE SELECTS
What songwriter hasn’t thought of moving to New York in the hopes of being discovered? What aspiring musician hasn’t at least considered auditioning for The Voice, or fantasized about what it would be like to date Adam Levine and be friends with CeeLo? As with his 2007 hit Once, writer/director John Carney again presents such an optimistic story, with all its dreamers, losers, opportunists—and original score—this time framed in Manhattan instead of Dublin. Yet unlike Once, with its frumpy clothes, dingy digs, and lessthan-perfect looks, Begin Again’s bohemia is too contrived, its songbook too forced, its cast too well-known and practiced.
RUNS FRI., JULY 4–THURS., JULY 10 AT SUNDANCE CINEMAS. NOT RATED. 109 MINUTES.
Soon to part: Knightley and Levine. ANDREW SCHWARTZ/WEINSTEIN CO.
GWENDOLYN ELLIOTT
Korengal OPENS FRI., JULY 4 AT VARSITY. RATED R. 84 MINUTES.
Sebastian Junger and Tim Hetherington came to SIFF 2010 with their acclaimed war doc Restrepo, which they filmed at great personal risk at a forward U.S. military outpost in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley. Those events were over two years past when we spoke; and the U.S. had just then withdrawn forces from the Korengal, to Junger’s dismay. Since then, further plans have been announced to withdraw all our troops from
BRIAN MILLER
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Soldiers from Second Platoon on patrol.
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
Keira Knightley is Greta, faithful girlfriend to up-and-coming rocker Dave Kohl (Adam Levine) and an aspiring songwriter herself. (Knightley performs her own songs, which bear some resemblance to Aimee Mann’s.) After Kohl scores a record deal, the pair moves to Manhattan, where he’s quickly seduced by the industry’s trappings. When Greta turns to fellow busker Steve ( James Corden), he whisks her out to an open-mike night in the Village, where she’s discovered by down-onhis luck record exec Dan (Mark Ruffalo). After some late-night beer-fueled banter, Dan and Greta team up to make a record. Rebuffed by Dan’s partner Saul (Mos Def ), the pair resolves to go the DIY route—with financial assistance from Dan’s former client TroubleGum (CeeLo Green). Meanwhile we learn of Dan’s difficult separation from his family and Greta’s struggles with Kohl. Obviously we expect these two to connect, just as in Once. That film worked for me (and many others) because I could buy the central couple played by Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová (both of them real musicians). Begin Again feels more like something purchased in a SoHo boutique. Greta’s supposed thrift-store chic simply reads as Knightley being expensively styled as Annie Hall. The film becomes too much the glossy, magazine-cover fantasy: Where in the known world would you find CeeLo, Levine, and Mos Def— who comes around in the end—all banking on one unproven songwriter’s raw talent? While Carney is again peddling the notion that a musician with a dream can get discovered, the reality of “making it” in the music biz has everything to do with hard work—not simple luck, as is the case here.
Although much of Hellion, set in southeast Texas, feels off-the-shelf and familiar, debut writer/director Kat Candler isn’t one to provide easy salvation for her characters. The situation here is very much post-recession, with a family struggling against forces large and small. Recently widowed Hollis (Breaking Bad’s Aaron Paul) insists on repairing the family’s storm-ruined beach house home near Galveston, even though it’s obviously doomed to foreclosure. Meanwhile back home, his two sons are unsupervised and running wild: 10-year-old Wes and, particularly, the budding 13-year-old delinquent Jacob ( Josh Wiggins), who’s fond of setting fires, skipping school, talking back, and riding motorcycles. Trying to intervene, but gently, is Aunt Pam ( Juliette Lewis, once the hellion herself, refreshingly cast against type). How did the mom die? That’s one of those annoying, looming secrets that Candler leaves to the end to answer (and it turns out not to matter very much). Her treatment of the Wilson family is more a sociological case study than a nuanced portrait. Everyone’s a predictable type, and the story similarly hews to template. Naturally Jacob is acting out, owing to grief and an absent father. And of course Child Protective Services comes calling. Aunt Pam swoops down for the younger boy, and a remorseful Hollis weeps manly tears in private. And, midway through the movie, one of Jacob’s pack members produces a stolen handgun—which we know must be fatefully fired in the third act. Candler’s Hellion has the misfortune of following two much better stories about at-risk boys in the South: the recent Joe and last year’s My Name Is Mud (whose director, Jeff Nichols, helped produce Hellion). If it lacks their artfulness, this movie does get the blighted textures exactly right. The Wilsons are a family slipping ineluctably out of the middle class, with empty kitchen shelves, broken-down cars, and overtaxed parents (if they’re home at all). That decline drives Hollis to despair (and the bottle), while Jacob seems only to be gathering rage. Here’s a post-millennial kid bound for
the Army, jail, or worse. There are no resources for him and his family, of course, because this is low-tax, low-service Texas, where there are plenty of good jobs in the prison industry. In one memorable scene, Jacob and his pals smash shaken-up soda bottles with a baseball bat, surprised by the strength of their anger. They’ve got the green diamond to themselves—have no teams been organized? Are there no dads left to coach?—with a giant gas plant hissing indifferently in the background. Their urge to destroy echoes the socioeconomic wreckage around them. These kids are your future, Candler is saying, and don’t be surprised when they come creeping into your house at night with a gun. BRIAN MILLER
OUTPOST FILMS
Hellion
Afghanistan by the end of 2016. Also during the interim, Hetherington was killed while covering Libya’s civil war. ( Junger’s tribute, Which Way Is the Frontline From Here, played on HBO last year.) So how is it that we are back in the Korengal with the same motley assortment of soldiers, the same Taliban firing at them, the same patrols and pastimes, the same boredom and complaints, the same hilltop quagmire as before? Essentially because Junger—and this is not to impugn his motives—had plenty of footage remaining, and he got talked into it. And there are worse reasons for making a movie. Back in ’10, Junger had also written a companion book, War, about the lure of combat to men. This time around he has less to say. And the soldiers essentially say the same things. After finishing his tour, “I’d rather be there than here,” one nostalgic ex-soldier declares. Another, while at Restrepo, envisions it as a ski resort: “This place could be sports heaven, if they’d just stop shooting at us.” Of their mission to draw fire, says a soldier safely back in Italy, “We were definitely bait.” The problem here is that the geopolitical situation has changed too much for Junger since filming in 2007–08 (before Obama’s election). Now there’s Bowe Bergdahl, the VA scandal, the recent elections in Afghanistan, and the new Republican fantasy that we ought to be putting more boots on the ground there and in Iraq, not less. We need to be looking ahead at this point, not back. Junger and Hetherington got some invaluably candid post-combat confessions from these young soldiers; but where are they today, six years later? Working at Walmart? Re-enlisted? On drugs? Married and coaching pee-wee soccer teams in the suburbs? How have these men been changed by a war that was mostly pointless and—after the 2011 killing of Osama bin Laden—inconclusive? Culled from the archives, Korengal isn’t exactly a failure of journalism. It’s merely a footnote to a superior, then-timely film. But there’s little reason to see it today. (Note: Korengal veterans Jeffrey Thompson and Damon Wilson are scheduled to appear with current soldier Elliot Alcantara on Friday. Congressman Jim McDermott is scheduled to appear with Vietnam vet and author Karl Marlante on Saturday. See landmarktheaters.com for details.)
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THE ONLY THING ROGER LOVED MORE THAN MOVIES “ IT’S A THRILLING TALE WITH UNFORGETTABLE CHARACTERS. Any biographical documentary demands onscreen star quality, and this one has a hero and a heroine worth rooting for.”
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– Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE
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RICHLY SATISFYING. COMPREHENSIVE, ENGROSSING, UNFLINCHING, AND MOVING.
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DEEPLY ENTHRALLING.”
An astute and sensitive account of a fully realized man and a life overflowing with abundance and achievement.”
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A GREAT DOCUMENTARY.”
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PLife Itself OPENS FRI., JULY 4 AT HARVARD EXIT. NOT RATED. 116 MINUTES.
@weeklyevents NEW ��MM PRINT
JULY �–��
DR. STRANGELOVE
or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying & Love the Bomb
For the last 25 years of his life, Roger Ebert was the most famous film critic in America. In his final decade—he died in April 2013—Ebert became famous for something else. He faced death in a public way, with frankness and grit. Cancer altered his appearance and robbed him of the ability to speak and eat, but he was unleashed as a writer. Those last years—and his embrace of blogging and Twitter—steered him into feisty agitprop and mellow memory-writing (he published his memoir Life Itself in 2011). Siskel (left) and Ebert locked in one of their classic arguments.
– Todd McCarthy, HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
FROM THE DIRECTOR OF HOOP DREAMS & THE INTERRUPTERS AND EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS MARTIN SCORSESE & STEVEN ZAILLIAN
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CANNES CLASSICS FESTIVAL DE CANNES
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This new documentary about Ebert focuses perhaps too much on the cancer fight. This is understandable; director Steve James—whose Hoop Dreams Ebert tirelessly championed—had touching access to the critic and his wife Chaz during what turned out to be Ebert’s last weeks. It’s a blunt, stirring portrait of illness. The character we knew from the TV show (it had a lot of different titles) is right there: Before submitting to a brief but uncomfortable hospital procedure and needing some distraction/solace, Ebert insists on having “Reelin’ in the Years” play on his laptop for the duration. To the end, the man had a sense of art as a transforming element. The movie’s no whitewash. The most colorful sections cover Ebert’s young career as a Chicago newspaper writer, which included hard drinking and blowhardiness. Some friends acknowledge that he might not have been all that nice back then, with a nasty streak that peeked out in some of his reviews and in his partnership with TV rival Gene Siskel. Although Siskel died in 1999, other observers are around to testify to the mutual dislike that eventually turned into a complex kind of closeness. (Whether or not you liked them as critics, there was something exhilarating about seeing people disagree so loudly in the cause of aesthetic passion.) Among the fascinating nuggets that emerge is Siskel’s longtime fear that Ebert would take another offer and leave the show; he was thrilled when Ebert married (at 50), because the demands of family and mortgages would tie his partner down. Life Itself gives fair time to those who contended that the Siskel and Ebert TV show weakened film criticism. Ebert’s own writing sometimes fills the screen, along with clips of a few of his favorite films, yet this isn’t sufficient to explore Ebert’s movie devotion, which was authentic. Still, this is a fine bio that admirably asks as many questions as it answers. As for the people onscreen who keep asking how Ebert could possibly have written the screenplay to the 1970 Russ Meyer sexfest Beyond the Valley of the Dolls : Folks, you’re really not paying attention. ROBERT HORTON
D I N I NG
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Tammy OPENS WED., JULY 2 AT SUNDANCE AND OTHER THEATERS. RATED R. 96 MINUTES.
Melissa McCarthy has earned her moment, and it is now. After scaring up an Oscar nomination for Bridesmaids and dragging The Heat and Identity Thief into the box-office winner’s circle, McCarthy gets to generate her own projects. So here’s Tammy, an unabashed vehicle for her specific strengths: She wrote it with her husband, Ben Falcone (the talented comic actor who played the air marshal in Bridesmaids), and he directed. The movie gets a mixed grade, because it doesn’t answer the central question about her talent: Can McCarthy go beyond antic co-starring roles and carry a movie as the sole lead? Tammy is an unhappy fast-food worker who gets fired the same day she discovers her husband with another woman. This prompts a road trip with her man-hungry, alcoholic grandmother, played with spirit if not much credibility
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by Susan Sarandon. Grandma hooks up with a swinger (Gary Cole, too little used) whose son (indie stalwart Mark Duplass) is set up as a possible escort for Tammy. This is where the movie gets tricky: We’ve met Tammy as an uncouth, foul-mouthed dope, but now we’re expected to play along as emotional realities are introduced into what had been a zany R-rated comedy. That kind of shift can be executed, but McCarthy and Falcone haven’t figured out the formula yet. Tammy does perk to life when McCarthy gets to play her signature scenes: charged situations featuring odd people, with enough space for her non sequiturs and improvisations. The early scene in which she’s fired is a dandy—Falcone plays her boss, a man whose heavy perspiration Tammy labels “medical.” She later robs a fast-food outlet, in an extended and funny scene played with a bag over her head. (You know a performer has defined her comic persona when she scores big laughs with her face covered.) Occasionally McCarthy manages to make even a raunchy one-liner ring true, as when she aggressively and prematurely kisses Duplass and he backs her off: “I don’t want your tongue down my throat.” Her reply—“Where do you want it?”—is offered lewdly but also with a weird kind of innocence that catches something truly sad about the character. Of course the problem is that Tammy’s so extreme she’d be unbearably pathetic if taken straight. The movie can’t handle that, so—while McCarthy remains an interesting test case for defining a leading lady in Hollywood—this one’s a misfire. ROBERT HORTON E
From the AcAdemy AwArd® nominAted director oF RestRepo BeSt docUmentAry FeAtUre
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arts&culture» Music
Out of the Dark
These days, Sharon Van Etten follows the light— and her gut.
mainstage
dinner & show
BY GWENDOLYN ELLIOTT
WED/JULY 2 & THU/JULY 3 • 7:30PM & 10:30PM DELOURUE PRESENTS
freedom fantasia SAT/JULY 5 • 7:30PM
commander cody movie mondays :: muscle shoals WED/JULY 9 • 7:30PM AMERICAN STANDARD TIME PRESENTS
frank fairfield w/ hallstrom THU/JULY 10 • 8PM
kobo town FRI/JULY 11 • 8PM
the paperboys
w/ jess jarris & the rhapsody project SAT/JULY 12 • 8PM
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
freddy pink
26
next • 7/13 dark divas • 7/14 & 15 the fixx: by request • 7/16 henry kapono • 7/17 susan ruth robkin • 7/18 roy rogers & the delta rhythm kings • 7/19 sinatra at the sands • 7/21 the polyphonic spree w/ sarah jaffe • 7/22 noura mint seymali • 7/23 dervish • 7/24 - 26 the buckaroos • 7/27 matt wertz • 7/30 & 31 x full band acoustic show • 8/2 ian moore & friends birthday show! • 8/3 cody beebe & the crooks • 8/4 movie mondays :: a mighty wind • 8/6 alyse black w/ natalie gelman • 8/7 jay farrar
happy hour every day • 7/2 the sunshine junkies • 7/3 danny godinez • 7/4 4th of july party! w/ the true romans • 7/5 grant schroff trio - featuring joe doria • 7/6 hwy 99 blues presents: tommy cook trio • 7/7 crossrhythm sessions • 7/8 singer-songwriter showcase featuring: nathaniel talbot, anna tivel and pierce & thompson • 7/9 brain injury benefit show! w/ more of anything TO ENSURE THE BEST EXPERIENCE · PLEASE ARRIVE EARLY DOORS OPEN 1.5 HOURS PRIOR TO FIRST SHOW · ALL-AGES (BEFORE 9:30PM)
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F
or all the heartache found in her songs, Sharon Van Etten comes off as remarkably cheerful. Perhaps the L.A. sun is helping. “It’s my first day off in a little while,” she tells Seattle Weekly in a recent phone call. “I’ve just had a wonderful Mexican meal, and it was perfect.” The New York–based songwriter is on the West Coast on the first leg of a North American tour that will dip in and out of Europe before ending in December. “It’s pretty aggressive,” she says, “but you kind of have to hit the ground running. I have two new band members, and we’re getting into a groove. The shows are only going to get better.” It’s a new setup for the artist. For one, she’s touring with a group of pros that she hand-picked herself (“I’ve always just brought my friends with me,” she says). For another, the songs her ensemble are interpreting—from her latest full-length, Are We There—are the first batch she’s self-produced since her critical breakthrough in 2012 with Tramp, an album bearing the unmistakably lush production of the National’s Aaron Dessner. “I ended up feeling like the cast of characters who played on that record overshadowed the songwriting,” she told Rolling Stone recently. “Like there was a stamp from them.” She elaborates on the thought. “I’m a middle child, and I feel like I have control issues. I had a lot of people putting me under their wings, and it was time to take the training wheels off. I was ready.” Making such a move was a long time coming. Van Etten’s first release, Because I Was in Love, a sparse, mournful folk album in the tradition of Vashti Bunyan, was recorded after a painful breakup. “I was so broken when I wrote that. I moved into my parent’s basement, and learned how to record on GarageBand.” Her producer for that album, Greg Weeks, took the job because, she says, “his heart went out to me.” On her latest, songs like “I Love You But I’m Lost” are still filled with self-referential lyrics and lean toward the introspective, even morose. Yet there’s a distinct break from Tramp’s professional-
grade polish, with the songwriter merging the intimacy of her stripped-down bedroom recordings with a few well-used production techniques. It’s a superb vehicle for her songwriting style—an intensely personal one that comes from a place not easily shared with others. ”I write whenever I’m going through a dark time or don’t know how to communicate my feelings,” Van Etten says. She then tries to make that material relatable to others, to keep her music from being self-indulgent or “me just being brokenhearted.” And then there are her vocals, which seem to relish in their new freedom, fluttering and soaring over lyrics like “Break my leg so I can’t walk to you/Cut my tongue so I can’t talk to you/ Burn my skin so I can’t feel you/Stab my eyes so I can’t see.” “Growing up, I listened to a lot of doo-wop music, but a lot of it was out of my range, so I noticed that I automatically sang harmony to sing along,” says Van Etten, an alto, who was also in church choir as a youth. “Working in the choir, it’s really incredible to sing with a group of people and work together and not be competitive.” Ultimately, collaborating as part of a larger artistic community with musicians like Dessner, Julianna Barwick, and Beirut’s Zach Congdon gave her the confidence to go solo. “It’s a little emotional looking back when I was starting, writing songs in my parents’ basement. Just recording in the studio is a trip to me,” she says. “But as soon as I started to pursue music seriously, as soon as I learned to trust people, it slowly started to happen. When I started doing that, I saw things grow organically.” It’s no coincidence she’s happier now, too. “I’m more stable, more competent, more confident,” she says. “I’ve made peace with my past.” E gelliott@seattleweekly.com
SHARON VAN ETTEN With Courtney Barnett, Jana Hunter. The Neptune, 1303 N.E. 45th St., 682-1414, stgpresents.org/neptune. $18 adv./$20 DOS. All ages. 9 p.m. Sat., July 5.
SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
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El Corazon www.elcorazonseattle.com
109 Eastlake Ave East • Seattle, WA 98109 Booking and Info: 206.262.0482
WEDNESDAY, JULY 2
SUNTONIO BANDANAZ with
B3 The Shark, L3fty & Stk, Black Senate, Caution 365, Speaker Child and Perfect By Tomorrow. Lounge Show. Doors at 7 / Show at 7:30PM. ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $10
THURSDAY, JULY 3
THE CERNY BROTHERS with
Gertrudes Hearse, Kari Jakobsen, Riley Thomas and Tim Dunn Lounge Show. Doors at 7:30 / Show at 8PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $8 ADV / $10 DOS
FRIDAY, JULY 4
AMB (AXE MURDER BOYZ)
with Pray, Enasnimi, KST Blunt Trauma, Dezlooca The Cannibal, Severed Triple 6, Chancelor K. Hoodrich, plus guests Doors at 7:30 / Show at 8PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $12 ADV / $15 DOS
SATURDAY, JULY 5
PEACE MERCUTIO
with The Common Names, AJ Caso (We The Audience), Forget Me Not, An Old Best Friend and Alina Ashley Nicole Lounge Show. Doors at 6:30 / Show at 7PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $8 ADV / $10 DOS
arts&culture» Music
TheWeekAhead Wednesday, July 2
MONDAY, JULY 7
Few artists can boast a career as wide and well-regarded as NICK CAVE, whose work spans decades as well as creative arenas, in music via The Birthday Party, Grinderman, and with the Bad Seeds (whom he’ll perform with at the Paramount), as well as acting and writing. And somehow each project that bears his name is spiritual, thought-provoking, and beautifully off-kilter. Reviews for this tour confirm his talents, which will be followed by a July 10 screening at the Grand Illusion of a new documentary about him, 20,000 Days on Earth, which Rolling Stone called “staged, stylized, and weird as fuck.” With Mark Lanegan. The Paramount, 911 Pine St., 682-1414. stgpresents.com/ paramount. 8 p.m. $51.25. DAVE LAKE SUSY SUN is one of those artists you can’t help but love if you are young, somewhat angst-ridden, and wondering why on earth boys (or girls) are so weird/can’t commit/love to break your heart. But she does it all with an angelic voice that is wonderfully Auto-Tune-free and a plucky piano-pop sensibility that recalls Sara Bareilles, even if it doesn’t have quite the same spunk. The local classically trained pianist’s latest effort, 2013’s Wanderlust EP, explores that maddening emotional territory between “I swear I’ll never love someone again” and “Oh no, here I go again, and I can’t stop myself!” With Sea Castle, Each and All. Tractor Tavern, 5213 Ballard Ave. N.W., 789-3599, tractortavern.com. 9 p.m. $8. 21 and over. BRIAN PALMER 2014 hasn’t been the banner year that GREGG ALLMAN might have hoped for. Between the upcoming dissolution of his iconic band to the lawsuits over his failed biopic, he’s been through the ringer. Despite it all, however, he continues to roll with the punches and perform the blues-inflected rock that’s made him an icon. With Ayron Jones. Woodland Park Zoo, 601 N. 59th St., 5482500, zoo.org/zootunes. 6 p.m. $32.50. CORBIN REIFF
KIERAN STRANGE with Within Rust, True Holland, Delta Wave and Watersports Lounge Show. Doors at 7:30 / Show at 8PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $8 ADV / $10 DOS
TUESDAY, JULY 8 El Corazon Presents:
An Evening With:
THE CHRIS O’LEARY BAND Lounge Show. Doors at 8 / Show at 9PM. 21+. $5
WEDNESDAY, JULY 9
MUSIQUESTRIA
Lounge Show. Doors at 7:30 / Show at 8PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $10 ADV / $12 DOS
THURSDAY, JULY 10
RYAN FARISH
with Blackburner, KBeeta, 80-M, plus guests Doors at 7:30 / Show at 8PM ALL AGES/BAR W/ID. $13 ADV / $17 DOS
JUST ANNOUNCED 8/6 LOUNGE ISHI 8/7 NICK THUNE 8/9 YOB 8/31 CORROSION OF CONFORMITY 9/5 THE 1ST ANNUAL “MISS ALTERNATIVE SEATTLE” CONTEST 9/29 CROWBAR UP & COMING 7/11 & 7/12 FLAME FEST 7/13 DWARVES / THE QUEERS 7/14 SAVING ABEL
7/15 LOUNGE KIGHT 7/16 SUFFOKATE 7/17 FILTER / HELMET / LOCAL H 7/18 UNTIL THIS SUNRISE 7/18 LOUNGE SEAWAY 7/19 LOUNGE BAREFOOT BARNACLE 7/20 BLEEDING THROUGH 7/21 TRAGEDY AMONGST THE STARS 7/21 LOUNGE SAM SILVA 7/22 LOUNGE JASON CRUZ AND HOWL 7/23 LOUNGE SHARKMUFFIN 7/25 ANDREW JACKSON JIHAD 7/29 SOULFLY 7/30 LOUNGE OFF TRENDS 7/31 RINGS OF SATURN
Tickets now available at cascadetickets.com - No per order fees for online purchases. Our on-site Box Office is open 1pm-5pm weekdays in our office and all nights we are open in the club - $2 service charge per ticket Charge by Phone at 1.800.514.3849. Online at www.cascadetickets.com - Tickets are subject to service charge
The EL CORAZON VIP PROGRAM: see details at www.elcorazon.com/vip.html and for an application email us at info@elcorazonseattle.com
Thursday, July 3
In the 10 months since Portland-by-way-of-New York indie-pop duo PURE BATHING CULTURE released its debut full-length, Moon Tides, the album has yet to lose the nostalgic grab that made it so instantly likable. Recorded with Richard Swift (the Shins, Damien Jurado), who also worked on the duo’s self-titled EP, Moon Tides combines Cocteau Twins-esque ’80s pop with the haziness of ’60s psychedelia. But guitarist Daniel Hindman and vocalist/keyboardist Sarah Versprille (both formerly of Vetiver) keep the album firmly rooted in the present with introspective lyrics about self-discovery and spirituality. It sounds like a lot to take in, but Hindman’s bright guitar riffs and
Versprille’s crystal-clear voice make such heavy topics easily palatable. With Pure X, M. Geddes Gengras. Barboza, 925 E. Pike St., 709-9951, thebarboza.com. 8 p.m. $10 adv. 21 and over. AZARIA C. PODPLESKY Just as Louis C.K. is often described as a “comedian’s comedian,” San Francisco’s CASTLE is a metal band’s metal band. Its latest record, Under Siege, is a purist interpretation of metal. There’s no hardcore or sludge crossover, just monster hooks and soaring vocals. It’s a brutal approach, which they use for epic, fantastical storytelling. With BlackQueen, Caligula. Chop Suey, 1325 E. Madison St., 324-8005, chopsuey.com. 8 p.m. $10. 21 and over. DUSTY HENRY CLIPPING.’s brand of experimental/noise hip-hop is similar in its unconventional sound to that of a group like Death Grips, only with a slightly tamer rapping style. Its sound is full of glitch and chaos that is always weird, and at times scary—it’s party music for art kids. The L.A.-based group recently dropped CLPPNG, its first release on Sub Pop. With SneakGuapo, OCnotes. Columbia City Theater, 4916 Rainier Ave. S., 722-3009, columbiacitytheater.com. 8 p.m. $12 adv./$15 DOS. 21 and over. DIANA M. LE FUTURE has been steadily rising in the mainstream-rap game. He’s already worked with the likes of Kanye West and the forever-happy Pharrell, and received a coveted diss on Eminem’s latest album. But so much about Future has been about the stars around him. His solo live set has the potential to prove what he can do on his own. With Rico Love, Casino, DJ Swervewon. The Neptune, 1303 N.E. 45th St., 877-784-4849, stgpresents. com/neptune. 9 p.m. $27.50 and up. All ages. DH In its newest venture Here and Nowhere Else, Cincinnatibased CLOUD NOTHINGS have no tricks up its sleeves, and what you hear is what you get: fast-paced, urgent garage rock. Each song is packed with rhythms and guitar on the verge of falling apart, yet a comforting cohesiveness manages to overcome that. Frontman Dylan Baldi has a keen ear for a catchy hook, and relentlessly drives them at you until you can’t help but sing (or scream) along. The whole thing sounds like Baldi learned guitar as a child playing along to Nirvana records in his basement, and it’s only a matter of time before someone learns by playing along to his albums in turn. With Metz. Neumos, 925 E. Pike St., 709-9442, neumos.com. 8 p.m. $15 adv. 21 and over. STIRLING MYLES
Saturday, July 5
HANK GREEN, one of the Internet’s resident nerds, is
one half of the Vlogbrothers, who launched their YouTube channel into popularity in 2007 after posting an original song about Harry Potter. Seven years later, Green’s touring in support of his fifth album, Incongruent, a collection of punk songs about science, My Little Pony, and Shakespearean insults. With Driftless Pony Club. The Crocodile, 2200 Second Ave., 441-4618, thecrocodile. com. 10 p.m. $17 adv. All ages. DML
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PARKER FITZGERALD
SEATTLE WEEKLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
Pure Bathing Culture
STEELY DAN, the jazz-rock duo of Donald Fagen and
Walter Becker, hasn’t released new material since 2003’s Everything Must Go, but that’s not stopping them from touring. This, the Jamalot Ever After tour, finds the pair riding on the strength of still-beloved singles like “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number” and “Hey Nineteen.” Through Sunday. With Bobby Broom. Marymoor Park, 6046 W. Lake Sammamish Pkwy., Redmond, 205-3661, marymoorconcerts.com. 7:30 p.m. $65 and up. All ages. ACP With two Grammys, 34 top-10 appearances on the pop and R&B charts, and singles like “Celebration” and “Jungle Boogie,” which everyone from Madonna to Will Smith has sampled, is there anything KOOL & THE GANG hasn’t accomplished? Well, at least one highlight is still to come: a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame next year. Snoqualmie Casino, Mountain View Plaza, 37500 S.E. North Bend Way, 425-888-1234, snocasino.com. 7 p.m. $15 and up. 21 and over. ACP
Sunday, July 6
NEW ORDER’s story is well known. After the tragic
suicide of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis, the band reformed to continue pushing post-punk in an exciting new direction. It’s easy to idealize bands that so defined an era and genre, but what makes New Order so fascinating is how its influence seems even larger today than it was in the ’80s. So much of modern dance music and indie pop is indebted to the grandiose and wistful hooks of Peter Hook (pun intended, though Hook no longer performs with the band), and both EDM devotees and bedroom-pop loners can find a common denominator in the band’s music. The Paramount. 8 p.m. $45–$65. All ages. DH Country-music legend DWIGHT YOAKAM is a busy man. Besides an illustrious music career, Yoakam is an actor (Sling Blade and Wedding Crashers), a director (South of Heaven, West of Hell), and the owner of his own brand of biscuits. And on top of all that, he somehow found time to release 2012’s delightfully twangy 3 Pears. Snoqualmie Casino. 7 p.m. $25 and up. 21 and over. ACP
Monday, July 7
ASLEEP AT THE WHEEL’s Ray Benson has taken
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Tuesday, July 8
Step aside, Mariah; LAURYN HILL is the real elusive chanteuse. Since releasing her critically acclaimed first (and so far only) solo album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, in 1998, the former Fugee has graced the world with more controversy than the handful of singles she’s dropped—most recently 2013’s “Consumerism,” which debuted the night before she left prison after serving three months for tax evasion. Her Tumblr page claims the track is an introduction to a new project, Letters From Exile, which she wrote during her incarceration, but a release date has yet to be announced. The Paramount. 8 p.m. $35 and up. All ages. ACP Send events to music@seattleweekly.com. See seattleweekly.com for full listings.
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SEATTLE W EE KLY • JULY 2 — 8, 2014
his Western swing band on a pretty long journey. Founding the ensemble in West Virginia, the group relocated to California and eventually Texas, incorporating much of those states’ storied music histories into its albums. A few years back it issued Remember the Alamo, draping juked-up honky tonk over Gen. Santa Anna’s battle. Even Willie Nelson’s a big enough fan to collaborate with the band, a partnership that resulted in 2009’s Willie and the Wheel. And on its latest, Havin’ a Party: Live, the Wheel churns through jazz standards, as well as some rockabilly in celebration of the nation’s heritage. Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley, 2033 Sixth Ave., 441-9729, jazzalley.com. 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. $34.50. DAVE CANTOR For everything that may be made easier by the fact that THE PINK SLIPS are fronted by Grace McKagan, teenage daughter of Duff McKagan, the group will have to fight equally hard to be seen and heard as something other than that. With no recorded material available yet (an EP is coming this summer), the live show and a handful of YouTube clips are currently the only way to experience them. McKagan’s vocals seem up to the task, sultry in a Lana Del Rey sort of way, though the band bristles with an energy more akin to that of the punk icons whose photos they are fond of tweeting: Iggy Pop, Debbie Harry, Joan Jett. With Jason Kertson, Bleachbear. Vera Project, 305 Warren Ave. N., 956-8372, theveraproject.org. 7:30 p.m. $8 adv./$10 DOS. DL
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n Saturday, June 28, Cher, looking incredibly glamorous in a tie-dyed wrap and adorned with what must have been one of the biggest headdresses ever to grace the KeyArena stage, emerged from a wildly elaborate stage set perched upon an oversized pedestal. As she started her first song, “Woman’s World,” the pedestal lowered slowly to the ground revealing the entertainer as the goddess of showmanship the world knows her to be. Her voice was strong and commanding as every member of the nearly sold-out crowd stood and screamed her name, the lyrics, or just out of pure joy. It’s easy to mock Cher, 68, for the work she’s had done to keep herself from aging, but even up close she looks far younger than her years should allow. That’s not just a facelift, that’s attitude. She continued to strut around the stage singing with power as lithe, young backup dancers tore at her costume to reveal a tight skin-toned outfit decked out with gems to catch every ray of light as she moved. Still, managing to keep that humongous headdress perfectly placed, it was something to behold. Opening act Cyndi Lauper, 61, was no slouch either. She made her entrance through curtains at the back of the venue, and interacted with her fans and the audience up close and personal. With fire-red hair, she made her way to the stage dressed in a cape with the Pride flag covering her shoulders and proceeded to deliver, belting out well-known hits like “She Bop” and “True Colors.” Her outfit was mostly black—including a tight-fitting bodice—along with a number of rainbow accessories. No coincidence it was Pride weekend—the singer perfectly matched the mood, vibe, and individual styles of all in attendance. Looking ageless, both performers were in sync with the festive mood of Pride. And you can bet Saturday’s show wasn’t the last time “Believe” rang through Seattle streets last weekend. E
mschuler@seattleweekly.com
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Seattle Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washington! *Do you have a proven track record of success in sales and enjoy managing your own territory? *Are you competitive and thrive in an energetic environment? *Do you desire to work in an environment which offers uncapped earning opportunities? *Are you interested in a fast paced, creative atmosphere where you can use your sales expertise to provide consultative print and digital solutions? If you answered YES to the above, then we are looking for you! Seattle Weekly, one of Seattle’s most respected publications and a division of Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for self-motivated, results-driven people interested in a multi-media sales career. This position will be responsible for print and digital advertising sales to an eclectic and exciting group of clients. As part of our sales team you are expected to maintain and grow existing client relationships, as well as develop new client relationships. The successful candidate will also be goal oriented, have organizational skills that enable you to manage multiple deadlines, provide great consultative sales and excellent customer service. This position receives a base salary of $24k plus commission; and a benefits package including health insurance, paid time off, and 401K. Position requires use of your personal cell phone and vehicle, possession of valid WA State Driver’s License and proof of active vehicle insurance. Sales experience necessary; Media experience is a definite asset. Must be computer-proficient. If you have these skills, and enjoy playing a pro-active part in impacting your local businesses’ financial success with advertising solutions, please email your resume and cover letter to: hreast@sound publishing.com, ATTN: SEA. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! hreast@soundpublishing.com
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The Daily Herald, Snohomish County’s source for outstanding local news and community information for more than 100 years and a division of Sound Publishing, Inc. is seeking a Marketing Coordinator to assist with multi-platform advertising and marketing solutions of print, web, mobile, e-newsletters, daily deals, event sponsorships and special publications as well as the daily operations of the Marketing department. Responsibilities include but are not limited to the coordination, updating and creation of marketing materials across a range of delivery channels, social media, contesting, events, house marketing, newsletters and working closely with the Sr. Marketing Manager to develop strategies and implement the marketing plan. The right individual will be a highly organized, responsible, self-motivated, customer-comes-first proven problem-solver who thrives in a fast-paced, deadline-driven environment with the ability to think ahead of the curve. We offer a competitive salary and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you meet the above qualifications and are seeking an opportunity to be part of a venerable media company, email us your resume and cover letter to hreast@soundpublishing.com No phone calls please. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com
Employment Computer/Technology QA/Automation Test Lead Seattle, WA. Serve as key contributor in testing of new mobile app enhancements, client-server apps, & responsible for ensuring stability of softw release candidates across all mobile platforms. Master’s or equiv in CS, Eng’g (any), or rel. plus 2 yrs relevant exp OR Bachelor’s or equiv in CS, Eng’g (any), or rel. plus 5 yrs relevant exp. CSQE or equiv cert. Exp testing apps & components on mobile platforms (Android SDK, iPhone SDK, or RIM/BlackBerry) & 3G/4G bearers. Exp testing/implementing test automation frameworks for mobile apps using open source tools incl Selenium/Robotium. Exp working w/ web srvcs, automation frameworks, mobile & web apps. Exp employing agile softw practices, early defect removal techniques, & test driven dvlpmt. Knowl of working apps dvlp for touch screen phones. Knowl of web technologies, fin’l apps, & bus. processes. Exp leading cross team projects w/ geographically distrib. team members. Knowl of following tools & technologies: C#, .NET, XML, HTML, ASP, MAC OS X. To apply, visit http:// careers.jpmorganchase.com & apply to job # 140061145. EOE, AAE, M/F/D/V. J.P. Morgan Chase is a marketing name of JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Chase Manhattan Bank is a subsidiary of J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (c) 2003 J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. All rights reserved. www.jpmorganchase.com
Employment Services Lidia’s Professional Cleaning 425-757-6779
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Business Opportunities Seattle, top location, high volume, profitable Subway sandwich shop for sale. $140k. Won’t last long. P.A. 206-612-0405
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WA Misc. Rentals Rooms for Rent Greenlake/WestSeattle $400 & up Utilities included! busline, some with private bathrooms • Please call Anna between 10am & 8pm • 206-790-5342
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NOTICE Washington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (receipt) that shows the seller’s and buyer’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quantity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood. When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the delivery vehicle. The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a cord by visualizing a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet. Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension. To make a firewood complaint, call 360-9021857. agr.wa.gov/inspection/ WeightsMeasures/Fire woodinformation.aspx agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx
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31
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MERCER ISLAND, 98040.
CRAFTERS/ VENDORS APPLY NOW FOR VASHON’S ALL ISLAND Bazaar Early bird special $35; 6’ rectangular table / chairs. After 8/15/14 registration is $40. Held Sat 11/22, 10-4, McMurray Middle School. Applications email Holly Daze Registrar Diane Kajca at r.kajca@gmail.com Diane 253-579-4683. Molly 206-329-4708. Signe 206-353-6232.
ESTATE & GARAGE SALE Friday, Saturday & Sunday, 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. Dealers don’t miss out!! Antique wooden furniture galore; china lamps, tables, end tables, sofas, gorgeous loveseat, lovely wingback chairs & lots more! 6 PC French BR Set; hand painted w/ beautiful bed frame & 2 bureau’s. Crystal & China galore. Clothes, household decor, great practical items for starter kitchens, 27” RCA TV. Too much more list!! 8408 SE 34th Place.
Auto Events/ Auctions
206.386.5400
AM-PM TOWING INC
720 3rd Ave. Ste. 1420 - Seattle, WA 98104
Temporarily Yours Staffing
Abandoned Vehicle AUCTION!!! 07/11/14 @ 11AM 4 Vehicles
1993 TOYOTA TER2 051WWQ 1994 VW JETTA AEL0986 (RUNS W/KEY) 1994 NISSAN SENTRA ADP6695 (RUNS W/KEY) 1990 NISSAN 3ZXCP AKN5222
Preview 10-11AM 14315 Aurora Ave N.
www.stjohnvianneyvashon.com
Bring your heart and hands... we’ll show you the rest You can help wild songbirds in one of PAWS’ most unique wildlife volunteer positions. As a Bird Nursery Caretaker, we’ll teach you how to prepare food and hand feed orphaned baby birds until they’re ready to fly home. Help us, help them. It’s an experience you’ll never forget.
Visit paws.org for details, or call 425.787.2500 x818
“The friendliest and preferred agency”