The
Advocate and the Hardliner Choices for district attorney present starkly different visions for the office BY STEV EN H SIEH ,
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SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 6
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ANSON STEVENS-BOLLEN
OCTOBER 19-25, 2016 | Volume 43, Issue 42 Opinion 5 News 6 7 DAYS, METROGLYPHS AND THIS MODERN WORLD 6 BRIEFS 7
SFR’s open records trial is delayed; the local Public Education Commission is a hot write-in race VERDE SEARCHING FOR GREEN 9
The Verde Fund needs to secure its scrilla “CONFIDENTIAL SOURCE OR METHODS” 11
Court says cops can’t hide records Cover Story 12
Is your bank still a bank that you can bank on?
THE ADVOCATE AND THE HARDLINER
PART PARTICIPATION FILMS
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For the first time in 40 years, Northern New Mexicans get to choose their district attorney in a general election—and the choices are disparate as can be
SFR Picks 17 New gardens, American yuks, monstrous drawings and ladies on film The Calendar 19 Santa Fe Independent Film Festival 20 Don’t-miss film picks from the festival’s founders Music 23
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Mail letters to PO Box 2306, Santa Fe, NM 87504, deliver to 132 E Marcy St., or email them to editor@sfreporter.com. Letters (no more than 200 words) should refer to specific articles in the Reporter. Letters will be edited for space and clarity.
producers got together and applied to the Santa Fe Arts Commission for a grant to create a one-stop, all-you-want-to-know website dedicated to theatre in Santa Fe. TheatreSantaFe.org is up and running now, and we are growing by the day. We believe that we are stronger together and that includes growing our audiences here to realize what great talent there is in Santa Fe. Please browse the website and see for yourselves. JANET DAVIDSON THEATRESANTAFE.ORG
COVER, OCTOBER 12: “MARTINEZ ON TRIAL”
NEWS, SEPTEMBER 21:
SAY IT LIKE T JEFF Thanks for this in-depth discussion of the upcoming court case. The response (or lack of it) from the Martinez administration regarding information requests would be expected from an autocratic regime in, say, the Middle East or Central Asia. Here in America, we very correctly take press freedom to be vitally important. Remember that Thomas Jefferson quote about newspapers and government? “... And were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.” DAVID GROENFELDT SFREPORTER.COM
“REFUGE AND RESPITE”
PAIN OF PSYCH PROBS [SFR has] been propping up the false values of behavioral psychology for nearly three years. ... You coninue to act as if it were a legitimate healing modality. There is no social science in the diagnosis manuals DSM-III and -IV. Poorly trained practitioners rely on addicting their patients to meds from big pharma instead of offering quality care. As one practitioner said to me, “The corporate behavioral fiasco is a dark time in counseling practice’s history.” ... Humanistic psychology has been censored for 40 years. ... Let’s start treating the pain of psych problems with real caring and not cover up the symptoms. ROBERT FRANCIS JOHNSON SANTA FE
COVER, OCTOBER 5: “ALL THE WORLD’S A STAGE...”
WE ARE MERELY PLAYERS Thank you Alex De Vore and the Reporter. ... We’d like to add one very important piece to your thoughtful article on emerging theatre here in Santa Fe. Last year the theatre
SFR will correct factual errors online and in print. Please let us know if we make a mistake, editor@sfreporter.com or 988-7530.
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OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
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BOB DYLAN WINS NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE, HAS YET TO ACCEPT
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POLICE ARREST YET ANOTHER WRONG-WAY DRIVER ON I-25
How does it feel?
Maybe instead of “Wrong Way,” the signs should say “Turn Around for Free Drinks.”
LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LAB TO SEND ALL NEW RADIOACTIVE WASTE OUT OF STATE
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If you’ve been looking to transform into a mutant/ superhero, you’d better get to it.
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RED RIVER BANK EMPLOYEE WAS IN ON HEIST WITH COUSIN
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GARY JOHNSON AND DARREN WHITE ARE FRIENDS AGAIN YEARS AFTER MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION FALLOUT
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Great work, geniuses.
Such is the power of weed, you guys … Man, we could go for some gummi bears.
SF MAYOR WANTS TO CITY TO HELP RESIDENTS REDUCE SUGAR INTAKE He just remembered that Halloween is coming.
CONTROLLED BURN HAS US ALL WHEEZING And it looks kinda spooky.
Read it on SFReporter.com LEE ON LITERATURE Just how does Huey P Long compare to Hillary Clinton? Lee Miller tells us in his most recent post on the 1946 Pulitzer-winning book, All the King’s Men. You’ll apparently acheive a deeper understanding of all the Hillary hate.
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MORNING WORD, BRO Do your colleagues discuss all the latest New Mexico news, and all you’ve read lately are Buzzfeed listicles? Sign up for the Morning Word at sfreporter.com/signup to get all the news of the day, right in your inbox.
Courtroom Delay
Last week’s cover story featured SFR’s free press lawsuit against the Susana Martinez administration. Today, we have an update. On Tuesday morning we learned our pre-Thanksgiving trial is now instead set to unfold with the spring blossoms. Katherine Murray, one of two attorneys representing SFR, received exciting news this weekend: She’s going to be a mother. After waiting more than two years to adopt a child, Murray on Monday flew to Florida and met her newborn son. Co-counsel Daniel Yohalem reached an agreement with Martinez’ team and
BRIEFS District Judge Sarah Singleton to kick off the three-day trial on March 29, a Wednesday. That gives Murray ample time to decide whether she wants to continue working on our case. If not, Yohalem may need to find another cocounsel or fly solo. “We’re very appreciative that the judge was able to find time on her calendar and the defendant was amenable to this change,” Yohalem says. “Sometimes events in our personal lives interrupt the work we’re doing and it is important to make room in our work lives for those events.” We couldn’t agree more. This year, we’ve had two staffers go on maternity leave. SFR’s trial concerns whether Gov. Martinez discriminated against this paper by ignoring our request for comment while providing other media outlets answers to nearly identical questions. We also claim the administration violated public records law by delaying or denying a number of our requests. (SFR)
Fill This Blank Of the four seats open this year on the New Mexico Public Education Commission, the only contested race appears to be the write-in spot for District 10, representing the northern reaches of the state—including portions of Santa Fe County. Two Democratic candidates, Tim Crone and Anthony Trujillo, are running write-in campaigns for the board responsible for advising the Secretary of Education and authorizing charter schools. Neither candidate could be reached for comment by press time. Crone is a retired humanities professor; Trujillo’s employment could not be verified. Crone, however, has the support of the current District 10 Commissioner, Jeff Carr, who vacated the seat to run for Colfax County Commission. Crone also counts the New Mexico’s American Federation of Teachers as a supporter; he serves as its higher education vice president.
Accepting new patients Crone attempted to make it onto the ballot but discrepancies regarding his address disqualified him. Both candidates’ campaign finance filings with the secretary of state indicate they have neither raised nor spent a single dollar toward their campaigns. A winning write-in candidate must secure at least 2 percent of the votes cast in that jurisdiction, according to the Santa Fe County clerk’s office. And in this race, pundits say that requires more than 900 votes, although the state Elections Bureau did not respond to a request to confirm that figure. If an election doesn’t fill the seat, the governor appoints someone to it. The other candidates for Districts 1, 4, and 9 are unopposed Democrats—to staff a board on which all members are already Democrats. The sole Republican commissioner resigned in May. (Elizabeth Miller)
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NEWS
Verde Searching for Green City’s fund to jointly address climate change and poverty still needs effective strategy, secure funds BY ELIZA B E TH M I LLE R eli zab et h @ s fre p o r te r.co m
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code set to go before the council on Oct. 26. Gonzales says he doesn’t expect that to chip into the fees set aside for the Verde Fund. Projections are on track to see the department secure those “excess” fees, but the city has committed to not moving forward with spending any money on the Verde Fund until they actually have those dollars in hand, according to city spokesperson Matt Ross. “So far, yes, permits are up, but we won’t know for sure if it’s up enough until we actually realize that revenue,” Ross tells SFR. “That’s dependent on construction schedules, which is the reason why we can’t say exactly when that will be.”
AN SON ST E VEN S-B OLL EN
hen the mayor’s proposal to launch the Verde Fund debuted earlier this year, the principles—fighting climate change and assisting the city’s poorest residents—weren’t tough to get behind. But the practical measures of addressing both at the same time were another matter. “I’m not one who is going to say, ‘Here is $300,000, come back in 90 days and tell me what you’re going to do with the money,’” Councilor Ron Trujillo said during the May 25 meeting when city councilors considered the Permits are up, resolution. “I’m sorry, I don’t work that way. I never have. but we won’t know I consider that bad government.” for sure if it’s up Trujillo, as well as Councilors Chris Rivera and Joseph enough until we Maestas, voted against the resolution, but it passed. actually realize “All I can say is, with that $300,000, I hope you guys that revenue. spend it in the right way,” Tru-Matt Ross, city spokesman jillo said. In the months since, Mayor Javier Gonzales and a team of city staff have been meeting to discuss just that—how to spend a small amount of startup capital, essentially, to demonstrate the city can make real strides against these complex, deeply entrenched issues. “There is no shortage of opportunity to meet the goals of the resolution,” Gonzales tells SFR. “It’s finding that program that will have the quickest and highest impact given the resources that we have, and that’s taken some time and effort by the staff.” He won’t take an idea back to the City Council, he says, until he has something he’s confident can be achieved given the resources made available—estimates which were not, he points out, quite at the level he had hoped to obtain. The figure Trujillo cited is a ballpark starting point. City Council allocated the Verde Fund an estimated $300,000 expected to arrive in the form of “excess land use permit fees.” This is only part of the revenues projected to run half a million above what the Land Use Department planned to use for regular operations. The department has already requested it be allowed to spend an additional $123,000 above what was budgeted, in order to cover another fulltime employee to assist in processing building permits as part of a revision to the city’s green building
Though Gonzales can cite no local research to support it—blaming a general absence of a conversation around this cross section before he started talking about the Verde Fund in February—the sense is that those living in poverty in Santa Fe will bear a disproportionate share of the costs of climate change. That toll is expected to manifest in higher costs for energy and healthy food, and limited access to items like solar panels. A team of city staff—Alexandra Ladd from Economic Development and Affordable Housing, Renewable Energy Planner John Alejandro, Chris Sanchez from Community Services’ Children and Youth Commission, and Andrés Mercado from the Mobile Integrated Health Office—has been batting ideas around. Those have included pairing training in sustainability-focused jobs with GED completion to map out a course for those graduates to hold jobs with the city that also help the city toward its goal of being carbon neutral by 2040 and funding retrofits on homes to make them more energy efficient. How to track the social and economic effects of any program is also weighing on their minds. “My feeling has been that we have this entire fall and towards the end of 2016 to really crystalize and determine whether, one, do we have a program that can move the needle and can be achievable?” Gonzales says. “And two, do we have enough resources to make that happen?”
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NEWS
“Confidential Sources or Methods” Judge says police can’t always claim confidentiality when blocking records requests without first giving some proof
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BY STEVE N H SI E H steven@ s fre p o r te r.co m
president of the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government. “It’s a significant result in that the court rejected efforts to expand the law enforcement exemption into something that it is not,” Williams tells SFR. “The law enforcement entities have an independent obligation to produce public records. And they can’t take cover from a district attorney telling them not to release them.” The City of Albuquerque in 2015 invoked the law enforcement exemption to block the release of cell phone footage of a skate park shootout that left one 17-year-old dead. A judge rejected that defense and ordered the release of the video. Former Attorney General Gary King raised the same exemption when his office refused to release a 2013 audit of 15 behavioral health providers. Gov. Susana Martinez’ administration used the audit as a basis for freezing Medicaid payments to the providers, claiming fraud. King’s successor Hector Balderas released a version of the audit in January 2015, more than a year after a lawsuit from Las Cruces Sun-News and New Mexico In Depth. In Noll’s case, lawyers for the Department of Public Safety said the department had an obligation to delay the release of the records and failing to do so would be violating state law that mandates police cooperation with district attorneys. Lawyers also argued that releasing the records too early could compromise an investigation. Edgewood’s lawyers presented a similar line of argument: “When faced with what appears to be a reasonable request from the District Attorney, what is a law enforcement officer to do—ignore the District Attorney’s request?” Noll’s attorney declined to speak with SFR on the record. AN
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viewing the decision and considering our options.” Edgewood Police Chief Ron Crow, who took his post in July, tells SFR he’s not familiar with the case but noted, “I am very forthcoming with our records. When we can, I will release information.” Both agencies gave notice that they would appeal the judgment. “The intent of DPS and the Town of Edgewood was to delay the delivery of the requested documents until the District Attorney conducted a grand jury proceeding to review the officer involved shooting of Ethan Noll,” Mathews writes. The decision could have broader implications for journalists, advocates and families seeking law enforcement records, according to Greg Williams,
EV
-Greg Williams, NMFOG
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The law enforcement entities have an independent obligation to produce public records. And they can’t take cover from a district attorney telling them not to release them.
SO
hen Erin Noll asked three law enforcement agencies for records related to the fatal police shooting of her husband last year, they all denied her request. The three entities—the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department, the Town of Edgewood and the state Department of Public Safety—cited a section of New Mexico’s public records law that exempts police from releasing records that would “reveal confidential sources, methods, information, or indiviudals accused but not charged with a crime.” Noll sued for the records, only to be denied again. This time, the agencies deferred to then-District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco, who asked them to hold off on releasing any documents pending a grand jury investigation. Pacheco never convened that grand jury. Neither did her successor, Jennifer Padgett, who this year stopped the practice of using special grand juries to investigate officers’ deadly use of force. Five state police officers reportedly fired at Ethan Noll, a former Marine, after he stepped out of his truck carrying a rifle. The shooting happened after a 13-hour standoff. Padgett called the use of force “tragic,” but “appropriate.” Cleared by the district attorney’s office, the three agencies in May handed Noll the records she asked for. But the police reports and video recordings didn’t seem to reveal anything senstive. All the officers involved in the shooting had already been identified by the Department of Public Safety. So Noll asked for attorney’s fees, on the basis that her request was improperly delayed. One of the parties involved, Santa Fe County, settled with the widow for $6,000. In the agreement, the county does not admit to any wrongdoing. Asked whether the settlement will change the way the sheriff’s department handles records request, spokesman Juan Rios says, “We will continue to follow the state’s Inspection of Public Records Act as stipulated by law as we did in this particular instance.” Following a bench trial last month, a district judge ruled that the other two agencies violated public records law by improperly invoking the confidentiality provision, commonly known as the “law enforcement exemption.” Judge Francis J Mathews’ opinion, notably, does not declare whether records under review by a grand
jury should fall under the law enforcement exemption. But it does say that when someone challenges a records denial, it is up to the agency in question to prove to a judge why certain records should be exempt. Neither the Department of Public Safety nor the Town of Edgewood took that step. Mathews awarded Noll her attorney’s fees— $11,804 from the Department of Public Safety and $9,523 from Edgewood. Asked if the decision would change the agency’s IPRA policy, a spokesperson for the Department of Public Safety said, “DPS is re-
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Choices for district attorney present starkly different visions for the office
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BY STE VE N H S I E H s teve n @s fre p o r ter.co m
he last time a Republican ran for District Attorney in the tri-county area comprising Santa Fe, Los Alamos and Rio Arriba, Gerald Ford sat in the White House. Now, for the first time in 40 years, residents of the Northern New Mexico region will choose their top prosecutor in a general election. Democrat Marco Serna, a millennial native son with a recognizable name, takes on Yvonne Chicoine, a Republican with a wealth of experience working for political organizations and governments before recently switching to a legal career. They’re running to take over for Jennifer Padgett, Gov. Susana Martinez’ appointee to replace Angela “Spence” Pacheco, who retired last year after seven years in the position. Whoever wins will oversee 27 attorneys and 43 support staff across three offices and hold ultimate prosecutorial authority over all state offenses in the region. The two candidates present starkly different visions for the office. Serna sees a pulpit to expand cooperation between prosecutors and treatment programs, part of a mission to funnel addicts out of the criminal justice system. His ideas resonated among Democrats in this drug-ridden district, particularly Rio Arriba County, whose voters helped propel him above two opponents in a close primary race. Chi-
THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT Location: Santa Fe, Los Alamos and Rio Arriba Counties Voters: 67 percent Democrat, 17 percent Republican Area: 7,916 square miles Staff: 27 attorneys and 43 support staff
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coine, who kicked off her Santa Fe career working for Republican state representatives, wants to “restore respect for the rule of law,” which she says has been tarnished in the district by selective prosecution. She ran unopposed in June. Chicoine is the clear underdog. About 64 percent of voters in the district are registered Democrats, while just 17 percent are Republicans. Even if the 17 percent of voters identifying as independents all vote for Chicoine, she still faces a challenge. (The rest are registered under third parties.) Whoever wins inherits a heavy backlog of cases, a problem exacerbated by a hiring freeze resulting from budget cuts that took place during this month’s special legislative session, according to Padgett, the outgoing district attorney. Padgett adds that a lack of pretrial services, diversion programs and specialty courts also present challenges to her successor. Marco Serna pulls his SUV up a long gravel driveway in a small neighborhood less than a mile north of the Penitentiary of New Mexico. It’s a sunny Thursday afternoon and he’s knocking on doors in the 70th voter precinct, an expansive patch of mostly-undeveloped land between La Cienega and Eldorado. Serna gets out of his car and waves down David Babcock, a registered Democrat, before the retired home designer is able to drive away. Babcock notes that he’s in a hurry, but gives the candidate a moment to make his pitch. “I’m really focusing on nonviolent drug offenders,” Serna tells his prospective constituent, who is listening through his rolled-down car window. “Trying to impose treatment with our sentencing, even with habitual offenders, rather than incarcerating them, is key,” Serna says, touting a 70 percent success rate for the Delancey Street rehab center at San Juan Pueblo. “Some of those people, they need to be locked up,” Babcock interjects. “Well, I agree with you. The violent offenders—” “The habituals too. And the thieves.” “Here’s the thing with habitual offenders,” Serna replies. “With a lot of them, it is theft, carjacking and burglaries, and after a certain point I agree with you. But your second or third offender, if we were to just
Party: Democrat Law school: St. Mary’s University (San Antonio, Texas) Last job: Medicaid Fraud Unit of the Attorney General’s office Platform:
“When you have people who suffer from addiction, so much good can be done by getting them into long-term treatment, rather than putting them in prison.”
Party: Republican Law school: University of New Mexico Last job: Appeals division of the Attorney General’s office Platform:
“We’re diminishing the rule of law if as a prosecutor I decide I’m not going to enforce certain laws.”
get them into treatment, my view is we would see a incident to her mother, who had inquired about her decrease in crime across the board.” daughter’s unusual behavior. The accused claimed Babcock, having heard enough of Serna’s stump that the girl may have dreamt the scenario. The trial speech, asks the Democrat his position on the death resulted in a hung jury, with 11 of 12 jurors convinced penalty. That evening, the House of Representatives of the man’s guilt. would stay up through the night debating a bill sup“What really brings me back to this case is the ported by Gov. Martinez proposing to reinstate capi- young girl, the victim. She was so courageous through tal punishment. The chamber passed the proposal this process. She had to sit on the stand in a courtroom full of strangers, look at a jury box full of adults, attor36-30, but it later died in the Senate. “That little girl in Albuquerque, that 10-year-old neys who were asking her questions. And she was so girl, that’s what tells me they gotta put it back in,” courageous through the whole thing. I was heartbroBabcock says, referring to the case of Victoria Mar- ken because justice, in my opinion, wasn’t served that tens, whose rape, murder and dismemberment this day,” Serna says. “I think about that case on a weekly basis, because you wish you could’ve done better.” summer horrified New Mexicans. Another case Serna often mentions is the murder Serna says he opposes the death penalty due to the protracted appeals process for the condemned, trial of Jack McDowell, a retired state police officer which often drags on for decades and costs millions convicted in the stabbing death of James Chavez, a of dollars. He rattles off the other arguments invoked Rio Rancho man, in 2011. Serna’s team presented the by opponents of capital punishment: It’s not a deter- case that McDowell and his son John, both affiliated rent and there’s no way to reverse death. (Serna tells with the Bandidos motorcycle gang, attacked Chavez over drugs and a love interest. SFR he would seek the death The older McDowell is curpenalty in extraordinary cases if the Legislature brings it back. rently serving a 30-year sen“Do I have discretion? I do. But I tence for first-degree murder. still have to enforce the law,” he “I was very proud to put him explains.) in prison,” he tells SFR. John If we were to The points don’t seem to McDowell pleaded guilty to a stick with Babcock. “Some of reduced charge of aggravated just get them into these are clear-cut cases,” the battery. voter says. Serna, ready to move Serna resigned from his treatment, my view on to the next home, asks the last job, working for the Atis we would see a man if he has any other questorney General’s Medicaid fraud unit, in January to run tions. decrease in crime for office. He says he’s getting “I like that you’re a Demoby on savings and a few legal crat. I like that little converacross the board. consulting contracts. sation we had now. You’re During the primaries, straightforward, and it’s not like -Marco Serna Serna campaigned to the left your hands are going to be tied. of his opponents, incumbent You’re not going to push any Padgett and former assistant laws,” Babcock says. “I’ll vote attorney general Maria Sanfor you. And I’ll vote for Hillary.” chez-Gagne. Padgett knew Serna, who grew up in Norththe office firsthand. Sanchezern New Mexico and is a 2008 graduate of St. Mary’s Gagne had more than 20 years experience working as School of Law in San Antonio, Texas, got his first job a prosecutor. To set himself apart, Serna emerged as in New Mexico working on risk management for the the advocate. His public comments almost always focused on a state’s General Services Department. In his first two weeks, he got a taste of a federal trial, interviewing self-described “outside-the-box” approach to lowertwo witnesses. “I did a lot of cool things, to be honest,” level crimes arising out of addiction. Initiating longhe says of his time in the Risk Management Division. term treatment programs, as he explained to BabBut Serna’s cases there, he says, too often wound up cock, would be a priority in his administration. He in mediation, and since law school he always felt most vowed to expand pre-booking diversion programs, comfortable in the courtroom. namely Santa Fe’s Law Enforcement Assisted DiverHe applied for prosecutor and public defender sion (LEAD) program, to Los Alamos and Rio Arriba openings before landing a gig in Valencia County as counties. (LEAD grants police officers discretion to an assistant district attorney. Like most prosecutors, divert property and drug crime offenders, specifically he started at the magistrate level, working DWIs and habitual ones, straight to treatment programs, skipdomestic violence cases. In 2011 he earned a promo- ping prosecution.) On the trail, Serna says he also wants to bring more tion to supervise Valencia County’s domestic violence unit. He eventually moved over to Sandoval County, cooperation between the district attorney’s office another jurisdiction covered in the district, becoming and nonprofit organizations, including the Delancey Street Foundation and the Solace Center, a crisis cenhead of the violent crimes unit in 2013. During that time, he tried two cases that continue ter for victims of domestic violence, sexual assault to stick with him. The first is a child molestation case and child abuse. involving a man who allegedly performed oral sex A New Mexico law passed in 1981 by the Legislaon a 3-year-old girl while she slept. Parents did not ture already grants state’s attorneys authority to direport the alleged assault by someone they consid- vert prosecution for first-time nonviolent offenders. ered a family friend until after the girl described the But Serna says that law, which imposes a six-month CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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to two-year probationary period for participants, doesn’t go far enough. He tells SFR, “When you think of people who are addicted right now, a lot of these guys are habitual offenders. That program doesn’t help them. It imposes prison time. What do we accomplish by that?” Serna says finding funding for his ideas amid a statewide budget crunch will be his biggest challenge. Yet, he says he won’t delay lobbying state, city and county governments on the topic. Reducing incarceration, Serna argues, will save money in the long run. Peter K Enns, a Cornell University professor and author of Incarceration Nation, which tracks the rise of the United States prison population, says Serna’s rhetoric reflects a national reckoning over strict sentencing for drug offenders with roots in the crime waves of the ’80s and ’90s. Bipartisan efforts on Capitol Hill to shrink America’s prison population by reducing mandatory minimums gained momentum during Barack Obama’s presidency, although those efforts have recently hit a snag. Obama, meanwhile, has recently commuted the sentences of hundreds of federal drug offenders. Democratic New Mexico Sen. Martin Heinrich co-sponsored a bill to increase resources nationwide for combatting heroin and opioid addiction,
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Marco Serna’s door-to-door game is strong.
which passed the US Senate but is currently stalled in the House. “My sense is that [Serna’s campaign] is very much in line with the national interest in criminal justice reform,” Enns tells SFR. “It appears that in some areas district attorneys are also noticing that public attitudes and the criminal justice political climate have changed.” Serna’s platform stops short of supporting drug decriminalization. “Your opioids, your heroin, methamphetamine, absolutely not. Marijuana, I wouldn’t actively support it, but I wouldn’t actively oppose it,” he says. On another topic of national interest, officer-involved shootings, Serna offers perhaps his biggest turn from the current administration. Under Padgett, the district attorney ultimately gets to decide whether a police shooting was justified. She recently broke from a controversial practice of using secretive grand juries to investigate these cases. Serna wants to completely remove the district attorney’s involvement after police use deadly force, instead inviting a special prosecutor to take the reins. “Why would we have the DA’s office, who works with these individuals day in and day out, not only investigate them, but determine whether we would prosecute them? There is an inherent conflict of interest,” Serna tells SFR.
STEVEN HSIEH
Yvonne Chicoine thanks city police officers as they arrive at Derailed, a bar attached to the Sage Inn, where her campaign is holding an appreciation event for area law enforcement. Long tables stretch along a back wall, offering mostly-untouched sandwiches and donuts. Another table is topped with t-shirts, stickers and a stuffed chicken. The plush poultry references a mnemonic slogan Chicoine often uses to explain the pronunciation of her name: “Please remember this November. This chick will win. Vote ‘chick-win.’” About a dozen people show up to the event, among them Sgt. Troy Baker, president of the Santa Fe Police Officers Association. Chicoine recently earned the endorsement of that union, as well as that of the local chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police. Baker says Chicoine is the only attorney he knew of in the district attorney’s office to prosecute a case of battery on a police officer, claiming that other staffers in the office turned a blind eye to crimes against his colleagues. “We know what we’re getting with her because we worked with her in the DA’s office. Our staff has individually had to deal with most of the previous administration there. If we get battered in our job, none of them would prosecute battery of a police officer. They would say, ‘Well, that’s your job.’ And that’s, to put it lightly, bullshit,” says Baker. (A SFR review of data from the Administrative Office of the Courts found that more than 340 cases of crimes against police, from battery to aggravated assault, have been filed in the district since 2007. Twenty-five resulted in conviction.) Baker’s claim buoys the crux of Chicoine’s platform: that there are certain categories of offenses that too many people get away with—three categories, to be specific. After battery of a police officer, the other two are crimes against businesses (shoplifting and embezzlement) and DWIs. “We have had selective law enforcement in our community for a long time,” Chicoine tells SFR. “It does two things: It fosters lawlessness and stands as an impediment to people who obey the law.” As an example, she shares an anecdote from her time working as an assistant district attorney under Pacheco. “What I was told when I was there is, ‘Once someone gets their first DWI, we really don’t care. We want to accumulate convictions until we get to the felony level.’” (Serna says first offenders should plead, second offenders are case-by-case, and third offenders should serve time.) Like her Democratic opponent, Chicoine is relatively new to the field, graduating from the University of New Mexico School of Law in 2007. But she has been involved in creating and influencing legislation for decades. Chicoine’s career started in the late ’70s, when she worked as a policy advisor for the American Conservative Union, the DC political organization. In the next couple decades, she helped manage a trademark association and directed trade policy for a paper and wood lobbying group. She moved to Santa Fe in 1995 after marrying her husband, Tom Starke, a Los Alamos physicist who, now retired, now spends his time on DWI prevention programs. But Chicoine didn’t slow down in the City Different. She helped edit a government operations report for the Gary Johnson administration and worked as a legislative analyst for Republican state representa-
The Santa Fe Police Officers Union has endorsed Yvonne Chicoine in the race.
We have had selective law enforcement in our community for a long time. It does two things: It fosters lawlessness and stands as an impediment to people who obey the law. -Yvonne Chicoine
tives before landing a management job at a construction industry trade association. Then, at the age of 48, she went to law school. In 2007, Chicoine started her legal career in the First Judicial District, the office she seeks to head, where she worked her way up from the magistrate level to trying crimes in district court. She served as second chair in the high-profile prosecution of Jennifer Stephenson, the mother of Isaiah Apodaca, a 2-year-old Santa Fe child whose legs got caught between a fallen dresser and a bed railing. Acting on a suggestion from doctors, Chicoine and colleagues originally theorized that ligature marks on the boy’s legs came from ropes and charged Stephenson with first-degree child abuse. But after doctors, upon further inspection, decided that could not be the case, prosecutors dropped that charge and sought negligent child abuse and child abandonment. A jury convicted Stephenson of the second charge, a decision reversed by an appeals court. The state Supreme Court last month upheld the reversal. “I agree with Justice Nakamura’s dissent,” Chicoine tells SFR, referring to Republican Judge Judith Naka-
mura, who argued that the prosecution had enough evidence to prove Isaiah would have cried through the night, such that Stephenson would have heard it. After serving about four years in the district, Chicoine moved to a job in the attorney general’s office, working in the criminal appeals division. She prosecuted another headline case during this time, successfully convicting Curtis Jones in a decade-old case of child abuse resulting in death. Chicoine resigned this year to run for district attorney. Chicoine’s platform presents as a conservative alternative to Serna’s advocacy-based campaign. The district attorney should be busy enforcing the law, she says, not creating programs or lobbying legislators. “If a shortstop is trying to do the second baseman’s job, that creates a void,” she explains to SFR. Bringing up the recent push to reinstate capital punishment as an example, she says, “I think it is reasonable for the district attorney to comment on the language that might be in the law. But the political decision as to whether or not there should be a death penalty should not be in the equation for the district attorney.” Chicoine doesn’t support the LEAD program, a Santa Fe city initiative, which she calls the “de facto decriminalization of drugs.” If elected district attorney, Chicoine says she would use the state’s diversion law in certain circumstances, but incarceration would be appropriate for people “who have adopted a criminal lifestyle.” In Chicoine’s eyes, poverty and addiction should not be an excuse for crime. “If one wants to rehabilitate, one can do it without getting into the criminal justice system,” she says. “There are plenty of people in AA or NA who recognize that and don’t have criminal records.” In many ways, Chicoine is exactly what you would expect from a district attorney: conservative and tough on crime. If Serna’s primary win in June is any indication, however, voters in the First Judicial District have different ideas in mind. Asked whether she views her bid as a longshot, Chicoine says, “I think my campaign has changed the discussion.” SFREPORTER.COM
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AMERICAN IDIOTS “We’ve been writing Winning the Future in Santa Fe and New York City annually since 2001,” Up & Down Theatre Co. co-founder and performer Lindsey Hope Pearlman tells us of the company’s upcoming political satire variety show. “In many ways, this feels like the ultimate version of the show [because] the political climate has never felt more surreal and self-satirizing.” Amen to that, sister! Up & Down even won a recent comedy competition sponsored by MoveOn.org for their original song, “Make America Great Again.” Pearlman and her cohorts kick off their series of performances this Thursday, which run through Nov. 6. (Alex De Vore)
WES NAMAN
JULIE ANN GRIMM
THEATER
Winning the Future: 7 pm Thursday Oct. 20. $10-$20. Adobe Rose Theatre, 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688.
COURTESY LINDSAY PAYTON
ART OPENNING EVENT
All Grown Up SF Botanical Garden reveals stunning second phase
Though she briefly attended New Mexico State University for fine art, artist Lindsay Payton says that style of work wasn’t for her. Instead, she gravitated toward ink illustration and small watercolor pieces within the realm of horror. “I’m a big fan of horror in general, especially older movies and stories,” Payton says, “and I draw a lot of inspiration from folklore as well.” Think the Universal Studios movie monsters of yesteryear with a hip and poppy aesthetic; small yet magnetic and jammed with nostalgia—it’s perfect for Halloween and would look good as hell all framed up on your wall. (ADV) Lindsay Payton: It Came From Upstairs: 5-7 pm Friday Oct. 21. Free. Back Road Pizza, 1807 Second St., 955-9055.
FILM IN HER WORDS Route 66, the famed highway that stretches for 2,400 miles across America, of course, runs partly through New Mexico. Nicknamed the “Mother Road” by author John Steinbeck, the route has been the center of many a historic tale—and in filmmaker Katrina Parks’ new documentary, women tell the stories. “We are looking forward to hosting this event,” says Meredith Davidson, a curator at New Mexico History Museum. “Looking at Route 66 from the perspective of a filmmaker who is very interested in women’s history is a different approach.” The documentary is a work in progress, so this event is a screening of four segments, followed by a panel discussion including three women featured in the film. (Maria Egolf-Romero)
COURTESY NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM
ovens for cooking demonstrations and, Santa Fe gets compared to other Southwestern cities in more ways than of course, native plants—all part of the new exhibition called Ojos y Manos: many of us find comfortable. But we know that when it comes to our score- Hands and Eyes. Albert and Elizabeth Kidd spend card of cultural amenities, we earn well-deserved top rankings. One of the most of the year in Houston, but their presence in Santa Fe isn’t limited to latest cultural contenders is the Santa just vacations. They’re proud to be Fe Botanical Garden. While the orgaamong the financial supporters of the nization has been around for decades, gardens and were touring the area managing the Leonora Curtin Wetwith Bass on the same day SFR visited. lands south of the city and taking on other projects, the permanent home of The Texas-sized port town, you see, doesn’t have a botanical garden. exhibition gardens opened just three “We’re just really excited about the years ago on Museum Hill. Now that garden,” Albert tells SFR. “It’s a small the first few acres of plants are thrivplace, but it’s really a jewel the way it’s ing in terrain that’s seen a massive been done. It’s interesting the way that transformation from undeveloped arroyo to planned garden, the goal of the they’ve shifted into this next phase. There’s kind of a whole different apgarden’s second phase makes sense: to provide facilities and gathering proach with the educational element. spaces for students and other visitors. It’s going to be a great place for kids While the original design for this part and students to learn about plants.” of the project was more plant-centric, Haven’t seen the garden yet? garden CEO Clayton Bass and others Admission is free for the events that met with landscape architect Gary celebrate the next phase. No addiSmith to reconceive plans. What tional charge for the fresh air. emerged in the $2.5 million addi(Julie Ann Grimm) tion are two outdoor classrooms, an OJOS Y MANOS EXHIBITION OPENING amphitheater with thoughtful touches 11:30 am Saturday Oct. 22. Free. like boulders for climbing in place of Santa Fe Botanical Garden, 715 Camino some stairs (and which double as a Lejo, 471-9103 lesson in New Mexico geology), kiva
THE HORROR!
The Women on the Mother Road: 5:30 pm Tuesday Oct. 25. Free. New Mexico History Museum, 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100.
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Creative Photo & Art Auction ry sa
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COURTESY NÜART GALLERY
THE CALENDAR
John Tarahteeff’s “The Shot” is on view at Nüart Gallery as part of the one that got away, opening Friday. Want to see your event here? Email all the relevant information to calendar@sfreporter.com. You can also enter your events yourself online at calendar.sfreporter. com (submission doesn’t guarantee inclusion). Need help? Contact Maria: 395-2910
WED/19 ART OPENINGS ERIN GINGRICH AND NAKKITA TRIMBLE Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2300 The two artists-in-residence open their studios for viewers to see what they are creating during their residencies. 3 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES ANDREW WK: THE POWER OF PARTYING Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 WK makes a stop on his pep rally tour for the inner spirit and continues his lifelong mission to defend and promote joy though partying (see Music, page 23). 7:30 pm, $25 AYSEN NEW Wheelright Museum of the American Indian 704 Camino Lejo, 982-4636 New, the widow of famed artist Lloyd Kiva New, presents a lecture titled “The Sound of Drums: A Memoir of Lloyd Kiva New.” 1:30 pm, free
DHARMA TALK: JOSHIN BRIAN BYRNES AND GENZAN QUENNEL Upaya Zen Center 1404 Cerro Gordo Road, 986-8518 The weekly talk is presented by Byrnes and Quennell, two Zen priests at Upaya. 5:30 pm, free DOCUMENTING CULTURAL CHANGE IN THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT IN THE 1960s State Archives of New Mexico 1209 Camino Carlos Rey, 476-7948 The State Archives of New Mexico and the Office of the State Historian host a brown bag lunch featuring two talks focused on cultural change. Noon, free
JANN HAYNES GILMORE Fray Angélico Chavez History Library 110 Washington Ave., 476-5052 Haynes discusses her book Olive Rush: Finding Her Place in the Santa Fe Art Colony as part of the Brainpower & Brownbags lecture series. Noon, free PANAYOTI KELAIDIS: CACTI & SUCCULENTS FOR THE ROCK GARDEN Christ Lutheran Church 1701 Arroyo Chamiso, 467-9025 Kelaidis is the director of outreach at Denver Botanic Garden and she speaks in collaboration with the Santa Fe chapter of the Native Plant Society about which plants thrive best in rocky terrain. 6:30 pm, free
EVENTS
GEEKS WHO DRINK The Dragon Room 406 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-7712 Stop by this perfectly dark downtown spot and measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others'. 5 pm, free SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Various Locations, 470-2411 Showing over 100 films at venues around the city, this festival—in its eighth year—brings the best independent movies from around the globe to the City Different. For a full list of showtimes and ticket prices and all the juicy details head to santafeindependentfilmfestival. com (see page 20). 5 pm, free
COLLEGE NIGHT Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 College representatives from across the state provide prospective students and their parents with the info they need to evaluate their college choices and make the best selection for their future. 6 pm, free FLU SHOT CLINIC Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Adult and pediatric doses are available at this clinic. Don't get deathly ill this year, it's not fun for anyone. 9 am, free
CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
AMERICA: The Election & Beyond This is an election like we have never seen before. What the heck is going on in our country? Four of Santa Fe ’s best astrologers: Jason Holley, Michael Bartlett, Marcia Starck, and Daniel Fiverson, will address this question - each from different perspectives. The talk will look at the current “ state of the union ” and also lo ok ahead to the potentially more dynamic times on the event horizon.
AN ASTROLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Saturday, October 29th, 2016, 2-4 pm $20 advance — $25 door
(505) 428-1527
Santa Fe Community College
Jemez Room (between the Cafeteria and the Book Store)
6401 Richards Ave, Santa Fe, NM 87508 SFREPORTER.COM
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A
s we enter the eighth year of the Santa Fe Independent Film Festival (SFIFF), it’s worth taking a moment to note just how far the annual event has come. Founded by siblings Jacques and Lisette Paisner and their friend David Moore in 2008, SFIFF has grown from a modest yet impressive slate of films to five powerhouse days jampacked with 43 feature-length movies and 70 shorts screened across town at venues like the Jean Cocteau Cinema, Violet Crown, The Screen and more. “We had a really big growth in 2012, which was the first year we had more than 5,000 attendees,” Jacques says, “and then in 2014 and 2015 we had over 10,000, and we’re expecting around the same again.” Attendees can catch anything from lowbudget indies and documentaries to locally produced shorts and exciting features with big-name stars. SFIFF also boasts panels with industry vets, awards ceremonies plus plenty of parties and lots of other fun surprises. Since it would be impossible to see everything SFIFF has to offer, we caught up with the Paisners to get their don’t-miss picks. Visit santafeindependentfilmfestival. com for a full schedule. (Alex De Vore)
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Don’t-miss choices from the fest’s founders
No Light and No Land Anywhere We reviewed this film in this very issue (see page 33), and both Paisners say it’s at the top of their list this year. The story of a young woman attempting to reconnect with her father after her mother dies, No Light comes to us from New Mexico-raised filmmaker Amber Sealey and was produced by Me and You and Everyone We Know scribe Miranda July. Early buzz says it’s a challenging film, but well worth the effort. “We’re super-stoked that [Amber Sealey] is going to be here,” Jacques says.
Jackson
Hotel Dallas
When it comes to abortion laws, the state of Mississippi is so far behind the times it’s horrifying. Jackson is a portrait of the the sole remaining abortion clinic in the state. “It’s really powerful to see what’s happening with women’s health down there,” Lisette tells SFR. “In a lot of cases, what these healthcare providers have to legally tell their patients are lies—it’s really scary, but it’s also a beautiful story.” Director Maisie Crow has worked in pretty much every behind-the-camera position, and her first fulllenth documentary is poised to be one of the most talked-about entries in the fest.
“In Romania in the 1980s, the only TV show that they had was Dallas, and it was used as this propaganda thing to show how evil capitalism is,” Jacques says. “But it totally backfired, and created all these fans of the show and of capitalism and this whole new subculture of young Romanian businessmen who loved the show.” For most Americans, this probably seems laughable, but Hotel Dallas examines the effect of the soap on the European nation’s men who embraced capitalism and the women who wanted desperately to emigrate to America.
My Life as a Film Swiss filmmaker Eva VitijaScheidegger’s father worked as a film and television director, so it’s not entirely surprising that his home movies took a more professional tone than most people’s. “She took all this footage he shot and cut it into a film, and it kind of crescendoes when [Eva] comes to Santa Fe, where her mom lives, to show her this rought cut of the movie,” Jacques says. “They’re like no home movies you’ve ever seen.” My Life as a Film has been showing prominently at film festivals internationally, and we really love the local angle. For most of us, home movies are an embarassing trip down memory lane; for VitijaScheidegger, it’s not only a means of artistic expression, but a creative and meaningful chance to feel connected with her father and their shared career trajectory.
Tempest Storm Say hello to the oldest burlesque performer in the country who, according to the filmmakers, is an American sex icon. Tempest Storm came up in the California Bay Area burlesque scene and reigned in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s, but her line of work didn’t sit well with her family. Through archival footage and interviews, documentarian Nimisha Mukerji captures Tempest Storm looking back over a lifelong career and pondering the ramifications it had on her personal life as well as its effect on her family. “It’s about her redemption later on in her life where she still loves her job, but she’s dealing with the choices she made and trying to reconnect with her family,” Lisette tells SFR. “It’s a great story about a woman.”
Off The Rails Trespass Against Us With reportedly stellar performances from Michael Fassbender (Prometheus) and Brendan Gleeson (In Bruges), Trespass may feature the festival’s most immediately recognizable actors, and both Paisners insist it’s one of the best in this year’s lineup. Directed by British filmmaker Adam Smith (Dr. Who, Skins), we follow a family of Irish mobsters and one man’s attempts to distance himself from their criminal leanings. “It’s about these generations of this crime family in Ireland, and they live in this poor community, and it turns into this cat and mouse game with the police,” Lisette tells us. “It actually turns out to be heartwarming and all about family.”
Darius McCollum is a man living with Asperger’s syndrome, and over the years a fascination with trains has led to more than 30 arrests for impersonating subway and railway conductors, booth clerks and repair workers. In director Adam Irving’s first major cinematic work, we follow McCollum and his incredible story. “Darius McCollum was obsessed with trains from the time he was a little kid, and he applied for a job with New York City transit several times, but they wouldn’t take him,” Jacques tells SFR. “So he keeps on getting arrested, but at some point, it’s realized that at no point has he been offered any kind of counseling. ... It’s a truly fascinating story.”
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COURTEST INTRIGUE GALLERY
THE CALENDAR
“Dissolving Into the Darkness Was Enough For Now” from Pamela Frankel Fiedler’s A Nod to Noir, opening Friday at Intrigue Gallery.
Wednesday
October 19 7 pm
New Mexico Hard Cider Taproom @ Luna Center Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are back for Round Three of the 2016 presidential debates. Chris Wallace, Fox News Sunday anchor, moderates this debate at the University of Nevada. We’ll watch it all unfold on the big screens with hard cider in hand. Offering drink specials, debate bingo and moral support.
SFR DEBATE WATCH PARTY New Mexico Hard Cider Tap Room 505 Cerrillos Road, 231-0632 Join our staff for drink specials, debate bingo and moral support during the third and (thank the Lord) final debate between presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. 8:30 pm, free
MUSIC ALTO ESTILO El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 An acoustic soul roots performance on Santa Fe’s bestknown street. 8:30 pm, free BRANDEN & JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo performs a selection of everything from Bieber to Bach with powerful vocals and a cello. 8 pm, free JOAQUIN GALLEGOS El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 A classical and flamenco guitar solo performance. 7 pm, free RUSSELL JAMES PYLE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Alt.country and folk rock in the venue that lets you have a frozen margarita IN your beer. What more could you want, folks? 8 pm, free
THEATER MACBETH Santa Fe High School 2100 Yucca St., 954-2434 A theatrical presentation of the existential tragedy directed by Ariana Karp is a collaboration between the high school and the International Shakespeare Center. 7:30 pm, $15
WHY THE LONG FACE COMEDY TOUR Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Curt Fletcher headlines the laugh-inducing lineup featuring Matt Peterson, Keith Brekenridge and Eddie Stephens. Laughing is good for your spirit and your abs. 8 pm, $10
THU/20 BOOKS/LECTURES ANNE HAVEN McDONNELL AND KIM PARKO Institute of American Indian Arts 83 Avan Nu Po Road, 424-2300 The two noted authors read from their current works. McDonnell is a faculty member at IAIA and Parko’s monster tales are published under Tarpaulin Sky Press. 4 pm, free NATHANIEL TARN AND JOAN MYERS Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Tarn, a British poet, and Myers, a photographer, talk about their new collaboration The Persephones, which features Tarn's retelling of the ancient Greek myth. 6 pm, free SANTA FE LITERARY REVIEW READING & RECEPTION Santa Fe Community College 6401 Richards Ave., 428-1000 Contributors to the literary review's 2016 edition read from their works. 5 pm, free
DANCE ZUMBA FITNESS AT THE NIGHTCLUB Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Join the booty-shaking for 90 minutes of dancing and fun! It's a party with lots of lights to make everyone feel like J.Lo or Shakira on the dance floor. 6 pm, $10
EVENTS HOUSE OF HALLOWEEN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 An all-ages, family-friendly event brings performers from around the state. 6 pm, $35 MAYOR’S ARTS AWARDS CEREMONY Santa Fe Community Convention Center 201 W Marcy St., 955-6590 The ceremony honors artists who have made remarkable contributions to Santa Fe's arts community. This year, Mayor Javier Gonzales awards Francisco Benitez, Leanne DeVane, Amy Summa, Irene Hofmann, Arlo Namingha and Zeke Farrell, all of whom work with children in the arts. 6 pm, $75 MIXPLEXITY Santa Fe Institute 1399 Hyde Park Road, 984-8800 A hilltop hootenanny invites you to hop on a shuttle at Fort Marcy taking you to the gathering filled with scientists from Los Alamos National Labs and SFI. Casa Nova catering provides bites and mixologists from Jean Cocteau pour concoctions for social lubrication. Get your networking on. 6 pm, $35 THE DIFFERENT FESTIVAL: BENCHWARMERS Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Eight new one-act plays; see Obits by Terry Riley, Improbable Encounter by Ann Bendan and Pigeons by Marguerite Louise Scott, among others. 7:30 pm, $25 SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Various Locations, 470-2411 Showing over 100 films at venues around the city, this festival brings the best independent movies from around the globe. For a list of showtimes, ticket prices and all the juicy details you need, head to santafeindependentfilmfestival. com (see page 20). 5 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 24
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NINA OTTOLINO
It’s Time to Party Andrew WK takes his motivational speaking tour to all 50 states—no joke BY ALEX DE VORE a l e x @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
W
hen Andrew WK released his rock album I Get Wet in 2001, he proved one very important thing about himself: He loves to fucking party, bro. And so it was, and it was good. These days, however, Mr. WK has shifted his focus to motivational speaking engagements and will appear at Meow Wolf to do just that during his 50-state speaking tour, The Power of Partying. He’s got a positive message to share and a drive to change lives. We didn’t know what to make of this, so we called WK up to get some details. SFR: What’s your deal, Andrew WK? Where the hell do you come from? AWK: As you can imagine, I come from the United States of America. I was born in California in a town called Stanford, lived there till I was 4, moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan, until I was 17, and then when I was 18, I moved to New York City. For the most part, off and on, I haven’t really lived anywhere; there’s been a lot of partying and a lot of touring and hotels and short stays in various places. I’ve been on a neverending party mission adventure. Depending on how you look at it, I found that having a traditional home didn’t make the most sense for me. I don’t feel like that’s how I was meant to live. I’ve been a big fan of storage spaces as well as binging and purging material items. For the most part, my focus is on spreading the message of partying and taking it to another level. Pretty much everyone I’ve spoken with about your coming to town has said, “Oh, that dude loves to party!” But there must be more to you than that. I don’t think so. There’s probably a lot less to it. It’s almost less than one dimension. It’s sort of a half dimension, but the beauty of the dimension, like many spatial dimensions, there’s a lot of vastness to it. I wouldn’t say depth, but there’s a primary dimension—you can build a lot on top of that, but you can interpret any other concept through it. It’s the simplest, most direct mindset I can think of. I didn’t invent partying, of course, it’s just a go-to concept communicated as instantly and as readily to how I want to devote my life. It involves your physical body, your heart, your spirit. … It’s a rigorous attempt at making life a good thing. You’ve dabbled in motivational speaking already. What spurred that decision? It was more of an invitation, really. Ten years ago I gave my first lecture at the request of New York Uni-
Andrew WK just wants to talk.
versity, and they specifically asked that I speak about life in general. I thought they’d want me to speak about the music business, but they requested that I not speak about that, but rather life itself or partying itself. To me, they’re synonymous. That was an incredible opportunity for me. People came, we talked for hours, I was very encouraged and more invitations came. I came to realize there were so many people out there who didn’t care for my rock ’n’ roll music or rock in general, but I didn’t want to leave those people out. My transcendent mission is this party perspective [and] music is a great way to access that mission. I myself am just a mechanism. I am a tool, really, to be used to achieve this party sensation. I want to dedicate myself to that mission. To whom do you turn when you need motivation or advice? Everybody. The world. The universe. The universe is so vast. I can’t grasp that size, so I take it back down to the day-to-day surroundings that I can interact with on a more immediate level. I say, “Appreciate the idea of expanding beyond the closeness;” they say, “Think globally, act locally.” I myself am not very advanced in any discipline beyond partying, so I have a lot to learn and to gain. Even within partying, I’m just a humble student who is continuing the legacy of celebration. I think celebration goes back to the first incarnation of man who wanted their lives to have this transcendental meaning beyond survival. Even if you’re just trying to survive, it’s a lot more motivating to do it for a cause. What’s that spark that makes us not want to die? We’re trying to grow, we’re trying to contribute something and we’re trying to celebrate the fact that we’re trying to exist. But since existence can be pain-
ful, we try to find ways to even celebrate that pain. Life, with its dark and light … by its definition has to be a positive thing. Can you give us an idea about what your upcoming show will be like? The Power of Partying is a 50-state lecture tour. I’ve never done a lecture tour before, just one-offs. It’s certainly the first US tour I’ve done where I’ve hit every single state in a two-and-a-half month period. I’ve played or been to every state in one way or another, and this is the first time I’ve performed in every state. It’s about being in a room together [and] hopefully have it still be there the next day. There’s a Q&A, but I’m leaving it as open as I can. … It’s a pep rally for the human spirit. In the talks I’ve done in the past, they were somewhat freeform; this will be a great opportunity for me to hone these skills. Anything you do over and over again, you’re bound to get better, but I’m going to let it evolve or devolve the way it best sees fit. In many ways it’s a great personal risk for me. I wouldn’t be surprised if no one showed up, but I have to follow these opportunities as they arise. I will not quit, that’s the only thing I can guarantee. I like Santa Fe very much. It’s the land of enchantment, and I don’t take that lightly. It’s a meaningful place that I’ve been lucky enough to spend some time in over the years. I’m very excited about the venue. … I hear it’s like the physical manifestation of partying.
ANDREW WK: THE POWER OF PARTYING 7:30 pm Wednesday Oct. 19. $25. Meow Wolf, 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369
SFREPORTER.COM
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OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
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THE CALENDAR LITERACY VOLUNTEERS OF SANTA FE Presents
Reads SANTA FE
READINGS & DISCUSSIONS WITH FOUR NATIONALLY ACCLAIMED AUTHORS
Stanley Crawford, writer and a farmer is the author of several novels and works of nonfiction about Northern New Mexico, including A Garlic Testament, Mayordomo, and a new novel, Village, due out in spring. Crawford has been the recipient of many awards, including two NEA Writing Fellowships. Anne Hillerman, author of Spider Woman’s Daughter and Rock with Wings, won a number of awards and a spot on the NY Times best seller list. She is the founding director of the Tony Hillerman Writers Conference. Her third novel, Song of the Lion, is due out next spring. Jimmy Santiago Baca, poet, author and activist, is perhaps best known for his memoir A Place To Stand for which he won the prestigious International Award. He is also the recipient of the Pushcart Prize, the American Book Award and the International Hispanic Heritage Award. Hampton Sides, best-selling author of Ghost Soldiers, Blood and Thunder, and In the Kingdom of Ice, is also editor-at-large at Outside magazine. The 2015 Miller Distinguished Scholar at the Santa Fe Institute, he teaches at Colorado College and is currently at work on a book about the Korean War. The panel will be moderated by broadcast journalist Bill Dupuy, recently retired KSFR’s news director and a Literacy Volunteer tutor. Discussions will focus on the importance of literacy with panelists sharing their personal stories of inspiration and creativity.
Autographed authors' books will be available for purchase through Collected Works Bookstore, with a portion of proceeds donated to LVSF.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30 AT 2 PM JAMES A LITTLE THEATER 1060 Cerrillos Road in Santa Fe Tickets $20 / At Tickets Santa Fe tickets.ticketssantafe.org or 505.988.1234 In person at the Lensic Box Office 211 West San Francisco Street Remaining tickets available at the door www.lvsf.org
MUSIC BRANDEN & JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The duo performs everything from Bieber to Bach. 8 pm, free JOHN RANGEL DUET SERIES El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Rangel plays jazz piano and a special guest performer joins him. 7 pm, free LATIN NIGHT Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 DJ Dany dazzles with a repertoire of Latin-influenced electronica. 9 pm, $7 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Evangelo's 200 W San Francisco St., 982-9014 Rock 'n' roll. 9 pm, $5 MOSE MCORMACK Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A solo set of Americana tunes. 8 pm, free REBECCA ARSCOTT Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Arscott performs a fusion of reggae and soul alongside her backing band One Heart Fyah. 10 pm, free
THEATER MACBETH Santa Fe High School 2100 Yucca St., 954-2434 A theatrical presentation of the existential tragedy directed by Ariana Karp is a collaboration between the high school and the International Shakespeare Center. 7:30 pm, $15 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater in its examination of America. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway (see SFR Picks, page 17). 7:30 pm, $20
FRI/21 ART OPENINGS JOHN TARAHTEEFF: THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY Nüart Gallery 670 Canyon Road, 988-3888 Tarahteeff is known for his figurative acrylic paintings. The works in this exhibit explore yearning. Through Nov. 6. 5 pm, free PAMELA FRANKEL FIEDLER: A NOD TO NOIR Intrigue Gallery 238 Delgado St., 820-9265 Frankel Fiedler's figurative paintings are inspired by the look and effects used in film noir. Through Nov. 18 (see 3 Questions, page 27). 5 pm, free
REMEMBERING JACK SINCLAIR Back Street Bistro 513 Camino de los Marquez, 982-3500 An exhibit celebrating the late artist who is known for his paintings of trucks, landscapes and airport scenes. Through Dec. 2. 5:30 pm, free THE PEOPLE'S POTTERY Poeh Cultural Center and Museum 78 Cities of Gold Road, 455-3334 The exhibit celebrates the return of nine pots from the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of the American Indian collection. The evening features dances from the local Tewa Pueblos and a limited edition art showcase (see A&C, page 29). 2 pm, free LINDSAY PAYTON: IT CAME FROM UPSTAIRS Back Road Pizza 1807 Second St., 955-9055 Feel the season with horrorthemed pop art in It Came From Upstairs (see SFR Picks, page 17). 5 pm, free THE SANTA FE ART PROJECT PART III David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 The third part of the eightweek series that focuses on local artists with innovative techniques brings works by Erik Gellert, Caity Kennedy, Ryan Robertson and more. The work represents a variety of mediums, from sculpture to painting. Through Nov. 6. 5 pm, free THE SANTA FE ART PROJECT: GUEST CURATORS CROCKETT BODELSON AND SANDRA WANG OF SCUBA David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 The guest curators present a collection of art produced by artists in living Santa Fe. See work by Andrew Cimelli, Derek Chan, Parker Jennings and more. Through Nov. 6. 5 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES DAVID DE VAUX Georgia 225 Johnson St., 989-4367 De Vaux reads from Cassowary Hill in celebration of its launch. The reading is accompanied by European gypsy jazz from Daniele Spadavecchia, with a discussion and book signing to follow. Enjoy hors d’oeuvres by chef Leroy Alvarado, with a full range of beverages. 6 pm, free
EVENTS HOUSE OF HALLOWEEN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 An all-ages, family-friendly event brings performers from around the state for three hours of crazy dance, music and art performances. 6 pm, $35
LOOK WHERE WE LIVE AUCTION Santa Fe Woman's Club 1616 Old Pecos Trail, 983-9455 An auction sponsored by the National New Deal Preservation Association, benefits its sponsor and the National Park Service. Bid on a selection of artworks inspired by and created in national parks. 5 pm, $20 PAPER TRADE FAIR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Vendors sell tools, supplies and crafts related to fine art paper, print and book arts. 10 am, free SANTA FE COMIC CON Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Meet superheroes and villains alike at the gathering of comic-related characters and actors who have starred in some of your favorite superhero movies and TV shows. Meet and greet Garret Wang, Kevin Sorbo, Ellen Hollman and more. And don't forget to wear your favorite character costume! 4 pm, $20 SANTA FE DESERT CHORALE BENEFIT Reflective Images Jewelry 912 Baca St., 988-7393 Enjoy performances by mezzosoprano Kerry Ginger, tenor Erik Gustafson and pianist Nathan Salazar at the sale benefiting the chorale group. 5:30 pm, free SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Various Locations, 470-2411 Showing over 100 films at venues around the city, this festival—in its eigth year— brings the best independent movies from around the globe to the City Different. For a full list of showtimes, ticket prices, and all the details, head to santafeindependentfilmfestival. com (see page 20). 5 pm, free
FILM MOVIE NIGHT Warehouse 21 1614 Paseo de Peralta, 989-4423 A presentation of two films, Tesla the Zenith Factor and How Well We Meant, both by the late Santa Fean Sky Fabin. 7 pm, $10
MUSIC BRANDEN & JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo performs a selection of everything from Bieber to Bach with powerful vocals and a cello. 8 pm, free BREAST HEALTH APPRECIATION EVENT Wise Fool New Mexico 1131 Siler Road. Suite B, 992-2588 Celebrating breast health with music by DJ Erin E Burlesque performances, food trucks, and informational booths. 6-9 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 26
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SFREPORTER.COM
Lo Que es Viejo es Nuevo
(Old-school, meet new-school)
IL LUSTRATI O N S AN D STO RY BY A MY DAV I S
T
he creamy early morning sunshine was dripping off the flossy Santa Fe clouds and drenching the adobes with a glow so ethereal and unbelievable that I knew it was time to stretch and carpe diem, baby. I put on a plum pout and my koo-koo knitted, milk-hued Devo-esque cap and headed over for a splish-splash of joe and some inspiration, ‘cause hey—Downtown Subscription (376 Garcia St., 9833085) always has French fashion mag L’Officiel. L’Officiel is the crack of the style set. It’s all of the fashion collections from Spring/Summer 2017. Choose either Paris/NYC or Milan/London; no ads, unedited, no trendy editors picking through and telling us what is cool—just your own eyes and opinions, your own yay or nay. L’Officiel runs about $35 and is worth every penny. You will never need to swim through a plethora of musty, murky, yucky ads like in Vogue or Harper’s Bazaar or even Jalouse. But on this bright autumn morning the collections were nowhere in sight. I gasped. My tummy wiggled in a nervous jitterbug. As I placed my order for a triple Americano (I needed the extra jolt to help with the grieving process), my barista (sweet-as-pie Nicholas Valdez) complimented my goofy choice of millinery and added: “My Grandmother makes knitted hats up in Los Ojos at Tierra Wools.” Apparently she even created the felted look of the woolen chapeaus. Nicholas recalled when Grandma Olivia Valdez popped a knitted cap into the washing machine eons ago and, voila—it fused together and
created a singular and much warmer piece. Mistakes = Brilliance. Just ask Alexander Fleming (penicillin anyone?). Tierra Wools (handweavers.com) is the real deal. They create incredible blankets all from their own organic sheep (of Rambioullet and Navajo-Churro breeds) and have classes on spinning, weaving and dyeing. The original Rio Grande tradition is carried on here with great respect and honor. It is living history. The wool is hand-dyed and the colors glow in an incandescent, Maxfield Parrish-esque simmering light, deep and alive. So I veered from my original Spring/Summer 2017 story to focus on what we have in our own high desert backyard a la Candide. I love shifting, turning and changing my direction; wandering down crimson vine-draped alleys, stumbling upon anything and everything. Letting Santa Fe enchant me. And that’s just what I did. I decided that it was time for a light nosh Hand-dyed wool hat by Olivia Valdez for Tierra Wools; “Hecho” tee by Nuevo Cerveza/Bloody Maria; Zia necklace by Lauren Ivy.
of green chile cheeseburger with fries and a side of toasted marshmallow sauce. The salty, hot fries and the gooey, sugary situation is quite luscious on the taste buds. I mean, a girl’s gotta keep her figure! The Burger Stand at Burro Alley (207 W San Francisco St., 989-3360) is the mucho-needed epicurean hipster burger joint (plus craft beers) off the Plaza. They also have some of the raddest Santa Fe streetwear and, let’s face it, you need the balance of viejo-skool y nuevo-skool. From their T-shirts complete with the state outline of New Mexico with the word “Hecho” plunked down in the center to their colorful zia-emblazoned caps, the merchandise is designed by Nueva Cerveza/Bloody Maria and is sickhip and dare I say slick. Owner Bobby Joe Grubb then cued me in that he’s about to open Nuevo HQ, a foodie collaboration with local businesspeople Marcos Aragon, Malisa Braselle and Tait Fletcher. Its location at 411 W Water St. will have even more fab style morsels plus local beer and wine and—wait for it—Caveman Coffee. My appetite was sated but my style sensors wanted some yummy dessert (ie accessories). So boom-bang-bing, I popped my knitted noggin into Vida Loca Gallery (203 W San Francisco St., 988-7410) and spied some day-glo Zia acrylic necklaces that are minimalist yet still punch up your look. Created by local artist Lauren Ivy, they are the perfect gloss for your ensemble. I also remember meeting another genius artist, Kit Evans, who has created a tote bag for his Christopher Merlyn imprint featuring the right postmodern twist with a play on the state outline of NM with the word “Entrapment” emblazoned over the enchanted square in fifties script. Again, graphically brilliant with just the right amount of wink-wink nudge-nudge irony, it’s very Marfa, very Ojai, very nouveau-Catskills. So there you go. The 80/20 rule. When your mind is set on one thing but the effort is taking 80 percent outta your life, switcharoo it up to that sweet and easy 20 percent. We are indeed lucky to live in a place with oodles of history as well as up-to-date streetwear. The style in New Mexico is as swift, dynamic and mutable as the weather, and that’s pretty darn fabulous.
SPECIAL FREE CLASS – TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 7:00 PM
Learn 3 Secrets to Creating Positive Change and How to Earn National Certification in Hypnotherapy For more information call
505-767-8030
Next Hypnotherapy Certification Course Begins January 30, 2017 HYPNOTHERAPY ACADEMY OF AMERICA www.hypnotherapyacademy.com • 505-767-8030 SFREPORTER.COM
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OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
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THE CALENDAR
Waiting to pay for my groceries at the market this evening, this guy, stinking of booze, says to my 9-year-old daughter, “Sweetheart, can you put the divider thing there for me?” First, why is some leering grown man calling my child “sweetheart”? He then thumps two huge bottles of vodka down on the belt. I move closer to my daughter; he then reaches his hand over me and wraps his hand around her arm, saying, “Now, you be nice to your Mommy, sweetie.” I pluck his hand off. “Do not touch my child,” I say. My other hand is pressed against my daughter’s ribs, and I can feel her heart POUNDING. “You have a beautiful daughter,” he says. The cashier, whom we know, a guy, looks at me, eyebrows up. I roll my eyes. So pissed. We leave. “I hated that man,” my daughter says once we get in the car. “He smelled bad, I wanted to hit him, if anyone ever does that to me again I’m going to scream.” Here we effing go: “Sometimes you have to be hypervigilant,” I tell my daughter, “because some gross men out there feel they are entitled to touch us.” And then I share my story: “When I was a little girl…” I don’t even remember the first time it happened to me. I don’t remember the last time some pervert rubbed up against me. But that’s what you have to deal with when you are a girl. We have to learn to brush this shit off, to make sure that this endless assault course of predators doesn’t take one bit of your pride, your confidence, or your sense of peace as you walk through this world. I am so angry. We should call this the “Trump Talk.” The depressing conversation that every parent needs to have with their little girl about revolting, predatory, entitled men. The Trump Talk. -Mother And Daughter Discuss Enraging Realities I’m sorry about what happened to your daughter at the grocery store—I’m sorry about what was done to your daughter by that entitled asshole at the grocery store—but I’m glad you were there with her when it happened. The author Kelly Oxford, in response to Donald Trump’s horrific comments about sexually assaulting women, called on women to tweet about their first assaults under the hashtag #notokay. Oxford’s post went viral—more than a million women responded—and reading through the seemingly endless thread, I was struck by how many women were alone the first time they were assaulted. Oxford herself was alone the first time it happened to her: “Old man on a city bus grabs my ‘pussy’ and smiles at me. I’m 12.” A lot of women I know, including some very close friends, were your daughter’s age the first time it happened to them, MADDER, but they were alone. Tragically, many assumed that they had done something wrong, that they had invited this on themselves somehow, and most didn’t go to their parents for fear of getting into trouble. And when it inevitably happened again, some became convinced they were indeed to blame, that they were bringing this on themselves somehow, because they thought it wasn’t happening to anyone else, just them. So thank God you were there with your daughter, MADDER, there to pull that asshole’s hand off of her, there to protect her from worse, and there to help her process the experience. And in that car ride home you inoculated your daughter with your message (you are a human being and you have a right to move through this world unmolested) before gross predators could infect her with theirs (you are only an object and we have a right to touch you). I want to live in a world where this sort of thing doesn’t happen to anyone’s daughter, MADDER, but until we do: Every little girl should be so lucky as to have a trusted adult standing by ready to intervene when it does happen. I only wish the grocery
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store clerk had intervened, too. Regarding your suggestion, MADDER, I’ve received roughly 10 million emails begging me to do for Donald Trump what I did for Rick Santorum: My readers and I redefined santorum (“the frothy mixture of lube and fecal matter that is sometimes the byproduct of anal sex”) and some wanted us to do the same for Trump. People even sent in suggestions: trump is the streak of shit a large turd sometimes leaves on the bottom of the toilet bowl; trump is the snot that sometimes runs out of your nose when you’re giving a blowjob; a trump is a guy so hopelessly inept in bed that no woman (or man) wants him, no matter how rich he is. The suggested new meanings all struck me as trivial and snarky—and I don’t think there’s anything trivial about the racism, sexism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism, and violence that Trump has mainstreamed and normalized, and I’m not inclined to snark about it. And, besides, “trump” already has a slang meaning: It means “to fart audibly” in Great Britain—and that definition is already in the Oxford English Dictionary. And it frankly didn’t seem possible to make Donald Trump’s name any more revolting than he already has. If I may paraphrase the amazing letter the New York Times sent to Trump after he demanded they retract a story about the women he’s assaulted: Nothing I could say in my sex column could even slightly elevate the feelings of disgust decent people experience whenever they hear his name. Mr. Trump, through his own words and actions, has already redefined his last name. But then your e-mail arrived, MADDER, and I set aside the column I was already working on to rush your idea into print. Because your suggestion—that parents call the conversation they need to have with their daughters about predatory and entitled men the “Trump Talk”— is just as fitting and apt as the “frothy mixture” definition of santorum. It’s not trivial and it’s not snarky. It has gravitas, MADDER, and here’s hoping “Trump Talk” isn’t just widely adopted, but universally practiced. Because no little girl who gets groped on a bus or in a grocery store or on a subway or in a classroom should ever have to wonder if she did something wrong. Big fan, longtime reader and listener, and I need your help. How in the hell can a bipartisan relationship survive this election? Things have gotten so heated that my husband and I recently exploded in an ugly argument. I know I’m not fighting fair—calling him stupid and irresponsible for supporting Trump—and I’m being a shitty partner, and he’s being shitty in response by spouting Clinton conspiracy theories. A huge part of it is that he’s someone who lives to disagree—a true contrarian—and our current political environment has been like manna from heaven for his sense of humor. What advice do you have? We’ve been together for ages and have survived other elections and issues. But, as you know, this one’s different. -Struggling After Debate Unlike your husband, SAD, I don’t think there’s anything funny about Donald Trump. I’m going to enjoy watching him lose the election, and I’m going to enjoy watching his hotels and golf courses go out of business one by one, but our politics and public life have been sickened by the poison that is Donald Trump. It’s going to take years for us to recover, SAD, and I just don’t see the humor in it. And personally, SAD, I wouldn’t be able to climb into bed with someone who was planning to vote for Donald Trump. I would be out the door. But if you can’t leave because you love him despite his moral and political bankruptcy, or because leaving isn’t an option for you financially, avoid the subject for the next three weeks, don’t take whatever bait your husband throws out, and try not to gloat too much when Hillary hands Donald his ass on November 8. On the Lovecast, Dan chats with a law professor about advanced sexual directives: savagelovecast.com
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CALIFORNIA REDWOOD CHORALE & SFUAD UNIVERSITY CHORUS San Miguel Chapel 401 Old Santa Fe Trail, 983-3974 The touring vocalists are joined by the local college ensemble, directed by Steven Paxton and accompanied by Melanie Monsieur, as they perform a classical repertoire of vocally impressive compositions. 7 pm, free CONTROLLED BURN El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 A rockin' and rollin' performance by a local ensemble. 8:30 pm, $5 DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes bound to strike your fancy if you're one of those Broadway-lovers. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery rocks his residential piano-playing spot. 6:30 pm, free GLITTER! A QUEER WOMAN'S DANCE PARTY Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 Dance and be proud at this gay fiesta where you can, and should, bust your best moves. 8 pm, $10 LITTLE LEROY AND HIS PACK OF LIES Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Rock 'n' roll with Leroy and his pack in celebration of Little Leroy's birthday! 8:30 pm, $5 PINK FREUD AND LET IT GROW The Bridge @ SF Brewing Co. 37 Fire Place, 424-3333 Pink Freud blows your mind with a brain-bending experience of innovative, psychedelic sights and sounds as they cover the greatest Pink Floyd hits. Let It Grow follows with faithful recreations of the improvisational music and community the Grateful Dead is known for. 6-10 pm, $10 UNA NOTA DE LORCA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Enjoy flamenco music by the famed Chuscales with a program of poetry and dance, all inspired by Federico García Lorca in commemoration of the 80th anniversary of his death. 7:30 pm, $25 VANILLA POP Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave, 428-0690 You know you love those super-sexy cover jams done like some kind of goddamned 1980s pop explosion. Swish! 10 pm, $10
THEATER THE CHAMPAGNE CHRONICLES Engine House Theater 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 438-4418 The annual play series, Joe West’s Theater of Death, brings short tales which surround a theme, and this year it’s everyone's favorite celebratory libation—Champagne. The subject matter spans comedy, insanity and horror so you may be in for a few entertaining surprises. 8 pm, $20 THE DIFFERENT FESTIVAL: THE TWO LOBBYISTS OF VERONA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Set in Verona, Kentucky, the play tells the story of a small town reeling from a natural disaster, and the silver lining they find in the dirt. Written by Diana Grisanti and Steve Moulds. 7:30 pm, $25 MACBETH Santa Fe High School 2100 Yucca St., 954-2434 A theatrical presentation of the existential tragedy directed by Ariana Karp is a collaboration between the high school and the International Shakespeare Center. 7:30 pm, $15 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater, which explores America. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. 7:30 pm, $20
SAT/22 ART OPENINGS THE PEOPLE’S POTTERY Poeh Cultural Center and Museum 78 Cities of Gold Road, 455-3334 The exhibit celebrates the return of nine pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection with a gathering of Pueblo potters (see A&C, page 29). 9:30 am-4 pm, free
BOOKS/LECTURES DIANE STANLEY Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Stanley presents her illustrated biography of Ada Lovelace, who is known as the first computer programmer. 3 pm, free MUSIC, MOVEMENT AND STORIES Beehive Kids Books 328 Montezuma Ave., 780-8051 Ingrid and Eric read interactive stories that get the kiddos up and moving to tire them out for nap time. 11:30 am, free
SCUBA PANEL DISCUSSION David Richard Gallery 1570 Pacheco St., 983-9555 The guest curators from the Santa Fe Art Project speak about their curation process. 3 pm, free
DANCE FLAMENCO DINNER SHOW El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Grab a glass of Spanish wine and enjoy flamenco footwork. 6:30 pm, $25
EVENTS HOUSE OF HALLOWEEN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 An all-ages, family-friendly event brings performers from around the state. 6 pm, $35 HUNT FOR RED ROCKTOBER DeVargas Park 302 W DeVargas St. The Santa Fe Watershed Association hosts a community river clean up that challenges volunteers to look for particular red rocks hidden in the river bed. 10 am, free OJOS Y MANOS: EYES AND HANDS Santa Fe Botanical Garden 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 The latest addition to the garden is a living exhibit featuring native plants that bring adults and children alike into the agricultural experience of Native Americans and early settlers. The opening celebration includes live flamenco and mariachi performances, Native American dances and storytelling (see SFR Picks, page 17). 11:30 am, free PAPER TRADE FAIR New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Vendors sell tools, supplies and crafts related to fine art paper, print and book arts. 10 am, free SANTA FE COMIC CON Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Meet superheroes and villains alike at the gathering of comic-related characters and actors who have starred in some of your favorite movies and TV shows. Meet and greet Garret Wang, Kevin Sorbo, Ellen Hollman and more. And don't forget to wear your character costume! 10 am, $20 SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Various Locations, 470-2411 Showing over 100 films at venues around the city, this festival—in its eighth year— brings the best independent movies from around the globe to the City Different. For a full list of showtimes, ticket prices and juicy details, head to santafeindependentfilmfestival. com (see page 20). 5 pm, free
THE CALENDAR FOOD SALSA FESTIVAL El Camino Real Academy 2500 S Meadows Road, 467-1300 Restaurants battle for the most important title: best salsa. Proceeds benefit the elementary school. 11 pm, $5
with Pamela Frankel Fiedler
ANNA ROSE Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 Rose is rock ‘n' roll. Raw and unfiltered only begins to describe the petite blonde’s person. 10 pm, free BRANDEN & JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 The resident duo performs a selection of everything from Bieber to Bach with powerful vocals and a cello. 8 pm, free DAVID GEIST Pranzo Italian Grill 540 Montezuma Ave., 984-2645 Geist plays a selection of Broadway tunes bound to strike your fancy. 6 pm, $2 DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Billy Joel’s song “Piano Man” is about a guy like Montgomery. 6:30 pm, free GREG BUTERA AND THE GUNSELS Palace Saloon 142 W Palace Ave, 428-0690 Cajun honky-tonk and Americana performed by Butera and his band of brothers. 10 pm, $5 KITTY JO CREEK Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Spend your afternoon listening to bluegrass, honky-tonk and jazz performed by these cats. 1 pm, free PAT MALONE El Mesón 213 Washington Ave., 983-6756 Jazz guitar by Malone. 7 pm, free SITA JAMIESON CADDLE: BRILLIANCE CD RELEASE Railyard Performance Center 1611 Paseo de Peralta, 982-8309 The devotional kirtan singer celebrates the release and performs selections from her second full-length album titled Brilliance. 7:30 pm, $15 SO SOPHISTICATED WITH DJ 12 TRIBE Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 So-phisticated they play the top 40 hip-hop and pop hits from today’s radio selection. 9 pm, $7 THE BOOMROOTS COLLECTIVE El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Roots, rock, reggae. 8:30 pm, $5
ROBERT FIEDLER
MUSIC
Artist Pamela Frankel Fiedler creates semi-nude, mostly black and white figure paintings that approach photo-realism (see one on page 22); a woman pulling at a delicate lace wedgie or another curled up in a papasan in her babydoll nightwear sensually exposing thick thighs. Frankel Fiedler is a body-positive artist and her upcoming show at Intrigue Gallery (5 pm Friday Oct. 21. Free. 238 Delgado St., 820-9265) serves as a rumination on the theme of confidence. (Maria Egolf-Romero) What is the inspiration behind A Nod to Noir? The inspiration is the easiest thing to talk about because [film noir is] an ongoing thing I’ve been intrigued with. It’s not so much about the plot or the dialogue, because a lot of it doesn’t really hold up through time, but it’s the visual attributes that I think are the stand-out, the main character, the star. So, how that directly relates to my work is that as a strong proponent for women I love, the femme fatale type of themes that are ongoing in those films. The shadowy sexuality. My work is very sensuous and also has an edgy, tough, cynical undertone. Do you use live models for your work? I hire models and take photographs. Sometimes I use photoshop to play with the lighting and contrast. I prefer to use my own photography versus a live model because some of the poses would be very difficult to hold over a long period of time. What do you hope to communicate to the people who come to see your show? One of my voices that is continuing in my work is to talk about how women in particular, but also men, are beautiful of all ages and body types. We should be more self-assured and confident in our sexuality and able to express it. That’s what I hope people would walk away with, knowing that it’s okay to express that.
UNA NOTA DE LORCA Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Enjoy a skilled program of flamenco music performed by the famed guitarist Chuscales followed by a selection of poetry and dance, inspired by Federico García Lorca in commemoration of the 80th anniversary of his death. 7:30 pm, $25
THEATER
THE CHAMPAGNE CHRONICLES Engine House Theater 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 438-4418 The annual play series, Joe West’s Theater of Death, brings short tales which surround a theme, and this year it’s everyone’s favorite celebratory libation—Champagne. Expect surprises and entertainment. 3 pm, $20
THE DIFFERENT FESTIVAL: THE TWO LOBBYISTS OF VERONA Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Set in Verona, Kentucky, the play tells the story of a small town reeling from a natural disaster. Written by Diana Grisanti and Steve Moulds. 2 pm, $25 THE DIFFERENT READINGS: MUSIC BETWEEN US Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Playwrights read from their new works in this series and this time around it’s Tal Rayman’s turn. 7:30 pm, $15 JEWEL BOX CABARET Skylight Santa Fe 139 W San Francisco St., 982-0775 A Halloween-themed edition of the burlesque comedy show titled “Hell on Heels.” 7 pm, $15
Hungry? SFR’s annual Restaurant Guide publishes Nov. 2. Did your favorite eatery make it into our Top 10 or 25 Best lists? Pick up a copy and find out!
Chocolate Maven
The authority on local eats.
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
SFREPORTER.COM
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OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
27
A Shakespeare
Masquerade Ball at the
Santa Fe Scottish Rite Temple
Saturday October 29th, 2016
7pm-10pm A magical cocktail party with music by Max and the Max Pack band, delicious food, tempting drinks, raffle tickets for outstanding prizes, and performers from the Upstart Crows.
Come in costume!
Phone: (505) 982-4414 Tickets available at www.eventbrite.com
JOE WEST PRESENTS
THEATERChapterOFIV DEATH THE
CHAMPAGNE CHRONICLES
THE CALENDAR MACBETH Santa Fe High School 2100 Yucca St., 954-2434 This presentation of the classic Shakespearean existential tragedy directed by Ariana Karp is a collaboration with the International Shakespeare Center. 7:30 pm, $15 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater. It explores America, where we are today and where we are headed in the future. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. 7:30 pm, $20
SUN/23 BOOKS/LECTURES ARISTOTLE ON JUSTICE AND THE INJUSTICE OF EACH REGIME St. John's College 1160 Camino Cruz Blanca, 684-6000 Allison Levy leads the twohour discussion on justice in the terms of Aristotle. 1 pm, $35 ELAINE PINKERTON Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St., 988-4226 Pinkerton presents the new edition of her book, Santa Fe On Foot-Exploring the City Different and discusses it with local author Peggy Bechko. 3 pm, free JOURNEYSANTAFE: REPORTING IN THE NEW MEDIA AGE Collected Works Bookstore and Coffeehouse 202 Galisteo St. , 988-4226 New Mexico Political Report journalists Joey Peters and Andy Lyman and editor Matthew Reichbach talk about the recent legislative special session with hosts Alan Webber and Bill Dupuy. 11 am, free LEW WATTS: MARCEL MALONE Teatro Paraguas 3205 Calle Marie, 424-1601 Watts reads from his newest novel, which is an odyssey of personal transformation that follows Marcel Malone on his path to recovery. 5 pm, free
EVENTS
The Engine House Theatre Madrid, New Mexico
8 pm Show 3 pm Matinees • joewestmusic.com Tickets: The Mine Shaft Tavern, The Lensic Box Office or ticketssantafe.org 28
OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
HOUSE OF HALLOWEEN Meow Wolf 1352 Rufina Circle, 395-6369 An all-ages, family-friendly event brings performers from around the state for three hours of crazy dance, music and art performances. 6 pm, $35 RAILYARD ARTISAN MARKET Farmers Market Pavilion 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 983-7726 Peruse the weekly market filled with artworks in many mediums, all made by locals. 10 am-4 pm, free
SANTA FE COMIC CON Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino 30 Buffalo Thunder Trail, 455-5555 Meet superheroes and villains alike at the gathering of comic-related characters and actors who have starred in some of your favorite superhero movies and TV shows. Meet and greet Garret Wang, Kevin Sorbo, Ellen Hollman and more. 10 am, $20 THE DIFFERENT FESTIVAL: BENCHWARMERS Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Presenting eight new oneact plays. See Obits by Terry Riley, Improbable Encounter by Ann Bendan and Pigeons by Marguerite Louise Scott, among others. 2 pm, $25 SANTA FE INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL Various Locations, 470-2411 Showing over 100 films at venues around the city, this festival brings the best independent movies from around the globe. For a list of showtimes and prices head to santafeindependentfilmfestival. com (see page 20). 5 pm, free
MUSIC 2ND ANNUAL OKTOBERFEST KRAWL & SELFIE KONTEST Second Street Brewery (Railyard) 1607 Paseo de Peralta, 989-3278 Partizani Brass Band leads the second annual Oktoberfest Krawl, which starts at Second Street Brewery in the Railyard and continues to the New Mexico Hard Cider Tap Room and Cowgirl. Participate in the selfie contest and win a great prize at the end of the event. 3 pm, free CHRIS ABEYTA El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 The singer-songwriter performs his originals live. 7 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery and his keyrockin’ skills impress. 6:30 pm, free GARY PAUL Upper Crust Pizza 329 Old Santa Fe Trail, 982-0000 Winner and three-time New Mexico Music award nominee Paul returns with his enchanting narrative story songs. 6 pm, free SERENATA OF SANTA FE: OPEN ROADS First Presbyterian Church 208 Grant Ave., 982-8544 Enjoy the chamber music of Prokofiev and Piazzolla by Ruxandra Marquardt, David Helberg, Debra Ayers and more. 3 pm, $15
THE SANTA FE REVUE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 A great cover band that will most likely play one of your all-time favorites from the rock genre. Noon, free
THEATER THE CHAMPAGNE CHRONICLES Engine House Theater 2846 Hwy. 14, Madrid, 438-4418 The annual play series, Joe West’s Theater of Death, brings short tales which surround a theme, and this year it’s everyone's favorite celebratory libation—Champagne. 3 pm, $20 THE DIFFERENT READINGS: ISLAND BLUE Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Brent Askari participates in the playwrights' reading series with his newest work about a man who discovers a crime on a small island. 7:30 pm, $15 THE DIFFERENT READINGS: MUSIC BETWEEN US Santa Fe Playhouse 142 E De Vargas St., 988-4262 Playwrights read from their new works in this series, and this time around it’s Tal Rayman's turn. 7:30 pm, $15 WINNING THE FUTURE Adobe Rose Theatre 1213 B Parkway Drive, 629-8688 Up & Down Theater Company presents a story that is part satire, part comedy and part musical theater. It explores America, where we are and where we are headed. Written by and starring Kate Chavez, Lindsey Hope Pearlman and Robin Holloway. 3 pm, $20
MON/24 EVENTS GEEKS WHO DRINK Draft Station 60 E San Francisco St., 983-6443 Stop by this downtown spot that has all the local brews your heart desires to measure your knowledge of useless trivia against others'. 5 pm, free
MUSIC COWGIRL KARAOKE WITH MICHÉLE Cowgirl 319 S Guadalupe St., 982-2565 Michéle Leidig hosts this night of amateurish fun. 9 pm, free DJ OBI ZEN Boxcar 530 S Guadalupe St., 988-7222 This guy mixes live percussion into his electronica set, making for a mix of instrument and machine that's real nice. 10 pm, free DOUG MONTGOMERY Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 Montgomery does it again— his key-rockin’ piano playing. 6:30 pm, free CONTINUED ON PAGE 30
The People’s Pottery Smithsonian teams up with Poeh Cultural Center for homecoming and renewed study
T
BY JA S O N ST RY KOWS K I
ERN
hree years ago, Native art scholar Bruce Bernstein had an epiphany while looking at an antique picture. The image from July 25, 1903, struck the tribal historic preservation officer at the Pueblo of Pojoaque as significant. “There were 12 large vessels, or pieces of pottery, in front of three men. One of those men was the governor of the Pueblo at that time, Antonio Tapia Montoya. The other man that we know was George Pepper. And Pepper was an anthropologist sent out here by the American Museum of National History to collect. So, I’ve been searching the country for those 12 pots,” he tells SFR. The investigation led him across the US and finally to an idea that became In T’owa Vi Sae’we (The People’s Pottery), an exhibit at the Pueblo of Pojoaque’s Poeh Cultural Center opening Friday. Bernstein followed a clear trail of breadcrumbs from Pepper’s pots to university libraries and to the Smithsonian Institution. He never meant to reclaim the pottery, as it had all been legally purchased; but there could be a lesson in the finding of them. Better yet, the ceramics themselves could have something to teach and make a necessary addition to the center, an entity founded in 1988 with the goal of preserving Tewa arts and culture. Scholars say that in the late 19th century, Pueblo pottery changed to fit the needs of a growing commercial market. Tourists arrived with an insatiable need for curios and the specter of economic recessions and local drought made the sale of pottery appealing for the people of the Rio Grande. Then Native peoples changed the look and texture of their current works to meet the needs of collectors who demanded differentiated styles from regions that outsiders branded as distinct. Perhaps in
recovering both historic and ancient pots from collections in the East, something of these faded memories could be recovered. Along with Karl Duncan, executive director of the Poeh Center, Bernstein approached the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) in Washington, DC (a wing of the Smithsonian Institution), to form a partnership and an exchange of ideas and artifacts. Pojoaque would send consultants to the East and the Smithsonian would reciprocate by sending pottery to the West. Poeh also had a helpful counterpart in the assistant director for collections for the National Museum of the American Indian, Cynthia Chavez Lamar, who was born in New Mexico and raised at San Felipe
E ST
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Pueblo. The two organizations made a multi-phased arrangement that Duncan says could make real impacts on the state of Native American art. “They provided us with training for our staff on conservation and collection care,” says Duncan. “They’re receiving from us the traditional and culturally appropriate ways of collection care.” The NMAI will loan nine Pojoaque-made ceramics back to the Poeh Center on a long-term basis. “Everything ranges from before 1930 to, if we go into their historical collection, 400 AD. So these are pots that came from the villages that don’t exist any more,” says Duncan. “Some of the styles and the knowledge that’s in the those pots have been [nearly] lost—few people know them.” Next year, the Poeh Center expects to receive many more pieces from the Smithsonian. The works will live in a controlled gallery just to the right of the center’s public entrance. Under safekeeping, they’ll be viewable for the general public, but they will be accessible by hand for Pueblo artists. “People can study, talk about it, tell stories about it. Look at the symbols that were used so they can learn from that. We also will provide access to other tribes,” he says. During his research, Bernstein ultimately located nine of the 12 pots with which Pepper posed in the picture over a century ago. While the exhibit at the Poeh Center won’t feature the same nine pots, Bernstein had, nonetheless, found missing members of the Pojoaque community. “When the pots come back, prayers will be said and they’ll pretty much be welcomed home,” says Duncan. The opening of the exhibit will be marked with two days of events. On Oct. 21, the Center plans a public reception featuring demonstrations by local artists followed by a fundraiser dinner and silent auction (RSVPs requested). The next day, local potters form panels to discuss the state and future of Native ceramics and survival despite contemporary challenges, and the public is invited for refreshmets and Native dances.
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IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE (THE PEOPLE’S POTTERY) Opening Reception: 2-6 pm Friday Oct. 21. Free. Welcome Home Feast: 6-8 pm Friday, Oct. 21. $20 Pueblo Potters Gathering: 9:30 am-4 pm Saturday,Oct. 22. Free Poeh Cultural Center, 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque 455-5041
SPECIALIZING IN:
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3909 ACADEMY RD.
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3909 Academy Rd. 473-3001 Factory Trained Technicians SFREPORTER.COM
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OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
29
THE CALENDAR Serving Students in Preschool - Sixth Grade
BOOKS/LECTURES
PICTURE YOUR CHILD
INFORMATION FOR START-UPS Santa Fe Public Library Main Branch 145 Washington Ave., 955-6780 Representatives of the Santa Fe Business Incubator meet with interested community members to dole out advice on starting a successful business in the City Different. They have a pretty good track record, so if you’re in need of some business-minded inspiration, this event is for you. 5 pm, free
Join Our Open House, Thurs, Nov 3, 8:30am
“It’s clear that the passion I have for learning originated in the strong mentors I had at RGS,”
Current Parent
“There is probably no other school like RGS in terms of academic preparation for our school,”
Class of 2009 Student, Now at Princeton
Secondary School Administrator
“We want to develop learners, not encyclopedias,”
“You get close to the teachers. They value every kid’s individual learning abilities,”
RGS Educator
Current Student
FILM THE WOMEN ON THE MOTHER ROAD IN NEW MEXICO New Mexico History Museum 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5100 Documentarian Katrina Parks brings her women’s history project for an evening of screening and discussion. The film includes local artists, architects and entrepreneurs (see SFR Picks, page 17). 5:30 pm, free
MUSIC BRANDEN & JAMES Vanessie 427 W Water St., 982-9966 From Bieber to Bach. 8 pm, free
CANYON ROAD BLUES JAM El Farol 808 Canyon Road, 983-9912 Bring your own instrument and jam alongside other blues-lovin' folks. 8:30 pm, free SANTA FE BLUEGRASS JAM Derailed at the Sage Inn 725 Cerrillos Road, 982-5952 And if you don’t feel like jamming on Canyon Road, you can drop by this Railyard area lounge with your instrument and make some acoustic magic. Just be sure you know the intricacies of the genre, y’all. 6 pm, free
MUSEUMS
"Conscientious, well behaved, and attentive to the animals during their monthly visits, the 4th graders raise $3,000 annually for our shelter. They inspire my team and make a huge difference in the animals' lives," Bridget Lindquist, Executive Director, Espanola Valley Humane Society
505.983.1621
RIOGRANDESCHOOL.ORG/OPENHOUSE2016 • TUITION ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE
COURTESY NEW MEXICO HISTORY MUSEUM
“My kids don’t just walk into school – they run into school,”
TUE/25
Rio Grande School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or national or ethnic origin.
La Loncherita Salvadoreña
1710 Llano Street
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Located just a few miles south of Santa Fe on the picturesque Turquoise Trail
3810 HWY 14 SANTA FE, NM 87508
50 5-47 1-3085 30
OCTOBER 19-25, 2016
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SFREPORTER.COM
People peruse the goods at the Paper Trade Fair at New Mexico History Museum.
EL RANCHO DE LAS GOLONDRINAS 334 Los Pinos Road, 471-2261 GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM 217 Johnson St., 946-1000 Far Wide Texas; Georgia O’Keeffe. Through Oct. 30. HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART 238 Ledoux St., Taos, (575) 758-9826 Mabel Dodge Luhan & Company: American Moderns and the West. Ken Price, Death Shrine I. Agnes Martin Gallery. MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY NATIVE ART 108 Cathedral Place, 983-8900 Rick Bartow: Things You Cannot Explain. Through Dec. 31. Lloyd Kiva New: Art. MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE 710 Camino Lejo, 476-1250 Into the Future: Culture Power in Native American Art. The Life and Art of
Innovative Native American Artist and Designer Lloyd Kiva New. MUSEUM OF INTERNATIONAL FOLK ART 706 Camino Lejo,476-1200 Flamenco: From Spain to New Mexico. Through Sept. 2017. Sacred Realm. The Morris Miniature Circus. Under Pressure. Through Dec. 2017. MUSEUM OF SPANISH COLONIAL ART 750 Camino Lejo, 982-2226 Chimayó: A Pilgrimage Through Two Centuries. The Beltran Kropp Collection. The Delgado Room. NM HISTORY MUSEUM 113 Lincoln Ave., 476-5019 Agnes Martin and Me. Through Aug. 2017. Lowriders, Hoppers and Hot Rods: Car Culture of Northern New Mexico. Through March 2017. Out of the Box: The Art of the Cigar. Through Oct. 2017. NM MUSEUM OF ART 107 W Palace Ave., 476-5072 Alcoves 16/17. Small
Wonders. Through March 2017. Governor’s Awards for Excellence in the Arts exhibition. Through Dec. 2016. PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS 105 W Palace Ave., 476-5100 Fractured Faiths: Spanish Judaism, The Inquisition and New World Identities. POEH CULTURAL CENTER AND MUSEUM 78 Cities of Gold Road, Pojoaque, 455-3334 Ashley Browning, Perspective of Perception. The Past of the Govenors. SANTA FE BOTANICAL GARDENS 715 Camino Lejo, 471-9103 Bill Barrett: Visual Poetry. Through March 2017. Ojos Y Manos. WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN 704 Camino Lejo, 986-4636 Eveli, Energy and Significance.
FOOD
CHRISTIANLOPEZ
for Cooking with Kids Santa Fe’s pioneering program now has a matching cookbook
I
BY GWYNETH DOLAND t h e f o r k @ s f r e p o r t e r. c o m
f your kids have been among the more than 5,000 elementary school students who have been lucky enough to experience a Cooking with Kids program, then you already have an idea of how cool this book is. With this 176-page spiral-bound book, founder Lynn Walters, program director Jane Stacey and educator Gabrielle Gonzales have captured the engaging style of the in-school programs. There are how-to sections on growing some of the fruits and vegetables in the book and pages that invite kids to draw pictures, write poems or reflect on their cooking experiences. Each recipe has been perfected by years of practice, so you can be sure the dishes are things every kid can help with—and nearly every kid will eat. They’re healthy and they taste good! A few years ago I observed a class of kids making the black bean tostada recipe here and I was (I’m ashamed to admit now) honestly surprised by how much the kids could do (with grown-up oversight) including chopping garlic and cooking tortillas. I was even more shocked that the end result was really, really good! But don’t take it from me. Jamie Oliver, the British celebrity chef and evangelist for healthy school lunches, named Cooking with Kids’ green and white fettuccine with tomato basil sauce as one of the best school lunches in America. First Lady Michelle Obama selected the “Lentils of the Southwest” recipe as a winner in her Recipes for Healthy Kids competition in 2011. This book is a treasure for any parent, grandparent, teacher or babysitter who needs a little help or inspiration in getting kids into the kitchen, excited about food and loving healthy meals.
BLACK BEAN TOSTADAS WITH SALSA FRESCA
From The Cooking with Kids Cookbook, UNM Press From sorting beans to measuring spices, from peeling and mincing garlic to sprinkling on toppings, there is lots for kids to do to help make this meal. Serves 4 to 6 BLACK BEANS ·· 1 cup dry black beans, cooked, or 2 (15-ounce) cans ·· 1/2 medium onion, chopped ·· 2 garlic cloves, minced ·· 1 tablespoon vegetable oil ·· 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin ·· 1/2 teaspoon salt ·· 1/2 teaspoon fresh oregano or 1/4 teaspoon dried oregano
Cook the black beans; or, if using canned beans, drain the juice from one can of black beans before putting all of the beans into a bowl. Use a potato masher to mash the beans until they are no longer whole. Set the mashed beans aside. In a saucepan, heat the oil over medium-high heat. Add the onions and saute for 1 to 2 minutes. Stir in the garlic and cumin and cook for 30 seconds more. Stir in the black beans. When the beans begin to boil, reduce heat to low, stir in the salt and oregano, and simmer for 10 minutes, uncovered. Keep warm until ready to serve.
Press on the top cutting board with both hands to flatten the dough. Slowly remove the top cutting board. You can also form the tortillas in your hands: flatten the ball of dough, then pat it back and forth between your palms until it looks like a tortilla! This method will result in somewhat thicker tortillas that will take a bit more time to cook. Makes 12 tortillas
TOSTADA FIXINGS ·· 12 corn tortillas (recipe follows) ·· 6 ounces mild cheddar cheese, grated ·· 1/2 head Romaine lettuce, thinly sliced ·· Salsa fresca (recipe follows)
In a bowl, mix together the masa harina de maiz and salt. Add the water and mix with a wooden spoon or with your hands until a soft dough forms. Cover the dough with a clean cloth and let rest for 5 minutes. Divide the dough into 12 equal pieces and roll each piece into a ball. To keep the dough from sticking to the tortilla press, put a square piece of plastic wrap (or parchment paper) on both surfaces of the press. Put a ball in the center of the plastic. Press the dough flat in the press. Pick up the tortilla with the plastic on both sides. Peel off one piece of plastic and flip the tortilla off of the plastic onto a hot griddle. Cook for 1 to 2 minutes, until the underside of the tortilla is golden. Flip the tortilla and cook for 1 to 2 minutes more. Continue this process until all of the dough has been made into tortillas. Stack the cooked tortillas on a plate and cover with a clean cloth. Serve warm.
Assemble and serve the tostadas: Warm the tortillas on a griddle or in the oven. Top each tortilla with a spoonful of black beans and pass the cheese, lettuce and salsa. SALSA FRESCA Salsa transcends culture and it can now be found almost everywhere. Homemade salsa is easy to make and is one of the tastiest ways to use the summer’s bounty of tomatoes, chile and fresh herbs. Makes about 3 cups ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ··
5 medium tomatoes 3 garlic cloves, minced 1/3 cup minced red onion 3 tablespoons fresh lime juice 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/8 teaspoon freshly ground pepper 1 tablespoon chopped cilantro 1 to 2 jalapeños
Cut the tomatoes into 1/2-inch pieces and put into a bowl. Add the garlic and onion to the tomatoes. Stir in the lime juice, salt and pepper. Add the cilantro and stir only until combined. Because hot pepper can burn the skin, an adult should seed and mince the jalapeños, then add them to the salsa. CORN TORTILLAS Children love working with dough. Kids enjoy squishing the dough to make tortillas using a tortilla press, but if you don’t have one you can use two cutting boards. Cover a cutting board with a piece of plastic wrap. Put a ball of dough on the top of the plastic wrap, then cover the dough with another piece of plastic wrap. Place the second cutting board on top.
·· 2 cups masa harina de maiz ·· 1/4 teaspoon salt ·· 1 1/2 cups warm water
What Kids Can Do ·· Wash vegetables ·· Mash beans ·· Grate cheese (watch those knuckles) ·· Peel garlic ·· Squeeze lime juice ·· Slice tomatoes ·· Tear cilantro ·· Measure ingredients ·· Mix tortilla dough ·· Press tortillas
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Uncle Howard Review: Howard’s End Documentary probably appeals only to the extremely cinematically literate by alex de vore alex@sfreporter.com
In 1978, a New York University film student named Howard Brookner was allowed unprecedented access to Naked Lunch author William S Burroughs. With a small crew (including a young
Jim Jarmusch working as the sound recordist), Brookner captured hundreds of hours of footage and created the one and only documentary about the author. Released in 1983, Burroughs: The Movie was a hit with critics and audiences alike. In 1987, Brookner released Robert Wilson and the Civil Wars, another doc, which focused on the fringe theater director’s attempt and failure to mount a 12-hour opera during the 1984 summer Olympics. Civil Wars was also received with much ballyhoo, and it seemed a long and fruitful film career was practically guaranteed for Brookner. Tragi-
SCORE CARD
ok
meh
barf
see it now
it’s ok, ok?!
rainy days only
avoid at all costs
yay!
NO LIGHT AND NO LAND ANYWHERE “The conclusion may prove unfulfilling.” THE ACCOUNTANT
“It’s the strength of the main character that makes us grade this cinematic achievement with approval.”
LONG WAY NORTH
yay!
“The simplicity of the art direction
yay!
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK—THE TOURING YEARS “The soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold.”
ok
never subtracts from the final product.”
THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN
“The Magnificent Seven is fine. Just
fine.”
how lends him cinematic credibility, but by the time the film starts to scratch the surface of the AIDS epidemic, the familial and homophobic struggles facing his uncle or even the tragedy of his death, there’s very little time left. Interviews with family members or those who were there working alongside the senior Brookner lack pertinence outside of illustrating how Howard was a really great guy and a talented director. Any actual weight that could have been utilized to explore his demons, his drug abuse or even how the pressures of filmmaking fed these things are either swept under the rug or not examined with any real emphasis. A longtime lover of Howard’s does come close to giving us a clearer idea of what the man was actually like, but the junior Brookner never provides the right information to help us understand why Uncle Howard was worth making. Film buffs, art aficionados and lit fans will probably get a kick out of seeing the footage of Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Andy Warhol and others, but this is not easily digestible fare for cinema novices or everyday people looking for an interesting documentary—this one’s for a certain subset of the culturally inclined, many of whom probably already have the bulk of this knowledge. UNCLE HOWARD Directed by Aaron Brookner Jean Cocteau Cinema, NR, 96 min.
SCREENER
yay!
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cally, however, he would die of AIDS in 1989 while in post-production for Bloodhounds of Broadway, a film that was to be his fist major cinematic effort. In Uncle Howard, Brookner’s nephew Aaron undertakes a journey to discover more about his uncle; a gay man living during a cultural renaissance in 1980s New York City, a naturally talented filmmaker who seemed to posses a preternatural brilliance behind the camera and a warm and loving family member struggling with homophobia, drug abuse and the stressors of a career in film. All the pieces are there for Uncle Howard to knock it out of the park— Brookner was working with the likes of Jim Jarmusch and Tom DiCillo before they became indie film legends, and was rubbing shoulders with up-and-comers like John Waters and Sara Driver—but even chronicling the discovery of the footage inside Burroughs’ famed apartment, known as The Bunker, can’t save the winding, unfocused nature of the younger Brookner’s film. The vast majority of Uncle Howard’s early bits are eaten up with the aforementioned Burroughs footage, and though it’s at least interesting to catch a glimpse of The Bunker as it exists today (almost nothing has changed), Aaron Brookner does little to tell us about the so-called subject of the film. It almost seems like a newcomer with big aspirations name-dropping his uncle’s now-famous pals as if this some-
NO LIGHT AND NO LAND ANYWHERE Her eyelids lay heavy, struggling not to shutter completely over her hazel-spotted pale blue eyes. Tears crystallize, balancing upon the bottom lids, grasping to defy gravity. In a voiceover, she speaks softly of abandonment—this is Lexi, the protagonist of No Light and No Land Anywhere, played with a subdued depth by newcomer Gemma Brockis. Introduced in a fragile state fueled by a broken marriage and the loss of her mother, Lexi heads from London to Los Angeles in search her father John (Richard Sealey), who abandoned her as a child. Upon arrival in the unfamiliar city, she is met with a dismal setting and feeling of alienation. Inside her motel room, an appetite for junk food and liquor appears to be the only nourishment for the frail Lexi, and the desire to reconnect with her father is the only conviction keeping her from breaking down entirely. Within this depressing odyssey, writer/director Amber Sealey (who has been more of an actor before now in British films like The Good Night and Big Nothing) confronts her audience with a miserable, uncomfortable reality in which any semblance of hope passes without a trace. Whether it’s strangers or estranged family members, the few characters with
whom Lexi engages are no more hopeful than she is, and meaningful emotional connection evades her with each passing minute. No Light and No Land Anywhere is bleak, and may be best viewed as a portrait of alienation and perseverance despite despondency. It is within the awkward moments of silence between characters that the drama provides its most convincing portrayal of the complexities of human sadness. For the most melancholy of viewers, the conclusion may prove unfulfilling. But in a film in which hope, resolution and meaningful connection consistently evade the protagonist, maybe it’s not without reason that Sealey has denied her audience the finality of a Hollywood happy ending in favor of the more honest nature of openendedness. (Jonny Leather) Center for Contemporary Arts, NR, 75 min.
THE ACCOUNTANT Suspense and problem-solving mixed with a dash of hopeless romance and a pinch of dysfunctional family history are the staples that sustain The Accountant, yet it’s the strength of the main character that makes us grade this cinematic achievement with approval. Far from sad Batman or cocky Daredevil, this Ben Affleck hero has something that’s more real: a spot on the autism spectrum. As Christian Wolff, we
see Handsome Ben in another light, and through him, we get a brighter spot on men and women diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome. Nothing like Rainman’s Raymond or Jerry Espenson from TV’s Boston Legal, our heretofore examples in entertainment, the Wolff character is complex and worthy of awe. He does not count toothpicks on the ground, but is a master of ledger books who gets recruited by mobsters, cartel kingpins and corporate overlords. The flashbacks to his childhood reveal both a well-meaning and sort of sadistic dad and a groundbreaking (perhaps fictionally effective) treatment approach that ostensibly helped him figure out how to overcome the condition’s characteristic symptoms such as difficulty or inability to express emotions or read social cues from others; repetitive, obsessive compulsion and a need for explicit order. While Affleck can typically rely on turning on the charm, here he’s got to suppress the dimpled, sly grin for an even thinner smile that he hardly ever gets to break out. The flat affect took some work, and it makes for some laughworthy moments among otherwise serious scenes. Sure, Affleck has to shoot a couple dudes in the head, but that’s just par for the action genre course. Rounding out the cast in her seemingly endless stream of supporting roles is Anna Kendrick (Pitch CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
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MOVIES
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Wednesday, October 19 1:45p Ixcanul* 2:30p Eight Days a Week 3:45p InnSaei* 5:00p Eight Days a Week 5:45p InnSaei* 7:30p Eight Days a Week 8:00p Ixcanul*
Visit santafeindependentfilmfestival.com for info, tickets, schedule, & special events hosted in the CCA’s Muñoz Waxman Gallery.
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• Santa Fe Independent Film Fest •
Thursday, October 20 10:00a SFIFF: Day for Night 11:00a SFIFF: Shorts 1* 12:30p SFIFF: The Good Mind + Dig it Out 1:30p SFIFF: Shorts 2* 2:15p SFIFF: 100 Years: One Woman’s Fight for Justice 4:00p SFIFF: One Week & A Day 4:00p SFIFF: Shorts 3* 6:30p SFIFF: All Light & No Land Anywhere 6:45p SFIFF: Shorts 4* 8:30p SFIFF: Tempest Storm Friday, October 21 10:00a SFIFF: 100 Years: One Woman’s Fight for Justice 10:30a SFIFF: Shorts 5* 11:45a SFIFF: Neither Wolf Nor Dog 1:00p SFIFF: Shorts 6* 2:00p SFIFF: Te Ata 3:30p SFIFF: Shorts 7* 4:30p Tempest Storm 6:00p SFIFF: Shorts 1* 6:15p SFIFF: Fire at Sea 8:15p SFIFF: Shorts 3* 9:00p SFIFF: Student Shorts Saturday, October 22 10:00a SFIFF: The Good Mind + Dig it Out 10:30a SFIFF: Shorts 2* 12:00p SFIFF: One Day A Week 1:00p SFIFF Event: Women Directors Panel* 2:15p SFIFF: Staying Verticle 2:30p SFIFF Event: Panel* 4:00p SFIFF: Shorts 4* 4:30p SFIFF: Te Ata 6:30p SFIFF: Shorts 5* 6:45p SFIFF: King Cobra 8:50p SFIFF: Shorts 1 Sunday, October 23 10:00a SFIFF: Neither Wolf Nor Dog 10:30a SFIFF: Shorts 6* 12:30p SFIFF: The Last Film Festival 1:00p SFIFF: Jay Roach Retrospective: Recount* 2:30p SFIFF: The Good Mind 3:30p SFIFF: Shorts 7* 4:30p SFIFF: Tender Mercies
FINAL S SHOW
Monday, October 24 1:30p InnSaei* 2:15p Eight Days a Week 3:30p Ixcanul* 4:30p Eight Days a Week 5:30p InnSaei* 6:45p Eight Days a Week 7:30p Ixcanul* Tuesday, October 25 CLOSED FOR MAINTENANCE. *in The Studio
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No Light and No Land Anywhere wants to discover how hard it can bum everyone out. Perfect), who this time plays another accountant who breaks through to her fellow math geek just in time to get sucked into an unfolding drama. A too-serious performance by Cynthia AddaiRobinson (Star Trek Into Darkness), a Treasury agent tasked with uncovering Wolff’s identity, nonetheless is essential for the plot tension. Wait and see if you can figure it out, too. (Julie Ann Grimm) Violet Crown, Regal, R, 128 min.
LONG WAY NORTH In a world dominated by computeranimated films both full-length and short, handdrawn animated movies are not only refreshing, they’re borderline novel. French director Rémi Chayé (who worked as an animator on 2009’s The Secret of Kells) proves this incontrovertibly with Long Way North, a film about a young Russian girl who abandons the aristocracy in search of her grandfather Oloukine, an explorer who disappeared some years back while looking for a serviceable route through the North Pole. Sasha (Christa Théret) is your typical brash young character who ignores her father’s overbearing wishes, thinks nothing of insulting the heartless head of her government’s science ministry and who is much more in her element poring over charts and maps than attending fancy balls. This kind of storyline is obviously nothing we haven’t seen before (that’s not how young women are supposed to act!). But the sense that Sasha’s loss is so unbearable she’d leave behind a comfortable life surpasses the cut-and-paste nature of, oh say, Disney films, wherein characters are generally thrust into extraordinary circumstances rather than actively seeking them out. It’s a little bit uplifting but also relatable, whether the viewer is a young person who uses a sense of immortality to charge headlong into the unknown or someone with more experience who might chuckle to themselves knowing that sometimes the only way to actually learn is to make the mistakes. Through flashbacks we piece together that Sasha and her grandfather are kindred spirits, and without overtly shoving it in our faces, we get a sense that the missing Oloukine practically calls to her from somewhere in the icy expanses of the far north. This propels her ever further into both maturity and independence, and by the time we reach the climax, Sasha is almost an entirely different person. These are important lessons for young people, maybe even more so for young women who are so constantly bombarded with the idea that one day their prince will come and then they’ll never have to worry about making their own way in the world ever again.
The simplicity of the art direction never subtracts from the final product; if anything, it redirects our attention to the importance of character development or the various calamities our heroine manages to escape while creating a strong sense of place and momentum. Thus, we’re left with a lot to think about, which makes Long Way North a no-brainer. (Alex De Vore) Center for Contemporary Arts, PG, 81 min.
THE BEATLES: EIGHT DAYS A WEEK - THE TOURING YEARS Practically everyone is familiar with the story of The Beatles and their rise from the basement venues of Liverpool and Hamburg to unprecedented crowds of screaming fans. For those who weren’t there, however, what is left is a mere idea of what Beatle-Mania was truly like and an intellectual understanding of the insanity sans experience. Director Ron Howard (In the Heart of the Sea) provides an in-depth look into those early years of the band from 1963 to 1966, as well as their impact on the globe in The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-The Touring Years, a new documentary opening at the Center for Contemporary Arts a full two days before hitting its intended home at hulu.com. Through found footage, hundreds of photographs, television/radio coverage and decades of sound bites and interviews, Howard weaves together one of the most intimate portraits of the Fab Four’s younger days that we’ve ever seen, and it doles out the feels in both jubilant and heartbreaking fashion. It’s a story that outwardly showcases society’s sick obsession with fame or being famous, but that also examines the psychological toll taken on Lennon, McCartney, Harrison and Starr in a riveting way. Certainly none of them were opposed to their fame at first, but as the years rolled by and the music creation began to play a secondary role to rabid curiosity and borderline psychotic fandom, we begin to understand why The Beatles eventually became studio hermits and ditched the live shows. Much of the real substance—or at least the consequence of fame—is saved for the final half hour, which is unfortunate despite the fun of watching four close friends take on the world. By the time we get to the famous Shea Stadium concert of ’66 (that’s the one that basically made ‘em quit), we can see exactly why they were burnt out, but Eight Days a Week doesn’t spend quite enough time focused on the actual impact their hectic existence had on their personal lives. It’s excellent to see how much they looked out for one another, and the soundtrack is obviously crammed with Beatles gold, but this one might not have major appeal
MOVIES
yay! Ben Affleck plays one of those math nerds who starts blasting all kinds of fools in The Accountant, and somewhere offscreen is Anna Kendrick. to those who aren’t Beatle-maniacs or already know the tale. (ADV) CCA, 137 min., NR
THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Hold onto your hats, because here comes another remake—this time in the form of legendary Western The Magnificent Seven (which was itself a retelling of Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai). In this new iteration, the blackhearted Bartholomew Bogue (a cartoonishly evil Peter Sarsgaard) is hell-bent on taking over the small valley town of Rose Creek, and the people who live there are pretty sad about it. Cue social unrest exploding into street violence and a whole mess of murders. Observing her husband gunned down in broad daylight doesn’t sit too well with Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett), so she hires a duly licensed warrant officer named Chisolm (Denzel Washington) to take Bogue down. “I seek righteousness,” Emma says, “but I shall take revenge.” Dang! Chisolm takes on the job, natch, and it seems like maybe he has his own mysterious reasons for pursuing Bogue—but he can’t do it alone. This is where the six other guys come into play, though their motivations are flimsy at best. Faraday (the always likeable Chris
Pratt), for example, owes Chisolm for getting his horse out of hock, and Goodnight Robicheaux (a surprisingly decent Ethan Hawke) joins because, uh … well, he just does. Ditto for his stereotypical Asian pal Billy Rocks (Bynughun Lee), the tracker Jack Horne (Vincent D’Onofrio), a Mexican outlaw named Vasquez (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) and a loner Comanche warrior named Red Harvest (whom they meet completely by chance and who joins the posse because he seemingly didn’t have anything else going on—played by Martin Sensmeier). It’s fun enough to watch the assemblage of the group, and there is definite chemistry between Washington and Pratt, but this must be about the most predictable movie of all time. And sure, it’s a remake, but we honestly expected a more sophisticated retelling from such an accomplished writer (True Detective mastermind Nic Pizzolatto). Everything plays out exactly how you’d expect and the overused filmic devices just keep on a-coming. It sure is entertaining, though, and one does wonder how on earth a two-hour film that’s basically just dudes getting shot in the face didn’t pick up the R rating. Regardless, The Magnificent Seven is fine. Just fine. (ADV) Violet Crown, Regal, PG-13, 133 min.
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with their mother under a shed by an employee at a government agency in Santa Fe. The kittens HALBERT, HERBERT and HUTCH are all healthy and ready for new homes; the mother will also be available for adoption. TEMPERAMENT: All the kittens are very playful and sweet, and love to cuddle with one another. Each should be placed with a sibling or in a home with another kitten or active cat to play with. HONEY B is a beautiful girl with a short coat and dilute torbie (tortoiseshell/tabby) markings. AGE: born approx. 8/7/16. City of Santa Fe Permit #16-006
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HONEY B and her brothers HALBERT, HERBERT and HUTCH were found living
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STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE IN THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NOTICE IS GIVEN that one Case No.D-101-PB-2016-00156 hundred percent (100%) of IN THE MATTER OF THE the issued and outstanding ESTATE OF OLIVIA DELGADO limited liability company DE TORRES, DECEASED. interests in Fashion Outlets NOTICE OF HEARING BY of Santa Fe LLC, a Delaware PUBLICATION limited liability company TO: UNKNOWN HEIRS (“Fashion Outlets”), and all OF OLIVIA DELGADO DE TORRES, DECEASED, AND related rights (collectively, ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS the”Sale Collateral”) will WHO HAVE OR CLAIM ANY be sold by PCI Investors INTEREST IN THE ESTATE Fund II LLC, a Delaware OF OLIVIA DELGADO DE limited liability company TORRES, OR IN THE MATTER (the “Secured Party”), to the BEING LITIGATED IN THE highest qualified bidder at HEREINAFTER MENTIONED a PUBLIC SALE on October HEARING.NOTICE IS HEREBY 24, 2016 at 3:00 p.m. (ET) at GIVEN of the following: Reed Smith LLP, 599 Lexington 1. OLIVIA DELGADO DE Avenue, 22 nd Floor, New TORRES, deceased, died on York, New York 10022. Fashion April 18, 2014; Outlets is the fee owner of the 2. LENA DELGADO DE TORRES real estate and improvements filed a Petition for Adjudication of Intestacy, Determination commonly known as 8380 Cerrillos Road, Santa Fe, New of Heirship, and Formal Appointment of Personal Mexico. The purchase price Representative in the aboveof the Sale Collateral must styled and numbered matter on be paid at the time of the August 31, 2016, and a hearing sale in immediately available on the above-referenced Petition funds, except that Secured has been set for November 17, Party may pay the purchase 2016, at 1:30PM at the Santa price by crediting it against Fe County First Judicial District Courthouse located at 225 the unpaid balance of the Montezuma Ave., Santa Fe, New loan secured by the Sale Mexico, before the Honorable Collateral. Any prospective Judge SARAH M. SINGLETON. purchaser must purchase 3. Pursuant to Section 45-1-401 the Sale Collateral for its (A) (3), N.M.S.A., 1978, notice own investment and account of the time and place of hearing and not for subsequent on the above-referenced Petition resale or distribution. is hereby given to you by publiPROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS cation, once each week, for two MAY PARTICIPATE IN THE consecutive weeks. SALE EITHER IN PERSON OR DATED this 29TH day of REMOTELY BY TELEPHONE. September, 2016 Kristi A. Wareham, FOR MORE INFORMATION, Attorney for Petitioner CONTACT CHRISTOPHER KRISTI A. WAREHAM, P.C. A. LYNCH, ESQ. AT Attorney for Petitioner 212-521-5400. 2205 Miguel Chavez Rd., Suite B Santa Fe, NM 87505 First Judicial District Court Telephone: (505) 820-0698 State of New Mexico Fax: (505) 820-1247 County of Santa Fe In the Matter of a Petition for a Change of Name of Grace Signe Blackburg. Case No.: D101cv201600978 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 408-3 NMSA 1978, the Petitioner Grace Signe Blackburg will apply to the Honorable Davis Thomas, District Judge of the First Judicial District at the Santa Fe Judicial Complex at Santa Fe, New Mexico at 12:45 p.m. on the 7th day of November, 2016 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Grace Signe Blackburg to Leo Laika Licona. STEPHEN T. PACHECO, District Court Clerk By: Monica Rivera, Deputy Court Clerk Submitted by: Grace Blackburg Petitioner, Pro Se
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Summons/D-101-CV-2016-00070 Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF SANTA FE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, 225 Montezuma Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501, (505) 455-8250 Case Number: D-101-CV-2016-00070 Judge: Sarah Singleton Villas De Santa Fe Condominium Association, Inc. Plaintiff, v. Kathleen R. Osmon; Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer; John Does I V, inclusive; Jane Does I-V, inclusive; Black Corporations I-V, inclusive; White Partnerships I-V, inclusive; Unknown Heirs and Devisees of each of the above-named Defendants, if deceased, Defendant. Summons The State Of New Mexico To: Unknown Spouse of Josephine Vander Meer, 419 Bryn Mawr Drive SE, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87106. To The Above Named Defendant(s): Take notice that 1. A lawsuit has been filed against you. A copy of the lawsuit is attached. The Court issued this Summons. 2. You must respond to this lawsuit in writing. You must file your written response with the Court no later than thirty (30) days from the date you are served with this Summons. (The date you are considered served with the Summons is determined by Rule 1-004 NMRA) The Court’s address is listed above. 3. You must file (in person or by mail) your written response with the Court. When you file your response, you must give or mail a copy to the person who signed the lawsuit. 4. If you do not respond in writing, the Court may enter judgment against you as requested in the lawsuit. 5. You are entitled to a jury trial in most types of lawsuits. To ask for a jury trial, you must request one in writing and pay a jury fee. 6. If you need an interpreter, you must ask for one in writing. 7. You may wish to consult a lawyer. You may contact the State Bar of New Mexico for help finding a lawyer at www.nmbar.org; 1-800-876-6227; or 1-505-797-6066. The Name And Address of Plaintiff’s attorney is: Javier B. Delgado, Esq. #138835, Kellie J. Callahan, Esq. #141405, Carpenter, Hazlewood, Delgado & Bolen, PLC, 1400 E. Southern Ave. Suite 400, Tempe, Arizona 85282, Phone: 505-242-4198, Fax: 505-242-4169 This Summons Is Issued Pursuant To Rule 1-004 NMRA Of The New Mexico Rules Of Civil Procedure For District Courts. Dated at Santa Fe, New Mexico, this 9th day of June, 2016. Stephen T. Pacheco Clerk of Court By: /s/ illegible Deputy
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2016
WRITING CONTEST Your Great Adventure
It’s time for the SFR Annual Writing Contest. Get to work on short fiction and nonfiction on this year’s theme, “Your Great Adventure.” Enter one or both categories for a chance to take home cash prizes worth up to $100 and gifts from local businesses, and best of all, be published in our Nov. 23 issue.
Winners will be invited to read their works at a special CENTER FOR event at CCA! CONTEMPORARY ARTS
CCA
SANTA FE
THE RULES: 1. Entries must be made on the contest website (www.sfreporter.com/writingcontest) before 11:59 pm on Nov. 1, 2016. A $10 fee applies for each entry. 2. Entries should not exceed 1,800 words, must be submitted digitally and previously unpublished. Paid contributors to SFR in the last year are not eligible. 3. Each work of fiction must include a form of each of the following words: reservoir, deplorable and swindle.
Nonfiction entries do not need to contain these words.
Visit SFReporter.com/writingcontest for details. Entries must be received before 11:59 pm Nov. 1, 2016. Questions? Contact editor Julie Ann Grimm at 988-7530
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MIND BODY SPIRIT ENERGY HEALING Rob Brezsny
Week of October 19th
ARIES (March 21-April 19) In the 1980s, two performance artists did a project entitled A Year Tied Together at the Waist. For 12 months, Linda Montano and Tehching Hsieh were never farther than eight feet away from each other, bound by a rope. Hsieh said he tried this experiment because he felt very comfortable doing solo work, but wanted to upgrade his abilities as a collaborator. Montano testified that the piece “dislodged a deep hiddenness” in her. It sharpened her intuition and gave her a “heightened passion for living and relating.” If you were ever going to engage in a comparable effort to deepen your intimacy skills, Aries, the coming weeks would be a favorable time to attempt it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) In the course of her long career, Libran actress Helen Hayes won an Oscar, an Emmy, a Grammy, and a Tony. Years before all that glory poured down on her, she met playwright Charles MacArthur at a party in a posh Manhattan salon. Hayes was sitting shyly in a dark corner. MacArthur glided over to her and slipped a few salted peanuts into her hand. “I wish they were emeralds,” he told her. It was love at first sight. A few years after they got married, MacArthur bought Hayes an emerald necklace. I foresee a metaphorically comparable event in your near future, Libra: peanuts serving as a promise of emeralds.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In the coming weeks would you prefer that we refer to you as “voracious”? Or do you like the word “ravenous” better? I have a feeling, based on the astrological omens, that you will be extra super eager to consume vast quantities of just about everything: food, information, beauty, sensory stimulation, novelty, pleasure, and who knows what else. But please keep this in mind: Your hunger could be a torment or it could be a gift. Which way it goes may depend on your determination to actually enjoy what you devour. In other words, don’t get so enchanted by the hypnotic power of your longing that you neglect to exult in the gratification when your longing is satisfied.
INTRODUCTION TO PRANIC HEALING Saturday, October 22, 10:00am to 1:00pm In this introduction to MCKS PRANIC HEALING® based on SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Welcome to the Painkiller the book by Master Stephen Phase of your cycle. It’s time to relieve your twinges, dis- Co and Eric B. Robbins, M.D. solve your troubles, and banish your torments. You can’t Your Hands Can Heal You, sweep away the whole mess in one quick heroic purge, you will learn the basics of of course. But I bet you can pare it down by at least 33 working with your energy field. percent. (More is quite possible.) To get started, make The workshop will include: the following declaration five times a day for the next Sensitizing the hands so that three days: “I am grateful for all the fascinating revelayou can feel energy (prana.) tions and indispensable lessons that my pain has taught Learning to sweep, or clean me.” On each of the three days after that, affirm this away congested energy. truth five times: “I have learned all I can from my pain, How to do a simple technique and therefore no longer need its reminders. Goodbye, using color prana. Learn pain.” On the three days after that, say these words, Meditation on Twin Hearts, even if you can’t bring yourself to mean them with com- which opens the heart and plete sincerity: “I forgive everybody of everything.” crown chakras. Learn simple breathing exercises to SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) For the foreseeable generate lots of energy. future, you possess the following powers: to make These techniques can be sensible that which has been unintelligible… to find used safely on yourself, amusement in situations that had been tedious… to family members, pets and create fertile meaning where before there had been plants. (505)204-6182 sterile chaos. Congratulations, Sagittarius! You are a first-class transformer. But that’s not all. I suspect you folklife@earthlink.net
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) When the wind blows at ten miles per hour, a windmill generates eight times more power than when the breeze is five miles per hour. Judging from the astrological omens, I suspect there will be a similar principle at work in your life during the coming weeks. A modest increase in effort and intensity will make a huge difference in the results you produce. Are will also have the ability to distract people from you willing to push yourself a bit beyond your comfort concerns that aren’t important… to deepen any quest level in order to harvest a wave of abundance? that has been too superficial or careless to succeed… CANCER (June 21-July 22) Cuthbert Collingwood (1748- and to ask the good questions that will render the bad 1810) had a distinguished career as an admiral in the questions irrelevant. British navy, leading the sailors under his command to numerous wartime victories. He was also a good-natured CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In the past eleven months, did you ever withhold your love on purpose? softie whose men regarded him as generous and kind. Have there been times when you “punished” those you Between battles, while enjoying his downtime, he hiked cared about by acting cold and aloof? Can you rememthrough the English countryside carrying acorns, which he ber a few occasions when you could have been more planted here and there so the “Navy would never want for generous or compassionate, but chose not to be? If you oaks to build the fighting ships upon which the country’s answered yes to any of those questions, the next three safety depended.” (Quoted in Life in Nelson’s Navy, by weeks will be an excellent time to atone. You’re in a Dudley Pope.) I propose that we make him your role phase of your astrological cycle when you can reap model for the coming weeks. May his example inspire you maximum benefit from correcting stingy mistakes. I sugto be both an effective warrior and a tender soul who gest that you make gleeful efforts to express your most takes practical actions to plan for the future. charitable impulses. Be a tower of bountiful power. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Eighteenth-century musician Giuseppe Tartini has been called “the godfather of modern violin playing.” He was also an innovative composer who specialized in poignant and poetic melodies. One of his most famous works is the Sonata in G Minor, also known as the Devil’s Trill. Tartini said it was inspired by a dream in which he made a pact with the Devil to provide him with new material. The Infernal One picked up a violin and played the amazing piece that Tartini transcribed when he woke up. Here’s the lesson for you: He didn’t actually sell his soul to the Devil. Simply engaging in this rebellious, taboo act in the realm of fantasy had the alchemical effect of unleashing a burst of creative energy. Try it!
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) In 1415, a smaller English army defeated French forces at the Battle of Agincourt in northern France. Essential to England’s victory were its 7,000 longbowmen—archers who shot big arrows using bows that were six feet long. So fast and skilled were these warriors that they typically had three arrows flying through the air at any one time. That’s the kind of highpowered proficiency I recommend that you summon during your upcoming campaign. If you need more training to reach that level of effectiveness, get it immediately.
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PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Let’s imagine your life as a novel. The most recent chapter, which you’ll soon be drawing to a close, might be called “The Redemption of Loneliness.” Other apt titles: “Intimacy with the Holy VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The planets have aligned in a Darkness” or “The Superpower of Surrender” or “The End Is Secretly the Beginning.” Soon you will start a curious pattern. I interpret it as meaning that you have new chapter, which I’ve tentatively dubbed “Escape cosmic permission to indulge in more self-interest and from Escapism,” or perhaps “Liberation from False self-seeking than usual. So it won’t be taboo for you to Concepts of Freedom” or “Where the Wild Things unabashedly say, “What exactly is in it for me?” or Are.” And the expansive adventures of this next phase “Prove your love, my dear” or “Gimmeee gimmeee gimmee what I want.” If someone makes a big promise, will have been made possible by the sweet-and-sour enigmas of the past four weeks. you shouldn’t be shy about saying, “Will you put that in Homework: Describe what you’d be like if you were the writing?” If you get a sudden urge to snag the biggest opposite of yourself. Freewillastrology.com piece of the pie, obey that urge.
Can I get your card?
Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s Expanded Weekly Audio Horoscopes and Daily Text Message Horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700. © CO P Y R I G H T 2 0 1 6 R O B B R E Z S N Y
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COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS TEACH YOUR WAY AROUND THE WORLD. Get TESOL Certified & Teach English Anywhere. Earn an accredited TESOL Certificate and start teaching English in the USA and abroad. Over 20,000 new jobs every month. Take this highly engaging & empowering course. Celebrating our 15th year. Next Course: Jan 22 - April 15. Contact John Kongsvik. 505-204-4361. info@tesoltrainers.com www.tesoltrainers.com
AMERICA:ELECTION & BEYOND SANTO NIÑO REGIONAL Astrology This is an election CATHOLIC SCHOOL Competing like we have never seen on a national stage. Our mission before. What the heck is is to provide excellent elementary, going on? Four astrologers: academic education with a Jason Holley, Michael Bartlett, Catholic tradition for Pre-Pre K Marcia Starck, and Daniel to 6th grade. Our committment Fiverson will address this is to education the whole child question from different in a safe, service oriented perspectives at a talk spon- environment. No transfer fee! sored by KSFR on Saturday, Visit us at santoninoregional.org October 29th at 2pm in the for more information or call Jemez room at the Santa Fe 505-424-1766. Community College on Richards Avenue. Tickets are UPAYA ZEN CENTER: $20 in advance at 428-1527 MEDITATION, TALKS, RETREATS JOHREI CENTER OF SANTA FE. and $25 at the door. Upaya is a community resource fostering mindfulness. Come JOHREI IS BASED ON THE for DAILY MEDITATION; FOCUS AND FLOW OF THE HEALING THROUGH THE Wednesday DHARMA UNIVERSAL LIFE ENERGY. ART of traditional Native TALKS 5:30-6:30pm; 10/22 When clouds in the spiritual American pottery. Open BODHIDHARMA: A Daylong body and in consciousness are group for men and women Silent Meditation Retreat dissolved, there is a return to 21 and up where we will with Joshin Brian Byrnes and true health. This is according incorporate the traditional Genzan Quennell ; 10/25-30 to the Divine Law of Order; SESSHIN: Silent Illumination: after spiritual clearing, physical pottery teachings and history into a collaborational An Intensive Multi-day Zen and mental- emotional healtherapeutic model. $10/ Meditation Retreat; or 11/13 ing follow. You are invited to session, sliding scale. Group THE EASE AND JOY OF experience the Divine Healing meets on Mondays 5:30MORNINGS: An Introductory Energy of Johrei. On Saturday, 7:30 pm, ongoing. Group Half-day Retreat for Zen November 5th at 10:30 am we led by student therapist and Meditation and Etiquette with will hold our Autumn Ancestors traditional Native American Maia Duerr (by donation). Service to honor those who gave potter Sanda Sandoval. Call www.upaya.org. 505-986-8518, us life. Please join us. All are 471-8575 to register. 404 Cerro Gordo, Santa Fe. Welcome! The Johrei Center of Santa Fe is located at Calle Cinco Plaza, 1500 Fifth St., Suite ADVERTISE AN EVENT, WORKSHOP OR 10, 87505. Please call 820-0451 with any questions. Drop-ins LECTURE HERE IN THE COMMUNITY welcome! There is no fee for receiving Johrei. Donations ANNOUCMENTS are gratefully accepted. Please check us out at our new website CLASSY@SFREPORTER.COM santafejohreifellowship.com
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SPORTING GOODS Retired scuba instructor selling a ton of diving gear. Tanks, regulators, wet suits, dry suit, fins, weights. Really too much to list. Best offer on everything. Call 505-690-7633 or email bsgee@hotmail.com.
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