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Avalos for mayor. Mirkarimi for sheriff. Onek for district attorney. Yes on C, no on D ... our complete endorsements in the Nov. 8 San Francisco election p10


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“They were prisoners of the historical moment.”

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Avalos for mayor. Mirkarimi for sheriff. Onek for district attorney. Yes on C, No on D .... complete endorsements for the San Francisco election P10

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appetite P20 cheap eats P22 At the Venezuelan consulate in New York, Josh Fattal, Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd, and Alex Fattal visit with the Venezuelan Foreign Minister, Nicolas Maduro (left), his chief of staff, Temir Porras. | photo courtesy Eva golinger

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Breaking free

How a small group of Bay Area activists helped free their friends from Iranian prison By Rebecca Bowe rebeccab@sfbg.com An ordeal that began with a hiking trip on July 31, 2009 in Northern Iraq came to a close Sept. 21 when Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal were released from Tehran’s Evin Prison. They’d languished in an 8-by-13foot cell for 781 days while their friends and supporters waged a creative, behind-the-scenes campaign to free them. Bauer and Fattal were ferried out in a convoy with Swiss and Omani officials and flown to Oman, where news cameras captured their joyful reunion with loved ones. Waiting on the tarmac with their family members was Sarah Shourd, Bauer’s fiancée, who’d been arrested with them and was released last September after spending 410 days in solitary confinement. It was the first time since their arrest that “the hikers” — as the trio came to be labeled in the campaign calling for their release — were together outside prison walls, free at last. Watching their reunion from Seattle, their friend Shon Meckfessel — who went to Northern Iraq with them but hadn’t felt up to hiking that day — was overjoyed. “It’s like I’ve collapsed from relief,” he told us by phone. “I just feel like I’ve been asphyxiated for the last two years, and suddenly I remember what air smells like.” In the Bay Area, friends who’d pulled together to work toward picks

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their release breathed a huge, collective sigh of relief. “It was just a crazy, amazing adrenaline rush of happiness,” said Jennifer Miller, who befriended Shourd years earlier while doing human rights work focused on violence against women in Juarez. Bauer and Fattal had stood trial only weeks earlier in an Iranian court, on charges of espionage and illegally crossing an unmarked border between Iraq and Iran. They were found guilty and sentenced to eight years each in prison. Their release coincided with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s visit to the United States for the United Nations General Assembly conference. As Bauer, Shourd, and Fattal remained isolated at the mercy of guards they could barely communicate with, their family and supporters kept up a steady drumbeat calling for their release. They recruited actors, intellectuals, and foreign diplomats to urge the Iranian government — which has not had diplomatic ties with the U.S. Since 1979 — to let the Americans go. Once Bauer and Fattal were free and wandering around New York City, they’d morphed into minor celebrities — strangers approached them in the streets to wish them well. In the end, nobody can say just what persuaded the Iranian government to release Bauer and Fattal. “Sarah was talking with diplomats in all kinds of countries.

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The thing is, none of us really knows what the calculus was,” said Liam O’Donoghue, a friend who helped out with the campaign. The campaign was multifaceted, with friends and family coordinating parallel efforts from various locales. While Bauer and Fattal’s group of friends in the Bay Area are quick to note that their work reflected just one slice of the overall push for the young men’s freedom, the grassroots organizing effort they created clearly had some effect in the end. “If Shane, Sarah, and Josh were just three random people who didn’t have this group of friends who were so proficient at organizing, I think they would have still been in jail,” O’Donoghue mused. Shortly after Bauer and Fattal were freed, Iran’s foreign ministry issued a statement acknowledging the involvement of the Sultan of Oman, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, and — more surprisingly, given his adversarial relationship with the U.S. — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who enjoys a close relationship with Ahmadinejad. Once reports surfaced emphasizing Chavez’s involvement, the news broke that actor Sean Penn had played a role, too — by flying to Venezuela to encourage Chavez to approach Ahmadinejad about the case. Yet the stage had already been set by friends of the hiking trio, film listings

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a small crew of passionate social justice activists based in San Francisco and Oakland. They possessed skills as organizers, but this time the goal was more personal — they wanted nothing more than for their friends to be free.

Time to organize Based on the 17 alarmed messages on his voicemail, David Martinez knew something terrible had happened involving Bauer and Shourd. An independent filmmaker, Martinez was close to both and had collaborated with Bauer in 2007 to produce a film about Darfur. Soon after learning that they were being detained in Iran, he found himself swept into a whirlwind, ad-hoc grassroots organizing effort as friends and family of the hikers contacted one another, fired off rapid emails, and organized conference calls to try and determine how to respond. “We created this working group, this conference group — we wanted everybody’s expertise,” explained attorney Ben Rosenfeld, who has known Shourd for more than a decade and offered free legal representation to Shourd’s mother. “We set out to build a brain trust, essentially, and we did that very, very quickly.” Shourd and Bauer had been living in Damascus, Syria, at a Palestinian camp when they decided to take a short trip to CONTINUES ON PAGE >>

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Iraqi Kurdistan. Shourd was teaching English to Iraqi refugees, and Bauer — a photojournalist — was writing articles about the Middle East. Fattal, an environmental educator, was visiting them. They journeyed along with Meckfessel to Kurdistan, a forested region of Iraq known as a safe destination for U.S. citizens. But once they arrived, Meckfessel felt groggy, so he opted to stay behind while the other three went off in search of a waterfall. “I was on a bus to meet them and got a call from Shane that they were being arrested by Iranian authorities,” Meckfessel told the Guardian. After notifying their families, he flew to Istanbul to stay with a friend. Back in the Bay Area, word of the hikers’ plight was starting to make news. “I had producers from morning shows like Good Morning America ringing my doorbell from the beginning,” Rosenfeld said. Martinez was on a conference call with the core group of organizers when Meckfessel contacted him via Skype from Istanbul — and by that point, the national media was hungry for a statement from the elusive fourth hiker. So the group worked with Meckfessel to craft a statement for the press. The first challenge they faced was this: Should they emphasize that Bauer, Shourd, and Fattal were humanitarian activists, or should they downplay their political leanings by casting them as adventuresome Americans with a love of the outdoors? Both portrayals were true, but the most important audience, as Rosenfeld pointed out, was ultimately their captors. Meckfessel said he thought highlighting their politics would help their case. “The first minute after I got the phone call [from Bauer] ... I thought that basically our involvement in the region as journalists, as academics, and as educators, and our long public record speaking out for human rights and as critics of US foreign policy in the area ... would get them out,” he said. Meckfessel later created a website, FreeOurFriends.eu, to emphasize the humanitarian and journalistic work that the three were engaged in. In the summer of 2010, he maxed out two credit cards to go on a 30-city European tour to drum up support overseas. Despite the group’s initial editorials

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Shane Bauer visited a Palestinian village where his friend, Tristan Anderson, was shot by a teargas canister fired by Israeli Defense Forces. | photo courtesy ben rosenfeld contact with the Committee to Protect Journalists as well as Bauer’s editors at The Nation and Mother Jones, some were opposed to emphasizing the journalism aspect. “Think back to July 2009 in Iran,” Martinez said, referencing the popular uprising known as the Green Revolution that had sent shockwaves through Iran just months earlier. “Our friends were and are journalists involved in social movements and people’s movements. I’m pretty sure if you did a Google search with ‘Iran, July, 2009, activists,’ you’d come up with something like torture, prison. That is why we thought ... let’s just say they’re hikers.” So they came to be known as “the hikers,” and a website was created to go along with the campaign, called Free the Hikers. “We wanted to make sure we weren’t divulging details about them that they weren’t divulging to their interrogators,” Rosenfeld said. “We wanted to be careful not to piss off the U.S. or the State Department. And, if we seemed too orchestrated, it might feed into Iran’s paranoid theories that they were spies. So we had to try to solve for all of these variables at the same time.” It began to dawn on them that they were contending not only with the soured relationship between the U.S. and Iran, but an internal power struggle within Iran that had intensified in the wake of mass internal dissent. “The government that grabbed Shane, Josh, and Sarah was at war with its own people,” Martinez reflected. “They were prisoners of the historical moment.”

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Nor was the trio the first in their circle of friends to stumble into a horrendous situation overseas. Tristan Anderson, of Berkeley, was attending a nonviolent protest of the Israeli occupation in a Palestinian village at the beginning of 2009 when he was hit by a high-velocity teargas projectile fired by Israeli Defense Forces, and sustained serious brain injuries. “Tristan’s like a minor celebrity in Iran,” Meckfessel noted. “He’s known not only for initially getting shot ... but Tristan’s whole case got a lot of sympathetic media in Iran.” When his three friends were captured, “the first thought I had was, we have proof that we’re all friends with Tristan,” he said. On Feb. 10, 2010, Anderson’s parents, Nancy and Mike Anderson, sent a letter to Ahmadinejad. “It pains us greatly, on top of the tragedy we have already suffered, to see Tristan’s close friends made to bear the burden of grievances between nations,” they wrote.

Game of diplomacy The idea to approach the Venezuelan government started when Raymor Ryan, an Irish author who lives in Chiapas, phoned Martinez. “He said, ‘The only thing that’s going to really affect them is state power — this is a game of diplomacy,’ ” Martinez recounted. He suggested Venezuela — a country that is not only on friendly terms with Iran, but has connections with social movements. Martinez liked the idea, but first he ran it by another friend, famed academic Immanuel Wallerstein. music listings

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In an email, Wallerstein summarized for the Guardian the advice he gave. “The Iranians are using this as part of their struggles with the United States,” he wrote. “The least likely way to obtain their release is to allow U.S.Iranian relations to be the issue, or to allow the virtues of the Iranian regime to be the issue. I suggested that they try to work with various left-of-center governments in Latin America, which have friendly relations with Iran, and see if they will intervene with the Iranian government. I did not single out Venezuela. After that, I was out of the picture.” In October of 2009, Rosenfeld reached out to an attorney he knew through the National Lawyers Guild, Eva Golinger, who’s authored seven books, lives in Caracas, and occasionally serves as an adviser to Chavez. She agreed to help. Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela’s foreign minister, told her he thought Chavez would be open to helping. “The foreign minister went to Tehran, and they told me they were going to broach the subject,” Golinger said. “When they came back, they told me unfortunately, it wasn’t a topic that was received favorably by the Iranians.” Rosenfeld and Martinez were crazed, but they had another idea. Perhaps Chavez would be more responsive to appeals from lefty luminaries. Thanks to behindthe-scenes arrangements made by campaign organizers working every connection they could muster, a letter dated Feb. 26, 2010 was sent to Chavez on behalf of Noam Chomsky, Angela Davis, and Harry Belafonte.

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neWs “All three of the hikers are dedicated to improving living conditions for poor and oppressed people throughout the world, and to fostering a better understanding among their fellow citizens of the U.S.’s hegemonic role in global politics and economic privation,� they wrote. Soon after, Golinger had a chance to speak with Chavez directly, when she was invited to join him on a trip to Uruguay to attend the presidential inauguration. “He said, ‘do you think they’re spies?’ I said, look, I don’t think they’re spies. I think they were gringos in the wrong place at the wrong time,� she recounted. “Chavez said, yeah, no problem. I’ll help.� Soon after, the campaign recruited anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan to write to Chavez, too. But the months rolled by without word of a trial date, let alone a release. Rosenfeld thought up a new way to reach Chavez — by encouraging actor Sean Penn to speak with him. Penn enjoyed a good relationship with the Venezuelan president and had been regularly traveling to the region to aid in earthquake relief efforts in Haiti, which Venezuela was deeply involved in. Rosenfeld asked Matt Gonzalez, chief attorney of the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office and a friend of Penn’s, to mention it to him. Within months, Penn discussed the hikers’ case with Chavez, according to Golinger. Then, in September of 2010, Shourd was finally released. Bay Area friends described it as a moment of sheer joy, but also bittersweet, because Bauer and Fattal remained behind bars. Miller invited friends and organizers over to her place in Oakland to join her in the surreal experience of watching their friend deliver a speech on television. Meckfessel was in Rome as part of his “Free Our Friends� tour through Europe. “I got a text message from somebody that she had been released, and I burst into tears of relief,� he said. “Then, just as I was preparing to do my presentation in Rome, I got a call — and it was Sarah. I just shouted and cried in front of this big group of Romans, and everyone was applauding.� Upon her return, Shourd wasted no time throwing herself into the campaign. “I just have so editorials

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much admiration and respect for Sarah,� Miller said. “She went from coming out of prison, and needing time to heal from that, to becoming a full-force, 24/7 international diplomacy worker.� Shourd, Bauer, and Fattal were unavailable for an interview for this article, but their families emailed a statement. “As Josh and Shane said when they got home, many of their friends put their own lives on hold to fight for their freedom,� they wrote. “We are grateful to the many people who worked in many different ways to help Shane and Josh. Every single effort mattered and made a difference.�

Inexcusable acts When the day of their release finally came, Golinger watched in Caracas as television broadcasts showed Bauer and Fattal bounding down the steps of the plane and leaping into the arms of their loved ones. She sent a text to Maduro, the Venezuelan foreign minister, who was in New York for the UN General Assembly. “I asked ... were we involved?� Minutes later, she received a text in response. “He said, fundamentally, yes.� The Iranian foreign minister had told him that the release went through because of Chavez’s request. Days later, in New York, the hikers visited the Venezuelan consulate. And on the same trip, their first time back on U.S. soil, Bauer and Fattal held a press conference. “The only explanation for our prolonged detention is the 32 years of mutual hostility between America and Iran,� Bauer said. “The irony is that Sarah, Josh, and I oppose U.S. policies towards Iran which perpetuate this hostility. We were convicted of espionage because we are American. It is that simple.� He went on: “In prison, every time we complained about our conditions, the guards would immediately remind us of comparable conditions at Guantanamo Bay. They would remind us of CIA prisons in other parts of the world, and the conditions that Iranians and others experience in prisons in the U.S. We do not believe that such human rights violations on the part of our government justify what has been done to us, not for a moment. However, we do believe that these actions on the part of the U.S provide an excuse for other governments, including the governments of Iran, to act in kind.� 2 picks

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ross mirkarimi is the person I want to see in this job. - sheriff mike hennessey

for more visit sfbg.com/politics

John avalos photo by keeney and law

Endorsements

Avalos for mayor. Mirkarimi for sheriff. Onek for district attorney. Yes on C, No on D, E, and F... complete endorsements for the San Francisco election The way the San Francisco Chronicle is reporting it, this city isn’t paying much attention to the Nov. 8 election. An Oct. 2 story cited a rumored poll showing that a third of the voters still think Gavin Newsom is mayor. And “nobody has a really big, attention-grabbing personality.” And yet, this is a crucial election. The city’s in serious trouble. The budget has a huge structural imbalance, blue-collar jobs are vanishing, affordable housing lags far behind condominiums for millionaires — and planning decisions that are made in the next administration will change the shape of the city for decades to come. Meanwhile, a discredited political machine run by former Mayor Willie Brown is trying mightily to get its sleazy tentacles back into City Hall. There are important races for sheriff and district attorney, too. San Francisco has a long history of progressive sheriffs, dating back to Dick Hongisto in the 1970s. Now, after 30 years, Mike Hennessey is retiring — and it’s possible that the city could lose the distinction of having a national leader in alternatives to incarceration, anti-recidivism and humane treatment of prisoners. San Francisco has another distinction, this one less laudable: This is the first city in modern history to have a police chief become district 10 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

attorney. And three challengers are trying to change that. We’ve spent weeks meeting with the candidates. We’ve held a series of forums on the key issues (see p. 16). Our interviews are all on the politics blog at sfbg.com. So don’t sit this one out. Vote early, vote often, and vote as if the future of the city is at stake. Our recommendations follow.

Mayor 1. John Avalos 2. Dennis Herrera 3. Leland Yee The first mayoral election in San Francisco to feature ranked-choice voting and public financing has opened the way to a broad field of candidates. There are eight contenders who have served either as supervisors or as citywide elected officials — and if the interim mayor, Ed Lee, had kept his promise and stayed out of the race, this would be perhaps the most competitive field in modern history. Unfortunately, Lee — who was chosen to replace Gavin Newsom only because he vowed to be a caretaker and not run for a full term — backed down from his promise, and, thanks to a boatload of special interest money, is now the clear favorite. But Lee still lacks the support of a majority of the voters (polls show him with around 30 percent, meaneditorials

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ing 70 percent are either undecided or voting for somebody else), which gives the rest of the field — or at least, a few of the top contenders — a fighting chance. In some ways, Lee has been refreshing. After years of the arrogant and superficial Gavin Newsom, Lee has brought humility, a sense of humor and a degree of openness to the office that has won him fans across the political spectrum. But frankly, the entire process that brought us to this position stinks of backroom deals involving some very unsavory characters. Lee, a career bureaucrat, wasn’t even interested in the job (and wasn’t even in the country) when the Board of Supervisors met to choose Newsom’s replacement. At the last minute, Newsom, Chief of Staff Steve Kawa, former Mayor Willie Brown and a few others orchestrated a deal that aced out Sheriff Mike Hennessy — the progressive choice — and put Lee in Room 200. And then, after denying for months that he had any intention of running in the fall, he changed his mind — telling Sup. David Chiu that he was “unable to resist Willie Brown and [Chinatown powerbroker] Rose Pak.” In a recent interview, Lee said he would give Brown an A+ for his time running the city. That’s a very bad sign. The years when Brown was mayor were awful. Between 1996 and 2001,

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some 20,000 people were driven out of San Francisco. Evictions ran as high as 200 a month. It seemed as if every day, another low-income family or senior citizen or artist community was forced out of the Mission to make way for rich dotcomers and illegal live-work lofts. At one point, Brown even said that the city was so expensive that poor people shouldn’t live here. Developers ran the Planning Department. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. (which now has Brown on a juicy legal retainer) ran the Public Utilities Commission. The city was deeply damaged by cronyism and corruption. Anyone who thinks those years were anything other than a disaster has no business in Room 200, City Hall. Even with all of that, we were willing to give Lee a shot. It’s been tough to find three candidates to endorse, and we were hoping he’d come talk to us, impress us, and leave us the option of putting him on the list. But after taking weeks to schedule an endorsement interview, he didn’t show up. The Brown-Newsom legacy has been terrible for San Francisco. This is a city where the rich are getting richer, housing prices are out of reach for working-class people, tenants are getting screwed, affordable housing is falling far behind the need — and the Planning Department is talking about building housing for another 40,000 music listings

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rich people, destroying blue-collar jobs in the process. City Hall badly needs change. It’s critical to end the 16 years of regressive policies and bring in a mayor who is independent of the old, corrupt political machine. And while we are strong supporters of Sup. John Avalos, with rankedchoice voting, we believe that it’s important to round out the slate with candidates who also have a reasonable chance of winning. Avalos is by far the best candidate, the strongest on the issues, the one who can be counted on to bring a progressive reform agenda and an age of innovation to City Hall. More than anyone else in the race, he understands the crisis facing the city and the need for dramatic action to protect tenants, poor people and what’s left of the city’s middle class. He realizes that San Francisco can’t continue to allow developers to build milliondollar condos without mandating a more-than equal amount of belowmarket-rate housing. He realizes that the public sector is under attack nationwide, and that San Francisco needs to fight back — and that means raising taxes on the rich to preserve and expand public services. He told us he’d like to see the city’s revenue increase by $500 million a year by the end of his mayoral term — enough not only to halt the ongoing budget cuts but to CONTINUES ON PAGE 12 >>

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11


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begin to restore essential programs that Newsom gutted. He’s already begun exploring legislation to create a municipal bank to take money that now goes to Wells Fargo and Bank of America and use it to make loans to local small businesses. He also realizes the danger of secrecy, corruption and cronyism in undermining faith in government. He’s been an excellent supervisor, and the city would be well served by an Avalos administration. Our second choice is City Attorney Dennis Herrera. We’ve had problems with Herrera in the past — his office disqualified a referendum on redevelopment in Bayview Hunters Point on the basis of a ridiculous interpretation of state law that he could easily have challenged. He’s promoted gang injunctions that are anathema to civil liberties. His office has allowed city departments to keep secret more documents than necessary. He’s weak on housing, declining to call for a moratorium on new marketrate units until affordable housing catches up. But he, as much as Newsom, was responsible for promoting and defending San Francisco’s landmark same-sex marriage campaign, he’s got a strong record on consumer and environmental protection — and on most issues, he’s a decent progressive. By all accounts, he’s a good manager. He has a solid grasp of public policy issues. He agrees that a big part of the solution to the city’s budget crisis has to be new revenue. He promised not only to introduce and lead a public power campaign but to appoint publicpower-friendly commissioners to the Public Utilities Commission. He would replace the BrownNewsom hacks on key city commissions and in top administration positions — and we’re convinced that he’s principled enough to put an end to pay-to-play, unregistered lobbyists and the growing tide of sleaze in the Mayor’s Office. He’s a hard worker with strong executive experience, and San Francisco would be well served by a Herrera administration. Then there’s the third choice — which was, to put it mildly, a challenge. There are a few decent candidates out there who have good things to say. The Green Party’s Terry Baum, one of only three women in the race, is right on all the issues, but has no electoral 12 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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experience — and honestly, little chance of winning. Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting has been great on Prop. 13 and has gone after big business and the Catholic Church on tax issues; his “Reset SF” campaign relies a little too much on the idea that crowd-sourcing policy solutions will save the day, but we like Ting. Unfortunately, he’s barely registering in the major polls and his campaign hasn’t developed the kind of traction it needs to make him a viable challenger. Supervisor David Chiu was a progressive once, and he claims he still is. He’s personable and accessible and votes the right way more than half the time. But he is singlehandedly responsible for giving the conservatives control of the Board of Supervisors. He was a swing vote for Ed Lee for mayor, he supported the Twitter tax break, he’s trying to block Sup. David Campos’ move to close a loophole in the city’s healthcare law — and in general, he’s too quick to compromise and move to the center. Bevan Dufty is the only candidate who shows a consistent sense of humor (“I’m a little Strawberry Shortcake meets Hello Kitty”), and he’s often the star of the candidate forums. He’s the only candidate talking seriously about the crisis in the African American community. He opposed the sit-lie law. He’s got some wonderful wild ideas, like getting Virgin Airlines to decorate the inside of Muni buses to make the ride colorful and exciting. He actually cares about city workers. We appreciate having Dufty in the race. But he’s been abysmal on tenant issues, and told us that he thinks landlord tenant battles “are too adversarial.” Overall, his voting record on economic issues has been consistently with the conservative wing of the board. We hope the next mayor finds a spot for him in city government; he has a lot to offer. But we just disagree on too many issues. Jeff Adachi has been an excellent public defender and talks passionately about social justice. He has strong roots in the progressive community. We give him credit for forcing pension reform onto the agenda. But he seems a bit too willing to attack the public sector as the source of the city’s economic woes — he refused to support the last public power measure and his main budget proposal is to make city employees pay more for their pensions –without in any way pairing that with a hike in the taxes that big businesses and wealthy people music listings

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pay. And his lone-wolf approach to the pension issue has been divisive and doesn’t play well in this labor town. Joanna Rees has offered some interesting, independent ideas, but she’s never held any elective office or had any involvement in local politics. That leaves Sen. Leland Yee. A classic lesser of the evils. Yee has a very mixed record. He was a conservative School Board member who wouldn’t even talk about higher taxes and once tried to split the wealthier West Side off into its own school district. He had a pretty bad voting record on the Board of Supervisors, particularly on tenant issues. He didn’t support health benefits for transgender city employees. But on a board almost entirely controlled by then-Mayor Brown, he was something of an independent, one of only two or three supervisors ever willing to go up against the powerful mayor. And he’s moved to the left in the past couple of years. He has fully apologized for his vote on transgender benefits, has been strong on labor issues — and is (and always has been) a leading voice on open government. He has 100 percent voting scores from the leading labor and environmental groups in Sacramento. He has the support of a lot of local progressive groups, including SEIU Local 1021. He is supporting the proposal by Sup. David Campos to close the loophole in the city’s health-care law. He told us he would oppose any effort to change district elections. Yee makes us nervous. As we noted in a profile (see “The Real Leland Yee,” 8/30/11): “He’s grown, changed, and developed his positions over time. Or he’s become an expert at political pandering, telling every group exactly what it wants to hear. He’s the best chance progressives have of keeping the corrupt old political machine out of City Hall — or he’s a chameleon who will be a nightmare for progressive San Francisco. “Or maybe he’s a little bit of all of that.” But in the end, after 24 years in public life, it’s safe to say that Yee is not part of the old machine, not part of the Newsom/Kawa/Brown team that put Lee in office, not part of anyone’s corrupt operation. He’s himself, for better and for worse, and he’ll clean house in the Mayor’s Office. And at a time when City Hall could too easily drift back into the very bad old days, we’re willing to take a chance on Leland Yee.

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NEWS

DAVID ONEK

DISTRICT ATTORNEY 1. David Onek 2. Sharmin Bock 3. Bill Fazio District Attorney George Gascon is not a bad guy. He was a better police chief than many of the people we’ve seen in that job. He has a history of standing up for immigrants under very, very difficult circumstances — as the chief of police in Mesa, Arizona he had to tangle with a rabidly anti-immigrant sheriff and a conservative population, and he emerged with solid credentials. He brought some much-needed professionalism and stronger management practices to the SFPD. He’s personable, accessible and works hard to stay in touch with the community. As D.A., he’s worked well with the public defender and has (finally) come around to opposing the death penalty. We just wish that Gavin Newsom hadn’t decided that the way to advance his own political career and agenda was to put his police chief in the District Attorney’s Office. There are reasons that no police chief in the United States has become a district attorney — certainly not in modern history. The D.A. and the cops have to work together, but they also have to have a certain degree of separation — or there are inevitable, unacceptable, unworkable conflicts of interest. And while Gascon talks about transparency, he’s fighting the release of a crucial memo on problems in the crime lab. So we’re looking for a new district attorney, and there are three contenders, each of them with strengths and weaknesses. Our first choice is David Onek, whose career in nonprofit and academic work leaves him short of the courtroom and management experience we’d like to see in the next D.A. but who has by far the strongest credentials and agenda for reform. He starts off every interview and discussion by saying editorials

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that the criminal justice system in California is broken — not bent, not sprained, not in need of a little attention, but utterly broken. The entire premise that’s driven criminal law in the past several decades — that offenders, including nonviolent and drug offenders, need to be sent to prison for longer and longer terms — has proven a failure. “We’re arresting and prosecuting people just fine,” he told us. “We need to reform the system.” And San Francisco could make a national statement by electing a district attorney who wants to change criminal justice, not just make it work better. Onek’s strong focus on juvenile justice would be a profound policy shift — juvie is typically a secondary thought in the justice system. Onek promised never to charge a youthful offender as an adult without going before a judge first — and would do that only in rare cases. His plan is to get kids out of the justice system before they become hardened criminals. He’s also talking about working on employment opportunities for ex-offenders. He has always been opposed to the death penalty, and we think he’s taking seriously the need for more aggressive investigation and prosecution of political corruption. Onek has never tried a case — a major drawback. On the other hand, neither has the incumbent. We acknowledge that putting someone with negligible prosecutorial experience in the top job is a stretch — but the justice system is such a mess that we’re willing to gamble on an idealistic reformer. Two qualified, experienced prosecutors are also in the race. We give a slight edge to Sharmin Bock, who has spent her career in the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office. Bock’s spent a lot of time working on crimes against women and portrays herself as in independent, which is both good and bad: Good because it would give her an outsiders perspective on the office, bad because, unlike Alameda County’s D.A., San Francisco’s prosecutor is part of the local political infrastructure. But she does have some background prosecuting bad cops — she was part of the office that went after Oakland’s notorious Riders. Bill Fazio, who was a San Francisco prosecutor and is now a defense lawyer, shares Bock’s courtroom experience. And his days on the defense side of the aisle have changed some of his perspectives

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— the one-time tough-on-crime guy who in 1999 ran for this office as a death-penalty advocate now agrees that executions are a terrible mistake. He’s a little shaky on drug crimes (“it’s only a problem when it’s a problem�) and to this day, he says the prosecution of the Fajitagate cops was “ridiculous� (wrong, Bill — there was a systemic cover-up, and it’s too bad the top brass got away with it). But we’ll give him our final nod.

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EDITORIALS

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SHERIFF 1. Ross Mirkarimi Mike Hennessey has been sheriff of San Francisco for so long, and has done such a great job, that hardly anyone in town really thinks about the politics of the office any more. We take it for granted that we have the most progressive sheriff in the state, maybe the nation. We just assume that the jails will be run well, that the deputies will be held to a high standard of behavior, that alternatives to incarceration will be part of the program, that evictions will be handled in a humane way, that anti-recidivism programs will be funded and given priority, that immigrants won’t face automatic deportation — and that San Francisco’s top elected law-enforcement official will be a leader in innovative ways to approach law enforcement. But it wasn’t always that way, and it won’t necessarily be that way in the future. This is a crucial election, pitting a progressive reformer who comes from the civilian world against two career law-enforcement officers. It’s a chance to vote for someone who will continue Hennessey’s legacy or to risk turning back the clock. That’s why we’re strongly endorsing Ross Mirkarimi, and only Ross Mirkarimi. Hennessey was never a cop. He started off as a poverty lawyer, working in prison legal services under Dick Hongisto, who launched

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the tradition of progressive sheriffs in this city. He ran as a civilian and won — and there’s a value to that. The Sheriff’s Office in San Francisco has no Police Commission, no Office of Citizen Complaints; the only oversight of 850 sworn officers is the elected sheriff. Since Hennessey’s election, law enforcement lobbyists have managed to make changes in state law that bar anyone without formal police training from serving as a sheriff. Under current law, Mike Hennessey — who is widely respected by his peers — wouldn’t be allowed to seek the office. Mirkarimi meets the qualifications. He went through the San Francisco Police Academy as an investigator for the District Attorney’s Office and graduated as president of his class. He holds the Peace Officers Standards and Training certificate and is thus in an unusual position: He can run for sheriff without being part of the law-enforcement fraternity. It’s not as if Mirkarimi is a stranger to the issues. He spent much of his first term in office working on public safety. When he took office in 2005, District Five, particularly the Western Addition, was plagued with violent crime. He personally appeared at every homicide scene, pushed for more police on the streets and for foot patrols and worked to organize the community around crime — and it worked. The murder rate dropped dramatically. These days, Mirkarimi is working on anti-recidivism programs and wants to bring that approach to the office. Which is critical: Over the next two years, as the state implements a prison-system realignment, hundreds more inmates will be entering the San Francisco County Jail system — and while Hennessey has made a lot of progress, almost three quarters of the people who leave jail in San Francisco wind up getting in trouble with the law again. The person who knows the job best is Hennessey — and he’s made his position clear. When Hennessey decided three years ago that he was going to retire at the end of his term, he met with Mirkarimi and told him he’d like to see the supervisor as his successor. In fact, Hennessey told us, he offered to appoint Mirkarimi as undersheriff, so he could learn the job and run as the second-in-command. But that wasn’t possible — city law prohibits sitting supervisors from taking another city job (unless it’s an MUSIC LISTINGS

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elected position). If Hennessey had become acting mayor he would have appointed Mirkarimi sheriff. “Ross is the person I want to see in the job,� Hennessey said. He noted two important reasons. First, he said, “one of the hardest parts of any law enforcement management job is maintaining discipline in the ranks. And that’s very hard to do if you’re an insider. I’ve always considered myself a citizen more than a peace officer, and that’s allowed me to do the job.� Second, Hennessey told us, “One of the reasons I was successful is that I’ve been an innovator. I see Ross as having that spirit. And I don’t see that in the other two candidates.� If John Avalos isn’t elected mayor, Mirkarimi could become the only truly progressive person holding citywide office in San Francisco. In seven years on the Board of Supervisors, he was not only a leader on environmental and public safety issues but was an utterly reliable progressive vote. He represents part of the next generation of progressive leadership in San Francisco, and we’re proud to endorse him for sheriff. There are two other candidates running — Chris Cunnie, a former San Francisco cop and head of the Police Officers Association, and Paul Miyamoto, a captain in Hennessey’s department. Both have experience, and both vowed to carry on Hennessey’s progressive legacy. But we can’t support either of them. Cunnie was head of the POA when that union opposed the police reform measure that gave the supervisors three appointments to the Police Commission. He made a habit of blasting progressive District Attorney Terence Hallinan for not being nice enough to the cops. And under his leadership, the POA opposed a promotions plan designed to bring more women and people of color into leadership positions in the SFPD. He’s done some good things, and told us he wants to work to get people with substance abuse problems out of the legal system and into treatment (he was a very successful executive at Walden House, the treatment facility). But he’s endorsed by POA President Gary Delagnes, who has been a major obstacle to police reform. Miyamoto spent his life in law enforcement and has the management experience, but lacks the kind of innovative agenda that Hennessey told us the next sheriff

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NEWS needs. The bottom line is simple: All three candidates spend a lot of time touting the legacy and great work that Hennessey did, and all of them vow to continue in his footsteps. But Hennessey himself says the only candidate who can continue his legacy is Ross Mirkarimi. That’s a pretty clear choice.

SAN FRANCISCO BALLOT MEASURES

of the city’s annual budget rather than being paid for with borrowed money repaid by increased property taxes and rents. We might even agree, if the wealthy were being fairly taxed and the city was bringing in at least $248 million in additional annual revenue. But in this era of declining government resources, this bond is desperately needed. Most of it, almost $150 million, goes to resurfacing the streets, while $50 million goes to new improvements (including improved bike lanes) and $22 million each go to signal upgrades and sidewalk and ramp improvements. Leaders from across the political spectrum support it. Vote yes on B.

PROPOSITION A

PROPOSITION C

YES

YES

SCHOOL BONDS A lot of the educational facilities in San Francisco are in need of repair and renovation, and some of these improvements are critical for meeting health and safety standards. They include elementary schools, middle schools, high schools and child development centers, many of which are located in the city’s southeastern neighborhoods. This measure would allow the San Francisco Unified School District to issue $531 million in bonds to repair and rebuild facilities. The expenditure comes with a number of safeguards and strings attached. SFUSD is required by law to conduct an annual financial audit to ensure that funding is being properly used, and an independent citizens’ oversight committee will be created within two months of approval to inform the public about how the proceeds are used. Vote yes.

PROPOSITION B YES STREET REPAVING BOND There are few more basic functions of government than maintaining the streets. This $248 million general obligation bond would fund improvements to benefit drivers, pedestrians, bicyclists, and public transit users. And if San Francisco doesn’t make this investment now, it will cost even more later to fix the roads once they’ve begun to degrade, so this really is a no-brainer. Some — particularly the right-wing, anti-tax scolds — might argue that keeping the roads in good shape should be part EDITORIALS

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PENSION REFORM

PROPOSITION D NO PENSION REFORM We’ll admit to a bit of political crankiness on this one: Our initial instinct was to oppose both of these measures. Sure, there are abuses in the city’s pension system (particularly among public safety employees). Sure, since the stock market crash, the cost to the city of funding the pension system has risen to levels unsustainable in our current fiscal environment. And at some point, the supervisors were going to have to deal with it. But there’s a basic unfairness about all of this that bothers us: The city workers are being asked to give up part of their pay — but the wealthiest individuals and big corporations in San Francisco are giving up nothing. It’s part of the national trend — the poor and middle class are shouldering the entire burden of the economic crisis, and the rich aren’t suffering a bit. That said, there’s political reality here — both of the pension reform measures will probably pass, and the one that gets more votes will take effect. And there’s really no choice between them — Prop. C, the measure written with the input and support of the mayor, the supervisors and labor, is the better option. The two proposals are complicated. Both would reduce the city’s obligation to pay into the employee pension plan, particularly in years when the economy is bad, the stock market is down and the pension PICKS

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fund portfolio is shrinking. Both require city employees to work longer for lower pensions. Both have complex formulas for how that would happen. Prop. D, written by Public Defender Jeff Adachi, has a slightly better formula for allocating the pain: Under his plan, employees making lower salaries would pay less than employees at the high end of the scale. His is also stronger on pension “spiking� — pensions would be based on the average pay of an employees last five years. Under the City Hall plan, that would be a three-year average. But overall, Prop. C is a better measure — in large part because it reflects a legitimate process of collective bargaining. Adachi did his plan all by himself, with no input from labor or others at City Hall. Prop. C was hammered out in a series of meetings with members of the board, the mayor, and representatives of the city employee unions that will actually pay for the changes. That, generally, is how the process ought to work. We would have demanded tax reform before we supported any pension reform, but given the options facing us, we’re going Yes on C and No on D.

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PROPOSITION E

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NO CHANGING VOTER-APPROVED MEASURES The right of the people to directly reform government laws when their elected representatives fail to do so is one of the most cherished and effective electoral reforms of the Progressive Era, when the initiative, recall, and referendum were established. But this measure would have the people voluntarily give up some of that power by allowing the Board of Supervisors to alter or repeal voter-approved ballot measures. Supervisor Scott Wiener, who pushed this measure with support from the big business community, never really explained why it was necessary or what legislation he was targeting — but among the potentially vulnerable measures are tenant protections and the city’s transit-first policy. Wiener argued that this was just about not cluttering up the ballots with minor administrative tweaks. Do you see anything like that on the ballot? No, neither do we, and we aren’t buying that this is a problem in need of such CONTINUES ON PAGE 16 >>

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15



news than letting it drop by a half-percent as the state rate sunsets. Sales taxes are regressive, hitting the poor harder than the rich, and not the best funding mechanism. We’re also not fond of this measure’s provisions to set that money aside to fund public safety programs and services to seniors and children, which is clearly a gimmick by tax-averse politicians to sell this measure to voters. But the bottom line is that years of deep cuts have taken a disastrous toll on the city budget — threatening core social services and, yes, even public safety programs — and the city needs the money. Besides, this simply keeps the city’s 8.5 percent sales tax rate where it is, at a level we’ve already budgeted for. We’ll endorse Prop. G — but we look forward to seeing some more progressive measures on the ballot next fall.

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The Guardian endorsements were prepared by our editorial board, Rebecca Bowe, Bruce B. Brugmann, Tim Redmond and Steven T. Jones. news

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NEIGHBORHOOD scHOOls Prop. H is a policy statement that would have no immediate impact — but it’s still dangerous. It’s an attempt to undermine the School Board’s assignment policy, a system worked out over more than two years after dozens of hearings and meetings. The current system isn’t perfect — but there’s no way to create a perfect way to assign kids to schools in a city where some neighborhoods are still segregated by race, the quality of local schools is unequal, the district offers special programs at school sites scattered across the city — and parents want the right to chose schools outside their neighborhoods. So the assignment process allows parents to chose seven schools, weighs the demographics of the family and makes an effort to both ensure diversity and give as many families one of their choices as possible. It works more than 80 percent of the time. Prop. H would mandate that geography — proximity to a school — was given the highest priority in assignment. That means kids in rich neighborhoods would go to better schools — and some schools would be effectively re-segregated by race. It’s a terrible idea, and needs to be defeated. Vote No. 2

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up to their elbows in bowls of weed nugs they’re breaking apart. Though currently located in a mostly residential building, Woodson claims that the business has never received a single neighborhood complaint. The delivery service has now served over 3,000 clients. Having sunk a half million dollars into failed permitting procedures, Reed hopes he’s created a comprehensive plan that will pass the expectations of the various city agencies through which one must venture to open a weed dispensary. The new location will necessitate a focus on discretion and security. Monroe Elementary School and the

heRBWiSe When asked to describe herself, Green Cross Dispensary patient Nicole Williams laughs. “I work full time, I go to school, I care for my mom. My brother’s taking the LSATs on Saturday — what else should I say? Native San Franciscan, long time resident.” She’s being interviewed by the Guardian to gauge the demand in the Excelsior neighborhood for a new business that’s relocating to the neighborhood where it will be the first of its kind: the Green Cross’ new marijuana dispensary walk-in facility. Currently, the company is the city’s sole licensed delivery-only dispensary. The Green Cross is hoping to have a little more luck with 4218 Mission than it did with its first location, which opened in Noe Valley in 2004 as a more professional alternative to the stereotypical cannabis club with BuSineSS CaSual BuDS: the gReen CRoSS hopeS “long haired hippies to expanD opeRationS to the exCelSioR. behind the counter,” guardian photo by caitlin donohue in the words of dispensary employee Caren Woodson. Mission YMCA are both a few blocks But the idea attracted so many away. Plans include a wall that customers (some garnering comwould block all view of the goingsplaints that marijuana was being on inside the dispensary. Plans do sold on the street) that the city’s not include a space for on-site smokplanning department rescinded ing, and members will have to sign owner Kevin Reed’s permit for the a code of conduct that says they’ll space. After a disappointing attempt be respectful of the surrounding to open a location in Fisherman’s neighborhood. Wharf, an aide to the Mayor encour350 of the patients currently age Reed to try for a delivery-only in Green Cross’ database live in permit instead. Now, the dispensary the proposed site’s 94112 zip code. hopes the third try’s the charm. A Williams is one of them, and has public hearing to discuss its applicabeen a patient since Green Cross’ tion to re-open in the Excelsior is Noe Valley days. She’s nowhere near scheduled for Nov. 17. the image of a troublemaking pot“We’re going to make sure head, but it’s small wonder she was we’re addressing the neighbors’ “pretty excited” to hear that she concerns,” Reed says, sitting on a might be getting a new neighbor. stool in the Green Cross delivery “You’re just looking for a safe and call center, which operates out place where you can get your mediof the front rooms of his comfortcine and go home.” 2 ably-appointed SoMa apartment. Green Cross mandatory review hearinG In front of him are flashing screens Nov. 17, time TBA of 32 security cameras — a glaring Room 400, City Hall reminder that Green Cross’ first One Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett, SF commitment is to safety. (415) 558-6377 Green Cross employees dress www.sf-planning.org in business casual — even, as this www.thegreencross.org reporter witnessed, when they’re music listings

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TarTine Cafe

saMPling 10- and 20-year Whiskies sTraighT froM The Barrel aT neW MidleTon disTillery in coUnTy cork | guardian photos by virginia miller

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Uncorking JaMeson By Virginia Miller virginia@sfbg.com aPPeTiTe Ireland is a green land of rolling hills, sheep, and craggy coastline, to be sure. The people enchanted even more: a generous, welcoming, hilarious lot. One of my favorite people in recent Ireland travels was Liam O’Leary, distillery operations manager at New Midleton Distillery in County Cork, near the southern coast of Ireland. The name New Midleton may not mean a lot to some, but if you follow Irish whiskey, you know there are merely three distilleries producing publicly sold spirits in all of Ireland and this one’s the mother. Most famously, it’s the home to Jameson (founded in 1780 by John Jameson and originally produced in Dublin at the Old Jameson Distillery, which I also visited). New Midleton also produces numerous Irish whiskies including Midleton, Powers Gold Label, Tullamore Dew, Paddy, and smaller pot still brands like my longtime favorite Irish whiskey, Redbreast, and new love Green Spot. (Oh, that it would become available in the States). Liam hosted the Renaissance Man and I on a private tour of the grounds. Spending pleasurable hours talking of whiskey and his 40-year history at Jameson (long before it was the huge company it is now), we soon delved into a subject dear to my heart, and, it seems, to every local I spoke to: music. We watched mass distilling in action, and finished with a hearty Irish lunch in the distillery restaurant. The New Midleton facility is to date the most colossal, high production I’ve yet seen: towering stills, control panels, endless storage

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buildings stacked with barrels, and the world’s largest pot still (able to hold up to 125,000 liters, or roughly 33,000 gallons), which is no longer in use but is viewable in the Old Midleton museum. Numerous copper pot stills operate simultaneously, holding a massive 75,000 liters each. The facility whirs and buzzes continuously, recalling Ireland’s past, creating its future. Exploring New Midleton, it was only fitting we talk Jameson. Possibly the highlight of my trip to Ireland — and there were many — was tasting Jameson 20-year whiskey straight from bourbon barrels (of which the majority of Jameson is aged in), and alongside it, 10-year whiskey in sherry barrels, both of which are blended into higher-end final product. Both were superb, the purest forms of Irish whiskey I’ve tasted, particularly the golden, 20-year in bourbon barrels. Its layers kept unfolding: warm, honeyed and bright, spicy, fresh with grain and fruit. Already perfection, this stuff should be bottled at cask strength on its own. The sherry cask whiskey adds round, dark notes, giving it fullness and sensual depth. As I taste through the Jameson line here at home, notes from those unforgettable barrels come back to me. I pick up various strains from the bourbon and sherry oak, all with that ever-present smoothness Irish whiskey is known for as it is generally triple-distilled. As the biggest selling Irish whiskey in the world, Jameson has done much to advance the category. Here are my tasting notes: JaMeson raresT reserVe, $279 Rarest Reserve is the granddaddy of the line. Winning numerous awards music listings

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(including this year’s Double Gold at the SF World Spirits Competition), it’s an expensive but truly special imbibement. After one explores the full-bodied aromas of ripe plum and spice, the taste impresses with toasted wood, dusty peach, dark chocolate, a hint of slate, leather, and earth. Here I find encompassed the approachable yet elevated possibilities inherent in Irish whiskey. JaMeson 18-year liMiTed reserVe, $86.99 The 18-year is another big awardwinner, hitting my taste buds with an intense amount of peach. For me it evokes a golden summer freshness. Though I prefer it neat, it’s also lovely on the rocks. A couple drops of water allow other tastes to unfold, including orange marmalade, gentle spice, nuttiness, and biscuit. It’s soft yet bright, and could convert the non-whiskey drinker. JaMeson gold reserVe, $60.99 Gold Reserve is a richer whiskey than the 12-year or Jameson Irish Whiskey. I get creamy apple on the nose, a gentle honey texture, and a peppery finish. JaMeson 12-year sPecial reserVe, $39.99 The 12-year won Gold this year at the SF World Spirits Competition. It’s sweet and spicy with sherry, wood notes. Oddly enough, I find its astringency is softened and rounded out with food. JaMeson irish Whiskey, $24.99 The original Jameson has never been my Irish whiskey go-to. I find it a bit hot and thin, despite sweet fruit, vanilla and nuts. But this is the great global seller in Irish whiskey, often the first introduction many have to the category. 2

Subscribe to Virgina’s twice monthly newsletter, The Perfect Spot, www. theperfectspotsf.com

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food + dRink: cheap eats

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CHEAP EATS Arrgh, the best laid plans of hedgehogs and chicken farmers! I was so homesick I eventually convinced my love to leave her besoddened home town in the capable (snicker snicker) hands of FEMA and commence via Hyundai toward San Francisco. Mostly I cried. But also I promised to eat her pussy once for every state line we crossed. So our route home, which was routed by Hedgehog, would best be described as zany. On the first day, for example, we crossed from Pennsylvania to West Virginia to Ohio to West Virginia to Ohio to Indiana and then back into Ohio, for gas. As if Indiana doesn’t have gas stations! But that ain’t what I’m aarghing about. I’m aarghing because a few days later in Colorado (and I’m pretty sure I’m the first person ever to enter Colorado via both Florida and Montana) word came down from Bloomsburg that the fair was back on. Or not on; it was just that the vendors, denied their yearly chicken and waffle profits, were setting up in parking lots and on the side of the road, trying to sell off their wares. Their chickens, that is. And their waffles. And now it was Hedgehog’s turn to cry. “There there,” I said, eating her pussy. Hedgehog lives for the Bloomsburg Fair, and this was a twisted sort of triple-edged stab in the back, to her. The fair had been cancelled, so she left, and now it was being kind of uncancelled, happening behind her, spontaneously and in spite of itself — like A Year Without a Santa Claus, only she was missing it. Her hometown friends very very helpfully were posting pictures on Facebook of hot sausage stands along the side of the road, and discussing where they went for lunch and where they were going to go for dinner. “It’s like a whole town of food trucks!” she said, looking forlorner than I had ever seen her. A town of food trucks being Hedgehog’s dream town. And where were we? Grand Junction. Grand Junction isn’t anyone’s dream town. It’s a dismal place with nothing to eat in it. Nothing that’s food, at least. “Hmm, we could forego all this incessant circuitousness and just music listings

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beeline for John’s Snack and Deli, or San Tung, or ...” And here I named a number of Hedgehog’s favorite San Francisco restaurants, but didn’t say anything at all about Burlingame. So how did we wind up there? Long story, with a mosquito named Mozart in it, and an oil change. Now, normally I’d of told you that one, but I seen when I got back home that the real writer for this paper’s food section had packed it in. Technically Hedgehog saw this, and told me, and then I read the same thing for myself and with tears running down my cheeks. Because now I was going to have to step up and at least try and say something intelligent about a restaurant now and then, to maintain the Bee Gee’s food section’s reputation. If not the reputation of all of print media. That’s a lot of pressure to put on the shoulders of one li’l chicken farmer whose eyes glaze over and whose brain goes blank every time she bites into something with butter on it. Not to mention tea leaf salad, curry chicken, and spicy fish with asparagus. Mango salad. I think I was thinking about what would happen if you mushed all these zingy things together and froze them into Popsicles when my cell phone ba-boop-a-doop-adooped. Which I would normally have ignored except that Hedgehog was smart-phoning away across the table from me, all this while, either writing a book or maintaining 10 Facebook friendships simultaneously. So fuck it, I looked. It was an email. From Hedgehog!! In it, she’d diligently recorded the name of the restaurant we were eating at, which was Mingalaba, the type of food that it was, Burmese and Mandarin, and get this: how much everything cost! Hold on a sec: $4.95, $8.95, and $11.50. Alls I had to remember was that the asparagus was tough, the potatoes were undercooked, but the chickens and fishes they accompanied were excellent. And the mango salad! Yum! “You could mention the mangogreen pepper thing,” Hedgehog’s email concluded. No I can’t, though. I’m out of space. 2 Mingalaba RestauRant Daily: 11 a.m.-9:30 p.m. 1213 Burlingame Ave., Burlingame (650) 343-3228 MC/V Beer & wine

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Don’t feed your furry friends after midnight.

for more visit sfbg.com

presented by Dancers’ Group and World Arts West, in partnership with San Francisco Grants for the Arts and San Francisco City Hall brings you hula, duende, and laughs in a single lunch hour. (Julie Potter)

datarock see thurs/6

Noon, Free San Francisco City Hall Rotunda 1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett, SF (415) 920-9181 www.dancersgroup.org

of animal performers; he set about searching shelters and then rescued and trained his newly found friends. His ever-growing family now has a regular gig in Las Vegas, so don’t miss this chance to see this one-of-kind fuzzy and feathery family. (McCourt) 4 and 7 p.m., $17–$25 Victoria Theatre 2961 16th St., SF (415) 863-7576

Friday 10/7

www.victoriatheatre.org

“Midnites For Maniacs” Continuing his excellent “Midnites For Maniacs” movie series, host Jesse Hawthorne Ficks presents “Monsters In Your Own Backyard,” an awesome triple feature tonight featuring The Goonies (1985), The Hole (2009), and Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990). Director Joe Dante, who helmed two of the three films (The Hole and Gremlins 2), will appear live in-person for an on-stage interview (time permitting) about his 35 years of work in Hollywood, which also includes the original Piranha (1978), The Howling (1981), Gremlins (1984), and Explorers (1985). It’s going to be a late night party — but remember, whatever you do, don’t feed your furry friends after midnight. (Sean McCourt) 7 p.m., $15 Castro Theatre

Thursday 10/6 Datarock I honestly swing back and forth on Norway’s Datarock. It has a whole self-embraced nerd element to its music that is great in a Devo sort of way (“Computer Camp Love,” “The Pretender.”) But then an anthemic, fun, fun, fun song like the recently released “California” comes along and makes me feel like I did poppers and decided hitting myself with a ball-peen hammer was a good idea. (Or was it the other way around?) Maybe Datarock is just better live, or in the musical it’s supposedly making, but I’d say ultimately the highs — along with the variety of the openers at this show, especially the IDM, sunny sounds of France’s Anoraak — definitely outweigh any of my apprehensions. (Ryan Prendiville) With Anoraak, BAERTUR, Syntax Terrorkester 9 p.m., $15 Mezzanine 444 Jessie, SF (415) 625-8880 www.mezzaninesf.com

24 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

429 Castro, SF.

The Fillmore 1805 Geary, SF (415) 346-6000 www.thefillmore.com

(415) 621-6120 www.castrotheatre.com

CSS

With Men 8 p.m., $35

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Saturday 10/8

Friday 10/7 “Rotunda Dance Series” San Francisco beckons to travelers for all kinds of reasons. When Theatre Flamenco, Hawaiian dance company Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu, and cast members of Beach Blanket Babylon descend on City Hall for a festive installment of the Rotunda Dance Series, they’ll be celebrating the 50th anniversary of the city’s Grants for the Arts, a program of the Hotel Tax Fund, which uses tourism tax dollars to support arts organizations that attract visitors to San Francisco. The free performance

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Blow Up Forever II The beautiful party people behind Blow Up are going bigger this month: bigger space, bigger lineup, bigger line? (Hopefully not.) As a requisite, some will go to be seen. Some will go because they always have a great time at Blow Up, even if they don’t quite remember it and the fine young things make them feel old and self-conscious. Some will go for the fine young things. Some will go to see art-punk-dance rockers the Rapture, which returns to SF having just released its kind-oflong-awaited-maybe-never-gonnahappen-new album, In the Grace of Your Love. All will have a good time. (Ryan Prendiville) With the Rapture, Fred Falke, Lifelike, Poolside, Treasure Fingers, Jeffrey Paradise, The Tenderloins, B33SON, and Eli Glad 9 p.m., $18.50–$22.50 The Factory 525 Harrison, SF blowupforever.com

Thursday 10/6 Cansei de ser Sexy (CSS) showcases a signature dancefloor swagger in third release, La Liberación, reminiscent of the band’s 2005/2006 self-titled debut. The song “City Girl” supplies easy, carefree rhymes and endless, bubbly attitude, while closing track “Fuck Everything” promotes all sorts of wanton aggression. But the São Paulo band shows it can do slower and moodier as well. The new album’s hidden gem is “Red Alert,” a low-slung collaboration with beats maestro Ratatat that promotes deviousness of a more rhythmic kind. (Kevin Lee)

Saturday 10/8

“Popovich Comedy Pet Theater” Forget about the musical Cats — there’s another show to dig your claws into. Led by the comedy and juggling talents of Gregory Popovich, Popovich Comedy Pet Theater features a cast of animals including cats, dogs, and birds performing incredible feats such as tightrope walking, pushing strollers, and balancing on their front paws. After working for many years at the Moscow Circus, Popovich decided to start an entire troupe music listings

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Saturday 10/8 Cymbals Eat Guitars Cymbals Eat Guitars, a noisy fourpiece indie rock band from Staten Island, NY, has switched its lineup and signed with Seattle’s Barsuk

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Records since its 2009 debut Why There Are Mountains. On the second LP, Lenses Alien (2011), a more confident Cymbals Eat Guitars continues to pay homage to indie forefathers like Pavement and Sonic Youth. The sophomore effort, however, is darker and more grandiose than Mountains. Expect floods of feedback, and be prepared to question your notions of melody and noise. (Frances Capell) With Hooray For Earth and the Dandelion War 10 p.m., $14 Bottom of the Hill 1233 17th St., SF (415) 621-4455 www.bottomofthehill.com

Hollywood’s megastars, raking in dough for studios (his two most frequent roles: wolves, himself) and elevating the popularity of his breed, which at the time was still relatively novel in America. Acclaimed author Susan Orlean (The Orchid Thief) visits San Francisco to talk about her new book, Rin Tin Tin: The Life and the Legend (a must-read, especially if you love Orlean’s writing and/or dogs) and host a screening of her favorite among “Rinty“ ‘s cinematic efforts, 1925 silent Western Clash of the Wolves. (Cheryl Eddy)

West Wave Dance Festival see mon/10

7:30 p.m., $15 San Francisco Film Society | New People Cinema 1746 Post, SF www.sffs.org

Monday 10/10 “West Wave Dance Festival: 3orMORE”

Sunday 10/9 Girls It’s been a busy month for local indie-darlings Girls. The band released its sophomore LP Father, Son, Holy Ghost (True Panther) on Sept. 13 to widespread critical acclaim. (It borrows from hits of the past yet sounds entirely new, making it an instant classic.) And on the record’s release Girls toured the nation and made its television debut on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. With a full band, featuring an organist and a trio of gospel backup singers, gifted songwriter Christopher Owens and bassist-recording mastermind Chet “JR” White return to San Francisco for the final show of their US tour. Welcome home. (Capell) With Sonny & The Sunsets and Carletta Sue Kay 8 p.m., $20 Great American Music Hall 859 O’Farrell, SF (415) 885-0750 www.gamh.com

It looks like the 20th West Wave Dance Festival is going out with a bang. If tonight’s program even approximates the last two shows — fun choreography, packed houses — one has every reason to look forward to a tradition that for a while seemed to be limping towards its demise. Widening the reach seems to have done the trick. So it’s no surprise that in addition to well-known locals — Dance Ceres, Moving Arts, Christian Burns — you’ll see newer or visiting companies such as Nhan Ho Project (San Jose), Body Traffic (Los Angeles), and Nicole Bridgens (of South Africa). Why are they on the same program? They all choreographed for at least three dancers, and artistic director Joan Lazarus trusted them to choose a piece. (Rita Felciano) 8 p.m., $22–$25 ODC Theater 3153 17th St., SF 1-866-55-TICKETS www.westwavedancefestival.org

Sunday 10/9 “An Evening with Susan Orlean and Rin Tin Tin” Before Benji, Beethoven, or Air Bud, there was Rin Tin Tin, discovered as a puppy on a French World War I battlefield by enterprising dog lover (and U.S. soldier) Lee Duncan. The charismatic German Shepard would grow up to become one of early editorials

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Monday 10/10 Nick Lowe After making hits in the New Wave and being closely associated picks

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with Elvis Costello — producing his first five records and writing “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding” — Nick Lowe decided to seek out new challenges. The result is a career that hasn’t borrowed elements from genres, but constantly finds the acerbic songwriter positioned firmly in traditions, whether it be lounge-y jazz, roots rock, or country and western. On his latest chameleon-like record, The Old Magic, Lowe proves his formula lies not in a particular style but in combining wit with sincerity, from pondering mortality (and his place in the musical pantheon) on “Closing Time” to just what to do when love’s gone away on “I Read A Lot.” (Prendiville)

fast, and catchy as hell; its shows are notoriously chaotic and delightfully dangerous. Vanek and Reilly shred drums and a three-string bass guitar over playful tape recorded beats, often whipping audiences into dance party riots. Songs of rebellion sung into kitschy yellow telephone mics, Japanther is punk-meets-fun personified. Get sweaty. (Capell)

With JD McPherson 8 p.m., $30 Seated Show Great American Music Hall 859 O’Farrell, SF (415) 885-0750 www.gamh.com

With Unstoppable Death Machines 8 p.m., $7 Hemlock Tavern 1131 Polk, SF (415) 923-0923 www.hemlocktavern.com

Monday 10/10

Tuesday 10/11

Japanther

Jeff Jarvis

Since 2001, Brooklyn art-punks Ian Vanek and Matt Reilly have been churning out fuzzy garage-pop anthems and touring like nobody’s business. Japanther’s music is hard,

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Everyone’s griping over the recent changes on Facebook and that’s partly because the social networking site now allows users to track how Internet acquaintances are film listings

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spending their every waking hour. But City of New York University journalism professor Jeff Jarvis says that degree of openness isn’t such a bad thing. In his new book Public Parts: How Sharing in the Digital Age Improves the Way We Work and Live, Jarvis argues that some of humankind’s greatest inventions (the printing press, for example) shifted perspectives on personal privacy. He goes on to say the tension technology presents between personal and public space is only natural — kind of like how people always look up their exes on Facebook.(Lee) 6 p.m., $15 for nonmembers, $5 for students World Affairs Council Auditorium 312 Sutter, SF (415) 293-4600 www.itsyourworld.org 2 The Guardian listings deadline is two weeks prior to our Wednesday publication date. To submit an item for consideration, please include the title of the event, a brief description of the event, date and time, venue name, street address (listing cross streets only isn’t sufficient), city, telephone number readers can call for more information, telephone number for media, and admission costs. Send information to Listings, the Guardian Building, 135 Mississippi St., SF, CA 94107; fax to (415) 487-2506; or e‑mail (paste press release into e‑mail body — no text attachments, please) to listings@sfbg.com. Digital photos may be submitted in jpeg format; the image must be at least 240 dpi and four inches by six inches in size. We regret we cannot accept listings over the phone.

october 5 - 11, 2011 / SFBG.com

25


October 8 & 9, 11am-6pm

220a Chessa Piker-Ward, 364 6th Ave., Geary Blvd./Clement 221 Elizabeth Fracchia, 497 8th Ave., Geary/Anza, Painting

Weekend 2 of 5

3)1 67(-25 46 3%1 5 /%4+)56 342+4%0 129 -1 -65 6, ;)%4 -18-6)5 28)4 8-5-6245 -162 %46-565 567(-25 '-6; 9-() (74-1+ 6,) )16-4) 0216, 2* '62&)4 !5) 6,-5 0%3 62 3/%1 ;274 5)/* +7-()( 6274 2* 567(-25 -1 6,) #)56)41 3246-21 2* %1 4%1'-5'2 420 ')%1 )%', 62 %;)5 "%//); 6,) -',021( 62 -%021( )-+,65 6,) %-+,6 62 6, %1( 48-1+ 6,)5) -1(-8-(7%/ 567(-25 2=)4 % 53)'-%/ +/-035) -162 6,) %46-56 5 /-*) $27 9-// &) 574) 62 (-5'28)4 ;274 1)9 *%824-6) %46-56 -1 ;274 291 &%'.;%4( "-5-6 6,) 3)1 67(-25 :,-&-6-21 )%674-1+ 6,) 924. 2* 28)4 3)1 67(-25 %46-565 )36)0&)4 62 '62&)4 465 7/674%/ )16)4 4%11%1 64))6 %//)4; 2745 7)5(%; 4-(%; 30 %674(%; %0 30 %1( 71(%; %0 30

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26 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

223 David Yapp, 3024 Fulton St., #9, 6th Ave./7th Ave., Painting 224 Elizabeth Gibbons, 449 Parker Ave., Turk/Anza, Mixed Media 224a Elena Lokshina, 3214 Geary Blvd., #1, Spruce/Parker, Painting 225 Holly Savas, 1921 Hayes, The Plum, Ashbury/Clayton, Mixed Media 226 Paul Cartier, 1845 Hayes St., Ashbury/Masonic, Photography 227 Cameron Chernoff, 1652 Waller St., Shrader/Cole, Drawing 228 Mark Ulriksen, 841 Shrader St., Frederick/Beulah, Painting 229 Arlene Diehl, 470 Frederick St., #1, Stanyan/Shrader, Drawing 230 Andrea Polland, 213 Upper Terrace @ Clifford, Painting 231 Phylis Johnson-Silk, 139 Downey St., Frederick/Ashbury, Wearable Art / Jewelry 232 Betty Katcher, 736 Ashbury St., Frederick/Waller, Sculpture 233 Kevin Tiell Photography, 9 Broderick St., Waller/Haight, Photography 234 Barbara Kleinhans, 1240 Hayes St., #6, Scott/Divisadero, Painting 235 David Ortiz, 1324b McAllister St., Steiner/Pierce, Painting Big Umbrella Studios

906.5 Divisadero St., McAllister/Golden Gate 235a 235b 235c 235d 235e 235f

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Kyle Brunel, Painting Ako Jacintho, Painting Rick Kitagawa, Painting Eve Skylar, Painting Jack Taylor, Painting Sarah Woodward, Painting

236 Kevin-Louis Barton, 1090 Eddy St., #508, Gough/Laguna, Painting 237 Philippe Jestin, 646 Laguna St., Grove/Hayes, Mixed Media 237a Christo Braun, 323 Ivy St., Gough/Octavia, Painting 238 Z McGarigle, 500 Buchanan St., #1, Oak/Fell, Painting

MEDIA SPONSORS

208 Mercedes Segesvary, 1288 15th Ave., Irving/Lincoln Way, Drawing 209 Noah Levin, 1245 17th Ave., Lincoln Way/Irving, Painting 211 Pamela Pitt, 1201 Funston Ave., #204, Lincoln Way/ Irving, Mixed Media 212 Melissa Shanley, 773 15th Ave., Fulton/Cabrillo, Fiber 213 Kim Johnson, 555 23rd Ave., Anza/Balboa, Sculpture 213a Louise Victor, 759 28th Ave., Balboa/Cabrillo, Painting 214 Barbara Landis, 689 37th Ave., Balboa/Anza, Photography 215 Nea Bisek, 7915 Geary Boulevard @ 43rd Ave., Painting 215a Sonya Lee Barrington, 837 47th Ave., Cabrillo/Fulton, Fiber 215b Eric Rewitzer, 854 47th Ave., Cabrillo/Fulton, Printmaking 216 Dianne Boate, 376 21st Ave., #103, Geary/Clement, Drawing 217 Larry Lurie, 21 21st Ave. @ Lake, Sculpture 217a Rowley Rabbit, 1428 Lake St., 15th St./16th St., Mixed Media 218 Fong Fai, 239 12th Ave., Clement/California, Painting 219 Jody McMillan, 59 6th Ave. @ Lake, Printmaking 220 Robert James Aston, 123 6th Ave., Lake/California, Photography

SPONSORS

200a Suzanne Q. Egan, 752 Stewart Ave., Ellis Dr./Maddux Dr., Painting 200b Robert Lowrey, 179 Thrift St., Capitol/Plymouth, Mixed Media 200c Kathy Voutyras, 268 Joost Ave., Congo/Baden, Painting 200d Elizabeth McClellan, 42 Chenery St., 30th St./ Randall, Painting 201 Jung Han Kim, 2376 45th Ave., Taraval/Santiago, Painting 201a Gregory Vernitsky, 2447 23rd Ave., Taraval/Ulloa, Sculpture 202 Hester Michael, 1437 38th Ave., Judah/Kirkham, Fiber 202a Nadine Defranoux, 1251 43rd Ave., Lincoln/Irving, Photography 203 Takeshi Nakayoshi, 1933 17th Ave., Ortega/Pacheco, Painting 204 Sherry Schaffer, 1710 Judah St. @ 22nd Ave., Painting 205 Jade Zabrowski, 1478 20th Ave., Kirkham/Judah, Painting 206 Lisa Neimeth, 1546 10th Ave., Kirkham/Lawton, Ceramics 207 Chucky Dugo, 1352 Irving St., 15th Ave./14th Ave., Mixed Media

222a Christine Cariati, 781 6th Ave., Fulton/Cabrillo, Painting 222b John Mickelson, 781 6th Ave., Fulton/Cabrillo, Photography 222c Sonja Navin, 781 6th Ave., Fulton/Cabrillo, Painting 222d Joel Peirano, 781 6th Ave., Fulton/Cabrillo, Painting

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Generous thanks to: Eventbrite, Fleishhacker Foundation, Grants for Arts/Hotel Tax Fund, SOMArts, Thomas John Events, Zellerbach Family Foundation on the cheap

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Ocean Beach, Sunset, Richmond, Hayes Valley, Haight, Upper Market, Diamond Heights, Twin Peaks, West Portal, Glen Park

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ShakIn’ SpIneS 'SPN 3PXEZ 3PEEZ 1JQFS UP NFUBQIPS KVHHMFST PVS QJDLT GPS -JURVBLF By Marke B. marke@sfbg.com

In 2006, LITquake hIT up a MISSIOn LaundrOMaT. ThIS year, IT aLSO TakeS In a BarBerShOp, caBLe carS, and SauSaLITO hOuSeBOaTS | PhOTO by ShElly EAdES

LIT Once again, the raucous, two-week Litquake festival is set to liquidate our shores with the mighty crack and crash of living language. Dazed authors and reeling poets will grace our lesser known alleyways; literary agents and bookstore owners will awaken satisfied on the curbs of our better sex clubs. Kindles will be hijacked, asses will be signed. Some actual writing may get done. And yet, while the larger events justly command the spotlight (opening party “The Devil’s Lexicon� on Fri/7, New Directions 75th anniversary party on Tue/11, infamously drunken unofficial closing blowout Litcrawl on Sun/15), there are a host of smaller and satellites events that tap into the true flavor of contemporary literature.

Below are some attractive-looking ones. (Unless noted, more info can be found on these functions at www.litquake.org.)

Off The rIchTer ScaLe This two-part event is the quavering blood and guts of Litquake: an unabashed free showcase of some of the most cutting-edge talent on offer. Rhyming or Not: Bay Area Poetry (Sat/8, 1 p.m., free) shores up the verse side of things, while Golden Gate and Beyond (Sun/9, noon, free) props up the prose. This year’s theme is, “to explore writing in extreme circumstances and from deep within the mind—defined in terms spiritual, physical, or cybernetic.� I’m bringing popcorn. Sat/8 and Sun/9, Variety Room, 582 Market, SF.

chrISTIne BeaTTy OK, this isn’t officially a part of Litquake — but the ‘quake CONTINUES ON PAGE 30 >>

MFA

Writing Writing Program in the

Heart of San Francisco

INFORMATION SESSION:

• Fiction, poetry, and nonfiction concentrations

Saturday, October 15

• All evening courses • Two-year program culminating in a book-length work • Small class size; individual instruction

11:30A.M.

USF Kalmanovitz Hall, Room 311 2130 Fulton Street, SF

• Teaching creative writing and TAships

415-422-6066 mfaw@usfca.edu www.usfca.edu/mfaw For a complete listing of all graduate programs at USF, visit: www.usfca.edu/graduate

core faculty: • Stephen Beachy • Catherine Brady • Lewis Buzbee • Lowell Cohn • Norma Cole • Lisa Harper • Nina Schuyler • Aaron Shurin • K.M. Soehnlein • Jane Anne Staw • David Vann

Educating Minds and Hearts to Change the World editorials

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arts + culture: lit liTquake 2011

of Northern Californiana.

CONT>>

Sat/8, 8 p.m., free. Center for Sex and Culture, 1349 Mission, SF. www. sexandculture.org

also spawns a slew of satellite events, so let’s just shake things up. Christine Beatty is tearing up the transsexual literature circuit with her memoir, “Not Your Average American Girl,” which tells her fascinating story from growing up hippie, serving in the military, hooking in the Tenderloin, engineering software, and much more. It’s a great slice

be happy with a good ol’ round of slams and shots. Sun/9, 4 p.m., free. Vesuvio, 255 Columbus, SF.

ThaT’s My F*cking sTool! WriTers aT The Bar

The secreT liFe oF MeTaphor

I know next to nothing about this night except that it takes place at one of my favorite bars, Vesuvio, and involves some very interesting writer-personalities, like Jack Boulware, Beth Lisick, Missy Roback, and Frances Stroh. I hope it’s Jell-O wresting, but I’ll

Am I terrified of an expert on metaphors who is also a juggler, and who illustrates his points by “juggling balls as well as words”? I am kind of terrified of this person! And yet, I find the promise of respected writer James Geary’s lecture almost too tantalizing to resist. Should I let my prejudices

keep me away, or should I let the wild carnival of knowledge commence? Right now, it’s a toss-up. Sun/9, 4 p.m., $5–$7. Z Space, 450 Florida, SF.

Fri/14, 7 p.m., $10. Hemlock Tavern, 1131 Polk, SF.

Teenquake: noT your MoTher’s Book cluB You either have come to accept that teenagers are rightfully taking over this world, or you need to look up this little thing called the Internet. Of course, teens have maliciously kept most of the best recent fiction writing to themselves, via “young adult” books. (If I’m addicted to Hunger Games does that mean I’m young forever?) Popular teen fiction writers Simone Elkeles, Becca Fitzpatrick, Michelle Hodkin, and Moira Young come together to dish their secrets. Mon/19, 7 p.m., free. Books Inc. Opera Plaza, 601 Van Ness, SF.

original shorTs: Failure To coMMiT Will the six authors — including Ladipo Manyiko and Shawna Yang Ryan — who were asked to “look deep into the heart of the flaky soul and emerge with original short stories on the theme of failing to commit” even show up? Now that would be some performative literature right there. If you’re stood-up, you’ll at least have the Lone Palm’s excellent cocktails for succor. Mon/10, 7 p.m., free. Lone Palm, 3394 22nd St., SF.

BarBershop reading: a liTTle oFF The Top and over The Top The gays do love to fuss about their tops! This party-slash-gathering of LGBT writers in the fab Joe’s Barbershop has already become a Litquake fixture for lit queens and their chasers, and proof that our community’s writing talent hasn’t been sucked into Grindr chats and Dinah missed connections. Tue/11, 9 p.m., free ($5–$10 suggested donation). Joe’s Barbershop, 2150 Market, SF.

Figure Four caps lock: pro WresTling MeMoirs FroM classy Freddie Blassie To The FaBulous Moolah Boxing, schmoxing — the real money melon for sports book fans of the last two decades have been professional reminiscences of flamboyant flings in the ring. I mean, c’mon, Rowdy Roddy Piper, people: what more titillation do you need (besides a kick in the rear from the Iron Sheik’s 30 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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pointy-toed shoes?) Writers Alia Volz, Rick Luxury, Alan Black and many more cactus clothesline this important body of work with tributes and testimonials.

invisiBle ciTy audio Tours: everyWhere Man “Alternative self-guided walking audio tour” purveyors Invisible City combine music, words, sonic landscapes, and historical information to create realtime

iF i’M addicTed To Hunger games, does ThaT Mean i’M young Forever?

experiences that map the ethereal onto SF streets. Latest work “Everywhere Man” is a mystery that whose clues are divulged while participants ride cable cars throughout the city. This sounds too, too cool, especially for firsttime visitors. Sat/15, 2 p.m., pre-order accompanying map and podcast at www. invisiblecityaudiotours.org for $15. Meet at the cable car turnaround, Market and Powell, SF.

Words on Waves The North Bay literary scene gets some incredible shine at this event, which takes place on the houseboats of Sausalito. Move from one houseboat to the next and experience samplings of such topics as “Rum, Sodomy, and the Lash: Tall Tales from the Boat Dwellers” on Boat #134, SMITH Magazine’s “Water, Fire, Rocks: Life in Six Words” on Boat #42, and “Vanda Marlow, Poetry Faerie” on Boat #12 (actually a restored World War II landing craft.) Get saucy, Sausalito. Literally. Sat/15, 1 p.m., $25 advance. Private houseboat pier (for exact location email wotw@litquake.org), Sausalito. 2

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arts + culture: trash

pop culture news, notes, and reviews

You’Re DeAD, bRo! SceNeS fRom 2008 THRowbAck Frat House Massacre. courtesy screamkings.com

New DVDS, olD SleAze TRASH When it comes to home viewing, gratuitous violence is always a selling point for genre fans — the censorial gloves that handle most theatrical films are off, “unrated” becomes a plus rather than commercial suicide, “director’s cut” usually means more blood and maybe a little flesh previously removed at the MPAA’s behest. The flood of obscure old exploitation titles now being released to DVD and Blu-ray are duly advertised as high on mayhem, whether that’s actually the case or not. (One mid70s Swedish sexploitation item just released is billed as a “violent cult classic,” though apart from a bit of fetish whipping there’s nary a violent moment in it.) Sometimes one even wonders if the writers of back-cover copy even bothered to watch the film itself, a question that recalls the halcyon days of VHS when box descriptions of cheap back-catalog titles often seemed to be about other, perhaps imaginary films entirely. Nonetheless, you don’t have to look too far to find retro schlock living up to its hype, reminding that in grindhouse days of yore bigscreen movies could get away with considerably more crassness than they do now. One such cheerfully nasty oldie is Ruggero Deodato’s 1976 Italian Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man, invitingly labeled as “ULTRA VIOLENCE from the director of Cannibal Holocaust.” That 1980 milestone in the annals of yecch was still years away when Deodato and scenarist cop-flick specialist Fernando Di Leo delivered this crazy exercise in vigilante justice with a badge. Ray editorials

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Lovelock and Marc Porel do the Starsky and Hutch thing as a Roman “special squad” police duo who always get their man — though to the exasperation of their superiors, said man always meets an bloody “accidental” death in the process of apprehension. In fact it’s acknowledged that the pair has criminal instincts. They’ve only chosen this side of the law to wreak as much violent havoc for kicks as possible and get away with it. Swiss Porel and Italian Lovelock were two of the most beautiful men — we’re talking Alain Delon level here — in movies then. Deodato lets them act not just like a flippant thrill-crazed comedy team nonchalantly distributing harm everywhere they go, but like a couple close-knit in other ways. We see that they share the same bedroom (if not bed); the few times they express sexual interest, it’s to “take turns” with a woman in each other’s company. Such interludes clearly do no more than kill time for our prankster-hero psychopaths between the greater visceral rewards of reckless motorcycle chases (reportedly shot without permits in the heart of Rome) plus blowing and shooting stuff up. They’re adorably lethal. Speaking of vigilantism, few U.S. films ripped off the Death Wish (1974) formula — aside from Death Wish sequels, of course — with more lurid tactlessness than 1980’s The Exterminator, now out in a DVD/Blu-ray pack. Writer-director James Glickenhaus’ magnum opus has Robert Ginty as a Vietnam vet whose avenging of a comrade’s assault by Class of 1984-style “punks” snowballs into a general

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NYC cleanup campaign utilizing a flame thrower, machine gun, soldering iron, giant meat grinder, electric carving knife, and jazz great Stan Getz — well, he’s featured in a rare non-violent, wholly incongruous scene at a nightclub. Lest we object to this unlawful justice, the perps pulverized include hoodlums who gut-punch old ladies and pimps who “serve young boys to perverts.” Tea Party logic is affirmed in an ending where FBI operatives, having slain our antihero (or so they think) on government orders because successful vigilantism makes public officials look bad at election time, smirk “Washington will be pleased.” Yeah, they’re all out to fuck ya! NRA 4-ever! The Exterminator offered a cheap-thrills alternative to the original slasher wave. Gleefully surfing the latter’s blood tide is Alex Pucci’s Frat House Massacre, a belated DVD release that reprises the excesses of that era and then some. With nary a dull (or tasteful) moment in its 116-minute director’s cut, this 2008 campus flashback has it all: psycho fraternity president, deliberately fatal hazings, rampant cocaine abuse, nasty sex and nastier sexism, boobs, a surprising surplus of well-toned male nudity, ludicrously gory murders, a disco production number, brutal towel-snapping, music by one of the Goblin guys (of 1977’s Suspiria fame), zero narrative continuity, and lines like “Studying always gets me horny.” Frat House Massacre would be a guilty pleasure if it weren’t clearly in on its own joke. (Dennis Harvey) 2

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1PQ VQ TUPSF 4DBOOFST DFMFCSBUFT UIF UISJMM PG VTFE CPPL TBMWBHF By Garrett Caples arts@sfbg.com

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addICted to prInt lIt Poet Nick Hoff is best known for his acclaimed translation of Friedrich HĂślderlin’s Odes and Elegies (Wesleyan, 2008), while Matt Borruso has achieved some notoriety as a visual artist (his “The Hermit’s Revenge Fantasyâ€? is at Steven Wolf Fine Arts through Sat/8). Yet both are also seasoned book scouts, those scavengers of estate sales, thrift shops, and flea markets who find saleable treasures buried in otherwise worthless piles of printed matter. And it’s in this capacity that they’ve embarked on a collaborative experiment in what one might call “conceptual commerce:â€? Scanners, a used bookstore that opened October 1 and closes at the end of the month. The impulses behind Scanners are various. In the face of what Hoff calls “the media’s hysteria about the death of print,â€? both he and Borruso remain interested in the book as material object rather than simply bearer of text, easily replaceable by more efficient digital media. But in an immediate sense, the project is informed by their experience in a profession that, like many, has felt the digital squeeze. The word “scanner,â€? says Hoff, is a derisive term among book scouts for the increasingly numerous competitors whose knowledge of a book’s value solely stems from their mobile barcode scanners. “At a library sale,â€? Hoff continues, “for every person without a device, there’s 50 people scanning books. The device tells them whether it has value. The traditional book

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scout who knew about book culture is becoming a thing of the past.� While scanners have drastically increased competition, devaluing that knowledge built through long practice, Borruso and Hoff are quick to own the advantages of the digital age; their ability to sell books online directly to consumers rather than a book dealer has offset the blow to their bottom line. And knowledge retains its edge. “Not everything has a barcode,� Borruso says with a sly smile, and throughout our conversation, it’s clear both men value the thrill of the chase at least as much as its results. Borruso speaks of the “adrenaline� that comes from finding that overlooked tome, while Hoff dwells on the more profound relationship a reader has with a long-sought book than with an instantly purchased text. Both savor the role chance plays in their acquisitions. With Scanners, they seek to replicate the conditions for such discovery. Herein lies the name’s opposite sense, of scanning physical shelves for the book chance may bestow. To this end, the duo intends to organize the store according to non-traditional categories — replacing the specific “economics,� for example, with the open-ended “money� — and emphasizing faceout visual display. Perhaps inevitably, the artist Borruso is more interested in the display aspect, while the writer Hoff is eager to see what categories will emerge from the 400 boxes of books they’ve stashed away over the past year. Much of this, Borruso says during our interview, “is still theoretical,� as they only had a three-day music listings

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window at the end of September to set up shop, using a break in the exhibit schedule of the Mina Dresden Gallery to inhabit its foot-traffic-friendly Valencia space. There’s something appropriate about staging this bookstore in an art gallery, for the project is at once scrupulous and absurd, requiring all the effort of opening a real bookstore — cash registers, credit card capability, etc. — even as they intend to close in a month. “It’s not a viable business model,� Borruso laughs. Being temporary, as Hoff notes, makes the bookstore “into an event itself.� Nonetheless, there will be events within the event, beginning with a conversation on bookselling between William Stout, owner of William Stout Architectural Books, and Paul Yamazaki, bookbuyer for City Lights. Upcoming events — listed on the store’s website — focus on archiving in the digital age, the neuroscience of reading, and artists’ use of found source material, reflecting Hoff and Borruso’s diverse interests in printed matter. “Our idea is to highlight things people will respond to a physical level,� Borruso concludes. “To base a store on things you wouldn’t be able to appreciate in digital format. Some of these things you might see and think, ‘I want that,’ but you would never know that seeing it even in jpeg form. You need to see it as an object, as a thing.� 2 “On BOOkstOres and BOOkselling� William Stout in conversation with Paul Yamazaki Wed/5, 6:30 p.m., free 312 Valencia, SF www.scannersproject.com

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arTs + CulTure: musiC

for more music content visit sfBg.Com/noise

two Men and their Piano: john Steven MorGan and john “thatCher” booMer iii Photos by Mel blanchard

Guerrilla jazz 5IF +PIO #SPUIFST 1JBOP $PNQBOZ UBLFT UP UIF TUSFFUT by Cora PuliatCh arts@sfbg.com MuSiC When John Steven Morgan and John “Thatcher” Boomer III — who make up the John Brothers Piano Company — finished their last set at the 54th Annual Monterey Jazz Festival last month, my eyes weren’t watering alone. It wasn’t the barbecue smoke from the nearby food tents, or the toobright afternoon fairgrounds sun. The John Brothers shake their listeners to the soul, because these piano-playing souls are shaking too. And MJF was their formal music venue debut. Most other days, the John Brothers work together electrifying SF street corner audiences with skillful, joyous frenzies on one of their Craigslist-freebie upright Wurlitzer pianos. And they hope to soon bring their music to new cities. Over the course of the last year, they’ve compelled perhaps hundreds of local passersby to stop and watch. That’s gold for Morgan and Boomer, who say they want to give the listener the most visceral possible reaction. “I’d like to trigger a miscarriage,” Boomer deadpans. The John Brothers put their own bodies into their art, hefting their piano to locations on a custom dolly, in and out of “the Contender,” a crumbling 1991 editorials

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Jeep Cherokee. It’s not clear how much longer they’ll be hulking piano for a living. While their plan is to save up for a giant cargo van and tour around the U.S. just the two of them, by the end of the MJF they were in talks with a potential manager. “It’s just too much stress,” says Boomer of managing themselves, alluding to the CDs they forgot in Oakland on the trip to Monterey. The CDs, which they sell out of a top hat, are filled with just one example of their repertoire. Morgan and Boomer’s original compositions are often mistaken for ragtime, but Morgan explains, “It’s not ragtime. Our influence comes mainly from the ‘20s and the ‘30s: Fats Waller, James B. Johnson, Art Tatum.” The two self-taught musicians have distinct styles, producing together a wild, organic, often playful mashup of classical, Morgan’s “gypsy stride,” Boomer’s blues, and a little jazz. Their ever-morphing reinterpretations oscillate from tender to eviscerating, raunchy to prim, mad to whimsical. Local filmmaker Dan Reed of NextBooth.com, who accompanied the band to document their MJF appearance, met the John Brothers on the street, and asked immediately if he could use their music in his short films. “Other [musicians’] songs capture moments — their songs picks

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are full narratives,” he says. Reed used the John Brothers’ track “Computer Duster” as the soundtrack to his short Curious Chris, about an innocent man who gets bamboozled. The duo’s music both enlivens and takes new meaning from the film, as Morgan carries the listener from an expansive, melancholic opening, an unpopulated landscape with the delicate curiosity of a child, which blends into apprehension mixed with determination, building seamlessly to a swaggering, gypsy caravan staccato finale. Morgan says he’s eager to score future Reed films. As the opening number for their first set at the jazz festival, Morgan, his broad shoulders bending over the keys, tore “Computer Duster” apart to create a novel Frankenstein of madness, thick shoulder-length hair swinging in his face, dissolving into chaos and in a moment resolving to the melody, the crowd simultaneously alienated and mesmerized; they were cheering by the end. The John Brothers Piano Company perform regularly in San Francisco’s Union Square on Friday afternoons and evenings. 2 The John BroThers Piano ComPany Fri/7, 5-8 p.m., free Union Square, O’Farrell and Geary, SF www.thejohnbrothers.com

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By KimBerly Chun arts@sfbg.com muSiC It’s tough to pin down a busy bee like Chris Taylor — Grizzly Bear’s bassist, an indemand producer, and now the leader of his own pack called CANT — but once you manage to, he’s as disarmingly engaging as his new dispatch from a darkling, excruciatingly personal plain, Dreams Come True, released on his own Terrible Records. So it shocks him when he hears critics describe his music as cold, even chilly. “When people say it’s impersonal, it’s like, wow, man,� Taylor marvels from Portland, Ore. “If anything, you should be saying, ‘This record is too emo.’ That was what I was expecting, that people would say, ‘This guy is way too emotional. Go see a therapist and cool out.’ “I was intentionally trying to figure out the worst kind of fears, fears of falling in love and not

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being able to let go, or fears of losing it when you think you have it. Scary, unpleasant realities.� But realities rendered far from heartlessly. A probing soulfulness runs throughout Dreams Come True, which often sounds more like a wrenching, pitch-black nightmare than a blissful reverie. Yet the LP teems with pleasures, and the deeper you penetrate, the harder its pull. It’s in the way that Taylor beautifully couples gristly, screeching scads of industrial noise, reminiscent of both Nine Inch Nails and horror-movie violins, with celestial synth in the title track and “Rises Silent.� Skittish electronic beats bang up against gamelan-like percussion in the echoey, prog-pop opening track, “Too Late, Too Far,� while Satie-esque (and Thom Yorke/ Radiohead-like) impressionism is paired with an undercurrent of ‘90s-era post-punk dissonance in “Bericht.� Brass that cues weehours soul bounces off elastic bass music listings

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notes in “The Edge,� and a softly insinuating Velvet Undergroundish guitar vamp adds menace to “She Found a Way Out� — a song that makes one wonder if that way out was, akin to Joy Division’s “She’s Lost Control Again,� something like a permanent check-out. “It’s about the sort of feeling you feel when the biggest love of your life walks out the door, and you deserve it, and she’s better off for it — it makes you want to scream,� explains Taylor with a rueful chuckle. “No, she didn’t die! She went to grad school. She’s getting smarter by the day.� Taylor’s education into solo music-making began with his forays into singing with Grizzly Bear —CANT’s name plays off that definition, among angles. After completing production on Twin Shadow’s Forget (4AD/ Terrible, 2010), he sat down with TS’s George Lewis Jr. for about two weeks to work on Dreams, playing most of the instruments themselves. Work continued after Lewis departed, contributing to the music’s sense of ratcheted-up intimacy. “I was by myself, and it’s just the worst, especially not having written lyrics before,� says Taylor. “You’re like, does this suck? And it’s just crickets.� Songs such as “Answer� — with its pacing synth line, moodily ascending string sounds, and brooding refrain, “It’s been a while since you needed me / It’s been a while since I needed you, too� — spoke directly to old demons. “It’s about my ongoing and often difficult relationship with my dad — one of the more trying relationships in my life,� confesses Taylor, whose parents divorced when he was 5. “It’s about feeling loved, and at the same time, there’s so much, like, meanness. It’s really confusing when a kid is told they’re loved and then treated so badly...� And it’s mystifying, and maybe a relief, that the track’s inspiration has no idea what role he played in its making — and that pain can be transformed so completely into pop. “I think,� says Taylor with disbelief, “when the song premiered on Pitchfork, [my dad] said, ‘I like that!’� 2 caNt With Mirror Mirror and Blood Orange Wed/5, 8 p.m., $15 Independent 628 Divisadero, SF (415) 771-1422 www.theindependentsf.com

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arts + culturE: Music

thE “all You can Eat� tour hits sf

oakland music complex Monthly Music Rehearsal Studios

1255 21St St. Oakland, Ca (510) 406-9697 OaklandMusicComplex.com

SFBg What are the comfort meals of your childhood in Sweden? JE A lot of rustic Viking food. Food you’re supposed to eat after working 12 hours shoveling snow [laughs]. I come from a small town in the north of Sweden and we have a signature dish there called palt. It’s like editorials

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San Francisco Bay guardian Where did the idea for “All You Can Eat� originate? John Eriksson We wanted to make a tour for the fans, like when you were a kid and you came to your grandmother’s house and you could eat as much candy and cake as you wanted — that feeling. We wanted the fans to get as much as possible. In some cities like New York, we’re playing as much as six shows. So it’s more venues and they see it over and over again until they throw up almost. Also, we have connected it with some food trucks. We have one here [in Miami] — it’s a grilled cheese food truck. The fans can go to the truck, say the right password, and they get something free. That came after the idea of the tour. We wanted to fill the fans with as much PB & J music and as much calories as possible. It’s not really connected with the music but it’s a fun thing to do — something different. And we love food. One of the most fun things when you’re out touring is trying to find good places to eat.

SFBg Your most recent album ‘Gimme Some’ (Startime) had an interesting back story. JE We had an idea to make our 2.0 version of the history of pop and rock’n’roll. So we stole shit from all over the place, from all the music history, and put it together like some kind of Swedish version of American English pop. It’s our version of the history of pop rock and the future of pop rock.

J8E =I8E:@J:F 98P >L8I;@8E FEC@E<

DININg

maximum ConSumption Looking to gorge on super-sweet, Swedishmade indie pop? Peter, Bjorn and John, the nearly-twee trio who made whistling cool again for a minute in 2006 with indie hit “Young Folks,� is returning to the States for a thematic “All You Can Eat� tour. The band’s food-friendly jaunt includes multiple nights in each city, and specialty food truck tie-ins. I spoke with John Eriksson via phone while he hovered near a grilled cheese truck:

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a potato bun filled with the fat of a pig. It’s very good actually. You put butter inside the ball of fat, which make it even better. That’s the only time I eat meat.

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K?< E8K@FE J ( @E;<G<E;<EK 8CK<IE8K@M< N<<BCP › J=9>%:FD J8E =I8E:@J:F 8E; 98P 8I<8

> last chance to view the special exhibition Picasso: Masterpieces from the MusÊe National Picasso, Paris—closes Mon, Oct 10.

> celebrate Picasso at Get Sketchy including SF Improv Fest and the Freeze, music by Rodringo Teague and live sketching, presented in partnership with the San Francisco Bay Guardian.

> enjoy WKH ÀOP VFUHHQLQJ RI Innovating Cities and Artist

Fellow Kevin Epps’ FAM BAM, presented in partnership with the African American Art and Culture Complex. In the Koret Auditorium DW SP VHDWLQJ LV RQ D ÀUVW FRPH ÀUVW VHUYHG EDVLV

With hanni El Khatib Thurs/6, 9 p.m., $20 Great American Music Hall 859 O’Farrell, SF www.gamh.com

> visit WKH $UWLVW 6DORQ IHDWXULQJ 2FWREHU $UWLVW LQ 5HVLGHQFH

Maori weaver Glenda Joyce Hape. In the Kimball Education Gallery.

> create your own sketch inspired by the Picasso exhibition.

With MistEr lovElEss, DJ naKo Fri/7, 9 p.m., $20–$25 New Parish 579 18th St., Oakl. www.thenewparish.com

Friday Nights at the de Young is part of FAMSF’s Cultural Encounters initiative generously funded by The James Irvine Foundation, The Wallace Foundation, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the Columbia Foundation, and the Winifred Johnson Clive Foundation.

With rElEasE thE birD Sat/8, 9 p.m., $20 Slim’s 333 11th St., SF www.slims-sf.com

Maximum Consumption is an unseasoned look at the increasingly overlapping fields of music and culinary arts. For more, visit the Noise blog on SFBG.com. arts + culture

Pablo Picasso. Portrait of Dora Maar, 1937. MusÊe National Picasso, Paris. Š 2011 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

From 5–8:45pm with free programs and live music. (QMR\ FRFNWDLOV VDQJULD DQG D 6SDQLVK LQVSLUHG SUL[ À[H PHQX LQ WKH FDIp

SFBg What songs are you playing on this tour? JE Keeping with this “All You Can Eat� thing, the idea was to play all the songs. When you have the opportunity to play in a city several nights in a row, you can play different songs every night. We’ve done six records so far, so it’s a cool mix of new and old songs. Of course we play “Young Folks,� some people like that, we play “Second Chance� from this record, which features a cowbell, which seems to drive people wild. 2

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pEtEr, BJorn and John want to StuFF you with trEatS By Emily SavagE

Oct.

fridaY nights 07

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Golden Gate Park 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive deyoungmuseum.org 415.750.3600

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ARTS + CULTURE: MUSIC _____________________________________________________________________________

10/5 Sport of Kings, Olivia Clayton, Molly Gazay, Denim Wedding 10/6 The Tet Holiday, Th Mrcy Hot Sprngs, The Gregors, Only Sleeping 10/7 Mutineers, Big Jugs, Coburns, Kitchen Fire 10/8 Black Box

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Revelation, Morning After Girls, King Midas in Reverse 10/9 Bronco, Mr. Turkey, Billy Duplain 10/27 Gringo Star, City of Women _____________________________________________________________________________

TWO FULL BARS * TWO FLOORS OPEN 11AM - 2AM * $3 PBR CANS 1351 POLK ST * KIMOSBARSF.COM

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5IFSFµT CFFO OP TIPSUBHF PG HSPVQT UBQ QJOH JOUP VOEFOJBCMZ QMFBTVSBCMF TPVOET PWFS UIF MBTU GFX ZFBST CVU GPS FWFSZ DPPM TPVOEJOH XJUDI IPVTF BOE HMPX DPSF SFDPSE UIF POF UIJOH UIBU IBT CFFO NJTT JOH JT B USVF TFOTF PG IVNBO FNPUJPO 0O Work (Work, Work) )53, DIBOOFMT UIF TFWFSF MPTT JU FYQFSJFODFE JOUP BO BMCVN UIBU TMPXMZ BOE TVCUMZ HMJEFT ZPV JOUP B GMPBUJOH BOE NPVSOGVM TUBUF PG NJOE -PTJOH UIFJS CBTTJTU UP TVJDJEF MBTU ZFBS BOE UIF QSPEVDFS PG UIFJS MBTU BMCVN UP DBODFS UIJT JT B HSPVQ JO UIF NJETU PG TFWFSF USBHFEZ XIP IBWF DIBOOFMFE UIFJS IFBSUBDIF JOUP B NFTNFSJ[JOH XPSL PG BJSZ NFMBODIPMZ 4USJQQFE EPXO FMFDUSPO JDT TIPF HB[FE BOE EB[FE WPDBMT TFDSFU NFMPEJFT BOE UIBU JOEFTDSJCBCMF TFOTB UJPO PG DMPTJOH ZPVS FZFT BOE GSFF[JOH UJNF XIFO UIF XPSME BSPVOE ZPV JT NPW JOH JO NJTFSBCMF XBZT 5IJT JT TFOTVBM HPUI 4XJSOPGG 2

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arts + culture: FilM

BhagwaN Shree rajNeeSh MakeS Few FrIeNdS But INFlueNCeS MaNy IN Guru: BhaGwan, his secretary and his BodyGuard; a CoNteStaNt FlexeS her textINg MuSCleS IN thumBs. | Guru courtesy DAs KoLLeKtIV fĂźr AuDIoVIsueLLe WerKe GmbH; Thumbs courtesy trIpLe tHreAt teLeVIsIon

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3FXBSEJOH BOE PGG UIF SBEBS .JMM 7BMMFZ 'JMN 'FTUJWBM QJDLT By Cheryl eddy cheryl@sfbg.com FIlM You could drive (or if you have the time, public transport) to the 34th annual Mill Valley Film Festival solely for movies like period drama Albert Nobbs, which is already generating Oscar buzz for Glenn Close. Hot tip, though: anything with the words “Oscar buzzâ€? attached to it, or “critically acclaimedâ€? (including believe-thehype entries Martha Marcy May Marlene and Like Crazy), will likely arrive in San Francisco over the next few months. However, Mill Valley also offers a huge schedule of films you haven’t heard of yet, like Bill CouturiÊ’s Thumbs, a zippy doc about swift-fingered teens battling to win the 2010 US National Texting Championships. Before you shake your head in disbelief, Grandpa, note that the top finishers rake in major skrilla (first place: $50,000). Thumbs, which owes much to earlier competition docs like 2002’s Spellbound, has already taken aim at its target demographic by airing on MTV, but it holds up beyond the small screen. Kids will dig the wholesome protagonists: the punky small-town girl who argues with her mother via text; the softspoken swim-team standout. But anyone who doesn’t hang with the class of 2014 will find Thumbs an eye-opening (and surprisingly positive) peek at high-school society in the digital age. Using technology in a completely different way is Granito: How to Nail a Dictator, acclaimed documentarian Pamela Yates’ follow-up to editorials

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her 1983 doc about the Guatemalan civil war, When the Mountains Tremble. “How does each of us weave our responsibilities into the fabric of history?� Yates wonders in her introspective voice-over. When a human-rights lawyer working to charge Guatemalan military leaders with genocide asks Yates for her Mountains outtakes, the filmmaker scours her archives, digging for evidence and eventually becoming deeply involved in the case. Granito is a legal thriller, but it’s also a personal journey, for Yates and, most potently, survivors still traumatized by Guatemala’s years of repression and violence. On the lighter side is Smokin’ Fish, a low-key profile of wry businessman Cory Mann (who also co-directs). Born in Juneau, raised in San Diego, the half-white, halfNative American (“For a long time, I thought I was Mexican!�) puts his mail-order company on hold for a few months every year to catch and smoke salmon using traditional methods in rural Alaska. More than a character study, Smokin’ Fish is also a portrait of what it means to be an “authentic Indian� in the 21st century, in a world where you can spend one day tangling with the IRS and the next trading fish for fresh moose meat. A far less gratifying tradition is the subject of The Forgiveness of Blood, the sophomore effort from Maria Full of Grace (2004) director Joshua Marston. The Los Angelesborn, internationally-minded Marston travels to Albania for this fictional drama about the decadesold conflict between two rival famipicks

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lies — and the devastating impact the eye-for-an-eye feud has on the younger generation. Already tapped as Albania’s entry for Best Foreign Language Film at next year’s Oscars, Forgiveness is definitely gonna be one of those MVFF films you’ll be able to see theatrically. Make sure you don’t miss it. Got no transition here, just another recommendation. Guru: Bhagwan, His Secretary and His Bodyguard, a Swiss documentary about the late Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh — and two of his most devoted followers, bodyguard Hugh Milne and secretary-spokesperson Sheela Birnstiel. “When did it begin to go wrong?� asks Milne early in the film, which utilizes a bounty of archival footage to chart a movement that started in the 1970s, when a charismatic guru first enthralled thousands of spiritual, sexually adventurous hippies. Milne (mournful) and Birnstiel (incredibly, still a believer) reconstruct the confusing, emotionally exhausting years that followed; the subsequent web of culty weirdness culminated with the hostile takeover of a rural Oregon community, and, most famously, an unholy collection of Rolls-Royces. Mill Valley’s shorts programs are always strong, from the “5@5� selections to the films paired with longer features throughout the fest. Of local interest, the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism presentation Pot Country (part of the “5@5: Circle of Life� program) travels 200 miles north of San Francisco to hang with marijuana farmers. The film interviews both the world’s smarmiest pot lobbyist and a veteran grower prone to poetic, philosophical musings (“We didn’t move here to grow marijuana. It came to us as a gift�). Directors Kate McLean

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and Mario Furloni are particularly interested in divisive Prop 19 (which would have legalized weed for personal use, but had the potential to squeeze out small farmers), and the fact that, like, everyone grows pot these days. “We came [to Northern California] to be away from the mainstream culture,� remarks the grower. “Now, we’re in it.� Screening alongside two other shorts in a program dubbed “The Barber, The Brush, and the Baton� is Paige Bierma’s A Brush With the Tenderloin, which follows muralist Mona Caron as she creates her landmark piece at Jones and Golden Gate Streets in San Francisco. Despite the neighborhood’s bad rep, its residents — no matter how intimidating they may look — rally around Caron’s efforts with positivity and pride. The art theme continues with Library of Dust, screening before William Kurelek’s The Maze. Directed by Ondi Timoner and Robert James, Library draws inspiration from David Maisel’s photography collection of the same name. His subject? Abandoned canisters of human ashes discovered at the Oregon State Hospital. Library recounts how the canisters were found and how Maisel’s haunting artwork came about; it also delves into the troubled history of mental health care. Despite the tragedy of the forgotten ashes — very few have been claimed to date, though the “reunions� captured on camera are poignant — the resulting media storm was enough to convince voters that Oregon was long overdue for new mental health facility. Powerful stuff, all vividly explored in the span of 16 minutes. 2 Mill Valley FilM FestiVal Oct. 6-16, most shows $13.50 Various North Bay venues www.mvff.com

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arts + culture: film

for more arts content visit sfbg.com/pixel_vision

a neW engLanD

WeekendµT HBZ SPNBODF JT SFNBSLBCMZ VOSFNBSLBCMF By Dennis Harvey arts@sfbg.com FiLM Recent urban unrest in London and elsewhere induced the same shocked response England has rolled out some years now at signs of what’s been termed “Broken Britain” — as if it were a complete surprise that the poor won’t always be content to suffer in polite near-silence. Propriety and gentility may be shrinking in the U.K., but they still have a powerful grip on the nation’s sense of itself. Similar tremors were felt five decades ago when things were at last waking up both economically and artistically after the long post-

by a sort of class system. There’s the Masterpiece Theatre school of costumed romance and intrigue on one hand, the pint-mouthed rebel yellers practicing gritty realism on another. Except contemporary examples of the latter, from Fish Tank (2009) to Attack the Block now allow that Angry Young Men might be something else beyond the radar once tuned to cocky, white male antiheroes. The “something else” is gay in Weekend, which was shot in some of the same Nottingham locations where Finney’s Arthur Seaton kicked against the pricks in Saturday Night. The landscape has changed — street level is now 14 floors down in a

esting, perhaps semi-staged portrait of a male hustler called Greek Pete (2009). It didn’t really prepare one for Weekend, which is the kind of yakkety, bumps and-all romantic brief encounter movies (or any other media) so rarely render this fresh, natural, and un-stagy. Both protagonists are average in their way — even Glen’s cynical pretensions are pretty standard-issue, such that you might decide he’s full of shit if in more-kindly-disposed Russell’s position — but the somewhat improvised ways they talk and act aren’t banal or predictable, just credible. They fuck (the movie isn’t graphic, but it’s frank about stuff like wiping splooge off one’s stomach), do

russeLL (ToM CuLLen) anD gLen (CHris neW) eMBarK on a reaLisTiCaLLy iMperFeCT roManCe in Weekend. | Photo by quinnford & scout World War II slough. Back then, the “Angry Young Man” school excited international interest even as it triggered alarm and disdain from various native bastions of cultural conservatism. Alan Sillitoe’s Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958) discomfited many by depicting a young factory grunt who frequently wakes in a married woman’s bed, chases other available tail, lies as naturally as he breathes, calls neighborhood busybodies “bitches and whores,” and on one Friday night entertains himself by drinking till he falls down a pub staircase — deliberately. “What I’m out for is a good time. The rest is propaganda,” sneers beady-eyed Albert Finney in the 1960 movie version, airing his contempt for all things cozy, dull and complacent. Today British movies (at least the ones that get exported) are still more or less divided as then, 38 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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council flat building — but still nondescript, the boozy clubs still loud but with different bad music. It’s at one such that bearded, late20s Russell (Tom Cullen) gets loaded, waking up next morning with a hangover next to no married lady but rather Glen (Chris New). You get the feeling Glen has been the guy a lot of Russells have woken up next to; he enjoys the upper-hand power of remembering more about last night than they do. It would be unfair to reveal more of Weekend’s plot, what little there is. Suffice it to say these two lads get to know each other over less than 48 hours, during which it emerges that Russell isn’t really “out,” while Glen is with a vengeance — though the matter of who is more emotionally mature or well adjusted isn’t so simple. Writer-director Andrew Haigh made one prior feature, a semi-intermusic listings

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too much cocaine, argue, and face a paths-parting deadline imposed by the fact that Glen will shortly leave to study for two years in the U.S. This may not be true love, but even the frail possibility of that is enough to usefully unsettle them both. Weekend makes its small but somehow stirring impact for a number of reasons, but not least because it’s British working-class anti-miserabilism — the Angry Young Man conventions so taken for granted that simply being working class no longer means anyone actually has to be angry. Despite a fag-baiting catcall or two, the problems these blokes face aren’t social (they’ve both got accepting straight friends, if not family) but internal. Two strangers connecting despite themselves is such an intricate thing it’s no wonder movies seldom get it this right. 2 WeeKenD opens Fri/7 in Bay Area theaters.

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39


arts + culture: nightlife

dOn’T BLaMe iT On The BOOGie: dJ BUS STaTiOn JOhn’S neW r&B niGhT, LOve WiLL Fix iT (LeFT) and J-BOOGie’S BikeS and BeaTS aPPearance ShOULd vaniSh The BLUeS.

TOO, TOO, TOO By Marke B. marke@sfbg.com SUPer eGO It’s a busy weekend coming up — the rains may threaten, but dammit we’re going to eke out an entire summer of our own in the clubs. I love fake weather! It’s the future, like penicillin Mentos. So let’s get right into parties. A few quick words, though, about what I’m living for lately: outlandishly tasty fivedollar margaritas at El Amigo Bar (3335 Mission, SF), all-night vegan pizza at DNA Pizza (371 11th St.), DJ Doc Sleep and her mesmerizing deep techno sets — and absolutely zero of the Paris collections so far. I mean, they might as well just dump a Hummerload of Quaker on the runway and call it “oat couture” it’s so bland up there this season. DIY for 2012 indeed.

Shine On Shoegaze, dream pop, C86: The fine minds behind perfectly retro ‘90s alternative party Debaser are launching this tribute to Creation Records and its ilk, rolling the heavenly oceanic sounds of bands like My Bloody Valentine, Chapterhouse, and (personal favorite) Curve as well as more catchy, twee expressions into Public Works for a new biweekly party. Don’t cut your bangs. Ever. Wed/5, 9 p.m., $5 (free before 11pm.) Public Works, 161 Erie, SF. www. publicsf.com. Facebook: Shine On.

J-BOOGie One of the hardest working DJs and groovesters on the scene, JBoogie, is back with a third album with his live Dubtronic Science collective, “Under Cover” (OM Records) and jazzing up the hiphop funk. He’ll be the perfect 40 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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devices are still frowned upon, however. Verisimilitude!)

focal point for the spokes-busting monthly Bikes and Beats party, also featuring Fort Knox Five, Kush Arora, Max Tannone, and a lot of people with amazing thighs. Fri/7, 9 p.m.-3 a.m., $10/$15. Public Works, 161 Erie, SF. Facebook: Bikes and Beats

TiGer and WOOdS This UK duo may cling to the somewhat tired anonymity thing (does anyone really care who they really are?) but they’re my favorite recent musical act — going beyond mere re-edits of funk and disco classics to seriously chop the shit out of old tracks, run them through a blender, and then go back and Ronco them some more until they’ve become something quite new. “Gin Nation,” their Nude Descending a Staircase version of Imagination’s “Music and Lights” was my favorite track of last year: live they should take the crowd deep. SF’s own re-edit masters 40 Thieves make a rare live appearance as well at this party from the As You Like It crew. Fri/7, 9 p.m.-4 a.m., $15/$20. Beatbox, 314 11th St., SF. Facebook: As You Like It

LOve WiLL Fix iT Oh, our fractured world! DJ Bus Station John aims to heal it with this new monthly at the Hotspot that showcases his extensive vinyl collection of funk, soul, and “R&B from A-Z, from ‘77-’83,” as he puts it. I guarantee you’re going to hear some unrecognized cuts that will blow your mind (and feet!). Unlike BSJ’s gay-oriented bathhouse disco nights — RIP his infamous Le Perle Degli Squalor parties — all comers are welcome to throw down at this musical tribute to his youth. (Cell phones and other interruptive digital music listings

stage listings

Sat/8 and second Saturdays, 10 p.m., $5. Hotspot, 1414 Market, SF.

The raPTUre Recent single “How Deep Is Your Love?” by post-postpunk-dance (or what have you) pioneers the Rapture surprised with a contemporary clubfriendly direction that still sounded unique: part Juan Maclean house revival, part baggy Madchester throwback, but still the work of a rock band whose performances can stoke a crowd that’s down for whatever. Which almost perfectly describes the Blow Up crowd: this edition of the wildly youthful and nubile Blow Up Forever party will be glitter-nuts as usual, the Rapture will beam it up. With Treasure Fingers, Fred Falke, Poolside, and more. Sat/8, 9:30 p.m.-3 a.m., $18–$25, 18+. Sound Factory, 525 Harrison, SF. www. blowupforever.com

Sen-Sei Following in the footsteps of live techno, live house music is making a comeback. (The difference? Better technology only recently made live techno an option for most venues, whereas live house music, with its more standard instrumentation, can basically be traced back to jazz.) Local musician Sen-Sei was one of the original residents of the 2nd Sundays party and is a wiz at accompanying a DJ, in this case Brian Salazar, with his keyboards and taking the music to cosmic places. He’s returning to close out the 2nd Sundays season — and those of you who know me know I would only recommend a 2nd Sundays party if the music was going to be exceptional. With Mark Farina and Honey Dijon, so you know. Sun/9, noon to midnight, $20. Kelly’s Mission Rock, 817 Terry Francois Blvd., SF. www.2ndsundays.com 2

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50 KicK Ass Beers on DrAught over 100 different bottles, specializing in Belgians

A Beer Drinker’s PArADise! since 1987

WED Oct 5 9pm, $7

HOLGER (Brazil)

THU Oct 6 9pm, FREE

HEMLOCK TAVERN 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY PARTY

New Spell Red Weather

FRI Oct 7 HURRY UP SHOTGUN 9:30pm, $7 (CD release) Generalissimo Moon Eater SAT Oct 8 SARTAIN 8:30pm, $10 DAN Two Tears (ex-Red Aunts) Des Roar (NYC) Electra (Israel) SUN Oct 9 9pm, $7

ARMS AND LEGS

Deaf Wish (AUS) The Djin Aquarian/Plastic Crimewave Band

MON Oct 10 JAPANTHER EARLY 8:30pm, $7 Unstoppable Death Machine LATER PUNK ROCK SIDESHOW 10pm, FREE

PREMONITION 13 PLAYS THE ELBO ROOM MON/10. | PhOTO by GAry COPElANd .VTJD MJTUJOHT BSF DPNQJMFE CZ &NJMZ 4BWBHF 4JODF DMVC MJGF JT VOQSFEJDUBCMF JUÂľT B HPPE JEFB UP DBMM BIFBE PS DIFDL UIF WFOVFÂľT XFCTJUF UP DPO GJSN CPPLJOHT BOE IPVST 1SJDFT BSF MJTUFE XIFO QSPWJEFE UP VT 4VCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT BU MJTUJOHT!TGCH DPN 'PS GVSUIFS JOGPSNBUJPO PO IPX UP TVCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT TFF 1JDLT

wednesday 5 Rock /Blues/hip-hop

Bar Fight, Aloha Screwdriver, Business End &MCP 3PPN QN CANT, Blood Orange *OEFQFOEFOU QN Evergrey, Blackguard, Sabaton, Powerglove, Absence 3FHFODZ #BMMSPPN QN Holger, New Spell, Red Weather )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN Jus’ Folks, Apogee Sound Club, Hard Feelings, Peter Precious ,OPDLPVU QN Guella, Antioquia $BGF %V /PSE QN #FOFGJU GPS UIF 5VUPSQFEJB 'PVOEBUJPO Mona, Funeral Party, Soft White Sixties #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Muca Pazza 3JDLTIBX 4UPQ QN Troy Neihardt vs. Nathan Temby +PIOOZ 'PMFZ¾T 0¾'BSSFMM 4' XXX EVFMJOHQJBOP TBUGPMFZT DPN QN Zola Jesus "NPFCB QN GSFF

jazz/new music

Cosmo AlleyCats -F $PMPOJBM $PTNP 1MBDF 4' XXX MFDPMPOJBMTG DPN QN David Binney Quartet 4XFEJTI "NFSJDBO )BMM QN Dink Dink Dink, Gaucho with Tamar Korn, Michael Abraham "NOFTJB QN GSFF Jazz organ party 3PZBM $VDLPP .JTTJPO 4' XXX SPZBMDVDLPP DPN QN GSFF Mingus Amungus :PTIJÂľT QN Jacui Naylor 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Ricardo Scales 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN

folk / woRld/countRy

Kelley McRae #B[BBS $BGF $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX CB[BBSDBGF DPN QN 'SFF

dance cluBs

Booty Call 2 #BS $BTUSP 4' XXX CPPUZ DBMMXFEOFTEBZT DPN QN +VBOJUB .PPSF IPTUT UIJT EBODF QBSUZ GFBUVSJOH %+ 3PCPU )VTUMF Mary Go Round -PPLPVU UI 4U 4' XXX MPPLPVUTG DPN QN %SBH XJUI 4VQQPTJUPSJ 4QFMMJOH .FSDFEF[ .VOSP BOE (JOHFS 4OBQ Megatallica 'JEEMFSÂľT (SFFO $PMVNCVT 4' XXX NFHBUBMMJDB DPN QN GSFF )FBWZ NFUBM IBOHPVU No Room For Squares 4PN UI 4U 4' QN GSFF %+ "GSPEJUF 4IBLF TQJOT KB[[ GPS IBQQZ IPVS “1320 Showcase SFâ€? 5FNQMF 4' )PXBSE

editorials

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4U XXX UFNQMFTG DPN QN GSFF 8JUI -JUUMF 1FPQMF /BMFQB %KVOZB $ISPO 'V[[ #JOT 4NBTI (SBC Vespa Beat #MJTT #BS UI 4U 4' XXX CMJTTCBSTG DPN QN GSFF .4, GN TQJOT SBSF HSPPWFT FMFDUSPTXJOH BOE CPPHJF

for future event info looK @ toronADo.com

hAPPY hour every Day until 6:00 pm hours: Daily 11:30 am to 2:00 am

thuRsday 6

)"*()5 45 ! '*--.03&

Rock /Blues/hip-hop

XXX UPSPOBEP DPN

TUE Oct 11 9pm, $8

THE RENDERERS (NZ, Ba Da Bing) Sore Eros (MA) Christine Shields

WED Oct 12 RADEMACHER 9pm, $7 Disco Doom (Switzerland) Ugly Winner UPCOMING: Siddhartha, Litquake, We Be The Echo, Walls (UK, Kompakt), Tigon, Ominous Black (NJ), Kicking Spit, The Family Stoned (Oly), Bad Daddies, MJ’s Brass Boppers, El Cajon, Skystone, Blank Stares, Slouching Stars, Nero Order

Blitzen Trapper "NPFCB QN GSFF CSS, Men 'JMMNPSF QN Datarock, Anoraak, Baertur, Syntax Terrorkester .F[[BOJOF QN Jason Dolan, SF Artists Collective .BTPO 4PDJBM )PVTF 4' XXX NBTPOTPDJBMIPVTF DPN QN GSFF Electric Six, Kitten, Mark Mallman *OEFQFOEFOU QN “Hemlock Tavern 10 Year Anniversaryâ€? )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN GSFF Hood Internet, Psalm One, Rhymesayers, Justus Bends #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Misisipi Mike and the Midnight Gamblers "NOFTJB QN Peter, Bjorn and John, Hanni El Khatib (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Short Fuse, Meatslab, Feral Depravity, Hemorage, Phalgeron 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN Nathan Temby vs. Troy Neihardt +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT 0Âľ'BSSFMM 4' XXX EVFMJOHQJBOP TBUGPMFZT DPN QN Yule Be Sorry, Swiftums, Lenguas Largas, Little Mercury ,OPDLPVU QN

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7ED -IKE !POCALYPSE 4HURSDAY 4HE 'OODS W 35"4%84 &RIDAY -OONSHAKE W $ARRAGH 3KELETON MEMBERS FROM THE "RIAN *ONESTOWN -ASSACRE 3EASONAL #OCKTAILS 'REEN $OOR VODKA LIME CUCUMBER MINT ROSE WATER 3AZERAC /LD /VERHOLT 2YE 7HISKY 0EYCHAUDS BITTERS SUGAR +UBLER !BSINTHE 2ECESSION 0ROOF *EREMIAH 7EEDS SWEET TEA VODKA LEMON 3187 MISSION @ VALENCIA SAN FRANCISCO • 415.824-1447

jazz/new music

Blues Organ Party 3PZBM $VDLPP .JTTJPO 4' XXX SPZBMDVDLPP DPN QN GSFF Lost Dog Found, Black Kat Kabaret $BGF %V /PSE QN Jacui Naylor 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Stompy Jones 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN

folk / woRld/countRy

Fourplay :PTIJÂľT BOE QN Mitch Polzak and Billy Wilson Duo "UMBT $BGF 4U 4' XXX BUMBTDBGF OFU QN GSFF Twang! Honky Tonk 'JEEMFSÂľT (SFFO $PMVNCVT 4' XXX UXBOHIPOLZUPOL DPN QN -JWF DPVOUSZ NVTJD EBODJOH BOE HJWFBXBZT

dance cluBs

Afrolicious &MCP 3PPN QN %+T 1MFBTVSFNBLFS BOE 4FvPS 0[ TQJO "GSPCFBU 5SPQJDgMJB FMFDUSP TBNCB BOE GVOL 4QFDJBM MJWF HVFTU %VOLFMCVOU 7JFOOB Electric Feel -PPLPVU 4' QN GSFF *OEJF NVTJD WJEFP EBODF QBSUZ Guilty Pleasures (FTUBMU UI 4U 4' QN GSFF %+ 5PQI;JMMB CONTINUES ON PAGE 42 >>

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OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2011 / SFBG.com

41


music listings

Read the digital version of the Guardian every week online at sfbg.com

THURS/6 CONT>>

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10/9 6pm $5

10/11 8pm

dJ sTrUggle creW, MPhd, B leThAl, v ThUnder And TiMeBoMB Free hotdog w/cover sUB•Mission ‘Bands and BBQ’ presents:

leTs dAnce! WiTh The dUAlies, neW YeAr sUn BeAr,doc PoPUlAr JAPAnTher, The UnsToPPABle deATh MAchines

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42 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

jazz/new music

Black Cat Orchestra 5PQ PG UIF .BSL $BMJGPSOJB 4' XXX UPQPGUIFNBSL DPN QN Fourplay :PTIJÂľT BOE QN Jazz Organ Party 3PZBM $VDLPP .JTTJPO 4' XXX SPZBMDVDLPP DPN QN GSFF Jacui Naylor 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Afro Bao -JUUMF #BPCBC UI 4U 4' QN "GSP BOE XPSME NVTJD XJUI SPUBUJOH %+T JODMVEJOH 4UFQXJTF 4UFWF $MBVEF 4BOUFSP BOE &MFNCF Bikes and Beats 1VCMJD 8PSLT 4' XXX QVCMJDTG DPN QN #FOFGJU GPS 4BO 'SBODJTDP #JLF $PBMJUJPO XJUI + #PPHJFÂľT %VCUSPOJD 4DJFODF 'PSU ,OPY Braza! 4PN 4U 4' XXX TPN CBS DPN QN #SB[JMJBO CFBUT BOE CSFBLT XJUI %+ 'BVTUP GSPN 'BWFMB 4PVM Fringe %/" QN *OEJF SPDLM FMFDUSP QPQ XJUI #MPOEJF , BOE 4VC0DUBWF Oldies Night ,OPDLPVU QN %PP XBQ TPVM BOE POF IJU XPOEFST XJUI %+ 1SJNP %BOJFM BOE -PTU $BU 120 Minutes &MCP 3PPN QN 4MFFQPWFS QMVT SFTJEFOU %+T 8IJUDI /BLP BOE (V..Z#F"S Strangelove: Undead Wedding $BU $MVC Q N (PUI BOE JOEVTUSJBM XJUI %+T 5PNBT %JBCMP .FMUJOH (JSM .[ 4BNBOUIB BOE 9BOEFS Vintage Orson, 'PVSUI 4U 4' QN GSFF %+ 5PQI0OF BOE HVFTU TQJO KB[[Z CFBUT GPS DPDLUBMJBOT

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subs going dumbs presents: 10/8 9pm

Fancy Space People #SJDL BOE .PSUBS QN Fresh and Onlys, Tamaryn, Wax Idols (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Groovality Band #JTDVJUT #MVFT QN Hurry Up Shotgun, Generalissimo, Moon Eater )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN Jason Marion, Nathan Temby, Troy Neihardt +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT 0Âľ'BSSFMM 4' XXX EVFMJOH QJBOPTBUGPMFZT DPN QN Christian Martin, Worthy, Justin Martin .F[[BOJOF QN GSFF CFGPSF QN XJUI 3471 PO (PJOH DPN XJUIPVU Megafaun, Doug Paisley $BGF %V /PSE QN Old Firm Casuals, Brassknuckle Boys, Young Offenders, Airfix Kits, Living Eyes 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN Pains of Being Pure at Heart, Twin Sister 4MJNÂľT QN Stephanie Rearick #SBJOXBTI 'PMTPN 4' XXX CSBJOXBTI DPN QN GSFF Rebirth Brass Band, Sister Sparrow and the Dirty Birds *OEFQFOEFOU QN Trophy Fire, Bird by Bird, Bruises #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN

dance cluBs

=Veen =djg 9g^c` HeZX^Vah

sub•Mission presents: gAviliAn The BAnd, 10/7 8:30pm MoccreTo, roMAncer $3

5&26*-" 5&$"5& 0/-: 4$3&&/*/( "-- :063 '"7 )03303 '*-.4

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+%ÂźH A6I>C HDJA

doMinATion (sAnJo), sToMPer

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Accept Yourself Productions presents: 10/6 UnchAined, ToPXnoTch, 7:30pm MAnkind, Will FUcking $7 BUrn, BrAWl (Boise id),

saturday 8

rock /Blues/hip-hop

+ ( ) +

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Fourplay :PTIJÂľT BOE QN Jazz Organ Party with Grahmm Connah 3PZBM $VDLPP .JTTJPO 4' XXX SPZBMDVDLPP DPN QN GSFF Jacui Naylor 3SB[[ 3PPN QN

folk / world/country

LoCura #SJDL BOE .PSUBS QN Saturday Night Salsa 3BNQ 'SBODPJT 4' XXX GBDFCPPL DPN UIFSBNQTG QN

dance cluBs

Afro Bao -JUUMF #BPCBC UI 4U 4' QN "GSP BOE XPSME NVTJD XJUI SPUBUJOH %+T JODMVEJOH 4UFQXJTF 4UFWF $MBVEF 4BOUFSP BOE &MFNCF Blow Up Forever II 5IF 'BDUPSZ 4' )BSSJTPO 4' XXXCMPXVQGPSFWFS DPN QN 8JUI 3BQUVSF 'SFE 'BMLF -JGFMJLF 1PPMTJEF 5SFBTVSF 'JOHFST +FGGSFZ 1BSBEJTF BOE NPSF Bootie SF: Mashup-Germany %/" -PVOHF QN (FSNBO 4QBSLMF 1BSUZ BOE 4VSSSM TQJOOJOH OVUUZ IPVTF FMFDUSP CSFBLT BOE GVOL DJ ?uestlove, DJ Sake1, Apollo and Mark Divita 1VCMJD 8PSLT &FSJF 4' XXX QVC MJDTG DPN QN Electricity ,OPDLPVU QN " EFDBEF PG ´ T XJUI %+T %FBECFBU BOE :VMF #F 4PSSZ QMVT /BLP Tormenta Tropical vs Que Bajo &MCP 3PPN QN 8JUI %+T 4IBXO 3FZOBMEP 0SP 6QSPPU "OEZ BOE (FLP +POFT 2 Men Will Move You "NOFTJB QN 1SJNP BOE +PSEBO QMBZ EJTDP CPPHJF IPVTF OFX XBWF BOE *UBMP Sanafrica #PMMZIPPE $BGn QN 8FTU "GSJDBO BOE -BUJO GVTJPO QBSUZ XJUI +PTF -VJT %+ /BEP BOE %+ .JHOBOF

sunday 9 rock /Blues/hip-hop

Arms and Legs, Deaf Wish, Djin Aquarian/ Plastic Crimewave Band )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN Bijou .BSUVOJÂľT 7BMFODJB 4' XXX ESBHBU NBSUVOJT DPN QN David Crowder Band 3FHFODZ #BMMSPPN QN Meddy Gerville #SJDL BOE .PSUBS QN Girls, Sonny and the Sunsets (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Hawthorne Heights #SJDL BOE .PSUBS QN Hobbit NYC, Blank Stares, Sassy!!! #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN Janiva Magness #JTDVJUT #MVFT BOE QN Stevie Nicks 'JMMNPSF QN Voltaire, Hellblinki, This Way to the Egress, Slow Poisoner 4UVE #BS 4U 4' XXX TUVETG DPN QN Yellowcard, Every Avenue, Go Radio 4MJNÂľT

jazz/new music

Boris, Tera Melos, Master Musucians of Bukkake 3FHFODZ #BMMSPPN QN Cymbals Eat Guitars, Hooray for Earth, Dandelion War #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN

!" ! # ! ! !# " $ " ! ! % " &

Dead Meadow, Burnt Ones, Pow! $BGF %V /PSE QN “Frisco Freakout Psychedelic Dance Partyâ€? 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN 8JUI )BSEFSTIJQT $BSMUPO .FMUPO *NBHJOBSZ 'SJFOET "TTFNCMF )FBE JO 4VOCVSTU 4PVOE ; 5SBOF BOE NPSF Girls, Sonny and the Sunsets (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Russo Jones .BTPO 4PDJBM )PVTF 4' XXX NBTPOTPDJBMIPVTF DPN QN GSFF “Meditations on San Franciscoâ€? 4BO 'SBODJTDP ;FO $FOUFS 1BHF 4' XXX TG[D PSH 8JUI #BSO 0XM %BUF 1BMNT BOE %BOOZ 1BVM (SPEZ QN Troy Neihardt, Jason Marion, Nathan Temby +PIOOZ 'PMFZÂľT 0Âľ'BSSFMM 4' XXX EVFMJOH QJBOPTBUGPMFZT DPN QN Stevie Nicks 'JMMNPSF QN Peter, Bjorn and John 4MJNÂľT QN Rebirth Brass Band, SeaSunZ and the Earth Amp Project *OEFQFOEFOU QN Sam Chase 3JQUJEF 5BSBWBM 4' XXX UIFSJQUJEFTG DPN QN GSFF Dan Sartain, Two Tears, Des Roar, Electra )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN

Jazz Organ Party 3PZBM $VDLPP .JTTJPO 4' XXX SPZBMDVDLPP DPN QN GSFF “Fourth Annual SF Filipino American Jazz Festivalâ€? :PTIJÂľT QN 8JUI "OOJF #SB[JM 8JOTUPO 3BWBM -FOB 4VOEBZ "OO .BSJF 4BOUPT BOE 4' 1JOPZ +B[[ 2VBSUFU

on the cheap

film listings

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Music listings Jacui Naylor 3SB[[ 3PPN QN Tiempo Libre :FSCB #VFOB $FOUFS GPS UIF "SUÂľT /PWFMMVT 5IFBUFS )PXBSE 4' XXX ZCDB PSH QN

folk / world/country

Margrit Eichler, Martine Donovan, Lea Grant :PTIJÂľT -PVOHF QN Salsa Sunday &M 3JP QN 4BMTB NFSFOHVF BOE DVNCJB XJUI #FOOZ 7FMBSEF : 4VQFSDPNCP Sunday Night Salsa 3BNQ 'SBODPJT 4' XXX GBDFCPPL DPN UIFSBNQTG QN “Twang Sundayâ€? 5IFF 1BSLTJEF QN GSFF

dance clubs

Batcave $BU $MVC QN %FBUI SPDL HPUI BOE QPTU QVOL XJUI 4UFFQMFSPU /FDSPNPT BOE D@EFBUI

Jock -PPLPVU UI 4U 4' XXX MPPL PVUTG DPN QN 3BJTF NPOFZ GPS -(#5 TQPSUT UFBNT XIJMF FOKPZJOH %+T BOE ESJOL TQFDJBMT La Pachanga #MVF .BDBX .JTTJPO 4' XXX UIFCMVFNBDBXTG DPN QN 4BMTB EBODF QBSUZ XJUI MJWF "GSP $VCBO TBMTB CBOET Mungo’s Hi Fi feat. Soom T, DJ Sep &MCP 3PPN QN 1SFTFOUFE CZ %VC .JTTJPO Tropical Hot Dog Night ,OPDLPVU QN 8JUI %+ 1MBDFOUJO TQJOOJOH NVUBOU EJTDP BOE QPTU QVOL

Nick Lowe, JD McPherson (SFBU "NFSJDBO .VTJD )BMM QN Premonition 13, Witch Mountain, Walken &MCP 3PPN QN Yelawolf, DJ Craze, Rittz *OEFQFOEFOU QN Switchfoot, Anberlin 8BSGJFME QN

jazz/new Music

Monday 10

Bossa Nova 5VOOFM 5PQ #VTI 4' QN GSFF -JWF BDPVTUJD #PTTB /PWB Benny Green )FSCTU 5IFBUFS 7BO /FTT 4' XXX TGXNQBD PSH QN Rileys :PTIJÂľT QN

rock /blues/hip-hop

folk / world/country

Japanther, Unstoppable Death Machine )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN

Toshio Hirano "NOFTJB QN

dance clubs

Death Guild %/" -PVOHF QN (PUIJD JOEVTUSJBM BOE TZOUIQPQ XJUI +PF 3BEJP %FDBZ BOE .FMUJOH (JSM M.O.M. .BESPOF "SU #BS QN GSFF %+T 5JNPUFP (JHBOUF (PSEP $BCF[B BOE $ISJT 1IMFL QMBZJOH BMM .PUPXO FWFSZ .POEBZ Sausage Party 3PTBNVOEF 4BVTBHF (SJMM .JTTJPO 4' QN GSFF %+ %BOEZ %JYPO TQJOT WJOUBHF SPDL 3 # HMPCBM CFBUT GVOL BOE EJTDP BU UIJT IBQQZ IPVS TBVTBHF TIBDL HJH

tuesday 11 rock /blues/hip-hop

Australian Pink Floyd 8BSGJFME QN

Gang Gang Dance, Prince Rama *OEFQFOEFOU QN Sarah McQuaid #JTDVJUT #MVFT Q N Renderers, Sore Eros, Christine Shields )FNMPDL 5BWFSO QN Chad VanGaalen, Gary War $BGF %V /PSE QN Rocky Votolato, Matt Pond PA, Minor Kingdom #PUUPN PG UIF )JMM QN

jazz/new Music

Steppin .BESPOF "SU #BS QN

folk / world/country

Fabiana Passoni and Her Quartet -F $PMPOJBM $PTNP 1MBDF 4' XXX MFDPMPOJBMTG DPN QN GSFF 2

UIFF

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WED

5IF GJOFTU PVUEPPS QBUJP 4PVUI PG .BSLFU ELbo room prESENTS

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10/5 (Ex-mEmbErS oF 9:30pm ExTrEmE ELVIS & hAroLD rAy! LIVE IN CoNCErT) $6

ALohA SCrEwDrIVEr ThE bUSINESS END

thu 10/6

AFro-TropI-ELECTrIC-SAmbA-FUNK

AFroLICIoUS

AndreW CerVAnTeS & pAULA FrAZer • dAVid & JoAnnA • meridiAnS (SoLo SeT) • rAGS To WidoWS ThU 10/6 6pm no CoVer!

SiCK SoUndS!

rAW 60S SoUL, FreAKbeAT, GArAGe, bUbbLeGUm

fri 10/7

10pm $8

ADV $10 Door

dJ mediUm rAre & GUeST miKey TAShJiAn 9pm Free!

dJ FoodCoUrT And hiS pALS roCK/pop/SoUL/CrAp

Fri 10/7 7:30pm $8

The ThinGerS

mATT piUCCi (rAin pArAde) W/ dJS Tom ThUmp, dAmon beLL & CenTipede

rAre GrooVe/FUnK/SoUL/hip-hop & more

SAT 10/8 6:30pm $5-$10 SLidinG SCALe

WriTerS WiTh drinKS

rebeCCA SoLniT • JiLLiAn LAUren • diAnA TUrKen • GeeK porn GirL And TomAS moniZ!

10/8

10pm $5 b4 11pm $10 AFTEr

eL SUperriTmo!

CUmbiA, dAnCehALL, SALSA, hip-hop

mon 10/10 7 pm Free

dUb rioT!

W/ dJS miKe d & dArT AJAx SpinninG 70’S dUb reGGAe 10pm no CoVer!

home ToWn hi-Fi

W/ dJ homeToWn hi-Fi & dJ WAx WAVeS reGGAe, roCK STeAdy, rooTS, SoUL

TUe 10/11 7:30-9:30pm $8

eLephAnT STone (monTreAL) CeLLAr doorS

9:30pm no CoVer!

LoST & FoUnd

deep & SWeeT 60S SoUL 45S

editorials

news

food + Drink

9pm $7

(VIENNA)

ELbo room prESENTS

120 mINUTES pErFormING LIVE:

suN

poweRhouse pRoductIoNs pReseNts:

rESIDENT DJS

9pm all ages $10

S4NTA_mU3rTE, NAKo, GUmmybEAr bErSA DISCoS prESENTS

4th aNNual FRIsco FReakout!

1:30pm all ages $15

wITh rESIDENT DJS

ShAwN rEyNALDo & oro11 (bErSA DISCoS), pLUS SpECIAL GUESTS

DUb mISSIoN prESENTS mUNGo'S hI FI FEAT. mC Soom T

MON 10/10

4V O INdIe-maRt!

.P O BTUSPOBVUBMJT TBOUFSP SVTUBOHT DSFTDFOU CBOLT

DJ SEp

8pm $5

LUCIFEr'S hAmmEr prESENTS

prEmoNITIoN 13

9pm (FEAT. wINo oF SAINT VITUS), $10/$13 (pDx),

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5IF #VTJOFTT %JSUZ 'JMUIZ .VHT 4ZEOFZ %VDLT Budget Rock 10! 1JFSDFE "SSPXT %POÂľU &Y 8JQFST )PU -VODI )BNNFS )PSSPS $MBTTJDT 3FEVDFST 4' $PNQMBJOUT 4USFFU +VTUJDF 5IF 1BQFS #BHT 8BSCSJOHFS -B[BSVT " % -BOENJOF .BSBUIPO %JBNPOE 1MBUF /FDSPTJO

wITCh moUNTAIN wALKEN

tuE

ELbo room prESENTS

9pm $8

AIr SEx ChAmpIoNShIpS

WED

ELbo room prESENTS A VEry SpECIAL LIVE pErFormANCE From

10/11

10/12

FUNKEr VoGT (GErmANy)

9pm $20/$25 pLUS AND DJ

EVEryThING GoES CoLD DECAy (DEATh GUILD)

UpComING:

ThU 10/13 AFroLICIoUS FrI 10/14 bombShELL bETTy bUrLESQUE bENEFIT SAT 10/15 SAT NITE SoUL pArTy EArLy: LITCrwAL SUN 10/16 DUb mISSIoN: DJ SEp

ADV TIX THROUGH WWW THEEPARKSIDE COM FOR MORE LISTINGS VISIT WWW MYSPACE COM THEEPARKSIDE

ADVANCE TICKETS

1600 17th Street 252-1330

www.browNpApErTICKETS.Com ELbo room IS LoCATED AT 647 VALENCIA NEAr 17Th

picks

arts + culture

music listings

"TTFNCMF )FBE JO] 4VOCVSTU 4PVOE] $BSMUPO .FMUPO] %BIHB #MPPN] ; 5SBOF &MFDUSJD #BOE] )BSEFSTIJQT] +PZ] XJDLFE NBDF] QPE CMPU[] FMFDUSJD TIFQIBSE] PVUMBX]

12pm FRee

(rENEGADE mASTErS/JAhTArI) pLUS

#SBTTLOVDLMF #PZT :PVOH 0GGFOEFST "JSGJY ,JUT -JWJOH &ZFT

4B U 5IF *NBKJOFSZ 'SJFOE]

TormENTA TropICAL VS. QUE bAJo

A bAy ArEA ExCLUSIVE Show: DEbUT U.S. ToUr From 9pm $12 ADV SoUNDSySTEm ChAmpIoNS $15-$17 Door (SCoTCh boNNET rECorDS/U.K.)

10/9

.FBUTMBC 'FSBM %FQSBWJUZ )FNPSBHF 1IBMHFSPO

'S J 5IF 0ME 'JSN $BTVBMT

SLEEp oVEr

(QUE bAJo)

dJS LUCKy & primo & FriendS

3225 22nd ST. @ miSSion SF CA 94110 415-647-2888 • www.makeoutroom.com

DUNKELbUNT

FRogass eNteRtaINmeNt pReseNts:

UprooT ANDy & GEKo JoNES

eVery SATUrdAy niGhT! 10pm $5

roGer mAS y eL KooL KyLe

5I V 4IPSU 'VTF

LASErS by FUTUrE wEApoNS

sat

eVery FridAy 10pm $5

LooSe JoinTS!

pLEASUrEmAKEr & SENor oZ SpECIAL LIVE GUESTS

penny ArCAde

)APPY )OUR

01&/ MON FRI "5 PM NOON ON SAT SUNDAY BRUNCH AM PM WWW ,*5$)&/ 01&/ %"*-:

9:30pm wITh DJS/hoSTS: $7

Wed 10/5 7:30pm $8

New & Improved 2pm-8pm

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on the cheap

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OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2011 / SFBG.com

43


Please Visit

cafedunord .com

www.doranshelley.com

Available for Private Rental

get tickets at yoshis.com

san francisco 1 3 3 0 f i l l m o r e s t. 4 1 5 - 6 5 5 - 5 6 0 0

YOSHI’S LOCAL TALENT SERIES

Free Music in the Lounge! Wed-Sat 6:30pm-11pm

.....................................................

Wed, Oct 5

MiNgUs aMUNgUs Thurs-Sat, Oct 6-8

FOURPLaY

Sun, Oct 9

4th aNNUaL FiLiPiNO-aMeRicaN JaZZ FestiVaL .............................................. Mon, Oct 10

tHe RiLeYs

feat.

terry & gyan Riley Tues-Wed, Oct 11-12

staNleY JordaN Thurs, Oct 13

VaN HUNt Fri-Sun, Oct 14-16

artUro saNdoVal

Mon-Tues, Oct 17-18

acoUstic alcHemY

coMing Soon: leela James oct 28-29

oakland

510 embarcadero west, 510-238-9200

Dinner ‘til 11PM WeDNeSDAY OctOBeR 5th 7:30PM $15 (jAzz) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: SF jAzz PReSeNtS:

DAViD BiNNeY QUARtet

WeDNeSDAY OctOBeR 5th 9:30PM $10 (ROck)

A BeNeFit FOR the tUtORPeDiA FOUNDAtiON FeAt:

gUeLLA / ANtiOQUiA

thURSDAY OctOBeR 6th 9PM $12 (ROck/SWiNg)

Lee PReSSON AND the NAiLS BLAck kAt kABARet LOSt DOg FOUND FRiDAY OctOBeR 7th 9:30PM $12 (iNDie)

MegAFAUN

jeSSicA PRAtt DOUg PAiSLeY

kYMBeRLiS MUSic BOx PReSeNtS:

DeAD MeADOW BURNt ONeS POW!

SUNDAY (SOLD OUt) OctOBeR 9th 8PM $12 (ROck/POP) 18+

cLARA c

NeW heightS MONDAY OctOBeR 10th 8PM $5-$10 SLiDiNg ScALe (LiteRARY eVeNt)

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: LitQUAke PReSeNtS:

MFA BODY SLAM!

the FiRSt-eVeR LitQUAke AND SAN FRANciScO BAY AReA MFA MixeR

MONDAY OctOBeR 10th 8:30PM $10 (ROck/FOLk)

chAMBeRLiN / OLiN & the MOON VANDeLLA

tUeSDAY OctOBeR 11th 8PM $10/$12 (LiteRARY eVeNt)

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: LitQUAke PReSeNtS:

YOUNg iReLAND: eMiSSARieS FROM A NeW LiteRARY ReNAiSSANce tUeSDAY OctOBeR 11th 9:30PM $12 (iNDie)

chAD VANgAALeN gARY WAR

WeDNeSDAY OctOBeR 12th 9:30PM $22/$25 (ROck/POP)

gLeN PhiLLiPS

kiM RicheY (BAND)

thURSDAY OctOBeR 13th 9PM $12/$15 (ROck)

AN eVeNiNg With MUStAche hARBOR

Fri-Sun, Oct 7-9

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: LitQUAke PReSeNtS: NORDic NOiR:

tHe New gaRY BURtON QUaRtet feat. Julian Lage, scott colley & antonio sanchez

Mon, Oct 10 the Duke of Bachata

JOaN sORiaNO

..............................................

Tues, Oct 11

JaZ sawYeR

& tHe BaY aRea aLL staRs

..............................................

Wed, Oct 12 Dutch trumpet master

eRic VLOeiMaNs

..............................................

Thurs, Oct 13 Solo piano

steVe kUHN

Fri-Sun, Oct 14-16 Direct from cuba

orqUesta aragóN Mon-Wed, Oct 17-19

PeteR wHite coMing Soon: JoHN scofield oct 21-23 All shows are all ages. Dinner Reservations Recommended.

44 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

c phi Gra gn i Des

SAtURDAY OctOBeR 8th 9:30PM $15 (ROck)

Wed-Thur, Oct 5-6

BaaBa MaaL

tar Gui cts Effe

FRiDAY OctOBeR 14th 8PM $10/$12 (LiteRARY eVeNt)

A DARk AND StORMY Night OF ScANDANAViAN cRiMe FictiON

FRiDAY OctOBeR 14th 9:30PM $10 (ROck/POP)

tYLeR MAtheW SMith (cD ReLeASe) BLiSSeS B keLLY McFARLiNg

SAtURDAY OctOBeR 15th 9:30PM $12/$15 (ROck)

jeRRY jOSePh & the jAckMORMONS

tUeSDAY OctOBeR 18th 8PM $22/$25 (SiNgeR-SONgWRiteR) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL: kcRW.cOM PReSeNtS:

AN eVeNiNg With SheLBY LYNNe WeDNeSDAY OctOBeR 19th 8PM $10 (ROck/eLectRO)

eL eLLe

BOYS iV MeN PUce MOMeNt PLUS SPeciAL gUeSt jAYSONik (hOttUB / Le heAt)

thURSDAY OctOBeR 20th 7:30PM $15 (FOLk/ iNDie) ALL AgeS

UPStAiRS At the SWeDiSh AMeRicAN hALL:

cOMMUNiON FeAtURiNg: MAttheW AND the AtLAS / the DAViD MAYFieLD PARADe AND LAUReN SheRA

thURSDAY OctOBeR 20th 9PM FRee (ROck)

BLAck heARt tAttOO 7th ANNiVeRSARY AND SFO tAttOO cONVeNtiON PRe-PARtY! FeAtURiNg: tOtAL B.S. LecheROUS gAze

2170 MARket StReet • 415.861.5016 Box Office Now Open for Phone Sales ONLY Mon-Fri, 2-6pm EDITORIALS

NEWS

FOOD + DRINK

PICKS

ARTS + CULTURE

club list AMNESIA 853 Valencia (415) 970-0012 ARGUS LOUNGE 3187 Mission (415) 824-1447 ASIASF 201 Ninth St (415) 255-2742 ATLAS CAFE 3049 20th St (415) 648-1047 ATMOSPHERE 3 447 Broadway (415) 788-4623 BAMBUDDHA LOUNGE 601 Eddy (415) 885-5088 BAOBAB 3388 19th St (415) 643-3558 BEAUTY BAR 2299 Mission (415) 285-0323 BIMBO’S 365 CLUB 1025 Columbus (415) 474-0365 BISCUITS AND BLUES 401 Mason (415) 292-2583 BOLLYHOOD CAFé 3372 19th St (415) 970-0362 BOOM BOOM ROOM 1601 Fillmore (415) 673-8000 BOTTOM OF THE HILL 1233 17th St (415) 621-4455 BRICK AND MORTAR MUSIC HALL 1710 Mission www.brickandmortarmusic.com BROADWAY STUDIOS 435 Broadway (415) 291-0333 BRUNO’S 2389 Mission (415) 643-5200 CAFE COCOMO 650 Indiana (415) 824-6910 CAFé DU NORD 2170 Market (415) 861-5016 CASANOVA LOUNGE 527 Valencia (415) 863-9328 CAT CLUB 1190 Folsom (415) 431-3332 CLUB DELUXE 1509 Haight (415) 552-6949 CLUB 525 525 Howard (415) 339-8686 CLUB SIX 60 Sixth St (415) 863-1221 DALVA 3121 16th St (415) 252-7740 DELIRIUM 3139 16th St (415) 552-5525 DNA LOUNGE 375 11th St (415) 626-1409 DOLORES PARK CAFE 501 Dolores (414) 621-2936 DOUBLE DUTCH 3192 16th St (415) 503-1670

MUSIC LISTINGS

EDINBURGH CASTLE PUB 950 Geary (415) 885-4074 ELBO ROOM 647 Valencia (415) 552-7788. ELEMENT LOUNGE 1028 Geary (415) 571-1362 ENDUP 401 Sixth St (415) 357-0827 FILLMORE 1805 Geary (415) 346-6000 540 CLUB 540 Clement (415) 752-7276 FLUID ULTRA LOUNGE 662 Mission (415) 615-6888 GLAS KAT 520 Fourth St (415) 495-6626 GRANT AND GREEN 1371 Grant (415) 693-9565 GREAT AMERICAN MUSIC HALL 859 O’Farrell (415) 885-0750 HEMLOCK TAVERN 1131 Polk (415) 923-0923 HIFI 2125 Lombard (415) 345-TONE HOTEL UTAH SALOON 500 Fourth St (415) 546-6300 ICON ULTRA LOUNGE 1192 Folsom (415) 626-4800 INDEPENDENT 628 Divisadero (415) 771-1421 INFUSION LOUNGE 124 Ellis (415) 421-8700 IRELAND’S 32 3920 Geary (415) 386-6173 JOHNNY FOLEY’S 243 O’Farrell (415) 954-0777 KIMO’S 1351 Polk (415) 885-4535 KNOCKOUT 3223 Mission (415) 550-6994 LASZLO 2526 Mission (415) 401-0810 LEXINGTON CLUB 3464 19th St (415) 863-2052 MADRONE ART BAR 500 Divisadero (415) 241-0202 MAKE-OUT ROOM 3225 22nd St (415) 647-2888 MEZZANINE 444 Jessie (415) 625-8880 MIGHTY 119 Utah (415) 626-7001 MILK 1840 Haight (415) 387-6455 MISSION ROCK CAFé 817 Terry Francois (415) 626-5355 MOJITO 1337 Grant (415) 398-1120

STAGE LISTINGS

NICKIE’S 466 Haight (415) 255-0300 111 MINNA GALLERY 111 Minna (415) 974-1719 PARADISE LOUNGE 1501 Folsom (415) 252-5018 PARKSIDE 1600 17th St (415) 252-1330 PIER 23 Pier 23 (415) 362-5125 PLOUGH AND STARS 116 Clement (415) 751-1122 POLENG LOUNGE 1751 Fulton (415) 441-1710 PUBLIC WORKS 161 Erie www.publicsf.com PURPLE ONION 140 Columbus (415) 217-8400 RASSELAS JAZZ 1534 Fillmore (415) 346-8696 RED DEVIL LOUNGE 1695 Polk (415) 921-1695 RED POPPY ART HOUSE 2698 Folsom (415) 826-2402 REGENCY BALLROOM 1300 Van Ness (415) 673-5716 RETOX LOUNGE 628 20th St (415) 626-7386 RICKSHAW STOP 155 Fell (415) 861-2011 EL RINCON 2700 16th St (415) 437-9240 EL RIO 3158 Mission (415) 282-3325 RIPTIDE BAR 3639 Taraval (415) 240-8360 ROCKIT ROOM 406 Clement (415) 387-6343 RRAZZ ROOM 222 Mason (415) 394-1189 RUBY SKYE 420 Mason (415) 693-0777 SAVANNA JAZZ 2937 Mission (415) 285-3369 SHANGHAI 1930 133 Steuart (415) 896-5600 SHINE DANCE LOUNGE 1337 Mission (415) 255-1337 SKYLARK 3089 16th St (415) 621-9294 SLIDE 430 Mason (415) 421-1916 SLIM’S 333 11th St (415) 255-0333 SOM. 2925 16th St (415) 558-8521 SPACE 550 550 Barneveld (415) 550-8286 STUD 399 Ninth St (415) 252-7883

ON THE CHEAP

SUPPERCLUB 657 Harrison (415) 348-0900 TEMPLE 540 Howard (415) 978-9942 1015 FOLSOM 1015 Folsom (415) 431-1200 330 RITCH 330 Ritch (415) 541-9574 TOP OF THE MARK Mark Hopkins Intercontinental Hotel 1 Nob Hill (415) 616-6916 TUNNEL TOP 601 Bush (415) 986-8900 UNDERGROUND SF 424 Haight (415) 864-7386 VESSEL 85 Campton (415) 433-8585 WARFIELD 982 Market (415) 345-0900 YOSHI’S SAN FRANCISCO 1330 Fillmore (415) 655-5600

BAY AREA ANNA’S JAZZ ISLAND 2120 Allston Way, Berk (510) 841-JAZZ ASHKENAZ 1317 San Pablo, Berk (510) 525-5054 BECKETT’S 2271 Shattuck, Berk (510) 647-1790 FOX THEATER 1807 Telegraph, Oakl 1-800-745-3000 FREIGHT AND SALVAGE COFFEE HOUSE 1111 Addison, Berk (510) 548-1761 JUPITER 2181 Shattuck, Berk (510) THE-ROCK 924 GILMAN STREET PROJECT 924 Gilman, Berk (510) 525-9926 LA PEñA CULTURAL CENTER 3104 Shattuck, Berk (510) 849-2568 SHATTUCK DOWN LOW 2284 Shattuck, Berk (510) 548-1159 STARRY PLOUGH 3101 Shattuck, Berk (510) 841-2082 STORK CLUB 2330 Telegraph, Oakl (510) 444-6174 21 GRAND 416 25th St, Oakl (510) 444-7263 UPTOWN 1928 Telegraph, Oakl (510) 451-8100 YOSHI’S 510 Embarcadero West Jack London Square, Oakl (510) 238-9200 2

FILM LISTINGS

CLASSIFIEDS


sTAGE lIsTINGs

for more arts content visit sfbG.com/PIxEl_vIsIoN

LAiONA MiCHELLE AND JACK KOENiG STAr iN Clementine in the lower 9 AT THEATrEWOrKS. | photo by tracy martin 4UBHF MJTUJOHT BSF DPNQJMFE CZ (VBSEJBO TUBGG 1FSGPSNBODF UJNFT NBZ DIBOHF DBMM WFOVFT UP DPO GJSN 3FWJFXFST BSF 3PCFSU "WJMB 3JUB 'FMDJBOP BOE /JDPMF (MVDLTUFSO 4VCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT BU MJTUJOHT!TGCH DPN 'PS GVSUIFS JOGPSNBUJPO PO IPX UP TVCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT TFF 1JDLT

THEATER oPENING

Almost Nothing, Day of Absence -PSSBJOF )BOTCFSSZ 5IFBUSF 1PTU 4' XXX MIUTG PSH 1SFWJFXT 0DU QN 0QFOT 0DU QN 3VOT 8FE 4BU QN BMTP 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI /PW -PSSBJOF )BOTCFSSZ 5IFBUSF QFSGPSNT POF BDU QMBZT CZ .BSDPT #BSCPTB BOE %PVHMBT 5VSOFS 8BSE Making Porn #PY $BS 5IFBUSF 4UVEJPT " )ZEF 4' XXX CSPXOQBQFSUJDLFUT DPN 0QFOT 'SJ QN 3VOT 5IVST QN 'SJ 4VO QN BMTP 'SJ 4BU QN 5ISPVHI 0DU 3POOJF -BSTFO CSJOHT CBDL IJT DSPXE QMFBTJOH DPNFEZ BCPVU UIF HBZ QPSO JOEVTUSZ Nymph Errant &VSFLB 5IFBUFS +BDLTPO 4' XXX OETUNPPO PSH 1SFWJFXT 8FE QN 5IVST 'SJ QN 0QFOT 4BU QN 3VOT 8FE QN 5IVST 'SJ QN 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU OE 4USFFU .PPO QFSGPSNT $PMF 1PFSUFSµT NBEDBQ NVTJDBM “San Francisco Olympians Festival” &YJU 5IFBUFS &EEZ 4' XXX TGPMZNQJBOT DPN 0QFOT 5IVST QN 3VOT 5IVST 4BU QN 5ISPVHI 0DU /P /VEF .FO 1SPEVDUJPOT QSFT FOUT B GFTUJWBM PG OFX GVMM MFOHUI QMBZT XSJUUFO CZ MPDBM XSJUFST &BDI QMBZ GPDVTFT PO POF PG UIF 0MZNQJBO DIBSBDUFST GSPN BODJFOU (SFFDF Tutor: Enter the Enclave &YJU 4UVEJP &EEZ 4' XXX EBSLQPSDIUIFBUSF DPN 0QFOT 5IVST QN 3VOT 5IVST 4BU QN 5ISPVHI 0DU %BSL 1PSDI 5IFBUSF QFSGPSNT .BSUJO 4DIXBSU[µT QMBZ JOTQJSFE CZ BO UI DFOUVSZ (FSNBO ESBNB BCPVU B UVUPS XIP SFBMJ[FT UIF DSFFQZ GBNJMZ IF XPSLT GPS JT OPU RVJUF XIBU UIFZ TFFN

BAy ArEA

Bellwether .BSJO 5IFBUSF $PNQBOZ .JMMFS .JMM 7BMMFZ XXX NBSJOUIFBUSF PSH 1SFWJFXT 5IVST 4BU QN 4VO BOE QN 0QFOT 5VFT QN 3VOT 5VFT 5IVST 4BU QN BMTP 0DU QN 0DU BOE QN 8FE QN 4VO BOE QN 5ISPVHI 0DU .BSJO 5IFBUSF $PNQBOZ QFSGPSNT 4UFWF :PDLFZµT TQPPLZ GBJSZ UBMF GPS BEVMUT Clementine in the Lower 9 5IFBUSF8PSLT BU UIF .PVOUBJO 7JFX $FOUFS GPS UIF 1FSGPSNJOH "SUT $BTUSP .UO 7JFX XXX UIFBUSF XPSLT PSH 1SFWJFXT 8FE 'SJ QN 0QFOT 4BU QN 3VOT 5VFT 8FE QN 5IVST 4BU QN BMTP 4BU QN 4VO BOE QN 5ISPVHI 0DU 5IFBUSF8PSLT QSFTFOUT UIF XPSME QSFNJFSF PG %BO %JFU[µT QPTU ,BUSJOB /FX 0SMFBOT ESBNB

oNGoING

“AfroSolo Arts Festival” 7BSJPVT WFOVFT 4' XXX BGSPTPMP PSH 'SFF 5ISPVHI 0DU 5IF "GSP4PMP 5IFBUSF $PNQBOZ QSFTFOUT JUT UI BOOVBM GFTUJWBM DFMFCSBUJOH "GSJDBO "NFSJDBO BSUJTUT NVTJ DJBOT BOE QFSGPSNFST Alice Down the rwong Wrabbit Whole &NFSBME 5BCMFU 'SFTOP 4' XXX CSPXOQBQFSUJDLFUT DPN 'SJ 4BU QN 5ISPVHI 0DU ,BSFO -JHIU BOE &EOB #BSSwO QFSGPSN UIFJS OFX DPNFEZ CBTFE PO Alice in Wonderland.

editorials

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American Buffalo "DUPST 5IFBUSF PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP #VTI 4' XXX BDUPSTUIF BUSFTG PSH 8FE 4BU QN &YUFOEFE UISPVHI 0DU "DUPST 5IFBUSF PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP QFSGPSNT UIF %BWJE .BNFU DSJNF DMBTTJD Desdemona: A Play About a Handkerchief #PYDBS 5IFBUSF 1MBZIPVTF /BUPNB 4' XXX CPYDBSUIFBUSF PSH 8FE 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI /PW #PYDBS 5IFBUSF QFSGPSNT 1BVMT 7PHFMµT EBSL DPNFEZ JOTQJSFE CZ UIF UISFF GFNBMF DIBSBDUFST GSPN 4IBLFTQFBSFµT Othello. Joy With Wings: A Daughter’s Tale "MDPWF 5IFBUFS .BTPO 'JGUI 'MS 4' XXX CSPXOQB QFSUJDLFUT DPN 8FE 5IVST QN $IBVDFS 5IFBUFS QFSGPSNT #FDLZ 1BSLFSµT ESBNB BCPVU B NPUIFSµT MPWF Killing My Lobster Conquers the Galaxy 5IF +FXJTI 5IFBUSF 'MPSJEB 4' XXX LJMMJOHNZ MPCTUFS DPN 5IVST 'SJ QN 4BU 4VO QN BMTP 4BU QN 5ISPVHI 4VO 5IF TLFUDI DPNFEZ USPVQF SFUVSOT XJUI B TDJ GJ TIPX The Kipling Hotel: True Misadventures of the Electric Pink ‘80s .BSTI 4BO 'SBODJTDP 7BMFODJB 4' XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI /PW "DDMBJNFE TPMP QFSGPSNFS %PO 3FFE (East 14th) QSFNJFSFT IJT OFX TIPX CBTFE PO IJT QPTU 0BLMBOE ZFBST MJWJOH JO -PT "OHFMFT Lucrezia Borgia 8BS .FNPSJBM 0QFSB )PVTF 7BO /FTT 4' XXX TGPQFSB DPN 8FE QN 4BU BOE 5VFT QN 'BNFE TPQSBOP 3FOnF 'MFNJOH TUBST JO 4BO 'SBODJTDP 0QFSBµT QSFTFOUBUJPO PG (BFUBOP %POJ[FUUJµT DMBTTJD Night Over Erzinga 4PVUI 4JEF 5IFBUSF .BHJD 5IFBUSF 'PSU .BTPO $FOUFS .BSJOB BU -BHVOB 4' XXX HPMEFOUISFBE PSH 5IVST QN 'SJ 4BU QN 4VO QN (PMEFO 5ISFBE 1SPEVDUJPOTµ TFBTPO PQFOFS JT UIF SFTVMU PG JUT GJSTU FWFS .JEEMF &BTU "NFSJDB OFX QMBZ JOJUJBUJWF DP QSFTFOUFE XJUI $IJDBHPµT 4JML 3PBE 5IFBUSF 1SPKFDU BOE /FX :PSLµT -BSL 1MBZ %FWFMPQNFOU $FOUFS QMBZXSJHIU "ESJBOB 4FWBIO /JDIPMTµ TUPSZ PG UISFF HFOFSBUJPOT JO BO "SNFOJBO "NFSJDBO GBNJMZ TUSVHHMJOH XJUI B IJTUPSZ PG WJPMFODF EJTQPTTFTTJPO BOE UIF UFOTJPOT CFUXFFO JOEJWJEVBM BOE DPMMFDUJWF EFTUJOZ JO UIF NPEFSO XPSME 5IF QMBZ CFHJOT BU BO PWFSMZ ESBNBUJD QJUDI BT B ZPVOH XPNBO 4BSJUB 0DwO TVNNPOT UIF TQJSJUT PG IFS HSBOEQBS FOUT %JSFDUPS )BGJ[ ,BSNBMJµT TUBHJOH JT EFMJCFSBUFMZ TQBSF BOE TFOTJCMF UISPVHIPVU UIPVHI UIJT JOJUJBM BDUJPO GFFMT BMUFSOBUFMZ TUJGG BOE TIVGGMJOH BOE UIF SFDPSEFE NVTJD DBO CF PWFSCFBSJOH BT UIF SPPUT PG B GBNJMZ TBHB BSF MBJE JNNFEJBUFMZ CFGPSF BOE BGUFS UIF HFOPDJEF #VU UIF TFDPOE BDU TFUUMFT JOUP B TVSFS BOE NPSF FOHBHJOH NPEF BOE UFNQP BT "WB B TIBSQ +VMJFU 5BOOFS JO B OJDFMZ TIBEFE QFSGPSNBODF SFCFMMJPVT "NFSJDBO EBVHIUFS PG UXP "SNFOJBO FYJMFT 5FSSZ -BNC BOE /FWB .BSJF )VUDIJOTPO QVSTVFT B DBSFFS BT B QPQVMBS EBODFS BOE TJOHFS BOE FOET VQ FTUSBOHFE GSPN IFS GBUIFS GPS ZFBST IFS NPUIFS TPMF TVSWJWPS PG B NBTTBDSFE "SNFOJBO GBNJMZ TQFOET IFS MBUUFS ZFBST JO B NFOUBM JOTUJUVUJPO 8PPFE CZ B DIBSNJOH %PNJOJDBO DSPPOFS BO BEFQU BQQFBMJOH #SJBO 5SZCPN "WB TUBSUT B GBNJMZ PG IFS PXO 8IJMF QSFHOBOU XJUI EBVHIUFS &TUSFMMB UIF ZPVOH TQJSJUFE /BUBMJF "NBOJBO TIF SF FTUBCMJTIFT B TIBLZ SFMB UJPOTIJQ XJUI IFS SFQFOUBOU GBUIFS 0ME XPVOET BOE CVSJFE IJTUPSJFT JOTVSF SFDPODJMJBUJPO XPOµU CF FBTZ CVU UIF USVUI BMPOF TIPXT UIF XBZ CBDL UP B TFOTF PG DPOOFDUJPO BOE DPNNVOJPO GPS B GBNJMZ TFWFSFE CZ JOKVTUJDF BOE VONPPSFE JO UIF ESJGU PG JNNJHSBOU "NFSJDB "WJMB

Not Getting Any younger .BSTI 4BO 'SBODJTDP 4UVEJP 5IFBUFS 7BMFODJB 4' XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 5IVST 'SJ QN

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4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU .BSHB (PNF[ JT CBDL BU UIF .BSTI B DPVQMF PG UPP CSJFG EFDBEFT BGUFS JOBVHVSBUJOH UIF UIFBUFSµT OFX TUBHF XJUI IFS GJSTU TPMP TIPX ± BO BQU TFUUJOH JO PUIFS XPSET GPS UIF XSJUFS QFSGPSNFSµT MBUFTU NPOPMPHVF B SFGMFDUJPO PO UIF JOFWJUBCMF QSPDFTT PG BHJOH GPS B -BUJOB MFTCJBO DPNFEJBO BOE BSUJTU XIP TUJMM IBOHT BU 4UBSCVDLT BOE DBOµU CF USVTUFE XJUI UIF EFUBJMT PG IFS PXO 8JLJQFEJB FOUSZ *G UIF UIPVHIU PG TPNFPOF BT QFSFOOJBMMZ JSSFWFSFOU JOTPVDJBOU BOE BQQFBMJOHMZ JNNBUVSF BT (PNF[ NBLFT ZPV EFQSFTTFE UIF TIPX JT TUSBOHFMZ FOPVHI UIF CFTU BOUJEPUF )FS OBSSB UJWF DBSFFOT XJMEMZ GSPN DIBSBDUFS GJMMFE DIJMEIPPE NFNPSJFT UIF FBSMJFTU USBVNBT PO EPXO BOE TUBOE VQ MJLF TIUJDL UIBU UVSOT PWFS XFMM XPSO TVCKFDU NBU UFS MJLF CBCJFT XJUI GSFTIMZ QJRVBOU NVTJOHT JEFB GPS BO ²JU HFU CFUUFS³ DBNQBJHO GPS JOGBOUT ZPVµMM CF BCMF UP XJQF ZPVSTFMG BOE DIFX ZPVS PXO GPPE 5IFSFµT FWFO TPNFUIJOH MJLF XJTEPN PS BOZXBZ IJTUPSJDBM DVSJPTJUZ JO IFS TLFXFE OPTUBMHJB GPS TVDI DIJMEIPPE FQIFNFSB BT 'SFFEPNMBOE B EPPNFE #SPOY CBTFE %JTOFZMBOE BMUFSOBUJWF (PNF[ JT PME FOPVHI UP SFNFNCFS WJTJUJOH /FFEMFTT UP TBZ TIF MPPLT BOE BDUT WFSZ HPPE GPS IFS BHF XIBUFWFS JU JT FYBDUMZ UIFSF BSF UZQJDBMMZ OP TUSBJHIU BOTXFST IFSF The Odyssey "CPBSE Alma )ZEF 4USFFU 1JFS 4BO 'SBODJTDP .BSJUJNF /BUJPOBM )JTUPSJD 1BSL 4' XXX XFQMBZFST PSH 0DU /PW BOE QN 5IJT ²GVMM BGUFSOPPO BEWFO UVSF³ QN JODMVEFT B TBJMJOH QFSGPSNBODF PG UBMFT GSPN )PNFS CZ 8F 1MBZFST BCPBSE BO TDPX TDIPPOFS QMVT B MJHIU NFBM Once in a Lifetime "NFSJDBO $POTFSWBUPSZ 5IFBUFS (FBSZ 4' XXX BDU TG PSH 5VFT 4BU QN 'SJ QFSGPSNBODF BU QN 8FE BOE 4BU 4VO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU "$5 QFSGPSNT B SFWJWBM PG .PTT )BSU BOE (FPSHF 4 ,BVGNBOµT )PMMZXPPE TBUJSF ShEvil Dead $FMMTQBDF #SZBOU 4' XXX CSPXOQBQFSUJDLFUT DPN 'SJ 4BU 0DU BOE QN 1SJNJUJWF 4DSFXIFBET SFUVSO XJUI B IPSSPS QMBZ JO XIJDI UIF BVEJFODF JT MJUFSBMMZ TQSBZFE XJUI CMPPE TP MFBWF UIF GBODZ TVJU BU IPNF CBTFE PO UIF Evil Dead NPWJFT “Shocktoberfest 12: Fear Over Frisco” )ZQOPESPNF 5IFBUSF UI 4U 4' XXX UISJMMQFEEMFST DPN 5IVST 4BU QN 5ISPVHI /PW 5IF 5ISJMMQFEEMFSTµ UI BOOVBM (SBOE (VJHOPM GFTU GFBUVSFT UISFF ²OPJS IPS SPS³ QMBZT CZ OPUFE OPJS FYQFSU &EEJF .VMMFS Show Ho /FX $POTFSWBUPSZ 5IFBUSF $FOUFS 7BO /FTT 4' XXX ODUDTG PSH 5IVST 4BU QN 4VO QN 4BSB .PPSF QFSGPSNT IFS NVMUJ DIBSBDUFS TUPSZ BCPVU B DMPXO JO B MPX SFOU DJSDVT Sorya! A Minor Miracle (Part One) /0)4QBDF 1SPKFDU "SUBVE .BSJQPTB 4' XXX CSPXOQB QFSUJDLFUT DPN 4VO .PO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU 5IFBUSF PG :VHFO QSFTFOUT B TFMFDUJPO PG OFX BOE USBEJUJPOBM Kyogen DPNFEJFT

BAy ArEA

A Delicate Balance "VSPSB 5IFBUSF 1 "EEJTPO #FSL XXX BVSPSBUIFBUSF PSH 5VFT QN 8FE 4BU QN 4VO BOE QN &YUFOEFE UISPVHI 0DU "VSPSB 5IFBUSF QFSGPSNT &EXBSE "MCFFµT DPNFEZ PG NBOOFST Madhouse rhythm $BCBSFU BU .BSTI #FSLFMFZ "MMTUPO #FSL XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 5IVST QN +PTIVB 8BMUFST QFSGPSNT IJT IJQ IPQ JOGVTFE BVUPCJPHSBQIJ DBM TIPX BCPVU IJT FYQFSJFODFT XJUI CJQPMBS EJTPSEFS Phaedra "TICZ 4UBHF "TICZ #FSL XXX TIPUHVOQMBZFST PSH 8FE 5IVST QN 'SJ 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU 4IPUHVO 1MBZFST QFSGPSN "EBN #PDLµT NPEFSO BEBQUBUJPO PG UIF 3BDJOF DMBTTJD rita Moreno: Life Without Makeup #FSLFMFZ 3FQFSUPSZ 5IFBUSF 3PEB 5IFBUSF "EEJTPO #FSL XXX CFSLFMFZSFQ PSH 5VFT 4VO TIPXUJNFT WBSZ 5ISPVHI 0DU 5IF MJGF PG TUBHF BOE TDSFFO MFHFOE 3JUB .PSFOP JT B TVCKFDU UIBU IBT OP USPVCMF GJMMJOH UXP TXJGU BOE WBSJFE BDUT FTQFDJBMMZ BT SFMBUFE JO BOFDEPUF TPOH DPNFEZ BOE EBODF CZ UIF TFSFOF NVMUJQMF°BXBSE XJOOJOH QFSGPSNFS BOE #FSLFMFZ SFTJEFOU IFSTFMG *OEFFE UIBU TP NVDI NBUFSJBM HFUT DPWFSFE TP TVDDJODUMZ CVU SBSFMZ BCSVQUMZ JT B SFBM BDIJFWFNFOU PG UIJT BUUSBDUJWFMZ BEPSOFE BVUP CJPHSBQIJDBM TPMP TIPX DSBGUFE XJUI QMBZXSJHIU BOE #FSLFMFZ 3FQ BSUJTUJD EJSFDUPS 5POZ 5BDDPOF "WJMB

The Taming of the Shrew #SVOT "NQIJUIFBUFS $BMJGPSOJB 4IBLFTQFBSF 8Z 0SJOEB XXX DBMTIBLFT PSH 5VFT 5IVST QN 'SJ 4BU QN 4VO QN 5ISPVHI 0DU $BMJGPSOJB 4IBLFTQFBSF 5IFBUSFµT MBTU TIPX PG UIF TFBTPO JT B IJHI GBTIJPO QPQ BSU UBLF PO 4IBLFTQFBSFµT CBUUMF PG UIF TFYFT The World’s Funniest Bubble Show .BSTI #FSLFMFZ 5IFBUFS4UBHF "MMTUPO #FSL XXX UIFNBSTI PSH 4VO BN 5ISPVHI /PW -PVJT ²5IF "NB[JOH #VCCMF .BO³ 1FBSM SFUVSOT XJUI UIJT LJE GSJFOEMZ CVCCMF UBTUJD DPNFEZ 2

1

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OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2011 / SFBG.com

45


'PMMPX VT

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LIVE GRAFFItI: SEE IN-PERSON SPRAY CREAtION At tHE EStRIA INVItAtIONAL GRAFFItI BAttLE ON SAt/8. 0O UIF $IFBQ MJTUJOHT BSF DPNQJMFE CZ $BJUMJO %POPIVF 4VCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT BU MJTU JOHT!TGCH DPN 'PS GVSUIFS JOGPSNBUJPO PO IPX UP TVCNJU JUFNT GPS UIF MJTUJOHT TFF 1JDLT

wednesday 5 Poetry World Series Play-Off 4BO 'SBODJTDP 1VCMJD -JCSBSZ MPXFS MFWFM -BSLJO 4' XXX TGQM PSH Q N GSFF )BT UIF (JBOUTµ MBDLMVTUFS TFBTPO TUSVDL ZPV BT MFTT UIBO B QPFUJD NBTUFSQJFDF 5JNF UP SFHBJO TPNF CBTF CBMM UIFNFE JOTQJSBUJPO 5IF 4' 1VCMJD -JCSBSZ JT IPTUJOH UIJT TIPXEPXO CFUXFFO MPDBM QPFUT ° DFMFCSJUZ KVEHFT JODMVEJOH -FNPOZ 4OJDLFU IJNTFMG %BOJFM )BOEMFS XJMM ²QJUDI³ QPFN UPQJDT BU UIF CBSET TP UIBU UIFZ DBO JNQSPWJTF TPOOFUT POTUBHF “Architectural Books and the Art of the Bookstore” 4DBOOFST #PPLTUPSF 7BMFODJB 4' XXX TDBO OFSTQSPKFDU DPN Q N GSFF 8BUDI $JUZ -JHIUT #PPLTUPSF IFBE CVZFS 1BVM :BNB[BLJ BOE BSDIJUFDUVSF CPPLTUPSF PXOFS 8JMMJBN 4UPVU JO DPOWFSTBUJPO BCPVU XFMM XIBU UIFZ LOPX CFTU 4BO 'SBODJTDP FOUSFQSFOFVST UBLF DFOUFS TUBHF BU UIJT -JURVBLF MJUFSBSZ GFTUJWBM FWFOU

Thursday 6

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“Windows and Mirrors” Afghani culture art opening 6OJWFSTJUZ PG 4BO 'SBODJTDP ,BMNBOPWJU[ )BMM 'VMUPO 4' XXX XJOEPXTBOENJSSPST PSH Q N GSFF "GUFS B TQFFDI CZ 7FUFSBOT "HBJOTU UIF 8BS BDUJWJTU .BUU 4PVUIXPSUI ZPVµMM CF GSFF UP TUBSF BU UIF XBMMT 0S CFUUFS ZFU BU UIF NVSBMT EFEJDBUFE UP UIF MJWFT PG "GHIBOJTUBOµT DJUJ[FOT "O JOUFS GBJUI QFBDF WJHJM XJMM BMTP CF IFME

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46 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

Friday 7

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Armenian Bazaar and Food Festival 4U 7BSUBO "SNFOJBO $IVSDI 4QSVDF 0BLM XXX TUWBSUBOPBLMBOE PSH Q N NJEOJHIU #PVODF UP UIF ,IBUH +JOJHJSJBO &OTFNCMF XIJDI XJMM CF UBLJOH UIF TUBHF BU UIJT PQFO BJS GBJS :PVµMM OFFE UP CVSO DBMPSJFT JG ZPVµSF B CFPSFH CPPSNB PS LVGUB GBO BOZXBZT

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saTurday 8 “Cakeland: Your Deadly Desserts” art exhibit .PEFSO &EFO (BMMFSZ 'SBODJTDP 4' Q N GSFF "SUJTU 4DPUU )PWFµT SPPN PG DBLF IBT B TFDSFU :PVµMM GJOE JU PVU RVJDLMZ JG ZPV TUFQ JOUP UIF PWFSQPXFSJOHMZ TXFFU MBJS ° EFTQJUF UIF TVHBS UIJT DBLF JT BSNFE XJUI NVMUJQMF WJDJPVT MPPLJOH NBXT San Carlos Art and Wine Faire 4BO $BSMPT CFUXFFO &M $BNJOP BOE 8BMOVU QMVT -BVSFM

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CFUXFFO 4BO $BSMPT BOE "SSPZP 4BO $BSMPT XXX TBODBSMPTDIBNCFS PSH "MTP 4VO B N Q N GSFF 5IF TP DBMMFE ²$JUZ PG (PPE -JWJOH³ JT TUSVUUJOH JUT TUVGG UIJT XFFLFOE -JTB -PFC XJMM UVSO JO B QFSGPSNBODF UIF DJO OBNPO SPBTUFE BMNPOET HBSMJD GSJFT BOE TQBS LMJOH XJOFT XJMM CF GMZJOH BOE GBNJMJFT XJMM GJOE BNQMF UIJOHT GPS UIFJS LJEEPT UP EP Open Studios: Sunset, Richmond, Haight, Hayes 7BSJPVT MPDBUJPOT 4' XXX BSUTQBO PSH "MTP 4VO B N Q N GSFF 5IF TFDPOE XFFL PG UIF UI BOOVBM 4' 0QFO 4UVEJPT IJUT UIF XFTUFSO OFJHICPSIPPET BOE UIF )BJHIU BOE )BZFT 7BMMFZ BSFBT 8PVME CF UIF QFSGFDU SFB TPO UP CJLF PVU BOE BSPVOE UIF )BSEMZ 4USJDUMZ #MVFHSBTT DSPXET Estria Invitational Graffiti Battle %F'SFNFSZ 1BSL "EFMJOF 0BLM XXX FTUSJBCBUUMF DPN B N Q N GSFF 'PS GJWF ZFBST UIJT FWFOU IBT CSJOHJOH TPNF PG UIF CFTU HSBGGJUJ BSU JTUT GSPN BSPVOE UIF DPVOUSZ )BXBJJ JODMVEFE UP EVLF JU PVU XJUI BFSPTPM JO 0BLMBOE *O UIF EBZT MFBEJOH VQ UP UIJT QBSL TJEF NBJO FWFOU UIFSF XJMM CF B 4BO 'SBODJTDP QSFNJFSF PG UIF TQSBZ BSU NPWJF Bomb It 2 BOE 1FDIB ,VDIB QSFTFOUBUJPO OJHIU BU 0BLTUFSEBN 6OJWFSTJUZ PO XPNFO BOE QVCMJD BSU h.Naoto-New People boutique opening /FX 1FPQMF 1PTU 4' XXX OFXQFPQMFXPSME DPN /PPO Q N GSFF "OPUIFS + QPQ GBTIJPO EFTJHOFS IBT KPJOFE UIF TMFFL BOE TJMMZ GPMET PG UIF /FX 1FPQMF +BQBOUPXO NBMM /BPUP )JSPPLB JT UIBU NBO XIPTF FEHZ EFTJHOT XJMM CF TVSF UP XPX UIF HPUIJD -PMJUB TFU

sunday 9 The Great Night in Buena Vista Park #VFOB 7JTUB 1BSL #VFOB 7JTUB "WF BOE 6QQFS 5FSSBDF 4' XXX MJURVBLF PSH Q N GSFF $ISJT "ESJBOµT OFX OPWFM The Great Night UBLFT QMBDF JO UIF TFMGTBNF #VFOB 7JTUB 1BSL GPMMPXJOH UIF JOUFSTFDUJPO PG UIF GBJSZ XPSME XJUI UIBU PG PVS PXO PS BU MFBTU UIBU PG XIP XF XFSF CBDL JO 5POJHIU TPNF PG UIF NBHJD IPQFT UP CF NBEF NBOJGFTU ° "ESJBO XJMM CF QFSGPSNJOH B CPPL SFBEJOH B TUSJOH RVBSUFU XJMM UBLF UP UIF QMBJO BJS BOE ZPV BOE ZPVS QJDOJD CMBOLFU DBO CF QSFTFOU UP XJUOFTT JU BMM HP EPXO Rockridge Out and About $PMMFHF CFUXFFO "MDBUSB[ BOE -JODPMO 3PDLSJEHF XXX SPDLSJE HFPVUBOEBCPVU DPN /PPO Q N GSFF 5IJT /PSUI 0BLMBOE OFJHICPSIPPE XFMDPNFT WJTJUPST GPS DIFG EFNPOTUSBUJPOT EBODJOH JO UIF TUSFFU BOE BO FWFOU CFJOH QSPEVDFE CZ DMPUIJOH CSBOE 0BLMBOEJTI Excelsior Arts and Music Festival .JTTJPO BOE 0DFBO 4' XXXFBHTG PSH B N Q N GSFF %JQ JOUP UIF TPVUIFSO OFJHICPSIPPET GPS &YDFMTJPSµT GBNJMZ EBZ #BZPOJDT 5IF #MJOE 8JMMJFT &TUSBEB 3FBM BOE $BTTBOESB 'BSSBS XJMM QSPWJEF UIF MJWF NVTJD 2

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AnnA PAquIn STARS In Margaret, ouT FRI/7. | PHOTO BY MYlES ArONOwITz 'JMN MJTUJOHT BSF FEJUFE CZ $IFSZM &EEZ 3FWJFXFST BSF ,JNCFSMZ $IVO .BY (PMECFSH %FOOJT )BSWFZ -ZOO 3BQPQPSU BOE .BUU 4VTTNBO 'PS SFQ IPVTF TIPXUJNFT TFF 3FQ $MPDL

mill valley film festival The 34th Mill Valley film festival runs Oct. 6-16 at various North Bay venues, including the Christopher B. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael. For tickets (most shows $13.50) and complete schedule, visit www.mvff.com. For commentary, see “Do North.”

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American Teacher 1VCMJD TDIPPM UFBDIFST 1 IBWF POF PG UIF NPTU JNQPSUBOU KPCT JO "NFSJDB ± BOE NPTU PG UIFN BSF QBJE WFSZ MJUUMF JO QSPQPS UJPO UP UIF MPOH EJGGJDVMU IPVST UIFZ QVU JO USVUI OP NBUUFS XIBU 5FB 1BSUJFST TBZ 7BOFTTB 3PUIµT American Teacher — OBSSBUFE CZ .BUU %BNPO DP QSPEVDFE CZ %BWF &HHFST BOE TQVSSFE CZ UIF OPOQSPGJU 5FBDIFS 4BMBSZ 1SPKFDU ± FYBNJOFT UIF DVSSFOU TUBUF PG UIF UFBDIJOH QSPGFTTJPO GSPN JUT NBOZ ESBXCBDLT MJLF UIPTF NFOUJPOFE BCPWF UP JUT DIJFG SFXBSET OBNFMZ UIF GFFMJOHT PG KPZ UIBU DPNF GSPN IFMQJOH UP FYQBOE ZPVOH NJOET "T FEVDBUJPO FYQFSUT MBNFOU UIF GBDU UIBU UPQ DPMMFHF HSBET HSBWJ UBUF UPXBSE CJH CVDLT DBSFFST JO MBX BOE NFEJDJOF JOTUFBE PG UFBDIJOH UIF GJMN QSPGJMFT GPVS UFBDIFST XIPµSF TUSVHHMJOH UP TUBZ JO UIF DBSFFS UIFZ MPWF POF PG UIFN SFMVDUBOUMZ RVJUT IJT KPC BU 4BO 'SBODJTDPµT -FBEFSTIJQ )JHI 4DIPPM JO GBWPS PG B IJHIFS QBZJOH HJH XJUI IJT GBNJMZµT SFBM FTUBUF CVTJOFTT 5IFSFµT BMTP UIF )BSWBSE HSBE UFNQUFE CZ B NBHOFU TDIPPM UIBU QBZT JUT UFBDIFST PWFS B ZFBS UIF QSFHOBOU GJSTU HSBEF UFBDIFS XPSSJFE BCPVU UIF JOUSJDBDJFT PG NBUFSOJUZ MFBWF BOE UIF NPTU EFW BTUBUJOH UBMF PG B TNBMM UPXO 5FYBT UFBDIFS BOE DPBDI GPSDFE UP UBLF PO B TFDPOE KPC UP TVQQPSU IJT GBNJMZ BU UIF FWFOUVBM FYQFOTF PG IJT NBSSJBHF *UµT MJLFMZ UIBU American Teacher XJMM QMBZ NPTUMZ GPS BVEJFODFT BMSFBEZ TZNQBUIFUJD UP JUT NFTTBHF CVU UIFSFµT BMXBZT IPQF B GJMN MJLF UIJT XJMM JOTQJSF BO BOHSZ 'PY /FXT FS UP IBWF B DIBOHF PG IFBSU Roxie. &EEZ

The Dead .PTU [PNCJF NPWJFT UFMM UIF TBNF CBTJD TUPSZ TPNF WBSJBUJPO PG ²TVSWJWPST PO UIF SVO ³ 4PNFUJNFT UIF SFQFUJUJPO JT GPSHJW BCMF BT XIFO UIF TQFDJBM FGGFDUT BSF QBSUJDVMBSMZ KVJDZ PS UIFSFµT UPUBMMZ VOJRVF QMPU UXJTU µT Zombieland TFU B OFX HPME TUBOEBSE GPS UIBU POF PS UIFSFµT TPNF PUIFS TQFDJBM thing UIBU NBLFT UIF GJMN TUBOE PVU GSPN UIF CSBJOT HPCCMJOH QBDL 'PS #SJUJTI EJSFDUJOH CSPUIFST )PXBSE + BOE +PO 'PSE UIBU UIJOH JT UIF TFUUJOH XIJDI JT OFJUIFS CBDLXPPET "NFSJDB OPS FNQUZ -POEPO CVU 8FTU "GSJDB 8IFO The Dead CFHJOT UIF PVUCSFBL OFWFS FYQMBJOFE IBT BMSFBEZ DPNNFODFE JO BO BCBOEPOFE WJMMBHF B HSJ[[MFE "NFSJDBO TPMEJFS 3PC 'SFFNBO FODPVO UFST B HSJN "GSJDBO TPMEJFS 1SJODF %BWJE 0TFJ 4JODF UIFZµSF UIF POMZ UXP MJWJOH IVNBOT GPS NJMFT MPHJD EJDUBUFT UIFZ TIPVME UFBN VQ NVDI PG UIF GJMN GPMMPXT UIF QBJS PO B TVSSFBM SPBE USJQ UISPVHI B SVSBM MBOETDBQF QPQVMBUFE POMZ CZ TMPX NPWJOH TUBSJOH FWFS IVOHSZ VOEFBE %FTQJUF TPNF GMBXT VOFWFO BDUJOH QMVT B GFX DVMUVSBMMZ JGGZ QPJOUT ± JTOµU ²XJUDI EPDUPS³ LJOE PG BO PVUEBUFE UVSO PG QISBTF

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for more visit sfbG.cOm/pixel_visiOn The Dead EFMJWFST XIFSF JU NBUUFST XJUI NPNFOUT PG HFOVJOF TVTQFOTF BOE TPNF TBUJTGZJOHMZ HSPTT PVUT " JO UIF SJQQFE PGG MJNCT EFQBSUNFOU 'PSE CSPUIFST Metreon. &EEZ

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Real Steel 'BUIFS TPO CPOEJOH QMVT SPCPU CPY JOH 0S WJDF WFSTB OPU TVSF Presidio. CONTINUES ON PAGE 48 >>

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Sleep Furiously (JEFPO ,PQQFM¾T QPFUJ 1 DBM GFBUVSF UBLFT B TOBQTIPU PG BO FCCJOH BHSJDVMUVSBM IBNMFU JO NJEEMF 8BMFT XIFSF IJT QBSFOUT OPX MJWF POF OFBS JO GMBWPS BOE HFPHSBQIZ UP %ZMBO 5IPNBT¾ GJDUJWF ²-MBSFHHVC³ JO Under Milk Wood /PU UIBU BOZ CBDLHSPVOE JOGPSNBUJPO JT MBJE PVU IFSF ¹ UIJT JT UIF LJOE PG EPDVNFOUBSZ UIBU FTDIFXT OBSSBUJWF BOE JOGPSNBUJPOBM FMFNFOUT GPS BO JNQSFTTJPOJTU BQQSPBDI MJUUMF GSBHNFOUT PG BSUGVMMZ BSSBOHFE MJGF BEEJOH VQ UP B GMBWPSTPNF JG JODPNQMFUF XIPMF QJDUVSF ,PQQFM JT BUUSBDUFE UP UIF XBZ UIJOHT IBWFO¾U DIBOHFE ¹ XF OFWFS TFF B 57 PO MFU BMPOF TPNFCPEZ VTJOH B DFMM QIPOF ¹ ZFU XF TPPO HMFBO UIBU UIJOHT JO 5SFGFVSJH BSF DIBOH JOH XIFUIFS IF MJLFT JU PS OPU 5IF MPDBM SFTJEFOUT XF NFFU EPO¾U B EXJOEMJOH QPQVMBDF IBT BMSFBEZ

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Weekend 4FF ²" /FX &OHMBOE ³ Embarcadero, Shattuck.

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OngOing

Abduction 1000 Van Ness. The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 Lumiere, Shattuck. Circumstance Opera Plaza, Shattuck. City of Life and Death Four Star. Contagion California, 1000 Van Ness, Sundance Kabuki. Crazy, Stupid, Love SF Center. The Debt Piedmont, Sundance Kabuki. Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame Lumiere. Dolphin Tale 1000 Van Ness, Presidio, SF Center. Dream House 1000 Van Ness, SF Center. Drive Four Star, 1000 Van Ness, SF Center, Sundance Kabuki. 50/50 1000 Van Ness, Presidio, SF Center, Sundance Kabuki. The Guard Lumiere. The Help 1000 Van Ness, SF Center, Shattuck, Sundance Kabuki. Killer Elite 1000 Van Ness. The Lion King 3D 1000 Van Ness, SF Center, Shattuck, Sundance Kabuki. Love Crime Albany, Clay. Machine Gun Preacher Sundance Kabuki. Midnight in Paris Albany, Embarcadero. The Mill and the Cross Embarcadero, Shattuck. Moneyball Balboa, Marina, 1000 Van Ness, Sundance Kabuki. Mozart’s Sister Shattuck. My Afternoons with Margueritte Opera Plaza. Point Blank Opera Plaza. Rise of the Planet of the Apes 1000 Van Ness. Sarah Palin: You Betcha! *TOÂľU UIF 4BSBI 1BMJO KPLF LJOE PG PWFS BU UIJT QPJOU "QQBSFOUMZ OPU BT #SJUJTI EPDVNFOUBSJBO /JDL #SPPNGJFME ÂľT Kurt and Courtney EPOT IJT FBS GMBQ IBU BOE USBWFMT UP "MBTLB JOUFOU PO TIBLJOH UIF MBTU DSVNCT PVU PG UIF 1SJOHMFT DBO PG 1BMJO MPSF 6OTVSQSJTJOHMZ 1BMJO EPEHFT IJT JOUFSWJFX SFRVFTUT IFS TVQQPSUFST BSF OPOF UP FBHFS UP TQFBL UP #SPPNGJFME FJUIFS BGUFS XPSE HFUT PVU IFÂľT NBLJOH ²B IJU TIPX Âł BDDPSEJOH UP 1BMJOÂľT GBUIFS XIP EPFT BQQFBS JO UIF GJMN BMPOH XJUI IJT BDUVBMMZ QSFUUZ BXFTPNF ²BOUMFS EPHÂł #SPPNGJFME EPHHFEMZ USBDFT 1BMJOÂľT QBUI GSPN 8BTJMMB CFBVUZ RVFFO UP UPXO NBZPS UP "MBTLB HPWFSOPS UP 7JDF 1SFTJEFOUJBM OPNJOFF ESFEHJOH VQ EJSU BMPOH UIF XBZ 8PSUI TFFJOH GPS TPNF PG UIF PEEFS BTJEFT -FWJ +PIOTUPOÂľT NBOBHFS TVHHFTUJOH UIF MBE XPOÂľU EP BO JOUFSWJFX GPS MFTT UIBO CVU UIFSFÂľT OPU NVDI OFX 4BSBI CBTIJOH NBUFSJBM IFSF /PX JG #SPPNGJFME DPVME NBSTIBM B .JDIFMF #BDINBOO IJU QJFDF SJHIU RVJDL UIBUÂľE CF TPNFUIJOH XPSUI DBTIJOH JO PO Sundance Kabuki. &EEZ

Senna

Opera Plaza. Tucker and Dale vs. Evil Lumiere, Shattuck. We Were Here Castro.

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48 SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

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SFINDIE .COM

10TH SF DOCUMENTARY FESTIVAL

OCT 14-27 ROXIE THEATER OCT 14-20 SHATTUCK CINEMAS

BECAUSE TRUTH IS OFTEN STRANGER THAN FICTION The 10th San Francisco Documentary Festival kicks off with Dirty Pictures, a film about the Bay Area chemist who discovered the effects of MDMA and other psychedelics, and ends with The Stan Lee Story, about the most recognized name in comics. In between we meet Egyptian belly dancers; California summer campers; the puppeteer behind Elmo; kids that run off to join the circus or want to become ballerinas;

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international hip hoppers; Christian card counters; English punk rockers; artists; yoga practitioners; today's soldiers; compulsive collectors; stand-up comics; Tetris masters; and animator Bill Plympton. Plus we take a delightful wander around Berlin in the Fall. Don’t miss the Opening Night Party celebrating Sasha Shulgin, the Superhero Themed Closing Night Party or the annual Roller Disco Costume Party (all at CellSpace). And make sure the 80s New Wave Sing A Long Party at the Roxie is on your calendar too! Go to www.sfindie.com for details, trailers, tix and more!

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ROLLER DISCO COSTUME PARTY! Oct 22, 8p at CellSpace. Tunes and Skate Rentals provided by Black Rock Roller Disco. 21up. $10, $5 in costume, Free with any DocFest ticket stub. IndieFest not responsible for alcohol influenced roller skating wipe outs!

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OCTOBER 5 - 11, 2011 / SFBG.com

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What’s Your Number? 'PMMPXJOH TPNF TBHF SFMBUJPOTIJQ BEWJDF GSPN Marie Claire BCPVU UIF QFSJMT PG B MFOHUIZ TFYVBM SnTVNn "MMZ "OOB 'BSJT SFTPMWFT UP DVU PGG IFS QBSUOFS SPTUFS BU UPP MBUF UP BWPJE HFUUJOH UBHHFE B TMVU CZ IFS GSJFOET CVU OPU TIF IPQFT UP TFDVSF IFS TPVM NBUF ± JG TIF DBO DBTU CBDL PWFS B TUPSJFE DBSFFS PG GBJMFE SFMBUJPOTIJQT BOE IPPL UIF POF XIP NJHIU OPU IBWF CFFO B UPUBM EPVDIF BGUFS BMM "JEJOH IFS JO UIJT TBE NJTHVJEFE RVFTU JT IFS GBS TMVUUJFS BDSPTT UIF IBMM OFJHICPS $PMJO $ISJT &WBOT XIPTF NBJO TFMMJOH QPJOU PUIFS UIBO 1 * TLJMMT BOE B XFMM EFGJOFE TFU PG PCMJRVFT TFFNT UP CF UIBU IFµT WJSUVBMMZ UIF POMZ QFSTPO JO UIF

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Metreon 'PVSUI 4U .JTTJPO '"/%"/(0 Metro 6OJPO 8FCTUFS 1000 Van Ness 7BO /FTT Opera Plaza 7BO /FTT (PMEFO (BUF Presidio $IFTUOVU San Francisco Film Society ] New People Cinema 1PTU XXX TGGT PSH SF Centre .JTTJPO CFUXFFO 'PVSUI BOE 'JGUI TUT Stonestown UI "WF 8JOTUPO Vogue 4BDSBNFOUP 1SFTJEJP

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AGNES KiTTELSEN STARS AS AN ETERNAL OPTiMiST iN NORwEGiAN COMEDY Happy, Happy, OUT FRi/5. courtesy of magnolia pictures

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ONE-OF-A-KIND!

“

A gorgeous, idiosyncratic documentary.� -Mick LaSalle, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

THE SHORT LIST of MUST-SEE NEW DOCUMENTARIES

�

includes... John Turturro’s PASSIONE. The attention you give this movie will be gloriously repaid.� -A.O. Scott, THE NEW YORK TIMES

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LOVE THIS MOVIE!

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“

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-Joshua -Joshua Rothkopf, Rothkopf, TIME TIME OUT OUT NY NY

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. A-0337401-00 The following person is doing business as Fernandez Landscaping ,310 Hamilton St #1, San Francisco, CA 94134. This business is conducted by an individual. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date August 4, 2011. Signed by Jesus Fernandez Prerez. This statement was filed by Mariedyne L. Argente on August 4, 2011. L#113448., September 14, 21, 28 and October 5th 2011 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. A-0337874-00 The following person is doing business as Greenbelt Alliance ,631 Howard St. Suite 510, San Francisco, CA 94105. This business is conducted by a corporation. Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date January 1, 2000. Signed by John Hewett Chapman, President of People for Open Space. This statement was filed by Maribel Jaldon on August 30, 2011. L#113450., September 14, 21, 28 and October 5th 2011

ACTORS/MOVIE EXTRAS Needed immediately for upcoming roles $150-$300/day depending on job requirements. No experience, all looks. 1-800-560-8672 A-109. For casting times/locations. (AAN CAN)

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. A-0338261-00 The following person is doing business as English Language Institute 760 Market Street #401 - 4, San Francisco, CA 94102. This business is conducted by a Corporation . Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date January 1, 2012. Signed by Yoko Rinerson, President. This statement was filed by Melissa Ortiz on September 16, 2011. L#113460., October 5, 12, 19 and 26, 2011

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FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. A-0338425-00 The following person is doing business as I - Creation 161 University St. San Francisco, CA 94134. This business is conducted by a Corporation . Registrant commenced business under the above-listed fictitious business name on the date Septpember 26, 2011. Signed by Richard law, Vice President. This statement was filed by Mariedyne L. Argente on September 26, 2011. L#113443., September 28 and October 5, 12, 19, 2011 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Date of Filing Application: Auguest 19, 2011. To Whom It May Concern: The name of the applicant is: Simon Li . The applicant listed above is applying to The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 448 Larkin Street, San Francisco CA 94102-3607. Type of License Applied for: 41 - ON-SALE BEER AND WINE - EATING PLACE . Publication dates: October 5, 12 and 19, 2011 L#113459 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Date of Filing Application: September 23, 2011. To Whom It May Concern: The name of the applicant is: Eduardo Arola, Luis M Ragasanjose . The applicant listed above is applying to The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 1201 Guerrero Street, San Francisco CA 94110-3620. Type of License Applied for: 41 - ONSALE BEER AND WINE - EATING PLACE . Publication dates: October 5, 2011 L#113458 NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO SELL ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Date of Filing Application: September 26, 2011. To Whom It May Concern: The name of the applicant is: Alibi LLC The . The applicant listed above is applying to The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control to sell alcoholic beverages at: 839 Geary Street, San Francisco CA 94109-7217. Type of License Applied for: 48 - ON-SALE GENERAL PUBLIC PREMISES . Publication dates: October 5, 2011 L#113461 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-11547977. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Anna Sophia Castillo for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Anna Sophia Castillo filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name: Anna Sophia Castillo. Proposed Name: Ana Sofia Castillo . THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: October 20, 2011. Time: 9:00 AM room - 514. Signed by Ellen Chaitin, Presiding Judge on August 9, 2011. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on August 9, 2011 by Param Natt, Deputy Clerk. Publication dates: September 21, 28, October 5, 12 2011. L#113429<*rb(.25, 0, K, 100%, 0, 0, 1.7 pt)> ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-11-548084. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Charles Laurence Ward for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Charles Laurence Ward filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name Charles Laurence Ward. Proposed Name: Charles Laurence Ward - Harshaw Jr.. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: November 29, 2011. Time: 9:00 AM room - 514. Signed by Ellen Chaitin, Presiding Judge on September 14, 2011. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on September 14, 2011 by Deputy Clerk. Publication dates: September 28, October 5, 12 and19th, 2011. L#113454

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ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-11-548113. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Charles Laurence Ward for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner Randolph Dean Dinwiddie filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name Randolph Dean Dinwiddie. Proposed Name: Remington Dean . THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: December 6, 2011. Time: 9:00 AM room - 514. Signed by Ellen Chaitin, Presiding Judge on September 22, 2011. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on September 22, 2011 by Param Natt Deputy Clerk. Publication dates: September 28, October 5, 12 and19th, 2011. L#113455 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: CNC-11-548114. SUPERIOR COURT, 400 McAllister St. San Francisco, CA 94102. PETITION of Charles Laurence Ward for change of name. TO ALL INTERESTED PERSONS: Petitioner San Shwe Kine Dinwiddie filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: Present Name San Shwe Khine Dinwiddie. Proposed Name: Clover Temple - Dean . THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter shall appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. NOTICE OF HEARING Date: December 6, 2011. Time: 9:00 AM room - 514. Signed by Ellen Chaitin, Presiding Judge on September 22, 2011. Endorsed Filed San Francisco County Superior Court on September 22, 2011 by Param Natt Deputy Clerk. Publication dates: September 28, October 5, 12 and19th, 2011. L#113456

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Full-figured black lady with huge butt, in wheelchair, seeks hungry, submissive W/AM, 25-70, for female worship, mutually beneficial arrangement, fantasy fulfillment, adult toy play. 851838

SEEKS ONE SPECIAL GUY

Attractive female, 47, 5’6”, N/S, dark skinned Puerto rican roots, down-toearth, does missionary work, likes bowling, dancing, cooking, jazz, dominoes, seeks WM, 53-67, N/S, for possible LTR. I believe we are living in the last days. 336995

SEEKING A FRIEND

Hispanic American lady, 64, attractive, educated and stable seeking Irisih Catholic gentleman, 75+, with education, for friendship. 861416

LOVELY LADY

SWF, 100% organically grown bohemian in mid 50s, long dark wild curly hair, grey-green eyes, attractive, fit, kind, honest, sincere and secure. Searching for male soulmate. Fremont area. 339569

LET’S CELEBRATE SUMMER!

SWF, 55+, petite, brown hair, big, brown eyes, would like to meet a nice, handsome man. I’m into music, metaphysics, big smiles and spiritual values. Nonsmokers, please. 298476

GOOD TIMES TOGETHER

Friendly mature female, compassionate, has good values, likes music, dancing, dining out. Seeking a SM, 70+, for friendship and companionship. 332829

WF, 43, professional single Mom, few tattoos, loving, caring, spontaneous, romantic, likes art, music, walks, good food, bookstores. Seeking old fashioned gentleman, prefers tall, 43-55, who’s independent, healthy self-esteem, good hygeine, outgoing, sociable, for friendship, romance, adventures, leading monogamous relationship. 336284

SEEKING MY BASHERT

Attractive, articulate, financially independent, observant DJF, 65, with open heart seeks same qualities in available, single/divorced/widowed Jewish man. 336110

LET’S GET TOGETHER

Very caring, mischievous and personal single woman in the Petaluma area looking for a single man with similar interests, 40-60. I enjoy music, camping, shopping, dining out, walking, exercise and much more. 332976

LOOKING FOR A SPRING THING

Classy woman, 5’3”, average build, blonde hair, hazel eyes, N/S, very smart and business-oriented, into biotech, biophysics and architecture. Looking for similar brainiac male, 40-60, for friendship first leading to possible LTR. SF Bay area. 337699

CARING & COMPASSIONATE

SF, 50s, honest, healthy, motivated and hardworking. Interests: music, camping, dancing, traveling, hiking, walks, the beach, and coffee shops. Looking for a man 40-70 for friendship, dating or possible LTR. 332978

VINTAGE EYEGLASSES

Attractive SWM, 56, has a fetish for single, never-married, non-smoking women who wear vintage eyeglasses, super winged jeweled cat eyed, similar to those from the late 60s-early 70s, or spectacles. 333345

TIRED OF SOAP OPERAS?

Want your own fantasy man? good-looking DWM, 46, seeks female, 55+, for fun and new adventures. 334056

LIFE IS AN ADVENTURE

Adventurous SWM, 50, tall, dark hair, handsome, intelligent with green eyes, outdoorsman with a romantic side looking for single woman to enjoy all that life has to offer and enlighten our horizons together. I love the outdoors and travel ( beach, mountains, etc.) lets have some fun! Sausalito. 334401

LET’S MEET AND TALK

SHM, 21, would like to meet a female, 19-28, for friendship possibly leading to more if we hit it off! 334467

LIFE IS AN ADVENTURE

SWM, 43, N/S, tall, blonde, blue eyes, athletic, very fun, outgoing, working professional, seeks a sweet AF, 18-55, for fun, good times, companionship and maybe more. 340947

FIT MARTIAL ARTS MAN

Dominant male, 51, 5' 10", seeks submissive woman, 30-50, who is not a democrat or republican, N/S, to enjoy conversations and to help you discover and explore your submissive side. Race is not important. 341069

SEEKS SWEET ASIAN

SWM, 69, N/S, retired, slim, intelligent, extremely good-looking, seeks slender AF, 18-35, N/S, to go dating, leading to serious LTR. 339556

YOU FOUND ME!

Caring SWM, 40s, 5’8”, 140lbs, N/S, with mild case cerebral palsy, seeks single female in her 30s, to share outdoor activities, dining out, long walks, running. I have run two half-marathons. Friendship first leading to possible LTR. 331626

LET’S MEET SOON!

I am a very good-looking, 26-year-old fun loving male. I live in SF. I work as a software programmer. I would like to date women between 20-40. I like sports, music and other outdoor activities. 335231

SEEKS A KIND WOMAN

DWM, 52, brown hair, brown eyes, single dad, has one young daughter, seeks a SF, who would be my best friend to share time with me and my daughter, go to family events, museums, parks, leading to a serious relationship. 336412

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Ambitious single man, 50s, motivated, intelligent, seeks similar woman, 4060, for dating leading to possible LTR. 332828

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Kind-hearted 43-year-old man seeks woman for friendship, possibly leading to LTR. Prefer 25-40 years-old, but physical appearance, weight is unimportant. Personality is. 338860

ATHLETIC YOUNG GUY

SWM, 20, smoker, 6’2”, 200lbs, blond/ blue, seeks WF, 18-22, to hang out, chill, friendship and more. 338205

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SWM, 36, 6’2”, 200lbs, smoker, seeks woman, 21-50, race does not matter, for casual relationship first and maybe leading to LTR. 339134

LET’S ENJOY LIFE

Iím a 31 year year old Black male that is very athletic and great looking. I am 5í10 180 pounds, awesome smile and personality. I want to meet an older woman that can appreciate a handsome young man. Union City. 339604

LET’S ENJOY LIFE

Chinese female, 34, 5’2”, 120lbs, black hairi, N/S, seeks a single woman, to share fun, romance and more. 339124

LET’S ENJOY LIFE!

Single professional, 47, enjoys outdoors, working out, dancing, and traveling taking time to enjoy life and have fun. I look for the good in others and try to make a positive difference. Seeks woman, with same interests, being spontaneous, healthy and fit, loves to travel and has good SOH. 336765

RUSSIAN SWM

SM , mid 30s, professional, tall, athletic, outgoing, I love outdoors, anything from camping to mountain biking, long distance swimming, meeting new people. My ideal female companion is someone who is athletic and outgoing. I am marriage-minded but of corse we will start out as friends. 339842

SEEKS ONE SPECIAL LADY

WM, 54, monogamous, hiker, ballroom dance, writer, singer, graduate degree, no church, giver, prolonged kissing, meditation, kind thoughts-words-actions, with 9-year--old son. Walnut Creek. 334892

SHARE HER I’M HUGE!

Endowed, 10+, nicknamed “Eveready”, experienced swinger. Strictly straight male, fulfills couples fantasies. I’m 53, 5’11”, 165lbs, Caucasian, black hair, discreet, reliable, non-pushy. Large BBW women encouraged. Host or travel. Flexible schedule. Female must leave first mesage in my box. No single males. 337120

LET’S HOOK UP!

Latin male, 43, 5’11”, N/S, light-drinker, seeking a TV or TS, 30-40, for friendship and companionship or having fun. Race not important. 335082

CIRCLE THIS AD

SWM, 50s, very caring, healthy, honest, ISO nice woman, 50-59, to enjoy outdoor activities, long walks, traveling, exercise, leading to possible LTR. 332831

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“Do you love to play Scrabble?” I do. I really could care less what you look like but intelligence and wit counts in my book. SWF, 53, N/S seeks male partner for Scrabble games. . 337056

SEEKING MISS RIGHT

Good-looking SM, 21, I’m a Marine and I’m looking for a nice woman that is fun, has alot of energy to enjoy fun together, maybe possible LTR. 336939

ISO GOOD WOMAN

SBPM, 58, 5’10’’, 180lbs, looking for a good, caring, honest, attractive, romantic, career-minded woman, 48+, to share cuddling and quality time. Sometimes cool, sometimes cute, always adventurous. 336749

LET’S MEET SOON!

Tall, mature W/M to share companionship with slender, 5’8”+ fun, outgoing 30-60--year-old female, possible LTR. Shared intimacy, health, fitness, music, dancing and hiking. 334348

SEEKS ANOTHER WOMAN...

to play with toys and having some hot fun! SHF, 41, N/S, seeks HF, 25-50, smoker. 337883

ISO ENDOWED BM, 18+

Talk Dirty to me!!!

Looking for a kinky BM, 18+, 6’+, very adventurous, who loves dancing. I’m 26 and looking to share some fantastic times. 333986

EROTIC COMPUTER

Female dominant, BBW, computer virgin, in wheelchair, seeks sci-fi geek, techno angel and submissive computer teacher, 21-60, for adult computer entertainment and programming. 802472

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Visit www.sfbgconnections.com foR thousands moRe singles Free Ads: Free ads placed in this section are not guaranteed to run every week. Be sure to renew your ad frequently to keep it fresh. Guidelines: Personals are for adults 18 or over seeking monogamous relationships. To ensure your safety, carefully screen all responses and have first meetings occur in a public place. This publication reserves the right to edit, revise, or reject any advertisement at any time at it’s sole discretion and assumes no responsibility for the content of or replies to any ad. Not all ads have corresponding voice messages. To review our complete guidelines, call 617.425.2636

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