ARTS: Beloved Tucson Artist Bailey Doogan Dies
AUGUST 11-17, 2022 • TUCSONWEEKLY.COM • FREE
Linda Acuña and Dillon Christian are launching a new company, Hashbelly. LAUGHING STOCK: Screening Room Sparks Comedy Creativity | WEEDLY: Budtenders
2
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
Upcoming Special Events
BRAD PAISLEY
FRIDAY, AUGUST 26
ICE-T
THURSDAY, AUGUST 18
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20
FT. STEEL PULSE
SATURDAY, AUGUST 13
JIM JEFFERIES
REBELUTION
ALEJANDRO FERNANDEZ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9
BANDA MS
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30
PRESENTS SOMETHING FROM NOTHING
LOS TIGRES DEL NORTE
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17
GEORGE LOPEZ SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22
STAIND
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20
LOS ANGELES
AZULES DE IZTAPALAPA
SATURDAY, APRIL 15 2023
BUY TICKETS NOW AT AVACONCERTS.COM
I-19, EXIT VALENCIA WEST • CASINODELSOL.COM • AN ENTERPRISE OF THE PASCUA YAQUI TRIBE
AUGUST 11, 2022
AUGUST 11, 2022 | VOL. 37, NO. 32
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
3
The Tucson Weekly is available free of charge in Pima County, limited to one copy per reader. Additional copies of the current issue of the Tucson Weekly may be purchased for $1, payable at the Tucson Weekly office in advance. To find out where you can pick up a free copy of the Tucson Weekly, please visit TucsonWeekly.com
STAFF ADMINISTRATION Steve T. Strickbine, Publisher Michael Hiatt, Vice President
CONTENTS LAUGHING STOCK
Tyler Vondrak, Associate Publisher, tyler@tucsonlocalmedia.com
COVER TUCSON SALVAGE Son of Legends Who Died
11 Screening Room sparks comedy creativity
ARTS
Alexandra Pere, Assistant Editor, apere@timespublications.com Hope Peters, Staff Reporter, hpeter@timespublications.com Katya Mendoza, Staff Reporter, kmendoza@timepublications.com
6
Contributors: David Abbott, Rob Brezsny, Max Cannon, Rand Carlson, Emily Dieckman, Christina Fuoco- Karasinski, Clay Jones, Katya Mendoza, Andy Mosier, Xavier Otero, Alex Pere, Dan Perkins, Linda Ray, Will Shortz, Jen Sorensen, PRODUCTION Courtney Oldham, Production Manager, tucsonproduction@timespublications.com Tonya Mildenberg, Graphic Designer, tmildenberg@timespublications.com
CURRENTS
CIRCULATION Aaron Kolodny, Circulation Director, aaron@phoenix.org
ON TO NOVEMBER’S RECKONING .................. 4
Brian Juhl, Distribution Manager, brian@timeslocalmedia.com
CITY WEEK
ADVERTISING TLMSales@TucsonLocalMedia.com
WEEKLY CALENDAR..............................10 XOXO ........................................................14
Gary Tackett, Account Executive, gtackett@tucsonlocalmedia.com
EXTRAS ASTROLOGY ............................................20 CLASSIFIEDS ..........................................22
Beloved Tucson artist Bailey Doogan dies
WEEDLY
EDITORIAL Christina Fuoco-Karasinski, Executive Editor, christina@tucsonlocalmedia.com
Karen Schaffner, Staff Reporter, kschaffner@timespublications.com
TOM DANEHY
12
Claudine Sowards, Accounting, claudine@tucsonlocalmedia.com
RANDOM SHOTS By Rand Carlson
Kristin Chester, Account Executive, kristin@tucsonlocalmedia.com Candace Murray, Account Executive, candace@tucsonlocalmedia.com Tyler Vondrak, Account Executive, tvondrak@timespublications.com NATIONAL ADVERTISING Zac Reynolds, Director of National Advertising Zac@timespublications.com Tucson Weekly® is published every Thursday by Times Media Group at 7225 N. Mona Lisa Rd., Ste. 125, Tucson, Arizona. Address all editorial, business and production correspondence to: Tucson Weekly, 7225 N. Mona Lisa Rd., Ste. 125, Tucson, Arizona 85741. Phone: (520) 797-4384, FAX (520) 575-8891. Member of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia (AAN). The Tucson Weekly® and Best of Tucson® are registered trademarks of Times Media Group. Publisher has the right to refuse any advertisement at his or her discretion.
Copyright: The entire contents of Tucson Weekly are Copyright Times Media Group. No portion may be reproduced in whole or part by any means without the express written permission of the Publisher, Tucson Weekly, 7225 N. Mona Lisa Rd., Ste. 125, Tucson, AZ 85741.
Tucson Weekly is distributed by AZ Integrated Media, a circulation company owned & operated by Times Media Group. The public is limited to one copy per reader. For circulation services, please contact Aaron Kolodny at aaron@phoenix.org.
17 Desert Bloom’s Michelle Montejano takes us on her journey
Cover image of Linda Acuña and Dillon Christian. Photo by Brian Smith.
To start or stop delivery of the paper, please visit: https://timespublications.com/tucson/ or call 480-898-7901 To receive your free online edition subscription, please visit: https://www.tucsonlocalmedia.com/newsletter/signup/
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
DANEHY
ON TO NOVEMBER’S RECKONING By Tom Danehy
Tucson Local Media
ONE OF THE MANY THINGS ABOUT our beloved Arizona that make little or no sense is the fact that our political primaries are held in August — the nastiest month of the year. It’s not the hottest (it trails July and June, respectively), but it’s the most uncomfortable, what with the humidity that has been around for weeks and the heat that has been around for months. Plus, football is still a month away. If T.S. Eliot had been a Tucsonan, August would have been the cruelest month. And so it was when I went to vote last Tuesday. Two hundred degrees, 140 percent humidity. It was a short walk from my car to the polling place, but by the time I reached the building, I was sweating like a hooker in church. There was a young guy there wearing a badge that identified him as an observer for the Republican Party. I asked him if he wanted to watch me vote. Maybe the felt-tip marker I was using on my Dem-
ocratic ballot might bleed over and taint thousands of Republican ballots, thereby stealing the election as, apparently, often happens. He appeared to think about my offer for a second. At least I think he was thinking; maybe he just had gas. Donald Trump isn’t on the ballot this year, but his vulgar vanity and incredible stupidity are. Any candidate who says that Donald Trump really won the 2020 election is not to be taken seriously. They’re either an idiot or a liar. Or maybe a lying idiot. Trump’s false claims are weak and pathetic, but not nearly as pathetic as people who are trying to get elected, not on the content of their character or any substantial personal achievements, but rather on their willingness to pass along the Big Lie. As I write this a couple days after the primary, the race for the Republican nomination for governor still hasn’t been officially called, nor should it have been.
Trump sycophant Kari Lake is leading Karrin Taylor Robson by about 10,000 votes, but there are still about 150,000 votes to be counted. It’s unlikely that Lake will lose the race, but I would think that someone for whom the word “fraud” constitutes half of her vocabulary would want all of the votes to be counted. She took a cue from her Lord and Master and prematurely declared victory. Then she got her crackpot-radio suckups to falsely claim that Taylor Robson had conceded. Then — and this is classic — she took to Twitter to claim that her “victory” was a “landslide.” That would mark the first time that a landslide win went to someone who got less than half of the votes that were cast and held a tiny 2 percentage point lead over her closest competitor. Still on a high, Lake held a press conference the next day and said that she had in her possession evidence of widespread fraud, but she wasn’t going to share it with the media. In her other hand, she had a list of 50 known Communists who are working for the state department. Just like Tail-Gunner Joe, she has no shame — or credibility. If (when) Taylor Robson loses, she’s going to be driven crazy by the fact that Matt Salmon, who had dropped out of the race and thrown his support to her, still got over 25,000 votes. Those votes
SORENSEN
4
would have given Taylor Robson a comfortable win. In the race for the U.S. Senate, it’s too bad that Martha McSally has stopped running for the office, because she’s really good at losing to Democrats. Incumbent Mark Kelly will be the Democratic nominee. He’s got a spectacular resume — Navy pilot, astronaut, great husband. In November, Kelly will face Blake Masters, who talks and acts like he was built in a lab run by the Red Skull (although he occasionally seems quite lifelike). Actually, I’ve known Blake since he was in high school. I coached the Green Fields girls’ basketball team when Blake was a member of the boys’ team. The girls always had a better record. He was one of those guys who convinced themselves that the record discrepancy was due to the “fact” that every school had a good boys’ team but a crappy girls’ team. That should have been a sign. Blake always seemed like a very smart, very serious guy with a bright future. But now when I hear him talk, I feel that attacking him would be like picking on the handicapped. Richard Pryor used to do a bit where he played a wino watching a drug addict walking down the street. The wino says, “Lookit that boy; he used to be a genius!
DANEHY CONTINUES ON PAGE 5
AUGUST 11, 2022
DANEHY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4 He could book the numbers, didn’t need paper or pencil. Now the fool don’t know who he is!” Unless he has suffered irreversible brain damage recently, there is no way that Blake can possibly believe that the election was stolen, so he’s just lying. And ever since growing up in the civil
rights era, I have always wondered what a politician’s kids think when they hear their dad spout blatantly racist language. Racists aren’t born; they’re taught. And right now, Daddy Blake is doing the teaching. Sadly, when I see Blake, I hear the Klondike jingle, slightly modified. “What would you do-oo-oo, for a Senate seat?”
go to
.com
For the latest news and updates
Vote for us Best torta 6308 S Nogales Hwy #4 @deliciocho_
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
5
6
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
Story & photos by Brian Smith
SON OF LEGENDS WHO DIED I STEP ON GRAVEL AROUND several off-road cars and a homemade-looking camper thing to the white, sort of modern ranch house. I am here to talk to the son of two people who recently died, whom I loved and held in the highest esteem. The merciless sun makes everything in the desert look either dead or emaciated, yet orange esperanza flowers bloom in the front yard. Esperanza can translate to “hope” in Spanish. I remember meeting Dillon Christian one night outside a Tucson bookstore in 1991, he was riding in a stroller pushed by Van, his dad, and he hadn’t yet turned two years old. He opens the door and I am greeted with his mother’s eyes, those expansive beautiful things that inspired calm, and his old man’s countenance and guffaw, which could command a room. Dark hair, dark beard, he welcomes, he laughs. Soon it is like conversing with both parents at once, the same uniform intelligence too, emotional and otherwise. Four mixed-breed dogs of various sizes bark and a pool table dominates the front room. His dad’s 1986 Naked Prey album “Under a Blue Marlon” leans against the stereo there. Dillon shares the roomy house with girlfriend Linda Acuña. The inside deflects the sun well, so cozy and cool as to feel like a giant sleep chamber. He sparks a bong and leans back on a sofa in the living room. A giant TV runs some Netflix lumberjack show on mute. The spare furnishings could be called utilitarian but the art is something else, collectable glass-blown figures and bongs, and beautiful, strident Shepard Fairey street art hangs on various walls. Dillon’s eyes well up a number of times in hours of conversation and in those
moments, I wonder if anything helps. But more often his voice cackles in self-deprecatory cheer, or on a peculiar joy he finds in stories and reminiscences of his parents, and their close friends and bandmates, good, bad, funny, indifferent. Dillon sides with humor, and self-deprecation. He is so his father’s son. He wears a black T-shirt emblazoned with a hair straightener and clamp illustration, a joke on hash production. There is open, deep kindness about him, and an innocence. Dillon talks music and his preferences
Young Dillon and his dad Van Christian. (COURTESY OF DILLON CHRISTIAN)
run wide. Dillon’s boyhood Backstreet Boys phase made his mother downright angry, but dad understood. He got into lots of EDM, hip hop, “way less rock ’n’ roll, my dad was into that so I wasn’t, of course. He’d hate on rap but gave it a
Young Dillon and JoAnn Tamez. (COURTESY OF DILLON CHRISTIAN)
chance and saw the good.” His dad turned him on to hillbilly and country and especially Townes Van Zandt. “I tried to listen to Townes the other day, and I had to turn it off, I was too overwhelmed with sadness.” We talk Van’s music, how it earned a wide European fanbase, tours in buses, how it lasts because it was more than right-time-right-place. His dad’s songs seemed to originate, more or less, from some impulsive wager, usually about nailing a feeling. Often hastily rehearsed and recorded, a heart thumped hard beneath the surface, which kept the thundering train from veering off the rails. Beyond the touchstones, early Alice Cooper, Neil Young, Townes Van Zandt, the music existed because it had too, which made it authentic rock ’n’ roll. Like any songwriter worth his salt, you hear Van’s music, that voice, those words, that guitar chug, you hear the man, all the conflict and precociousness, all the restlessness and tender insecurities, sometimes wrapped in painfully witty or fictional narratives. He never compromised in life or in song, and you can hear it. Overall, the sonic sum is more than simple wit and smirks set to melody and power, and the passage of time does not diminish such sway. In his way, Van, and particularly his ’80s and ’90s band Naked Prey, which featured all great musicians, represent-
ed a folklore of outlaw Tucson, a disorder and autonomy. Mainly on a trio of albums released by indie giants Enigma and Frontier, the pull of collective sentiments rose from the ground his future wife help set in place through a cowboy bar (Tumbleweeds) and a record store (Record Room) on Tucson’s Fourth Avenue when the street was mostly filled of failure and biker crank, die-hard hippies and rednecks. A recording of Van’s last song, “Middle of the Road,” features Van’s voice, now a more hushed talky croon and softer, deeper than ever, on a spare ballad upheld on a pair of acoustic guitars. It is a moving, fragile confessional, and in context with his death, Van sounds almost at ease telling us there is no painless way to say goodbye. The opening line: “It used to be that you could find me/Frantically chasing down my dreams/But my life seemed to confine me/And I would go to extremes.” The song is a beautiful tough listen and will be featured on Van’s posthumous final album, “Downhill Racer,” coming soon. If you want to know Van Christian, listen to his music, all of it, from Naked Prey to his solo stuff to his songs with Friends of Dean Martinez. That lawlessness. Van did time for a prodigious amount of weed. Things were different then. Sure, some hard drugs. Van was no
SALVAGE CONTINUES ON PAGE 7
AUGUST 11, 2022
SALVAGE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 6 stranger. Things drifted free of time for many of us, and the desire to bail on podunk Tucson, where lives just seemed to exist in circles, was so easy. Self-destruction could be ingrained into such sensations, came on like a slumping fuck-you figure dressed as a saint. I envied Van since we first met in the late 1970s, I was younger and it seemed to me he’d discovered in life what mattered to him, and he never capitulated. When life doesn’t agree that can be defenseless and tragic. He stepped away from an upper-class upbringing (his dad a prominent gynecologist), and never looked back, his sense of self steadfast. I was amazed he abandoned the Green on Red drumstool to reinvent himself as a singer-songwriter. Took guts. Later, when Dillon was born, his son was everything. I explain to Dillon how Van’s easy generosity was almost biblical; he fed me personally when I was hungry, gave me drink when I was thirsty, in Tucson and Los Angeles, when he likely had but two nickels in his pocket. His humor so scathing, he could mock me down with six words and I’d have zero retort. Mostly because he was right. The many stories of Van, great, hilarious or tragic, or all three at once, can be so muted as to be spun from something to nothing, secrets on lips of others. It is easy when friends die to create rigid narratives from ambiguous, personal affairs. Dillon remembers dad helping many. One example: he spent his last five bucks feeding a homeless person, saying, “It’s OK, Dillon, we have food at home to eat.” Or joke, “Look, they’re sharing a spoon but they don’t have any cereal!” Dillon didn’t know this one. Van literally saved a mutual friend, guitarist Robin Johnson from my old bands Pills/Gentlemen Afterdark. (Robin happens to share Van’s July 4 birthday.) On one Christmas Eve, Robin was visiting Tucson from Los Angeles around 2007 and stayed at Van’s. He snuck drugs in and OD’d, out cold, in a backroom. Van heard noises, kicked down the door, dragged him out of there, inadvertently breaking Robin’s finger in the process, saved his life and called 911. Two years later on Christmas Eve, Robin receives a random text from Van, something to the effect of “Feeling sleepy, Robbie?” His humor knew few limits. Dad was Dillon’s best buddy, taught
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
7
ley Cats, and Rank and File, and many others. It wasn’t just booking, she helped get some on the radio, KWFM, which was unheard of. There was nowhere else these bands could play or be heard. She believed in the music, in the against-allodds success of it. The challenge was part of who she was. JoAnn brought warmth and balance to the otherwise imbalanced and a true scene emerged under her wing. (A constant former thought: how did Richard Ramone get her? In 1986, when she married Van: That makes sense.) Dillon chuckles a lot, nods his head at the familiars he’d picked up from others with similar stories. Picks up the mom memories. “She was always a den mother, taking in a runaway or caring for Afghan refugee families, feeding homeless at Armory Park with sandwiches, just doing her thing, the giver of the ninth chance. “She had an extremely hard childhood, there was abuse and abandonment, which is probably why she was so empathetic with other kids.” Tells of a trip to a local mosque after 9/11, because “people were
him how to ride a bike, camp out, play basketball, tell stories, gave him guitar or drum lessons, never pushed him hard. A
tender closeness cultivated from day one, bonds built on mutual trust.
“My dad never let me know or see if he was hav- Linda Acuña and Dillon Christian at home. ing a bad time, I never knew when we were broke. When we hung out it was JoAnn believed. She cheered us on. only about me. He instilled good values It was the little stuff, making sure my in me. And he was like smoke weed, don’t out-of-control teen self would get home do the hard stuff. After I learned about safely after shows she booked at Tumhis addictions, I knew he was right.” bleweeds with my later band, The Pills. Dillon would fall asleep on the couch She worked tirelessly for everyone, so in the recording studio when dad was many of the shows standing-room-only, making a record. On the ’95 Naked Prey established a Tucson foothold for bands album, “And Then I Shot Everyone,” like Van’s early Serfers (Green on Red), the final song “Dillonious Skunk” is all Giant Sandworms, Z-9, Phantom Limbs, SALVAGE CONTINUES ON PAGE 8 6-year-old Dillon, bits and pieces of his and Cali bands like X, The Weirdos, Alplayful tinkering looped and strung together. I tell Dillon a few early memories of his mother, JoAnn Tamez, who died last year. The obvious, like how she was den mother to naïve misfits and chose to see the good in everyone. Before I was even in a band, I’d skip school and ride the bus down to the Record Room from Tucson’s far eastside to get Sex Pistols bootlegs and Generation X singles, stuff you couldn’t find anywhere else. She and partner Richard Ramone ran the place, a small, rectangle room with record bins lining the edges. She would emerge through a tapestry from the back room, where the two lived, and float around the store, dark eyes, dark hair, and perfect dark Mexican skin, some strange angel, - Brittany this older, accidental cultivator of boyhood crushes, so droll and smart. I was terrified in her presence. There was ranDrug & alcohol treatment • No judgment • We believe in you dom wisdom about her, a life lived far beyond my reach, mysterious tentacles touching far-off cities, and a crossing of Walk-in or Call 24/7 dry, scorching emotional borders. Made 380 E. Ft. Lowell • 520-202-1792 her untouchable. CODAC.org/GetYourLifeBack I had no idea in less than a year my first band, The Suspects, would play a No insurance? No worries. We have grant funds available to help. gig inside that store. We just set up and ran through a bunch of shitty punk rock.
Get your life back. I did.
SCAN FOR INFO
8
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
SALVAGE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7 hating on Muslims,” and her work at a Methodist church, though she was raised Catholic. It was to bring that warmth and balance to the needy. “Even my dad was there at the church a few times,” he laughs. “A paid gig playing drums.” Dillon had great parents, says so often and apologizes for the cliché, though they split-up, when he was around 9 years old, and never officially divorced. He remembers some tension, a little sadness and anger there, and his dad joking, “Yeah, she finally locked the door when I came home.” The irony is Van’s son works in weed. After high school he was so into “computers, nerd stuff and video games” and studied graphic design in college. Classic stoner stuff, he’ll say, and bailed on studies because it got in the way of his selling hash, which he did to a select few, and he made some headway as a glass-blower.
LINDA STEPS INTO THE LIVING room. She has long corkscrew hair, she is half-Korean (mom), and half Mexican (dad), a first-generation American and very alert, intelligent, in her work, her description of work, and in her life. She is the outwardly confident kind of person who can map out her current and future existence, keep it organized and have plenty of leftover time. She amazes Dillon. She made all the funeral arrangements for JoAnn, whom she loved.
CLAYTOONZ By Clay Jones
Dillon and Linda had the same group of friends in high school, Linda a year younger. After graduation, Linda bailed on nursing school to work on a weed farm in California, but returned to Tucson, her siblings and dad are here. She hooked up with Dillion as pals, would get-together at his place, share food, weed, watch movies, listen to music. Seven years ago, one thing led to another. Now they share this house and talk about having a kid, a conversation Dillon’s dad was privy too, was excited by. Dillon adds, “The hard part is my parents would’ve made great grandparents.” With weed, Dillon turned an obsession and dealing into an above-board franchise. “Dad got arrested for weed, it was hard for him to say ‘stop selling weed.’ It’s bullshit people are still in jail for selling weed and people out here are making millions on the stuff.” The pair co-founded a successful weed concentration and extraction company called IoExtracts and just sold all but a seven-percent share. They have enough money they don’t worry about much at the moment. Linda works another gig, the director of compliance for Nature Med dispensaries, but they’re launching their own cannabis wholesaler, Hashbelly. They explain the ins and outs of the new enterprise, the intricacies and fluidness of the marijuana laws, the hoops the city and state make one jump through, lawyers they keep to stay atop it all, down to the design, which Dillon creates. They’ve
built key alliances in cannabis, and it is no stretch to see the couple become wildly successful. The tenderness between the two is wholly apparent and the moment Dillon talks of his mother and begins to falter, Linda caresses his hand, and he’s OK. He talks of his dad and falters, she caresses his hand and he’s OK.
BLOOD CANCER, MDS, KILLED JoAnn. She blamed a famous guitar store in Tucson, where she had worked for years, inhaling the chemicals and lacquers of new guitar finishes, though nothing ever came of it. JoAnn’s partner after Van, Peter Holpert, who Dillon adores, cared for JoAnn. She suffered through chemo, went in for an ulcer, and a stroke got her. Dillon was visiting San Diego. He rushed home and she’d waited for him on life-support. They felt one another in a lifetime-lasting way, “it was the last time I’d feel my mom’s hand,” he says. Dillon, her only child, made the decision to let her go off life-support. “After seeing what my dad went through,” he says, “I felt blessed my mom went in an instant, relatively.” Dillon’s father’s health deteriorated slowly. His income background was classic musician: music, landscaping and cooking jobs. There is no social security, he wasn’t 65, so no Medicare. A decade ago he’d had a heart attack. In the weeks leading up to Van’s death on July 5th, a day after his 62nd birthday, painful hours of incongruity sled into realms of chaos, hospitals, hospice and some misdiagnoses. The pain unimaginable for Dillon, and Van’s partner of nearly a decade, artist Sarah Hamilton, as well as Van’s friends and two siblings. One can only imagine what roams Sarah’s mind now, as both she and Van loved each other hard, each said as much, often. Sarah dedicated her life to Van. Now Van needs her still, to orchestrate and promote his music and final album, posthumously. Dillon tells of Sarah suffering insane bureaucratic negotiations of health care on behalf of her partner. “Sarah kept Van alive. She would fight and fight and fight for him. Do everything seven times just to get denied, to be told ‘he doesn’t qualify.’ She would do things like sit down at AHCCCS offices and not leave until she got some help. She nursed him and it was “the most brutal nurse
work, I’ve ever saw. I couldn’t have done what she did.” Van was horribly mistreated at a care facility. “One time they lost him and we found him crying in the lobby, just lost,” Dillon says. “I never saw him cry before except when my mother died.” Van asked permission to die, gave a little speech, said he wanted Dillon and Sarah to live their lives. “He said to me, ‘Ok, if I give up?’” Ammonia polluted his blood, toxins invaded his brain, already suffocating from lack of oxygen. He stopped recognizing Dillon. “It was so brutal. At one point he couldn’t walk. At another he had no idea where he was. That wasn’t living for him. At the end they chalked it up to congestive heart failure, but they later discovered his liver wasn’t working. “From my perspective, he had every will to live. Van always said he was the man he wanted to be. He did love himself.” He adds, “Everybody’s parents die, and so many people have much harder situations. I had my parents. With my dad there is the music, so there is a legacy.”
DILLON TAKES ME INTO HIS closed garage and the room is filled with boxes and things that belonged to JoAnn; Christmas tree decorations from his childhood, including some, he says, from Van’s youth; flowers from mom’s funeral. He has reached a point where memories are not so pregnant with sadness and yearning; whatever sensation of grief or powerlessness is giving way to what is contained in the remnants of lives lived. He calls them happy. Yes, Van and JoAnn showed Dillon how to live a life of empathy, and to be true to self. In their lives and in their deaths. That is the greatest parental teaching one can absorb. He knows this. He is grateful. The afternoon descends and the three of us step outside the house to the yard with the cars and trucks and that camper, all beat things, off-road things, in which the couple, Dillon particularly, love storming around. Pleasure rises in us with the surprise of a dark sky and thunderstorm. It has been a brutally hot day in Tucson. Dillon whispers thanks, and I swear it was not to me or Linda, but to whatever power that cast such lovely rainy light.
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
ELEVATING BURGERS TO AN ARTFORM! CUSTOM BLINDS, SHADES, SHUTTERS & DRAPERY
500 N 4TH AVE , TUCSON, 85705 520.207.6970 | LO4TH.COM HOURS: MON-SAT 11AM - 10PM • SUN 11AM-5PM
Vote Tucson Tea for Best Tea! Experience Tucson’s largest collecson of over 100+ arssan tea blends. Same-day shipping. Woman-owned. www.TucsonTea.com
SCAN TO VOTE Survey quessons 32, 116, 117, 126
GET YOUR GROOVE ON!
BUY ONE GET ONE
50
%
*
OFF
on Custom Blinds, Shades & Drapery
CALL TO SCHEDULE FREE in-home design consultation with no obligation!
(855) 560-1022
WE DESIGN, WE MEASURE, WE INSTALL, YOU RELAX!® *Offer valid on 3 Day Blinds brand products only, excluding shutters and special orders. Buy 1 qualifying window covering and receive the 2nd qualifying window covering of equal or lesser value at 50% off! Offer excludes installation, sales tax, shipping and handling. Not valid on previous purchases or with any other offer or discount. Offer Code BGXB. Expires 12/31/22. State Contractor and Home Improvement Licenses: Arizona 321056. California 1005986. Connecticut HIC.0644950. New Jersey 13VH09390200. Oregon 209181. Pennsylvania PA107656. Tennessee 10020. Washington 3DAYBDB842KS. County Licenses: Nassau County, NY H01073101. Rockland County, NY H-12401-34-00-00. Licensed through Great Windows Services, LLC: Virginia 2705172678. West Virginia WV061238. Various City Licenses Available Upon Request. © 2022 3 Day Blinds LLC.
9
10
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
THE CENTURY ROOM Feeling jazzy? There are plenty of options this month at this new Downtown location. At 7 p.m. Wednesdays, enjoy an open mic roundup of standards, musical theater and opera hosted by pianist Elliot Jones. At 9 p.m. Sundays, multi-instrumentalist Max Goldschmid hosts the Century Room Jazz Jam. On Thursdays and Saturdays from 6 to 8 p.m., their cocktail hour solo piano session includes rotating pianists like Sly Slipetsky, Susan Artemis and Nick Stanley. All of these have no cover! For a cover, they also have late gigs at 9 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. every Thursday and Saturday, plus sets at 7 and 9 p.m. this Friday, Aug. 12, by Angelo Versace, director of jazz studies at the University of Arizona. Various times and days, Century Room, 311 E. Congress Street, various pricing, hotelcongress.com. CHILLIN’ AT THE CHUL Well, have you chilled at the Chul yet this summer? This free evening series at Tohono Chul features refreshing drinks, light snacks and live music. And you can enjoy it all from the shade of their big ol’ trees, where things will feel about 10 degrees cooler. The Children’s Museum of Oro Valley is providing entertainment for the kids, so you can focus on your street mesquites and your prickly pear mimosa (or lemonade). Also on the menu: Sonoran hot dogs, a Chillin’ Chul cocktail, Tajin watermelon and mint, and gelato. Diluvio provides music Friday, Aug. 12 and Sophia Rankin and the Sound are playing Saturday, Aug. 13, 5 to 8 p.m. both days Tohono Chul, 7366 Paseo del Norte, free, tohonochul.org. SECOND SATURDAYS DOWNTOWN: MOVIE AND MUSIC AT THE FOX The Fox is starting a new double feature series, pairing a performance by a local musician with a music-themed film. This month, the duo Liz and Pete (Liz Cerepanya and Peter Dalton Ronstadt) are bringing their acoustic melodies to the stage. The film is “The Sound of My Voice,” the acclaimed 2019 documentary about legendary singer Linda Ronstadt. 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, The Fox Theatre, 17 W. Congress Street, $12.50 for adults and $10.50 for kids, foxtucson. com.
by Emily Dieckman
EMERGENCE: ANTI-MARKET + OPEN MIC NIGHT I know we can always rely on Tucson to offer an abundance of local open-air and makers markets. But, somehow, it also feels very on brand for Tucson to be home to an event called an anti-market. It’s still an evening at which you can support local artists and vendors, but rather than paying them with money, you’ll engage in a barter and donation-based market open to all. Bring an item you’d like to share or trade, or sign up for potential skill-share opportunities in this vent co-hosted by Pidgin Palace Arts and Hamsters Without Wheels. There’s also an open mic at which individuals can share their voices starting at 7 p.m. 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 14, Pidgin Palace Arts, 1110 S. Sixth Avenue, free, pidginpalacearts.com. ‘DJ IN ONEDERLAND’ The next show on the Children’s Theatre Stage at Live Theatre Workshop is the modern musical “DJ in Onederland,” which follows DJ who, in preparation for high school, feels compelled to let go of all the fun stuff, like childhood and imagination. They end up on a journey through the technicolor world of Onederland, where they meet a cast of characters who help them learn the true meaning of growing up. Written and directed by Gretchen Wirges, with original music by Michael Martinez, Richard Gremel and David Ragland. Saturday, Aug. 13 to Sunday, Aug. 28, 5 p.m. Saturdays, 1 p.m. Sundays, Live Theatre Workshop, 3322 E. Fort Lowell Road, $10 kids and $12 adults, livetheatreworkshop.org. SUMMER SAFARI NIGHTS: SOCIAL NETWORKING IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM Can you believe this is the final event in the zoo’s annual summer series? Don’t miss your final chance to learn about the social habits of all your favorite animals — and see which animal has the social habits most like yours. Children’s book author Teydon Rae will be signing copies of “Kami the Koala Makes a Decision” and Broadway in Tucson will be there with activities related to its upcoming production of “The Lion King.” You could even win tickets to the performance. As usual, food and drinks abound, and this week’s live music is by OnesAll. 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, Reid Park Zoo, 3400 Zoo Court, $10.50 adults, $8.50 seniors, $6.50 kids 2 to 14 and free for kids under 2, reidparkzoo.org.
KINGFISHER SUMMER ROAD TRIP Every summer, Kingfisher takes guests on a culinary road trip across the United States. This week, they’re taking us back east. The official menu isn’t out, but last year’s featured treats like lobster tails, smoked salmon scotch eggs, baked scrod and an apple and dried cranberry slab pie. 4 to 9 p.m. through Saturday, Aug. 20 (except Sunday and Monday, when Kingfisher is closed), Kingfisher Bar & Grill, 2564 E. Grant Road, kingfishertucson.com. COOL SUMMER NIGHTS ALL ABOUT ART The Desert Museum is so wonderfully versatile. Where else can you pet a stingray, play on a playground, see a coatimundi and even enjoy local art? At this week’s iteration of their summer series, they’re focusing on art. Kids can enjoy an art scavenger hunt around the museum and take home a coloring book to kick off their own art careers. There are also live demos from plein air painters and a film screening of desert photography. They also have their usual art galleries open, face painting sessions and live music by Jacob Acosta. 5 to 9 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, 2021 N. Kinney Road, $24.95 GA, $22.95 seniors, $13.95 youth 3 to 12, free for members and kids under 3. Other discounts available, desertmuseum. org. CRITTER NIGHT AT MISSION GARDEN We all know the evenings — especially after, or even during, a monsoon — are the best times to go outside during the summer. And desert wildlife knows this too. Frogs in the canal, nighthawks in the sky, bats around neighborhoods. Each August, Mission Garden brings together wildlife agencies, nonprofits and the UA to teach the public about wildlife. Some of them even bring live animals and activities for kids! (There will also be Lahaina Shave Ice!) Bring a flashlight and a water bottle. 6 to 9 p.m. Friday, Aug. 12, Mission Garden: Friends of Tucson’s Birthplace, 946 W. Mission Lane, free, missiongarden.org.
AUGUST 11, 2022
LAUGHING STOCK L
Screening Room sparks comedy creativity
HIN AUG G S
TOCK
MADE FOR FILM FANTASY By Linda Ray
Tucson Local Media
THE STORY SO FAR… In the Aug. 4 column, we explored the beginnings of Tucson’s popular quarterly comedy variety show, Keep Tucson Sketchy (KTS). That showcase of live-sketches, videos, music and standup comedy is set for two shows, 6:30 and 9 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 13, at The Screening Room, 127 E. Congress Street. Tickets are $10 via eventbrite.com; $15 at the door if available. The show almost always sells out. KTS’ origins started in the rubble of the Federal Trade Commission 1970s effort to liberate the tools of broadcasting into the hands of ordinary people. Tucson’s outlet was first Tucson 20, then Access Tucson 12. As that project faded, Brink Media reimagined and revived it as Creative Tucson. A fun show emerged from the project: The Scorcher Report. A news show parody that included skits, on-location videos and jokes about Tucson News, it gave a klatsch of Tucson comedians, actors and writers a creative nexus they were unwilling to give up when the channel’s grant ended. They regrouped and created the multimedia leviathan called Keep Tucson Sketchy. KTS landed at The Screening Room when their ambition leveraged a fairy-godmother-like connection. David Pike has managed the 92-person capacity Screening Room for more than a decade. A former journalist covering music and movies, Pike also has written and produced independent films. He owns and runs the Arizona Underground Film Festival and Tucson Terror Fest. Now he also provides nationwide and international distribution for indie films, including films from South by Southwest (SXSW) and the Sundance Film Festival, through the Brink Media affiliate, BrinkVision, lessee of The Screening Room. Around 2018, as KTS was gearing up in Pike’s peripheral vision at Brink,
Chris Quinn was bringing a jolt of fresh ambition to Tucson’s live comedy scene. Like dozens of other current Tucson comics, Quinn took the stage first at Roxy Merari’s Monday open mic at The Surly Wench. That experience introduced him to the Tucson comedy circuit. “I went to all the mics that were going on then,” Quinn said, “The Wench, Café Passe, Laff’s.” Now Quinn performs in showcases around town and even hosts at Laff’s from time to time. But in 2019, he was still a newcomer. “I started an open mic very quickly for how little I had been doing standup,” he said, but Pike encouraged him from the time they first met. Quinn had gone with friends to a performance of REEL Tucson, a short-lived series that mixed drag and videos. The organizers wanted to include a standup element. REEL Tucson folded, but Quinn and Pike kept talking. Pike was eager to bring comedy into the theater; Quinn staged a modestly successful showcase, then suggested a Wednesday open mic. “It was an open night,” Quinn said. “I knew from hearing older comedians say, to get better, you have to get as much stage time as you can. Hosting will give you that because you literally have to do it for however long. So that was really my goal, to get better at comedy. “With David’s support it really took off,” Quinn said, “and before the pandemic, we were one of the most rocking open mics out there. I didn’t know if it was going to come back. So now looking at how many great shows we’ve had recently, and we have coming up, it is so exciting!” The Screening Room’s open mic is every Wednesday at 7 p.m. Signups are at 6:30 p.m. While the mic returned successfully, the number and quality of the venue’s booked shows came on like a monsoon rain. “Since I reopened from COVID in May 2021,” Pike said, “I decided that comedy shows were very im-
Jose “Polar Bear” Gonzalez brings his Whispanic Causing Panic show to The Screening Room at 11 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13. (JOSE GONZALEZ/SUBMITTED)
portant for the community. Comedians have been producing their own shows, late night comedy (a Chris Quinn project), women’s showcase comedy (LadyBits, produced by Jen Blanco), Chicano Comedy (produced by Jesus Otamendi) and touring comedy. “I’m just a venue. I had this idea of of having comedians produce certain shows on their own. Chris could help as much or as little as they wanted. Chris took off with it. It’s phenomenal what he’s done with it.” Quinn said, “I feel like the comics had good ideas for shows but didn’t really have a venue that wanted to take a chance on them. That’s what The Screening Room has been doing.” “Maybe it’s how things are in the world, but people need to laugh.” Pike said.
BLOCKBUSTER WEEKEND AT THE SCREENING ROOM On Friday, Aug. 12 at 10 p.m., Jen Blanco spreads her wings as a producer and host, staging John, Jenn and Friends, a showcase featuring Los Angeles comedians John Brickley and Jenn Gonzalez. Tickets are $10 via Eventbrite. com.
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
11
Gonzales was the 2019 winner of the U.S. Comedy Contest, a legendary annual event hosted at Hollywood’s Comedy Chateau by Golden Artists Entertainment. Brickley is a podcast regular who opens for national headliners in clubs throughout the U. S. The lineup also includes Tucson’s Kyle Veville, Morgan and Victor G. Blanco’s semi-monthly Lady Bits show is a blue-ribbon model of The Screening Room’s incubator programming. With a lineup comprising, exclusively, comics who identify as women, Lady Bits has been packing the house to overflowing almost from the beginning. On Saturday, Aug. 13, following two Keep Tucson Sketchy shows at 6:30 and 9 p.m. (see eventbrite for tickets), Chris Quinn produces a late-night laughathon for deep-cut comedy hipsters and fans of Chicano comedy. At 11 p.m., viral underground wonder Jon “Polar Bear” Gonzalez presents his Whispanic Causing Panic Comedy Tour. Gonzalez holds forth regularly on TikTok and broadcasts a weekly show on both Facebook and YouTube. Tickets are $29, $39 for preferred seating, via eventbrite.
COMEDY ELSEWHERE Laff’s Comedy Cafe, 2900 E. Broadway Blvd. (presales, reservations and performer details are at laffstucson. com) $15, $20 preferred seating. Friday, Aug. 12, and Saturday, Aug. 13, 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m., featuring Justin Berkman, Dry Bar’s “Kosher Ham,” and former Daily Show writer, Jimmy Earl. Tucson Improv Movement/TIM Comedy Theatre, 414 E. Ninth Street (presales at tucsonimprov.com). Thursday, Aug. 11, $7, 7:30 p.m., Harold Night with Harold teams Epsilon and Zeta; $7, 8:30 p.m. standup open mic; Friday, Aug. 12, free, 6:30 p.m., improv jam. 7:30 p.m., $7, The Soapbox with Alana Wiesling; 9 p.m., $7, Stand Up Showcase. Saturday, Aug. 13, $7, 7:30 p.m., Your Favorite Movie Improvised; 9 p.m., $7 The Dirty Tees. Unscrewed Theater, 4500 E. Speedway Boulevard. (presales at unscrewedtheatre.org), $5 kids, $8, live or remote; Friday, Aug. 12, 7:30 p.m., Family Friendly Improv Comedy; 9 p.m., Fridays After Dark; Saturday, Aug. 13, 7:30 p.m., Family Friendly Improv Comedy; 9 p.m., Uncensored Improv Comedy with NBOJU and The Big Daddies.
12
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
ARTS
BELOVED TUCSON ARTIST BAILEY DOOGAN DIES By Margaret Regan Tucson Local Media
IN 1981, TERRY ETHERTON KNEW exactly what he wanted his new art gallery to be: a showcase for the burgeoning medium of photography. Photographs were finally coming into their own as fine art. And he decided to show them exclusively. Then in 1983, he saw the work of Bailey Doogan. She had made small monotypes of a kind he’d never seen before. They were so stunning he voided his rule and invited her in. “She was the first nonphotographer that we showed,” he recalls. “We’ve had many incredible shows of hers since those early days. I think we had about 12 shows with Peggy over the years.” Doogan was earning a national reputation, particularly for her challenging paintings of women. Among her art works was a provocative oil painting of a naked woman who replaces the risen Christ of Catholicism, and she made a massive charcoal work that honors an Irish activist murdered by the British during the Troubles. The piece, “The Hard Place (For Mairead Farrell),” is in the permanent collection of the Brooklyn Museum.
As the years went on, she created difficult images of women’s aging bodies, often her own. In 2005, she told me, “I deal with the real body. Our bodies are diaries of our experience. Whatever happens to us is recorded there: wrinkles, scars, the way we stand. That specificity fascinates me. I think it’s beautiful.” Margaret Mary Bailey Doogan died on July 4 at age 80, leaving behind her daughter, Moira Doogan and her son-inlaw of Oregon, a raft of friends — both artists and art lovers — and many fans, myself included. As an art professor at the University of Arizona, she was known on campus as a wonderful teacher and generations of her students will remember her. Doogan — “Peggy” to her friends — was a hometown favorite. Apart from her national exhibitions, she showed her art all over Tucson: at the Tucson Museum of Art, the University of Arizona Museum of Art, Dinnerware, Etherton Gallery, Louis Carlos Bernal Gallery at Pima Community College West, and Davis Dominguez Gallery. I wrote about her art for the Weekly
Doogan with two of her paintings. (SUBMITTED)
for the first time in the early 1990s. I was struck by her oil painting, “Mea Corpa,” in which a glorious nude woman appears to be dispensing Christ-like grace. In 1998, she had a one-person show of startling charcoal figures at the UAMA, so great that I named it “the best of the year.” Twenty-years later, I was still excited by her work. In 2018, the Bernal Gallery featured her with four other prominent Tucson artists and I chose her work to write about — a semi-comical series of Peggy making faces in a mirror. What turned out to be her final show was at Davis Dominguez Gallery with two other women artists in 2020. Sadly, the gallery was shut down by the pandemic and the exhibition only last a week or so. When I first met Peggy, we were floored to find that we were both born and raised in Philadelphia, grew up in devout Irish
Catholic families, and were taught by nuns from first grade all the way through high school. We even both took Latin. Peggy was happy that I understood the Catholic references in her art and I was happy to meet someone who had the same memories. In 2005, Peggy scored a giant two-part retrospective at Etherton and the Tucson Museum of Art, with both venues filled with her oil paintings, pastels, charcoals, and mixed media. To honor the occasion, I wrote “A Life Lived,” a long cover story about Peggy’s work and her life, including tales of her raucous Irish relatives and her sexist colleagues in her early days of teaching. What a storyteller she was. She had plenty to say about everything under the sun. Fifteen years on, I am sharing the piece to let her words ring out once again: https://bit.ly/BaileyDoogan
Make Your Space Work For You! Life. Organized.® Closets • Home Offices Pantries/Laundry Rooms Garages • Wallbeds Media Centers Tucson Showroom 2010 N. Forbes Blvd.
Save 30
%
Call us today!*
520-326-7888 www.classyclosets.com
AZ ROC #232839
*When scheduling Installation in September 2022. With signed contract day of estimate. New contracts only. Not to be combined with any other offer. Restrictions may apply. Expires 8/25/22
AUGUST 11, 2022
TUCSON CONVENTION CENTER - SAT. AUGUST 27
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
13
14
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
By Xavier Otero
Tucson Local Media
MARK YOUR CALENDARS… THURSDAY, AUG. 11 Owing largely to the strength of their live show — a sweat-drenched spectacle that taps into everything from Southern rock and stoner metal to Latin hip-hop and musica norteña — Giovannie and the Hired Guns have racked up millions of streams primarily through word-ofmouth. Front man Giovannie Yanez describes his band, “Some of our songs are pure fun. And some will hit you in the gut and make you cry. It all depends on what is in my heart at that moment.” Giovannie and the Hired Guns at 191 Toole. Drew Cooper presents his unique brand of workingman’s Americana first up on stage… Hailing from the Lower 9th Ward — a place that still bears the indelible cicatrices of Hurricane Katrina’s fury — this trumpeter/vocalist and his ace band are the embodiment of New Orleans. Stepping up on the frontline, Shamarr Allen & The Underdawgs’ fiery concoction of jazz and hip-hop, funk and blues, rock and country keep the party lit all night long at Hotel Congress Plaza…
FRIDAY, AUG. 12 Influenced by Celtic, bluegrass and old-time music, Matt Rolland and Rebekah Sandoval Rolland comprise the husband-and-wife acoustic duo RISO. Matt’s nimble melodic lines — chops honed as a contest fiddler — coupled with Rebekah’s speech-driven, “crooked” rhythms and evocative phrasing create a compelling push/pull dynamic. This interplay is in full effect on “New Eyes.” Like a caterpillar be-
coming a butterfly, the duo’s latest album transmogrifies centuries old traditions into something new. In the studio the Rolland’s enlisted the help of several notables: drummer Arthur Vint, guitarist Ryan David Green, keyboardist Steff Koeppen, bassist Thøger Lund, violinist Ben Plotnick and cellist Kaitlyn Raitz. With a repertoire of songs capable of breaking one’s heart and mending it anew, RISO fête the release of “New Eyes” with “a slice of folk perfection” at 191 Toole. Singersongwriter Ryan David Green of Ryanhood kicks off the shindig… Led by pianist Dr. Angelo Versace — director of jazz studies at the UA — the Angelo Versace Trio pay homage to the late, great pianist Mulgrew Miller. They perform Miller’s compositions and arrangements in a special program, One For ‘Grew, at The Century Room… During the heady days of the mid1990s, Memphis rap pioneer King Skinny Pimp never quite matched the success of his peers: 8ball & MJG, Three 6 Mafia and Tela. “I feel like I’m the dopest MC that’s unknown.” Pimp said. Despite that, he is now enjoying a resurgence thanks in part to TikTok. Songs sampling Kingpin Skinny Pimp’s oeuvre have been igniting into flame around the world. Kingpin Skinny Pimp brings “Spider,” his latest full-length album, to the Club Congress stage. Get A Grip, Psypiritual and Sex Prisoner share the bill…
SATURDAY, AUG. 13 Most musicians won’t hit the road without a travel comfort item or two — an eye mask for sleeping, a neck pillow, and a pair of noise-canceling headphones. When country music superstar Brad Paisley an-
nounced that he was embarking on World Tour 2022, he already had something special in mind. Paisley will travel coast-to-coast with a semi-truck carrying 90 barrels of bourbon — his American Highway Reserve, a Kentucky whiskey aged in barrels that roll along with the country singer tossing and turning on the open road. It’s a method not unlike liquors aged centuries ago on boats at sea. “Plus, a little live music doesn’t hurt, either,” Paisley adds. Truly a “Whiskey Lullaby.” Paisley rides his steel horse, and a few barrels of bourbon, into the AVA Amphitheater… John Moreland said his new album, “Birds in the Ceiling,” captures the thoughts and sounds swimming around in his head. “I think most of the album lyrically is about alienation and isolation,” he said. “Colored through this terrifying, dystopian lens.” Like “Cheap Idols Dressed in Expensive Garbage,” a song Moreland wrote after a friend introduced him to a social media account that highlights pastors wearing designer clothes, while parishioners toil. “It feels like things just continue to get harder for working people,” he said, contemplatively. “It’s hard to afford life these days.” Moreland breaks hearts sweetly at 191 Toole. S.G. Goodman opens the show… Steve Von Till dreams of trees. He has made a life’s work out of seeking the elemental. On “A Deep Voiceless Wilderness” — an achingly beautiful work with ambient, neo-classical leanings — Von Till ruminates on our disconnect from the natural world, each other, and ultimately ourselves. “This is how I originally heard this piece of music,” he said. “Without the voice as an anchor or earthbound narrative. These pieces have a broader wingspan.” They allow the listener to imagine their own story. Musician/poet Von Till shares the Club Congress stage with Chicago-based rock cellist/composer Helen Money… Baptized in mezcal, Los Nawdy Dawgs serve “south of the border, Pulp Fiction-esque, Latin blues-rock,” having gotten
XOXO CONTINUES ON PAGE 16
AUGUST 11, 2022
ZUZIMOVEIT.ORG Workshops! Classes! Camps! All Ages! All Levels! All Welcome! AL AERI EZE P A TR
HEA MOVELING MENT
TIC SOMATICE C A PR
IMPROVE & MODERN DANCE
650 NORTH 6TH AVENUE • TUCSON, ARIZONA 86705
COME IN. BE MOVED.
Japanese Restaurant & Sushi Bar Daily Specials Half Price Rolls $6 Sake Bombs All Day 5036 N Oracle Road 888-6646 M-F 11:30am to 2:30pm & 5pm to 10pm Sat 12pm to 10pm Sun 12pm to 9pm
shoguntucson.com
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
15
16
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
XOXO CONTINUED FROM PAGE 14 their start playing raunchy strip clubs in the redlight district of Nogales, Sonora. Los Nawdy Dawgs provide the musical soundtrack for Dia de las Luchas while Spandex-clad luchadores grapple at the Rialto Theater… KMKR 99.9 FM presents Kulululu, Piramides, DimitriAM and BugClub performing an outdoor benefit concert to help raise funds to upgrade the sound system and facilities for the Scott J. Kerr Memorial Stage at Steinfeld Warehouse Community Arts Center…
SUNDAY, AUG. 14 In 2001, after landing two tracks on the blockbuster “The Fast and the Furious” motion picture soundtrack — with singles “Click Click Boom” and “Superstar” receiving significant airplay on rock radio — Tennessee’s Saliva was propelled into mainstream popularity. The Grammy-nominated nu metallists return talking “Some Sh*t About Love,” off their most recent studio album, “10 Lives.” They make a stop at The Rock. Local pop punks Hell Doubt and hard rockers Cranberry Suit help to raise some dust… Now years in development, “The Mariachi Miracle” is the passion project of filmmaker Daniel Buckley. It is a thoroughly American story with a Mexican sound. “It’s the best story that I am ever going to get to tell, bar none,” Buckley offered without hesitation. “Wherever there are farm workers there are mariachi programs to help lift those families out of poverty and give a new trajectory in life. That’s what ‘The Mariachi Miracle’ is about.” A tireless advocate for the Mexican-American community, Buckley reflects, “If I were to die tomorrow, the Mariachi community would know that they did something truly transforma-
tional for their community, their state and their country.” Something truly miraculous. A sneak peek preview of Buckley’s long-awaited documentary film “The Mariachi Miracle” will be screened — along with live performances by some of the best young mariachi and folklórico performers in Tucson today — at the Fox Tucson Theatre… A hurricane is coming your way. Featuring saxophonist “Hurricane” Carla Brownlee and Arizona Blues Hall of Famer Mike Blommer on guitar, Tucson blues institution Bad News Blues make landfall at Hotel Congress Plaza for the latest installment of the Congress Cookout… Led by Avery Leigh Draut, principal songwriter, lyricist and chamber orchestra arranger, Night Palace’s debut album “Diving Rings’’ is awash in reverb-drenched atmospherics, orchestral flourishes and the wispy ASMR quality of Draut’s voice that acts as the stimulus from where technicolor dreamscapes can manifest in the mind’s eye. Draut reflects on the inner conflict she faced while recording the album. “Sometimes I was sure that I wanted to make a pop gem, sometimes a cosmic folk record and sometimes I would want to throw out everything except seventeen layers of vocals.” New York City via Athens, Georgia, orchestral indie-poppers Night Palace are joined by Tucson’s Hannah Yeun at Club Congress… Hosted by Paul Bowman, the latest installment of Fruit Cocktail Lounge—Tucson’s signature jazz LGBTQ+ cocktail party and social—features performances by esteemed pianist Elliot Jones and powerhouse vocalist Kalae Nouveau at The Century Room…
Vote for us Best of Tucson! 4573 S. 12th Avenue • 520-300-6289
MONDAY, AUG. 15 Emerging in the late 1990s, Static-X hit the Los Angeles scene hard, pushing a blunt-force trauma-inducing sound. Incorporating electronics, harsh industrial overtones and an unrelenting techno pulse — future-forward elements seldom heard in a thrash-metal context — the band quickly drew attention within the burgeoning nu metal movement. Static-X’s debut album “Wisconsin Death Trip” rose to platinum-selling success. Over the years, the band’s lineup fluctuated. Founding singer Wayne Static was a constant until his death in 2014 from a mixture of Xanax, other prescription drugs and alcohol. Filling the void, in 2020 Static-X released “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1” — an album that incorporates rediscovered demos that Static worked on prior to his death—to critical acclaim. Static-X—with new frontman Xer0—lay siege to Encore. Special guests Dead Rabbits and AZ The World Burnz lead the rampage…… With a name that evokes imagery of detritus one would find in an urban public works department, on their seventh full-length effort, “Electrified Brain,” Richmond, Virginia’s Municipal Waste continue to carry the thrash-punk torch forward. Drain, Intoxicated and 200 Stab Wounds help to solidify a hard-hitting lineup at the Rialto Theater… Florist is a friendship project that coalesced in the Catskill Mountains of Upstate New York in 2013. The quartet’s self-titled album — commingling improvisation, loops, found sounds and field recordings — functions as a folk album and audio documentary. Lead vocalist Emily Sprague reflects on the challenge of being a lyricist. “Language just scratches the surface of what
we experience,” she ruminates. “I’m interested in words being more like a sentence saying a hundred emotions, yet being only five words long.” Indie folksters Florist share the Club Congress stage with Marc Merza and Imogen Rose…
TUESDAY, AUG. 16 An offshoot from the same tree of life that sprouted crossover artists like Dwight Yoakam, Alejandro Rose-Garcia, aka Shakey Graves, is a little bit country, a little bit rock ‘n’ roll. The Austin, Texas native’s debut “Roll the Bones” was released into the world without a lick of advance promotion. Wallowing in the self-doubt that can accompany an artist’s first record, Rose-Garcia considered the possibility that, upon its release, “Roll the Bones” may only be received by a handful of listeners. Of course, that’s far from what happened, selling more than 100,000 units and remaining in Bandcamp’s top-selling folk albums. A decade later — preparing to release “Roll the Bones: Ten Year Special Edition’’ — Rose-Garcia reflected on his alter ego. “I hear someone who felt really trapped,” he revealed. “My first serious relationship had fallen apart and I was wanting to run away, be transient, and figure out who I was in the world.” Rose-Garcia expands, “I can hear myself blaming the girl and trying to support myself, saying to myself like maybe it’s okay to be dirty and crazy and have blinders on. Then, at the end, everything zooming back in and I’m saying ‘I guess I just got hurt and I’m in pain, but you know, it’s going to be okay.’” Shakey Graves returns to the Rialto Theater with Nigerian-Greek singer-songwriter Abraham Alexander… Until next week, XOXO…
SUNDAZE TO THURZDAZE 4PM TO 1AM FRYDAZE & SATURDAZE 4PM TO 2AM 450 N. 6TH AVE. / TUCSON, AZ. 85705 / 520-347-7023
TUCSON WEEDLY
AUGUST 11, 2022
BUDTENDER Q&A
Desert Bloom’s Michelle Montejano takes us on her journey By Hope Peters
Tucson Local Media
SINCE ARIZONA VOTERS PASSED Proposition 207 in November 2020, legalizing recreational marijuana, dispensaries have established themselves throughout Tucson. Arizona dispensaries began selling recreational marijuana in January 2021. Now, Tucson has 17 locations dispensing marijuana. In a new feature, budtenders will discuss their experiences working in the rapidly growing industry. This week’s budtender is Michelle Montejano, man-
ager and budtender at Desert Bloom Releaf Center: Tell us about your career in the cannabis industry. I’ve been in this industry for just about six years now and I’ve gotten a front row seat to the madness. I got my start in extraction, then packaging, from there I moved on to wholesale sales, budtending and onto retail management. I networked, learned as much as I could and
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
17
worked hard to apply it to my everyday tasks in order to turn a passion into a career. This industry is ever changing and the comparison of products from then to now is surreal; regulations and laws included, but through all of it the one goal that remains is creating products consumers can trust. Budtending is the epitome of this, building a connection with those in your community and ensuring that they are leaving with safe and secure medicine. What types of cannabis products do you specialize in? (Such as flower, prerolls, vaporizers, concentrates, edibles, tinctures, etc.) As a budtender I specialize in all types of cannabis, it is my job to educate and offer the consumer a variety of products as well as methods
WEEDLY CONTINUES ON PAGE 18
Michelle Montejano, manager and budtender at Desert Bloom Releaf Center enjoys the connections she makes with members of the Tucson cannabis community. (PHOTO BY NOELLE HARO-GOMEZ)
18
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
TUCSON WEEDLY
AUGUST 11, 2022
WEEDLY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17 of use to better fit their needs. Personally, I enjoy edibles and can give more of an insight to what they may be like for the consumer based on personal use, but I make it a point to familiarize myself with all products to recommend exactly what they are asking for. What are your favorite memories being behind the counter? Definitely the connections you are able to make with people within your own community. Essentially, they are coming to you in hopes of feeling better; physically, mentally or just trying to turn a bad day into a good one. Being a part of that for so many people really makes it all worth it. What is the oddest request for a product or oddest infused flavor for an edible you have had? Oddest request for a product would probably be an aphrodisiac. Although we might not carry everything that comes to mind, if you can think of it, it probably exists somewhere in the cannabis industry.
What does ordering a hybrid, indica, or sativa say about a person? That’s tricky because they really don’t determine much about a person, more so what kind of day they are looking to have. For example, someone with a busy day ahead of them might be more inclined to purchase a sativa or hybrid for the start of their day because of the option to medicate and manage pain without feeling mentally and physically bogged down, and lean more towards indica at the end of their day to take advantage of the relaxing, sedative and calming effects indicas have to offer at home in a more comfortable setting. What is the difference between, hybrid, indica and sativa? Typically, sativa strains are used throughout the day, in more energetic settings, to enhance creativity and boost your mood. Indicas produce more calming effects, used to treat things such as severe or chronic pain, anxiety and insomnia. Perfect for evening use and activities that don’t require physical activity. Lastly, hybrids are known as the best
The Desert Bloom’s Re-leaf topical brand offers muscle jelly and body balm for $20 with 350 mg of CBD and THC. (PHOTO BY NOELLE HARO-GOMEZ)
of both worlds sharing both indica and sativa genetics. Making them a go-to for those looking for something to use during the day but may also want to manage pain and anxiety. What’s your best piece of advice for people wanting to get into the business? For anyone looking to get into this industry, the only piece of advice I can offer is get your foot in the door any way you can, and work hard. Assert yourself, network and do your research. Really ed-
ucate yourself on all things cannabis, the chemistry behind the plant, methods of use, products, rules, regulations, compliance, etc. With the expanding cannabis market there will always be a niche to fill.
Desert Bloom Re-Leaf Center
8060 E. 22nd Street, Suite 108 520-886-1760 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday to Sunday
.com
GROWN YOUR OWN!
3384 E. River Rd. at Green Things Nursery
(520) 209-1881 www.greenladyhydro.com LOCALLY OWNED AND CHEERFULLY OPERATED!
TUCSON WEEDLY
AUGUST 11, 2022
LEARN TO GROW A POUND PER PLANT!
30% OFF all 110 W LED grow lights!
A Grower’s Paradise Become a member for just $44.99 a year!
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT & COUNSELING • On staff physician certified in addiction treatment • Individual and Group Counseling provided by licensed drug & alcohol counselor. • Group Topics: Relapse prevention, Peer Support, Crisis interventions, and Family dynamics • Liquid methadone, tablets, diskettes, and suboxone • Walk-ins welcome no appointment needed • Mon-Fri 5AM-6PM Sat 7AM- Noon
NOW ACCEPTING AHCCCS
Behavioral Awareness Center Incorporated
520-420-8506 • 4837 E Speedway Blvd AZ420RECREATIONAL.COM
DAILY FLOWER SPECIALS! Go to
tucsonsaints.com tucsonsaints .com for easy online ordering
112 S. Kolb Rd., Tucson, AZ 85710
520-886-1003 tucsonsaints.com
Hours: 10am-7pm, 7 days a week
2002 West Anklam Road, Tucson, Arizona 85745 (520) 629-9126 Fax: (520)629-9282 BACmethadone.com
19
20
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY
than usual to encounter and generate miracles. Be proactive! Oh, and very important: What are your three top wishes?
By Rob Brezsny. Go to RealAstrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s EXPANDED WEEKLY HOROSCOPE 1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700 $1.99 per minute. 18 and over. Touchtone phone required.
ARIES (MARCH 21-APRIL 19): Tips to get the most out of the coming weeks: 1. Exercise your willpower at random moments just to keep it limber. 2. Be adept at fulfilling your own hype. 3. Argue for fun. Be playful and frisky as you banter. Disagree for the sport of it, without feeling attached to being right or needing the last word. 4. Be unable to understand how anyone can resist you or not find you alluring. 5. Declare yourself President of Everything, then stage a coup d’état. 6. Smile often when you have no reason to. 7. If you come upon a “square peg, round hole” situation, change the shape of the hole. TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20): If I had to choose a mythic deity to be your symbolic helper, I would pick Venus. The planet Venus is ruler of your sign, and the goddess Venus is the maven of beauty and love, which are key to your happiness. But I would also assign Hephaestus to you Tauruses. He was the Greek god of the metalworking forge. He created Zeus’s thunderbolts, Hermes’ winged helmet, Aphrodite’s magic bra, Achilles’ armor, Eros’ bow and arrows, and the thrones for all the deities in Olympus. The things he made were elegant and useful. I nominate him to be your spirit guide during the next ten months. May he inspire you to be a generous source of practical beauty. GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE 20): To be a true Gemini, you must yearn for knowledge— whether it’s about coral reefs, ancient maps of Sumer, sex among jellyfish, mini-black holes, your friends’ secrets, or celebrity gossip. You need to be an eternal student who craves education. Are some things more important to learn than others? Of course, but that gauge is not always apparent in the present. A seemingly minor clue or trick you glean today may become unexpectedly helpful a month from now. With that perspective in mind, I encourage you to be promiscuous in your lust for new information and teachings in the coming weeks. CANCER (JUNE 21-JULY 22): Canceri-
an drummer Ringo Starr is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Though he has received less acclaim than his fellow Beatles, many critics recognize him as a skillful and original drummer. How did he get started? At age 13, he contracted tuberculosis and lived in a sanatorium for two years. The medical staff encouraged him to join the hospital band, hoping it would stimulate his motor skills and alleviate boredom. Ringo used a makeshift mallet to bang the cabinet near his bed. Good practice! That’s how his misfortune led to his joy and success. Is there an equivalent story in your life, Cancerian? The coming months will be a good time to take that story to its next level. LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22): One of the inspiring experiments I hope you will attempt in the coming months is to work on loving another person as wildly and deeply and smartly as you love yourself. In urging you to try this exercise, I don’t mean to imply that I have a problem with you loving yourself wildly and deeply and smartly. I endorse your efforts to keep increasing the intensity and ingenuity with which you adore and care for yourself. But here’s a secret: Learning to summon a monumental passion for another soul may have the magic power of enhancing your love for yourself. VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22): Musician Viv Albertine has recorded four albums and played guitar for the Slits, a famous punk band. She has also written two books and worked as a TV director for 20 years. Her accomplishments are impressive. Yet she also acknowledges that she has spent a lot of time in bed for many reasons: needing to rest, seeking refuge to think and meditate, recovering from illness, feeling overwhelmed or lonely or sad. She admiringly cites other creative people who, like her, have worked in their beds: Emily Dickinson, Patti Smith, Edith Sitwell, and Frida Kahlo. I mention this, Virgo, because the coming days will be an excellent time for you to seek sanctuary and healing and creativity in bed.
LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22): Libran author Katherine Mansfield wrote, “The mind I love must have wild places, a tangled orchard where dark damsons drop in the heavy grass, an overgrown little wood, the chance of a snake or two, and a pool that nobody’s fathomed the depth of.” Be inspired by her in the coming weeks, Libra. I suspect you will flourish if you give yourself the luxury of exploring your untamed side. The time is ripe to wander in nature and commune with exciting influences outside your comfort zone. What uncharted frontier would you enjoy visiting? SCORPIO (OCT. 23-NOV. 21): When you are functioning at your best, you Scorpios crave only the finest, top-quality highs. You embrace joys and pleasures that generate epiphanies and vitalizing transformations. Mediocre varieties of fun don’t interest you. You avoid debilitating indulgences that provide brief excitement but spawn long-term problems. In the coming weeks, dear Scorpio, I hope you will embody these descriptions. It’s crucial that you seek gratifications and delectations that uplift you, ennoble you, and bless your future. SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21): “Wish on everything,” advises Sagittarian author Francesca Lia Block. “Pink cars are good, especially old ones. And first stars and shooting stars. Planes will do if they are the first light in the sky and look like stars. Wish in tunnels, holding your breath and lifting your feet off the ground. Birthday candles. Baby teeth.” Your homework during the next two weeks, Sagittarius, is to build a list of further marvels that you will wish on. It’s the Magic Wish season of the year for you: a time when you’re more likely
CAPRICORN (DEC. 22-JAN. 19): Author Aldous Huxley wrote, “That people do not learn much from the lessons of history is the most important lesson that history has to teach.” While his observation is true much of the time, I don’t think it will be so for you in the coming weeks. I suspect you will triumph over past patterns that have repeated and repeated themselves. You will study your life story and figure out what you must do to graduate from lessons you have finally, completely learned. AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18): In the film “I Origins,” a scientist says this to a lover: “When the Big Bang happened, all the atoms in the universe were smashed together into one little dot that exploded outward. So my atoms and your atoms were together then . . . my atoms have always known your atoms.” Although this sounds poetic, it’s true in a literal sense: The atoms that compose you and me and everyone else were originally all squeezed together in a tiny space. We knew each other intimately! The coming days will be an excellent time to celebrate your fundamental link with the rest of the universe. You’ll be extra receptive to feeling connection. You’ll be especially adept at fitting your energy together with others’. You’ll love the sensation of being united, merged, blended. PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH 20): My Piscean friend Luna sent me a message that sums up how I feel about you these days. I’ll repeat it here in the hope it will inspire you to be perfectly yourself. Luna said, “Every time I meet someone who was born within like two weeks of my birthday, I end up with the impression that they are the loopiest and wisest person I’ve met in a long time. They are totally ridiculous and worthy of profound respect. They are unhinged and brilliantly focused. They are fuzzy-headed dreamers who couldn’t possibly ever get anything practical accomplished and they are lyrical thinkers who charm me with their attunement to the world’s beauty and impress me with their understanding of how the world works. Hahahahaha. Luckily for me, I know the fool is sacred.”
AUGUST 11, 2022
Comics
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
We Love Tucson!
Best of Tucson voting is going on right now! Show some love for your favorite local businesses
Go to
Your Trusted Source for Community News LEGALIZATION NATION By Brian Box Brown
tucsonweekly.com/tucson/BestOf Best of Tucson voting is open till August 20th at noon
21
22
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
CLASSIFIEDS 520.797.4384
Classifieds@tucsonlocalmedia.com
CONTRACTORS
MASSAGE
AWESOME Body Rub Ajo and Kinney Area For a man by a man Stop by for relaxation and to destress. Call or Text Oliver : 520-358-7310
GF and Son Contractor
Family Business 25 yrs. BBB Member & licensed. Specialize in all types of(New/Old) Roof repairs, Coating, Rotten Wood, Fascia Boards, Remodeling & Additions, Permit plans. Now Accepting Credit cards Gary or Chase 520-742-1953
HANDYMAN Handyman Service
Doors* Drywall*Painting Roof Repair/Coating Hauling*Coolers* Odd Repairs Minor Plumbing/Electrical* BBB Member. Not a licensed Contractor
520-425-0845
FULL BODY RUB Best full body rub for men by a man. West Tucson. Ajo and Kinney. Privacy assured. 7AM to 7PM. In/Out calls available. Darvin 520-404-0901. No texts.
Mature Woman Full Body Massage Satisfaction Guaranteed. Provided by a woman for a man. 10 am to 8 pm Text or Call 520-278-0597
EMPLOYMENT GENERAL Senior Director of Product Development sought by CliniSys, Inc. in Tucson, AZ. 40 hrs/wk. Duties include but are not limited to: Supervises development managers and senior managers to oversee the development of strategic products and ensure resource availability, the use of appropriate technology, upholding of quality standards, and on-time delivery of software releases. Challenges the product development teams to ensure that the appropriate strategic, technical and tactical solutions are being implemented. Involved in project intake triaging relating to additional requests and initiatives to determine the impact, prioritization and need. Develops and utilizes supporting metrics to show status, drive decisions, and identify risk. Requires a Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science or related and 12 years of experience in Software Development or testing or related. 3 years’ experience in a Senior Manager/Director Role. 3 years’ experience building strong partnerships with other job functions, like product, support and UX, to keep teams collaborating smoothly and working together to improve the product. 5 years’ management experience including hiring and leading a geographically distributed software engineering organization comprising multiple teams. 5 years’ experience leading multidimensional software development improvement initiatives like software automation on applicable product lines. 7 years’ experience with healthcare software applications. 12 years’ experience planning to meet departmental and company objectives. 12 years of progressive experience in software engineering or related discipline in the technology sector. Reply with resume to: Christine Gomez, CliniSys, Inc., 3300 E. Sunrise Dr., Tucson, AZ 85718; or apply online at https://www.sunquestinfo.com/careers/.
MEETINGS/ EVENTS Plan your future. Senior Pride’s Honoring A Life Workshop takes away the mystery of Advance Medical Care Planning for LGBTQ people. Register for workshop: https://soazsenior pride.org/events Learn more: eol@soazseniorpride.org
NETWORK ADS WANTED OLD SPORTSCARS/CONVERTIBLES: Porsche, Mercedes, Jaguar, Triumph/MG, Ferrari, Corvette & others! 1973 & OLDER! ANY condition! TOP $$ PAID! Call/Text: Mike 520-977-1110. I bring trailer & cash! (AzCAN)
Crossword Answers
NETWORK ADS DISH Network. $64.99 for 190 Channels! Blazing Fast Internet, $19.99/mo. (where available.) Switch & Get a FREE $100 Visa Gift Card. FREE Voice Remote. FREE HD DVR. FREE Streaming on ALL Devices. Call today! 1-855-722-2290 (AzCAN)
Classifieds are now in color! Call 520-797-4384 for more info
EMPLOYMENT GENERAL
AUTO PARTS/ACCESSORIES
Complete and All Auto Parts & Metals Top $$ For Cars Running or Not
We buy Propane Tanks All Auto Parts, All Aluminum Metal and Automotive Parts Complete Cars, Trucks & Metal Catalytic Converters from LICENSED sellers only
520-999-0804 Se Habla Español
Crossword
Edited Edited by Will Shortz by Will Shortz
No. 0630
70 “Didn’t I tell you?” 1 ACROSS 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 S 36 Loud firework 66 Convenience 1 It may be mined or crunched 71 Game 1 in a mined 5 38Night Catherine 70 “Didn’t I tell 15 16 14 playoff series lights, of aofsort d “Schitt’s Creek” 72 Jolly season 11 ___ card (auditioner’s need) you?” 18 19 17 s, of a14 40Suit Warning before a 71 Game 73 Poet’s 1 inpalindromic a gory movie scene playoff series preposition 15 Documents 20 21 22 23 … orMendes a phonetic 74 More than a 16 Actress 72 Jolly season hint to answering ’s hypothesis, but 17 Mechanical 27 28 29 30 24 25 26 four rows in this 73 Poet’s not quite a law 18 Snack puzzle palindromic 31 32 33 34 35 75 PlayStation rival 19 Dispensers preposition 44 Thoroughly 20 An official language of the s enjoyedTerritories 38 39 36 37 74 More DOWNthan a Northwest ndes 22 45GoSomber hypothesis, butAbbr. 1 Part of R&D: ashore rings 40 41 42 43 not a law l 2 quite Big name in body 24 47French Burn a bit sprays rival 27 Cake 75 PlayStation 44 45 46 50 Fictional 3 Face value? 30 Advocate? Christian of 47 48 49 50 51 52 4 “Thunderstruck” 31 Word with and sing orfilms string books DOWN band 33 Green hazard Sussex smell f 55 56 57 53 54 5 Sleeper’s 35 52A word before we forget? 1 Part of R&D:problem est 36 53Loud Atlantic 6 !, in emails firework Abbr. 58 59 60 61 38 55Catherine of “Schitt’s Creek” 7 ___-com Division 2 Big name in body 40 Warning before a gory movie 8 Some cryobank 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 57 Skaters sprays deposits scene … or a phonetic hint 58to Tries to please, value? dept. 70 9 Accounting answering four rows in this3 Face 71 72 with “to” stamp puzzle 4 “Thunderstruck” 74 75 73 Host that 10 44 60Thoroughly enjoyed bandVampiric in preceded and sing 45 Somber appearance rings 5 11 Sleeper’s succeeded House that’s not 47 Burn a bit problem PUZZLE BY SAMUEL A. DONALDSON AND DOUG PETERSON O’Brien 32 Pamplona’s province 51 Modern food critic the House Christian of books ard 50 Fictional 34 Top gear? 6 !, in emails but perhaps wrong” 62 Home 12 Turns away and films 26 Kind of scoring FormerI’m frosh 43 Counterfeit 54 “… 59 ore we 37 Last little bit 56 City in Northern Ireland “Blown” seal 52 63Sussex smell in fantasy token 7 13 ___-com Office 61 Mineral with Celebrity 59 Former frosh 21 Facepalm emotion 53 Atlantic sports 39 leagues, 46 G.R.E. takers, 8 Some cryobank bands 41 Mongolian tent 61 Mineral parallel with parallel bands informally 23 Fixed, as a climber’s rope 55 Division usually: Abbr. deposits O PREVIOUS 42 University near Greensboro 64 Meghan Mountbatten24 Guide showing relief, maybe 57 Skaters PUZZLE 28 Speeder stopper 47 Obsolescent 64 Meghan 43 Counterfeit Windsor ___ Markle 9 25 Accounting dept. Smart ___ 58 Tries to please, with “to” MountbattenF I 60G H T W H O M music holder 29 American home stamp token 65 Composer Brian ___ 26 Kind of scoring in fantasy Host that preceded and Windsor of a royal palace E N L A I HO’Brien I V E 46 G.R.E. takers, usually: Abbr. 48 Revival figure 67 Butter purchase sports leagues, informally succeeded Markle 10 Vampiric in D AB62I T E A J A R 47 Obsolescent49 music 68 “Turn to Stone” band of 28 Speeder stopper 32 Pamplona’s Home appearance P.M.holder preceded 65 for Composer Brian province 48 Revival figure AB AB short I 63N H I T L E 29 American home of a royal Office and succeeded 1977, 11 House that’s not 49 P .M. preceded and 69 Playmate of Fido and Rover by Churchill palace R T 66T Convenience O D S 34 Top gear? the House 67 Butter purchase succeeded 51 by Churchill E RW A N D A N Modern food 37 Last little bit 12 Turns away 68 “Turn to Stone” critic H A Z E H E A V E 39 Celebrity band of 1977, 13 “Blown” seal AB L E S N O W M A N 54 “… but perhaps for short 41 Mongolian tent I’m wrong” O N520.797.4384 T O U S E Classifieds@tucsonlocalmedia.com 21 Facepalm emotion 56 City in Northern 69 Playmate of Fido 42 University near T E M P T C E NETWORK CLEANING SERVICES ADS Ireland and Rover ADS GreensboroNETWORK E O H A R A 23 Fixed, as a climber’s rope D AB R A I S U Z U DIRECTV Stream - The The Generac PWRcell, a Online subscriptions: Today’s puzzle and more A B C R U N C H E S 24 Guide showing Best of Live solarthan & On-Deplus7,000 batterypast storage puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95system. a year).SAVE money, rerelief, maybe R E A D S O U R S mand On All Your Favorite Screens. your reliance on the S Y S Cleaning C O T HServices O R 25 Smart ___ Read about and commentCHOICE on each puzzle:duce nytimes.com/wordplay.
CLASSIFIEDS Experience
(520)-396-8695
Free In Home Estimates
Marisol Gomez: ExperienceCleaning150@gmail.com
• 25+ yrs Experience • Low Prices • Licensed & Insured • Disinfecting • Eco-friendly • Detail is a focus • Satisfaction is a Priority
Package, $84.99/mo for 12 months. Stream on 20 devices in your home at once. HBO Max included for 3 mos (w/CHOICE Package or higher.) No annual contract, no hidden fees! Some restrictions apply. Call IVS 1-877-8410507 (AzCAN)
grid, prepare for power outages and power your home. Full installation services available. $0 Down Financing Option. Request a FREE, no obligation, quote today. Call 1-844-730-0219
CLASSIFIEDS HELP: 520-797-4384
AUGUST 11, 2022
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
23
WORSHIP GUIDE CLASSIFIEDS 520.797.4384
Classifieds@tucsonlocalm 520.797.4384 Classifieds@tucsonlocalmedia.com METHODIST
REACH OUT
SERVE
Get the word out!
God
CONNECT
to our community JOURNEY
together
INSPIRE 8:15 AM
love
TRADITIONAL
10:00 AM
CONTEMPORY
7620 N Hartman Ln Tucson, AZ 85743
520-365-1183
Kevin@maranachurch.com • Office@maranachurch.com
Reserve Ad space in your local Worship Directory Call 520-797-4384
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
Casas Adobes Congregational Church
An Open and Affirming Congregation of the UCC
No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here!
Join Us In-Person and Online Sundays at 9:30am
In-person Taizé, 2nd Thursdays, 6:30pm
www.caucc.org/welcome 520.297.1181 | info@caucc.org | 6801 N. Oracle Road
Get The Word Out!
Call 520 -797- 4384
24
TUCSONWEEKLY.COM
AUGUST 11, 2022
VOTE FOR US
MEDICAL MARIJUANA CARDS
BEST CBD STORE & BEST ALTERNATIVE HEALTH CENTER
299
$
Includes State, Doctor, Evaluation, and Processing Fees
Card valid for 2 years
Ad must be presented at time of payment. Cannot be combined with other offers.
NOW OFFERING NATUROPATHIC WELLNESS EXAMS! CALL FOR DETAILS! DOCTORS AVAILABLE SATURDAYS 10AM-3PM • CBD STORE ON-SITE & ONLINE!
4826 E Broadway Blvd
520-838-4430
TumbleweedsHealthCenter.com Telemedicine Available