TRADE STREET DINER
www.yesweekly.com
P. 8
NEWS OF THE WEIRD
P. 20
LELAND MELVIN
P. 24
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
1
GET AHEAD FOR THE
Holidays
Urban Grinders at Revolution Mill
Our Hot Chocolate made with Organic Cacao Powder base rich in Antioxidants, Vitamin C, Fiber and Magnesium. Only 5 minutes from downtown! Gourmet coffee drinks, Cold Brew, Loose Leaf Teas and affordable Grab and Go Lunch is available. Always pushing the limits with signature drinks and lattes. Locally roasted beans so always fresh! facebook.com/urbangrinders | (336) 907-3291
WOW
A place to share your sales, deals, BOGO’s, anything special so the early shoppers can share the benefits this year!
2 YES! WEEKLY
WOW is an all-natural organic juice company. Specializing in lemonades and teas with fresh fruit and not with any powder. WOW does not use any high fructose corn syrup, and uses cane sugar and honey for sweeteners. WOW makes 6 lemonades: Strawberry Lemonade, Passion Fruit lemonade, Orange Pineapple Lemonade, Blueberry Basil Lemonade, Blackberry Lemonade, Fresh Squeezed Lemonade; and 3 teas: Mango Tea (hot or cold), Peach Tea and Southern Tea. AND NOW YOU CAN CREATE YOUR OWN SMOOTHIE! facebook.com/WowWhatADrink | (336) 587-8876
Pushing the limits with creative drinks and signature latte recipes!
Gourmet Coffee Drinks Cold Brew Loose Leaf Teas Grab and Go Lunches Locally Roasted Beans —2016—
Voted Best Coffee Shop in Greensboro
—2017—
Voted Best Coffee Shop in Guilford County
1250 Revolution Mill Dr, Suite 178 Greensboro|(336) 907-3291 @ugrevolutionmill
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
/urbangrinders
ALL-NATURAL ORGANIC JUICE! NO POWDER! ALL FRESH FRUIT AND TEAS 6 LEMONADES 3 TEAS
Blueberry Basil Lemonade or Strawberry Lemonade to name a few! Including Mango, Peach & Southern Tea
1250 Revolution Mill Drive - Greensboro (Beside Urban Grinders) Check out @WowWhatADrink & wow_whatadrink to see more! 336-587-8876 | jutztasteit@gmail.com | www.facebook.com/WowWhatADrink
NEWLY ANNOUCED! CREATE YOUR OWN SMOOTHIE!
www.yEswEEkly.cOMw
Greensboro Ballet
GUMBO Fat Tuesday
FT SEAFOOD GUMBO (available Tuesdays & Sundays) Our Sea Food Gumbo is made with our own Low Country Gullah recipe. It combines a traditional Roux with shrimp, sausage, chicken, crab meat, fresh okra, stewed tomatoes, onion and celery chucks throughout! Whats in it? YOU NAME IT! fattuesday.com | (336) 763-6707
Visit us for the Gala Nutcracker on Dec. 16. A performance will be held at 7:30pm with guests artists from the New York City Ballet. The Holiday Event will be at 9:30pm with champagne and sweets on the stage in the Kingdom of the Sweets. carolinatheatre.com (336) 333-2605
Nutcracker the
December 9-10 • December 16-17
MENTION ThIS ad aNd REcEIvE 10% Off! NEW MENU ITEMS ROLLING OUT SOON! Sneak Peek Fatty French Toast Slider FT Seafood Gumbo (Available on Tuesdays & Sunday) 120 Barnhardt Street • GreenSBoro • Located in the railyard 336-763-6707 • www.fattuesday.com • @fattuesdaygso www.yEswEEkly.cOM
at the Carolina Theatre
Ask about our beloved Tea with Clara pre-events December 9 & 10 at 1:45pm *Don’t miss this year’s Nutcracker Gala Event on December 16th! Ticket sales at 336-333-2605 www.carolinatheatre.com Event Info: www.greensboroballet.org NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
3
GIFT IDEAS FOR THE HOLIDAYS
SPECIAL OFFER!
Give a little
TENDERNESS
®
Save 75%* on Omaha Steaks
WAS $30.90
19
$
95
NOW ONLY
FREE
The Family Gourmet Buffet
Plus, get 4 more Burgers and 4 more Kielbasa
2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons 2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins 2 (4 oz.) Boneless Pork Chops 4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.) 4 (3 oz.) Kielbasa Sausages 4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers 4 (3 oz.) Potatoes au Gratin 4 (4 oz.) Caramel Apple Tartlets OS Seasoning Packet (.33 oz.) 51689EZA $ $199.90* separately Combo Price
FREE!
SHIPPING
SAVE 35% & FREE SHIPPING A customer favorite! Send a box of our large, luscious sun-loving fruit hand-picked fresh from our grove. A generous selection of our 2 most popular varieties are guaranteed to delight everyone on your list. All at a very special price! • 3 Ruby Red Grapefruit So sweet, they never need sugar!
•4
4999
Navel Oranges
Sweet, juicy and seedless
*Savings shown over aggregated single item base price. Limit 2 51689 pkgs. Your 4 free burgers and 4 free kielbasa will be sent to each shipping address that includes 51689. Standard S&H will be added per address. Flat rate shipping and reward cards and codes cannot be used with this offer. Not valid with other offers. Expires 2/28/18. All purchases acknowledge acceptance of Omaha Steaks, Inc. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Visit omahasteaks.com/terms-of-useOSI and omahasteaks.com/info/privacy-policy or call 1-800-228-9872 for a copy. ©2017 OCG | Omaha Steaks, Inc. | 17M1957
1-877-649-1462 ask for 51689EZA www.OmahaSteaks.com/excellent10
Call Toll-Free 1-855-802-4733 to order item MB17 or Visit PittmanDavis.com/B1960 Only $19.95 (reg. $30.90) plus FREE Shipping and handling to the 48 contiguous states.
MB17
IC: P8SH-B960
Petite Navel Oranges
Wild Alaskan Smoked Sockeye 1 lb. Salmon
Tangerines
Petite Red Navels Navel Oranges
ONLY
Offer expires 12-31-2017. Some restrictions apply.
SAVE $10
Orange Spectacular!
$39 $29
$1999
*
(Item #1-16316)
Special limited time offer!
4 favorite varieties
SAVE $15!
delicious oranges
20 fresh from Florida
WOW!
Plus 4 FREE
Grapefruit Spoons
TO ORDER: Use code MB17063 online at BuySeaBear.com or by calling 844-244-9531
Reg. Price $34.99
Handpicked fresh from the grove! 4 unique varieties. 20 delicious oranges!
Call 1-888-605-4112 to order item 453X or Visit HaleGroves.com/N19177
Discount limited to one per order. Offer expires 12/31/2017 or while supplies last.
Order Item #453X, mention Code 8SH-N977 for your $15 savings.
Only $19.99* (reg. $34.99), plus $5.99 shipping & handling. Satisfaction completely guaranteed. This gift ships in December at the peak of freshness. Order by Dec. 16, 2017 for GUARANTEED Christmas delivery.
Since 1947. Hale Groves, Vero Beach, FL 32966
IC: 8SH-N977
4 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
Call now and
SAVE 43%!
*Plus $5.99 handling to the 48 contiguous states. Limited time offer, good while supplies last. Not valid with any other offer. Limit 5 boxes per customer.
PURE
NATURAL
WILD
HANDCRAFTED
SMALL-BATCH SMOKED
www.yEswEEkly.cOMw
GET
w w w.y e s w e e k l y. c o m
inside
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017 VOLUME 13, NUMBER 46
22
N OVE M B E R
WE 15 EKALI W/JOSH PAN/Y2K 7P TH 16 DOPAPOD & THE MOTET 8P FR 17
MIPSO
W/LIL SMOKIES, BROTHER COMATOSE 8P ID W/WAREZ /DOMJJ/ MOJOT + 9P
5500 Adams Farm Lane Suite 204 Greensboro, NC 27407 Office 336-316-1231 Fax 336-316-1930
SA 18 WE 22 CELEBRATION OF LIFE FOR BRAD SKINNER 6P FR 24 CAPITAL CITY REGGAE FEST FEAT. CRUCIAL FIYA 7:30P
SA 25 NANTUCKET
W/ SHOOT TO THRILL (AC/DC TRIBUTE) 7P
Publisher CHARLES A. WOMACK III publisher@yesweekly.com EDITORIAL Editor KATIE MURAWSKI katie@yesweekly.com Contributors KRISTI MAIER JOHN ADAMIAN MARK BURGER JESSICA CLIFFORD IAN MCDOWELL CARL MIZE
DECE M B E R
JAMES, MEET EMMA
FR 1 START MAKING SENSE
(TALKING HEADS TRIBUTE) 8P
EMMA JAMES DUARTE-CLEMENTS (who is going through the process of legally changing her name) is a veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, a police officer and a bisexual trans woman. She started her transition in May 2016 at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Durham, North Carolina.
8
12
24
PRODUCTION Graphic Designers ALEX ELDRIDGE designer@yesweekly.com AUSTIN KINDLEY artdirector@yesweekly.com ADVERTISING Regional Sales Mng. KATHARINE OSBORNE
kat@yesweekly.com Marketing BRAD MCCAULEY brad@yesweekly.com TRAVIS WAGEMAN travis@yesweekly.com Promotion NATALIE GARCIA
DISTRIBUTION JANICE GANTT JENNIFER RICKERT WILLIAM HEDRICK We at YES! Weekly realize that the interest of our readers goes well beyond the boundaries of the Piedmont Triad. Therefore we are dedicated to informing and entertaining with thought-provoking, debate-spurring, in-depth investigative news stories and features of local, national and international scope, and opinion grounded in reason, as well as providing the most comprehensive entertainment and arts coverage in the Triad. YES! Weekly welcomes submissions of all kinds. Efforts will be made to return those with a self-addressed stamped envelope; however YES! Weekly assumes no responsibility for unsolicited submissions. YES! Weekly is published every Wednesday by Womack Newspapers, Inc. No portion may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. First copy is free, all additional copies are $1.00. Copyright 2017 Womack Newspapers, Inc.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
8
TRADE STREET DINER is comfy and inviting as a diner should be. But you won’t see retro vinyl stools or booths. One of the first things you’ll notice on the far wall is a chalkboard with the day’s specials. 10 In a recent phone interview, I asked Hip-Hop legend Darryl “DMC” McDaniels how it feels to be Back from the Dead, the title of his first solo album in over a decade. “Really, really, really great,” he said with the enthusiasm of a man who’s not been asked that a thousand times. 11 ALAN J. VAN DYKE, a 2006 graduate of the UNCSA School of Filmmaking, has been selected for the Sundance Institute’s fourth annual Episodic Lab. Van Dyke’s The Wasteland Survival Handbook is among 10 original independent pilots so honored by the Sundance Institute... 12 Fans of Ringo might very well be fans of The Ringos, the Greensboro-based duo who have a peculiar and crazed fab-fourobsessed iconography. THE RINGOS are not a Beatles tribute band. They are more of an absurdist art-pop project devised to burn off excess creative energy by the two
members, who also happen to work most of the time in a recording studio. 18 ...raves and riches will likely be withheld from the new version of MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS. Certainly, Kenneth Branagh deserves credit for bringing this venerable novel to the modern screen, if for no other reason than to provide a viewing option for audiences not interested in Marvel or Madea... 24 Former NFL wide receiver and astronaut LELAND MELVIN became an internet sensation in February, when a photo of him with his dogs, Jake and Scout, went viral. So expect a crowd at 4 p.m., Nov. 18, when Melvin speaks at the Greensboro Coliseum Special Events Center, located at 1921 W. Gate City Blvd. 25 THE BIG HAIR BALL has become one of the premier social events in Greensboro and has been presented annually since 2012. The event on Nov. 8 was a chance for event organizers and sponsors to get together, socialize and discuss what is on the agenda for the 2018 extravaganza to be presented in January.
SA 2 KIX W/ THE FIFTH 7P SU 3 NETWORKING SOCIAL 2017 TH 7 WHO’S HAT IS THIS?
(MEMBERS OF TEDESCHI TRUCKS) 7P
FR 8 OLD HABITS
W/ OLD MAN WHICHUTT 8P
SA 9 WQDR’S CHRISTMAS WISH
W/GRANGER SMITH & BROOKE EDEN
SU 10 SHOOTER JENNINGS & JASON BOLAND 7P TU 12 JAKE BUGG W/ KATE RHUDY 7P WE 13 CHATHAM COUNTY LINE ELECTRIC FR 15 BAND TOGETHER HOLIDAY BASH W/ THE CONNELLS SA 16 SU 17 FR 22 SA 23 FR 29
SURRENDER HUMAN & SPACE MULLET 7P
YARN & THE DUNE DOGS 7P ASHEVILLE HOLIDAY HANG 7P LIQUID PLEASURE 8P SMELL THE GLOVE 9:30P BIG SOMETHING W/ TRAVERS BROTHERSHIP
SA 30 BIG SOMETHING W/ URBAN SOIL SU 31 BIG SOMETHING W/ DR. BACON CO M I N G S O O N
1/5 BIG RIVER BAND 7P 1/12-13 ZOSO (LED ZEPPELIN TRIBUTE) 1/14 COLLIE BUDDZ W/ THE HOLDUP 1/19 THE BREAKFAST CLUB 8P 1/20 BOULEVARDS W/KOOLEY HIGH/ 1/26-27
1/29 2/2 2/3 2/8 2/10 2/11 2/17 2/18 2/23 2/25 2/28
LONNIE WALKER/ZENSOFLY
AMERICAN AQUARIUM 8P BROCKHAMPTON KELLER WILLIAMS 8P PERPETUAL GROOVE 8P AJR: THE CLICK TOUR FAR TOO JONES 7P SLEIGH BELLS 7:30P WHO’S BAD
(MICHAEL JACKSON TRIBUTE) 7:30P Y&T 7P EMANCIPATOR ENSEMBLE 8P ERIC JOHNSON W/ARIELLE 7P RAILROAD EARTH 7P
ADV. TICKETS @ LINCOLNTHEATRE.COM & SCHOOLKIDS RECORDS ALL SHOWS ALL AGES
126 E. Cabarrus St.• 919-821-4111 www.lincolntheatre.com NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
5
EVENTS YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS | BY AUSTIN KINDLEY
be there JIM MALCOLM FRIDAY THUR 16
LELAND MELVIN SATURDAY FRI 17
8TH ANNUAL TASTE OF THE SOUTH
CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY
WHAT: Join Authoring Action for the 8th Annual Taste of the South to fund the need for our state-renowned Just Us program. The evening includes live music by Karon Click and the Hot Licks, southern cuisine, local North Carolina wines and brews, silent auction, and raffle. WHEN: 6 p.m. WHERE: Womble Carlyle Gallery at the Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts. 251 N. Spruce Street, Winston-Salem. MORE: $60 tickets.
WHAT: The North Carolina Theatre for Young People at UNCG’s School of Theatre presents Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Directed by Todd Siff. Charlie is one of five kids who win a chance to tour Willy Wonka’s mysterious candy-making operation. While the other children are never satisfied with what they have, Charlie is grateful and amazed by the experience. WHEN: 12 p.m. WHERE: Taylor Theatre. 406 Tate Street, Greensboro. MORE: $8-18 tickets.
6 YES! WEEKLY
FRI 17
SAT 18
JIM MALCOLM
SAT 18
TASTE CAROLINA GOURMET FOOD TOUR
WHAT: Jim Malcolm is the ultimate Scots troubadour. Traveling the world with his guitar, harmonicas, and engaging wit, he sings the traditional songs of Scotland and his own masterfully crafted songs in a style which is modern and accessible, yet utterly authentic. He is highly regarded as an interpreter of the songs of Robert Burns, and has been described as one of the finest singers in Scotland in any style. WHEN: 8 p.m. WHERE: Muddy Creek Music Hall. 5455 Bethania Road, Winston-Salem. MORE: $16-18 tickets.
LELAND MELVIN WHAT: The Greensboro Public Library welcomes astronaut and former NFL wide receiver Leland Melvin at the Greensboro Coliseum Special Events Center. Leland is the only person drafted into the National Football League to have flown in space. This visit is part of One City, One Book, sponsored by the Greensboro Public Library and community partners, which encourages the entire community to read one book. WHEN: 4 p.m. WHERE: Greensboro Coliseum Special Events Center. 1921 W. Gate City Blvd, Greensboro. MORE: Free entry.
WHAT: Theaters, parks, galleries and restaurants line the historic Elm Street area in downtown Greensboro. On this guided tour of the revitalized downtown, modern culture and incredible food intertwine with over 200 years of history. Youll talk with chefs and owners who are partnering with nearby small farms to offer fresh, innovative, and eclectic cuisine. WHEN: 2 p.m. WHERE: Greensboro Marriott Downtown. 301 N. Greene St., Greensboro. MORE: $55 tickets.
More miles. With the safety you expect.
Count on us to keep you on the go with our expert service and the long-lasting value of MICHELIN® tires.
THE NEW MICHELIN DEFENDER TIRE. ®
®
STOP IN TODAY!
Life never stops moving. So take on every mile – and be there for every moment – with Michelin’s longest-lasting tire. *
*
Based on commissioned third-party wear test results in tire size 225/55R17 97H vs. Goodyear Assurance TripleTred All-Season and Continental TrueContact tires in size 225/55R17 97H, and Pirelli P4 Four Seasons+ tire in size 225/55R17 97T, on a 2016 Chevrolet Malibu; and in tire size 205/55R16 91H vs. Bridgestone Turanza Serenity Plus tire in size 205/55R16 91H on a 2015 Honda Civic. Actual on-road results may vary. Copyright © 2017 Michelin North America, Inc. All rights reserved. The Michelin Man is a registered trademark owned by Michelin North America, Inc. ®
®
™
®
™
®
™
®
™
TAYLOR'S DISCOUNT TIRE 336-375-8883 2100 E. CONE BLVD, GREENSBORO, NC WWW.TAYLORSDISCOUNTTIRE.COM
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
[BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT] CANDIT
BY JESSICA CLIFFORD Candit, a family owned salsa company, began when a few coworkers fell in love with Shanna Withers’s homemade salsa. Originally, Withers was against selling her salsa because for her, making it was more of a hobby than a job. She soon agreed to the idea and started growing more vegetables. She then began selling her homemade salsa in early spring of 2016. All the vegetables in the salsa are homegrown and organic. If more vegetables are needed then they are purchased from Wetmore Farms in Woodleaf, North Carolina. “I believe in all-natural, non-GMO ingredients and definitely anti-pesticides,” Withers said. The name Candit came about as a play on words. “It kind of comes from ‘I canned it,’ like I canned something, but then it’s also candit as in bandit, as in we steal your tastebuds,” Withers said. “It was short and kind of sweet and we didn’t want anything long or complicated.” Withers first made two flavors —mild and hot— but people started asking for
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
more various flavors. Her husband, Blake, insisted on pineapple salsa, while her son, Nolan, suggested lime salsa after the family was eating lime-flavored chips. “He came up with it completely by himself,” Withers said, referring to her son’s suggestion. “Actually, it is really popular, everybody loves the lime.” Now, Candit offers five kinds of salsa including mild, medium, hot, pineapple and lime. However, Withers is open to expand their selection. Two flavors the family has been wanting to make are tropical or mango-flavored salsa. “I’m always open to custom orders,” Withers said. Each jar costs $7, or three can be bought at $20. However, Withers usually advertises special deals on her Facebook page. Withers mails only one jar at a time, but she can delivers most salsa orders. Candit will have a website soon, but for now all orders can be purchased through Facebook messenger, @canditbyshanna or over Withers’ email at canditbyshanna@gmail.com. !
NEXT HOME GAME Friday Nov. 24th 2PM
TEAM POSTER GIVEAWAY
VS. TO PURCHASE TICKETS CALL 336-907-3600
Marcus Paige
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
7
triad foodies 101 West Fifth Street WSNC 27101 336.723.3700 Tickets Sold on ETIX & Local 27101
11/22, 24-25
Thanksgathering 3 Day Pass $25 PERFORMERS: Eric Gales Band Marvelous Funkshun Big Daddy Love Dr. Bacon Time Sawyer Mood Cultivation Project Urban Soil Shane Pruitt RKIII Elusive Groove The Freeway Revival Twisted River Junction Travis Griggs and Friends 3 Pc & and a Biscuit Stab Rabbit Funk Mob Wyndy Trail Travelers DOCO
8 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
EAT IT!
A taste of Trade Street Diner
W
instonSalem’s food scene just keeps on growing. The owners of Sweet Potatoes relocated down the street. Right after their move, chef and Kristi Maier restauranteur, Freddy @triadfoodies Lee and his business partner, Chef John Tharpe, set their Contributor sights on the 529 N. Trade Street address. It was small but pretty much ready to go, with new paint and decor. Though the eatery has a hint of its predecessor, the space is fresh and gleaming for its new journey. It is comfy and inviting as a diner should be. But you won’t see retro vinyl stools or booths. One of the first things you’ll notice on the far wall is a chalkboard with the day’s specials. There’s a T.V. at the bar to add to the casual vibe. We asked the server if she could tell the team in the kitchen to “surprise” us. Although we did insist that one of the “surprises” be macaroni and cheese and the other be chicken skins and tuna tartare because that just sounded too awesome. Everything else was totally up to the kitchen (my kids have to eat). Here’s how those surprises rack up. We started out with some appetizers and shareable snacks. Hushpuppies with Honey Mascarpone These puppies were fluffy and light. Almost doughnut-like with a light and creamy drizzle. You get a bunch of them too, so plan to share. Tuna and Crispy Chicken Skin My little boy calls the skin on fried chicken the good part. It couldn’t be more accurate, in my opinion. When I see fried chicken skins on a menu, I almost always order it, so this evening was no different. The menu name is pretty self-explanatory: fried chicken skins, quite airy, used almost like wontons to scoop up the bright and fresh tuna tartare that’s been dressed with radishes and a lemony vinaigrette. I’d definitely hit up Trade Street Diner just to eat this again. Macaroni and Cheese This dish is listed under the Snack &
Tuna and Crispy Chicken Skin
Macaroni and Cheese
Share portion of the menu, along with the hushpuppies and a few other tempting options, such as pickled beets and fried okra. Think of this section as your extra a la carte side options. You get a generous size macaroni with a great, caramelized and cheesy top. You know what I’m talking about. Fortunately, between the chicken skins and the macaroni and cheese, we had a complete meal for the little ones.
Fried Catfish with Dirty Rice, Mustard Greens and Cajun Remoulade My mother-in-law had hoped this dish would be one of the surprises, and she was elated when it arrived. The catfish was fried to a crisp and arrived piping hot. The skin did a pretty great job hanging on to the meat, and I think that’s important. The dirty rice was laced with sausage and seasonings, which was really tasty. The remoulade definitely belongs with the catfish; it was a great condiment to dip the fish in to get a kick of the spice.
Roasted Pork & Crispy Head with Creamy Green Beans, Brown Butter Apple Glaze How do I explain this dish? The roasted pork was quite straightforward, perfectly roasted and cooked medium. The toasty flavor of the brown butter really came through in the apple glaze. It added an extraordinary component to the sauce. I actually feel inspired by the glaze for future applesauce or apple dish. Crispy Head? Lee told me, “It’s a slow-cooked pig’s head. Then we take all the meat out of it and fry it into a croquette.”
Roasted Chicken with Whipped Potatoes, Local Vegetables, Chicken Jus The roast chicken is probably the most “diner-like” dish that we tried. This was by far the little boy’s favorite. He ate more than any of us. It’s also one of the best chicken dishes I’ve had at a restaurant (besides fried chicken and hot chicken, of course).
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
Roasted Pork & Crispy Head
Fried Catfish
Roasted Chicken
Pecan Pie
Crispy Salmon with Mushroom Puree, Pickled Mushroom Salad, Butter Braised Cabbage and Truffle Sauce This salmon was by far…by far the best salmon I’ve ever had. Now, if I’m being honest, I don’t order it often at all. I prefer rare salmon, sushi style. Smoke salmon, brunch style. I’m almost always disappointed by restaurant salmon, and that is troubling because salmon is so good for us. Trade Street Diner’s salmon had a crispy exterior and was just sumptuous and lovely. What set the dish apart, Lee told us, was the truffle sauce, which was cooked in and dressed again. The salmon was placed on a mushroom puree and
topped with a pickled mushroom salad. The salad just added to the uniqueness of the dish. The flavor, for me, was just wow. It was truly the winner of the table.
to the back, I was surprised to see that neither Lee nor Tharpe were chef-ing in the kitchen. Instead they left a Saturday night in the hands of what appears to be a very capable culinary team. Applause to that. One thing you should know going in to Trade Street Diner…it’s a diner, but mostly in name only. How many diners do you know that blend their burger meat with brisket? If you’re looking for something a bit on the chef-inspired side, you might look at the Braised Beef Shin or the Swordfish. There’s a small selection of salads as well. There’s a diner house salad with the usual suspects, but I’m curious about the pickled beet and
goat cheese salad with butterbeans and crispy ham. Diners wanting to have a cocktail will not be disappointed in the craft cocktail menu or beer and wine list. The doors are open for the ever-growing lunch crowd downtown and is sure to be a popular brunch spot. Despite such an interesting menu that feels like a departure for such an establishment, It still has the inviting feel that you might expect from a diner. And you get pie. !
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
Pecan Pie I mean, it’s a diner after all, and you must expect pie. House-made pecan pie, it doesn’t get any better. Pecan pie can be cloyingly sweet, but the filling was nicely rounded out, and the pecans were crunchy and caramelized, which offset the sweet. A little a la mode never hurt anyone. We were impressed by the menu and all the dishes that came out. When I went
KRISTI MAIER is a food writer, blogger and cheerleader for all things local who even enjoys cooking in her kitchen, though her kidlets seldom appreciate her efforts.
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
9
visions
SEE IT!
Talking to rapper DMC about coming ‘Back from the Dead’
I
n a recent phone interview, I asked Hip-Hop legend Darryl “DMC” McDaniels how it feels to be Back from the Dead, the title of his first solo album in over a decade. Ian McDowell “Really, really, really great,” he said with Contributing the enthusiasm of a man who’s not columnist been asked that a thousand times. “I’m sober, alive and don’t want to kill myself.” He also said he didn’t even remember recording Checks Thugs and Rock n Roll, his 2006 solo debut after his 1981-2002 stint in Run-DMC. “I do recall being in Japan promoting it, but only the first day, because I was still drinking.” DMC had been struggling with alcoholism since 1997 when he began suffering from depression and felt his voice giving out. He was later diagnosed with spasmodic dysphonia, a vocal disorder he believes was caused by the way he shouted out his lyrics, compounded with years of heavy drinking. There was a rift with his partners in Run-DMC due to his desire to adopt a slower and softer style, both because of his admiration for the Beatles, Bob Dylan and Harry Chapin, and to be less stressful on his vocal chords. Even before Jason Mizell, the Run-DMC DJ known as Jam Master Jay, was murdered in 2002, friction between
McDaniels and Joseph “Run” Simmons was dissolving the partnership. He still hadn’t crawled back up from the darkness when he recorded the 2006 album. That negativity is one reason why he calls it a disappointment even though it included vocals by Sarah McLachlan, whose 1997 “Angel” he credited with saving his life during a bout of suicidal depression. “Only nine people bought it, so it’s technically not a failure,” he said with a hearty laugh. On the first and only sober day of
Want to be active & improve your game during the Holiday Break?
Our CP3 Basketball Academy Christmas camp is a great way for kids to the learn the game of basketball.
Christmas Camp
DeCemBer 27-29 | 9am-12pm CP3 Christmas Camp will increase each athlete’s skill set and focus on the fundamentals of the game through skill development and competitive games.
10 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
check us out!
@cp3basketballacademy
www.cp3basketballacademy.com Call 336-448-449 for ticket information!
that 2006 promo tour, he said a journalist asked him if there was anything he would have done differently. His answer? “Made a happier record.” Back from the Dead! is that, but he said it took decades to get there. “I sometimes thought Run-DMC should have ended after Raising Hell [the 1986 album that Public Enemy’s Chuck D called the greatest HipHop record of all time]. I was just looking at the history of Cream, one of my favorite bands. They only had three great albums. Lots of people only had three.” The reference may surprise those who don’t know of DMC’s love for Classic Rock. “Classic doesn’t mean old,” he said. “It means better than anything that came after.” He also loves folk rock and includes Tom Petty, Jim Croce and Harry Chapin alongside Public Enemy’s Chuck D in his pantheon of musical heroes. DMC’s Back From the Dead! The Legend Lives! (Brookvale Records) will debut as a four-track EP on Record Store Day Presents Black Friday, Nov. 24. One highlight is “Rhino,” featuring Chuck D and the Canadian Metal band Slaves On Dope. The other tracks feature John Moyer from Disturbed, Roman Ramirez from Sublime with Rome, and Myles Kennedy from Alter Bridge and Slash’s backing band. DMC describes “Rhino” as a departure from his previous work with Chuck D. “Chuck and I had free-styled and collaborated on hip-hop projects in the past, but
‘Rhino’ brings us together in a new way,” he said. “I’m always excited to combine hip-hop and rock and this captures that in-your-face stance I admire in both genres.” He said that he’s wanted to work with Chuck D on a rock project, having been a big admirer of D’s collaboration with Anthrax on “Bring The Noise.” Not surprisingly for the man who founded the publishing imprint, Darryl Makes Comics; the vinyl-only limited edition EP features a cover by award-winning artist Tony Moore of The Walking Dead, the source comic for the AMC TV series. Finding that image took awhile, despite DMC owning it the whole time. “I was trying to find a great cover, and nothing was working,” he said, “and all of sudden a light goes on.” Two years earlier at Kansas City Comic Con, Tony Moore had a booth next to DMC. At the end of the convention, the artist handed him an envelope. Inside was a picture of DMC as a zombie. This represents the kind of cross-over he loves. “Comic book fans that don’t like rap will want Back from the Dead because of the cover, while rap fans not into comics will still think it’s a dope image. Bringing people together is what I’ve always done with my music.” ! IAN MCDOWELL is the author of two published novels, numerous anthologized short stories, and a whole lot of nonfiction and journalism, some of which he’s proud of and none of which he’s ashamed of.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
Ground-breaking comedy ‘The Graduate’ gets first-rate tribute
Mark Burger
Contributing columnist
SEDUCED BY MRS. ROBINSON: How The Graduate Became the Touchstone of a Generation by Beverly Gray. Published by Algonquin Books. 304 pages. $24.95 retail. Don’t look now, but that cinematic paragon of the generation gap, The Graduate, turns 50 years old this year.
Elements of the film, including Simon and Garfunkel’s soundtrack, have become so ingrained in the lexicon of popular culture that many may not realize just how profound its impact was. At the time of its release, The Graduate was as cutting-edge as American comedies got – and it spoke deeply to the ‘60s generation. Author Beverly Gray, who previously documented her adventures in the screen trade as Roger Corman’s story editor in the fabulous Roger Corman: An Unauthorized Biography of the Godfather of Indie Filmmaking, brings her own keen insight into the making of the independently
UNCSA graduate scores Sundance fellowship Alan J. Van Dyke, a 2006 graduate of the UNCSA School of Filmmaking, has been selected for the Sundance Institute’s fourth annual Episodic Lab. Van Dyke’s The Wasteland Survival Handbook is among 10 original independent pilots so honored by the Sundance Institute, the largest independent film festival in the United States. The Wasteland Survival Handbook is a futuristic science-fiction farce set five generations after a global apocalypse, in which a scheming high-school teacher and an ill-tempered cannibal queen decide to team up in a battle for survival. Recipients of the fellowship will enjoy ongoing support from the festival’s programming staff, creative advisers, and industry mentors. They will develop their series’ and pilot scripts through a series of individual and group creative sessions, screenings and pitch sessions, guided by professional show-runners, producers, and industry executives. “It does not get any better than this for an emerging artist who is interested in writing for television,” said Susan Ruskin, the dean of the School of Filmmaking. “Sundance is the foremost organization dedicated to supporting independent film and television projects. Alan will be WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
advised and mentored by a stellar group of industry professionals. The experience will be of tremendous benefit to his work and his career.” A native of Shelby, North Carolina, Van Dyke was previously selected for the Nickelodeon Writing Program in 2014 and has penned several episodes of Nickelodeon’s award-winning, animated comedy series The Loud House, which in inspired by series creator Chris Savino’s childhood growing up in a large family. While a student at the School of Filmmaking, Van Dyke wrote the student short films The People in Andy (2004), There’s This Guy (also ‘04), Raccoon (2005) and Rain, Rain (2006). He also made his directorial debut with The People in Andy. “With the recent and ongoing growth of the episodic format, there are immense opportunities for emerging storytellers,” said Michelle Satter, the founding director for the Sundance Institute’s Feature Film Program. “With this program, we identify new and diverse voices, offering them unparalleled and sustained access to customized creative and industry support.” For information about all the goings-on at UNCSA, visit the official website: www. uncsa.edu. !
financed film version of Charles Webb’s novel, as well as an unvarnished enthusiasm for the film. Seduced by Mrs. Robinson is about the people who made The Graduate and the people who were directly impacted by it. Lest one forget, the film remains emblematic of its time, cruising into iconic status almost instantaneously. The Graduate was the highest-grossing comedy of the 1960s, earned seven Oscar nominations (winning only for Mike Nichols as Best Director), propelled Dustin Hoffman to instant stardom, and more. Although Gray offers a thorough and illuminating discourse on the film’s themes, production and legacy, it’s never long-winded or heavy-handed. On the contrary, Seduced by Mrs. Robinson is consistently entertaining, effortlessly engaging, and altogether satisfying as the first and last word on a film that remains, as the subtitle indicates, a touchstone for a generation. Author Beverly Gray’s official website is www.beverlygray.com/. The official website for Algonquin Books is www. algonquin.com/. !
See MARK BURGER’s reviews of current movies on Burgervideo.com. © 2017, Mark Burger.
D L O C E H T T A E B
, T SOUPS WITH HOR HOT SAKE! ,O HOT TEA
WALK-IN OR MAKE RESERVATIONS TODAY! 329 TATE STREET • 336.274.6684
LUNCH: MON-FRI 11:30 AM - 2:30 PM • DINNER: SAT 5-10:30 PM
CHECK OUT OUR NEW WEBSITE!
SUSH I REPUBLICGSO.COM
FOLLOW US ON
UNDER ‘SUSHI REPUBLIC’
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
11
tunes
HEAR IT!
The Ringos channel their inner Ringo
W
ho’s your favorite Beatle? That was a question that used to reveal something about your personality. It was the Rorschach test of pop fandom, 50 years ago. Paul John Adamian was the tuneful @johnradamian dreamboat. George was the earnest, spiritual one. John Contributor was the vulnerable poet. And Ringo, well, he was the comic relief—sort of the Yogi Berra of rock music, a loveable Basset hound of a guy. Fans of Ringo were those who didn’t go in for self-seriousness, or for bombast. Fans of Ringo might very well be fans of The Ringos, the Greensborobased duo who have a peculiar and crazed fab-four-obsessed iconography. The Ringos are not a Beatles tribute band. They are more of an absurdist art-pop project devised to burn off excess creative energy by the two members, who also happen to work most of the time in a recording studio. The Ringos play On Pop of the World studios in Greensboro on Nov. 17 and Monstercade in Winston-Salem on Nov. 18. Randy Seals and Matt Goshow both work at On Pop of the World studios, a recording studio and performance space that also serves as the headquarters of an ultra-prolific and promiscuous musical collective with tendrils reaching in different directions. Both Seals and Goshow are founding members of Dildo Of God (sometimes known simply as D.O.G.), a sprawling hip-hop, noise-rock enterprise. They have another side-side band called Pencil Fight. Each has solo projects and other collaborative ventures. Logging hours behind the mixing board, helping get the right drum sound or coax a good vocal take from artists recording there, Seals and Goshow would routinely feel both depleted and energized. Both Seals, 49, and Goshow, 27, are drummers, hence the name The Ringos. “The Ringos started as a project because Matt and I were recording 100 hours a week, and after work, we were like, ‘We have to record something just to get anything of ours out,’” Seals said. “But we were pretty burnt. And there was only one rule: you can do anything you want.” The combination of overextended deliri-
12 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
ousness and complete creative freedom meant that the duo could egg each other on, by taking snippets of old riffs they’d been working on for years. Or hatching new ideas on the spot, layering them with psychedelic keyboards, blankets of vocal takes deranged by studio effects and pitch adjustment and disjointed drum grooves. It’s stream-of-consciousness music-making. Add to that the fever dream of conspiracy theories (“I buried Paul!”, “Billy Shears!”) and music-nerd minutia associated with the Beatles and you get a fertile bed of possibilities. The Ringos released their first record, aptly called The Real McCartneys, last year. On its cover, the iconic Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band album art, with its packed gallery of famous faces, is photoshopped so that every face becomes that of Ringo Starr as
if the familiar imagery had run through a funhouse mirror. Or else as if the cover had turned into a warped mandala. They took something that was already fairly trippy and made it a little trippier. The record starts with “Un-American Satanism,” a song that — if you’re looking for Beatles comparisons — might be said to sound a little like “Baby, You’re a Rich Man.” With a mid-tempo beat and gently rising and falling piano line and subsonic slowed-down vocal scraps, the song has some stitched-together lyrical details about reptiles, widows, pyramids and shape-shifting. As it turns out, Seals and Goshow reverse-engineered some of the words by watching a conspiracy-theory video on YouTube involving a Katy Perry song, highly processed vocals and inferences involving the Illuminati and other bits of pop-culture paranoia.
“It’s like Steely Dan for Ween fans,” Seals said. Imagine fans of bands like Bongwater and the Butthole Surfers engaged in a sort of musical version of the Da Vinci Code, and you get some idea of the giddy layers of allusion, reference and sleight of hand. “There is a probably a thinly veiled joky second meaning to every song,” Seals said of some of the musical breadcrumbs dusted throughout the recording. You can, for instance, hear a connection to “A Day in the Life,” with its famous woke-up-got-out-of-bed beginning, on “The Countdown,” which starts with the line “I awoke.” And there are whiffs of “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!,” with its lurching circus-music feel, on “Spongecake Submarine.” “It’s like they’re all riddles,” Goshow said. If a listener gets tired of teasing out the Beatles references, there are ways that The Ringos conjure much more recent musical iconoclasts. The stilted vocal delivery and forcefully stiff feel on certain songs can bring to mind Wall of Voodoo, while the dystopian atmosphere bears a connection to the Holy Sons, and the foggy cabaret hip-hop element suggests a kinship with idiosyncratic artists like Gonjasufi. When they’re in their nerdchic, post-punk, piano-pop zone, The Ringos can even warrant a comparison to the mightily successful malcontents of Twenty One Pilots. Goshow and Seals may have intended The Ringos as a one-off goof, but they’ve breathed enough life into the project that it’s started to lurch and kick on its own. The duo will be playing a string of shows taking them to Austin, Texas, and Brooklyn, New York. At first, The Ringos weren’t entirely sure how to execute their songs live, but prerecorded tracks allowed at maximum theatricality. “We dress up a lot,” Seals said. “It’s super weird.” ! JOHN ADAMIAN lives in Winston-Salem, and his writing has appeared in Wired, The Believer, Relix, Arthur, Modern Farmer, the Hartford Courant and numerous other publications.
WANNA
go?
See the Ringos at On Pop of the World Studios in Greensboro on Friday, Nov. 17 and at Monstercade, 204 W. Acadia Ave., Winston-Salem, on Saturday, Nov. 18.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
get s t e k c ti now
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
13
Submissions should be sent to artdirector@yesweekly.com by Friday at 5 p.m., prior to the week’s publication. Visit yesweekly.com and click on calendar to list your event online. home grown muSic Scene | compiled by Austin Kindley
ASHEBORO
FOUR SAINTS BREWING
218 South Fayetteville St. | 336.610.3722 foursaintsbrewing.com Nov 18: Olivia Rudeen Nov 22: AB Hill Nov 25: High Cotton Dec 1: Wolfie Calhoun Dec 2: Matt Walsh Dec 8: RD & Co.
clEmmOnS
VILLAGE SQUARE TAP HOUSE
6000 Meadowbrook Mall Ct | 336.448.5330 Nov 17: Whiskey Mic Nov 18: Jukebox Revolver Dec 1: Whiskey mic
dAnBuRy
GREEN HERON ALE HOUSE 1110 Flinchum Rd | 336.593.4733 greenheronclub.com Dec 16: Jim Avett
gREEnSBORO
ARIzONA PETE’S
2900 Patterson St #A | 336.632.9889 arizonapetes.com Nov 17: 1-2-3 Friday Nov 26: Fit For A King & In Hearts Wake, Like Moths to Flames, Phinehas Nov 27: Hatebreed, Dying Fetus, Code Orange, Twitching Tongues Dec 3: Cannibal Corpse, Power Trip, Gatecreeper
ARTISTIKA NIGHT CLUB 523 S Elm St | 336.271.2686 artistikanightclub.com Nov 17: DJ Dan the Player Nov 18: DJ Paco and DJ Dan the Player
BARN DINNER THEATRE 120 Stage Coach Tr. | 336.292.2211
BEERTHIRTY
505 N. Greene St Nov 17: Tom Warren Nov 24: Leather and Lace Dec 1: Brittany Davis Dec 8: Leather and Lace
BIG PURPLE
812 Olive St. | 336.302.3728 Nov 24: Wyatt Espalin
THE BLIND TIGER
1819 Spring Garden St | 336.272.9888 theblindtiger.com Nov 15: The Billyfolks w/ Giant Red Panda Nov 18: mewithoutYou, Pianos Become The Teeth Nov 21: UNCG Sapphires Fall 2017 Concert Nov 22: Dr. Bacon, Travers Brothership, Arson Daily Nov 24: Ne Obliviscaris, Allegaeon Nov 26: Ghostemane, Chxpo, Nedarb, Wavy Jone$, Cedric James Dec 1: Aaron West And The Roaring Twenties, Steady Hands, Chase Huglin, Norwegian Arms Dec 8: Suicide Silence, Upon a Burning Body, Slaughter To Prevail, Prison, Discoveries Dec 12: Wage War, Oceans Ate Alaska, Gideon, Loathe, Varials
BUCKHEAD SALOON
1720 Battleground Ave | 336.272.9884 buckheadsaloongreensboro.com
CHURCHILL’S ON ELM
213 S Elm St | 336.275.6367 churchillscigarlounge.com Nov 18: Jack Long Old School Jam
THE CORNER BAR
1700 Spring Garden St | 336.272.5559 corner-bar.com Nov 16: Live Thursdays
COMEDY zONE
1126 S Holden Rd | 336.333.1034 thecomedyzone.com Nov 17: The Tennessee Tramp (Janet Williams) Nov 18: The Tennessee Tramp (Janet Williams) Nov 24: Darren DS Sanders Nov 25: Darren DS Sanders Dec 1: Chris Wiles - Home For The Holidays - A Toys For Tots Event Dec 2: Chris Wiles - Home For The Holidays - A Toys For Tots Event Dec 8: Julie Scoggins Dec 9: Julie Scoggins Dec 15: B.T. Dec 16: B.T.
COMMON GROUNDS 11602 S Elm Ave | 336.698.3888 Jan 19: Swingin’ Hammers
CONE DENIM
117 S Elm St | 336.378.9646 cdecgreensboro.com Nov 17: Parmalee Nov 29: Clutch Dec 9: Smith & Myers from Shinedown
HAM’S GATE CITY
3017 Gate City Blvd | 336.851.4800 hamsrestaurants.com Nov 17: Tre King Band Nov 24: Sahara
HAM’S NEW GARDEN
1635 New Garden Rd | 336.288.4544 hamsrestaurants.com Nov 17: Mean Gene Nov 24: J. Timber/Joel Henry
SOMEWHERE ELSE TAVERN
5713 W Friendly Ave | 336.292.5464 facebook.com/thesomewhereelsetavern Nov 18: Big Dirty Ride Nov 25: Murder Maiden
SPEAKEASY TAVERN
1706 Battleground Ave | 336.378.0006
THE IDIOT BOx COMEDY CLUB
2134 Lawndale Dr | 336.274.2699 www.idiotboxers.com Nov 17: Ultimate Comic Challenge x
HigH pOint
AFTER HOURS TAVERN 1614 N Main St | 336.883.4113 afterhourstavern.net Nov 17: Karaoke - DJ Dance
HAM’S PALLADIUM 5840 Samet Dr | 336.887.2434 hamsrestaurants.com Nov 17: Brothers Pearl Nov 18: Disco Lemonade Nov 24: The Plaids
NOW SELLING CBD! 7 LOCATIONS 7 DAYS A WEEK
PeaceOutVapes.com 14 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
Come see us for all your electronic vaping needs!
www.yEswEEkly.cOMw
jamestown
thE dEck
118 E Main St | 336.207.1999 thedeckatrivertwist.com Nov 17: Radio Revolver Nov 18: Jody Lee Petty Band Nov 24: the dickens Nov 25: Strereo doll Nov 31: Brothers Pearl
kernersville
daNcE haLL dazE
612 Edgewood St | 336.558.7204 dancehalldaze.com Nov 17: the delmonicos Nov 18: Skyryder Nov 22: colours Nov 24: time Bandits Nov 25: Silverhawk
BREathE cocktaiL LouNgE
221 N Main St. | 336.497.4822 facebook.com/BreatheCocktailLounge Nov 17: Freddie Fred Fridays
lewisville
oLd Nick’S PuB
191 Lowes Foods Dr | 336.747.3059 OldNicksPubNC.com Nov 16: acoustic Music with/Steve carden Nov 17: karaoke w dJ tyler Perkins Nov 24: karaoke w dJ tyler Perkins Nov 25: Southern Eyes Nov 30: acoustic Music tBd
oak ridge
JP LooNEY’S
2213 E Oak Ridge Rd | 336.643.1570 facebook.com/JPLooneys Nov 16: trivia
www.yEswEEkly.cOM
randleman
RidER’S iN thE couNtRY 5701 Randleman Rd | 336.674.5111 ridersinthecountry.net
winston-salem
SEcoNd & gREEN
207 N Green St | 336.631.3143 2ngtavern.com
BuLL’S tavERN
408 West 4th St | 336.331.3431 facebook.com/bulls-tavern
cB’S tavERN
3870 Bethania Station Rd | 336.815.1664
FiNNigaN’S wakE
620 Trade St | 336.723.0322 facebook.com/FinnigansWake
FoothiLLS BREwiNg
638 W 4th St | 336.777.3348 foothillsbrewing.com Nov 15: Bluegrass Sweethearts Nov 18: the Souljam trio Nov 19: Sunday Jazz Nov 22: Never too Late Nov 24: cooper alan Nov 25: violet Ball Nov 26: Sunday Jazz Nov 29: greg wilson and Second wind dec 2: the Jangling Sparrows dec 3: Sunday Jazz
JohNNY & JuNE’S SaLooN
MuddY cREEk caFE
2105 Peters Creek Pkwy | 336.724.0546 johnnynjunes.com Nov 18: the honky tonk outlaws dec 1: tracy Lawrence dec 2: outshyne
Mac & NELLi’S
4926 Country Club Rd | 336.529.6230 macandnellisws.com
MiLLENNiuM cENtER
101 West 5th Street | 336.723.3700 MCenterevents.com Nov 22: thanksgathering w/ Eric gales Band, Marvelous Funkshun, Big daddy Love, dr. Bacon, time Sawyer, Mood cultivation Project, urban Soil, Shane Pruitt, Rkiii, Elusive groove, the Freeway Revival, twisted River Junction, travis griggs and Friends, 3 Pc & and a Biscuit, Stab Rabbit, Funk Mob, wyndy trail travelers, and doco
MiLNER’S
630 S Stratford Rd | 336.768.2221 milnerfood.com Nov 19: Live Jazz Nov 26: Live Jazz
5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 Nov 16: open Mic w/ country dan collins Nov 18: carson Mac
MuddY cREEk MuSic haLL
5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 Nov 16: antigone Rising Nov 18: dark water Rising Nov 19: dom Flemmons Nov 25: Big Ron hunter Nov 30: corin Raymond and Jonathan Byrd, the Pickup cowboy
thE quiEt PiNt
1420 W 1st St | 336.893.6881 thequietpint.com
tEE tiME SPoRtS & SPiRitS 3040 Healy Dr | 336.760.4010
viLLagE tavERN
2000 Griffith Rd | 336.760.8686 villagetavern.com
BRING THIS TO EITHER OF OUR NC OR TN STORES AND GET HOOKED UP!
thE gaRagE
110 W 7th St | 336.777.1127 the-garage.ws Nov 15: demon Eye & Lords of Mace Nov 18: irata, Mega colossus, Night Sweats Nov 24: Possum Jenkins’ dec 8: Native harrow & Retro candy
HOOKAHS | WATERPIPES | VAPES E-CIGS | SMOKING ACCESSORIES
Selling the highest quality CBD products in the Triad! WINSTON-SALEM 243 West 4th St Phone: 336-842-5178 805-B Silas Creek Pkwy Phone: 336-722-6393
20% OFF
GREENSBORO
2601 Battleground Ave Phone: 336-282-4477 1827-A Spring Garden St Phone: 336-285-7516
YOUR PURCHASE WITH THIS AD!
Excluding vapes, e-cigs, & tobacco products. Offer good through 12/14/17.
BURLINGTON
550 Huffman Mill Rd Phone: 336-278-9045
Find us on Facebook! www.thehookahhookup.net
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
15
[CONCERTS] Compiled by Alex Eldridge
CHARLOTTE
BOJANGLES COLISEUM
2700 E Independence Blvd | 704.372.3600 www.bojanglescoliseum.com Dec. 5: Backstreet Boys Dec 14: 2017 K-LOVE Christmas Tour
THE FILLMORE
1000 NC Music Factory Blvd | 704.916.8970 www.fillmorecharlottenc.com Nov 15: J.I.D. + Earthgang Nov 16: The Shins Nov 16: Haley Reinhart Nov 17: The Original Wailers Nov 18: Zoso - Tribute to Led Zeppelin Nov 18: Michael Tracy 2/ Moses Jones & Revelry Soul Nov 19: Walk The Moon Nov 21: The Front Bottoms Nov 24: Tremont Music Hall Reunion Nov 24: Keyshia Cole Nov 25: Bear Grillz Nov 25: Seether Nov 26: A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie Nov 28: Bleachers, J Roddy Walson, & The Business Nov 29: X Ambasadors
Nov 30: $uicideboy$ Dec 1: Sonny Digital Dec 3: Lil Pump Dec 4: Waterparks Dec 5: Chevelle Dec 5: H.E.R. Dec 8: Rumours Dec 10: The Revivalists Dec 17: Time Low Dec 22: Snails Dec 30: Hippie Sabotage Dec 31: JJ Grey & Mofro Jan 13: Badfish Jan 20: Rebelution Jan 27: Black Rebel Motorcycle Club Jan 30: NF Jan 31: Killswitch Engage & Anthrax Feb 2: Big Head Todd & The Monsters Feb 8: Excision Feb 10: AJR Feb 10: George Clinton & Parliament 2700 E Independence Blvd | 704.372.3600 www.ovensauditorium.com Nov 16: Brit Floyd Nov 21: Kirk Frankly & Ledisi Dec 8: Fantasia
MEXICAN & SEAFOOD GRILL
NO PASSPORT REQUIRED! Expires 12/15/17
5 OFF $25 purchase!
$
Expires 12/15/17
SAN LUIS III
1503 W Gate City Blvd GREENSBORO 336-851-2158
144 Westchester Dr HIGH POINT 336-882-2155
SAN LUIS II
CASA VALLARTA
4207 Gate City Blvd GREENSBORO 336-617-5508
3915 Battleground Ave GREENSBORO 336-282-7070
WWW.SANLUISRESTAURANT.COM NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
333 E Trade St | 704.688.9000 www.timewarnercablearena.com Nov 16: Jay-Z Nov 28: Dead & Company Dec 2: The Great Xscape Tour Dec 7: Trans-Siberian Orchestra Jan 21: Winter Jam Jan 30: Lana Del Ray Feb 9: Andrea Bocelli Feb 10: Kid Rock
CAROLINA THEATRE
3 OFF $15 purchase!
SAN LUIS
TWC ARENA
DURHAM
$
16 YES! WEEKLY
[Walk The Moon] November 19 - The Fillmore
OVENS AUDITORIUM
309 W Morgan St | 919.560.3030 www.carolinatheatre.org Nov 15: Squeeze Nov 16: Judy Collins Nov 17: The Mavericks Nov 24: The Motown Experience Dec 1: The Lynn Grissett Quintet Dec 2: David Crosby & Friends Dec 3: Robert Earl Keen Dec 6: The Mountain Goats Jan 11: Travis Tritt Jan 25: William Bell, Bobby Rush, & Don Bryant Feb 10: Arlo Guthrie
DPAC
123 Vivian St | 919.680.2787 www.dpacnc.com Nov 18: The O’Jays w/ The Dramatics Nov 25: St. Vincent Nov 26: The Brian Setzer Orchestra Dec 5: 98 Degrees Dec 6: Fantasia Feb 10: Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit
GREENSBORO
CAROLINA THEATRE
310 S Greene St | 336.333.2605 www.carolinatheatre.com Dec 8: Camel City Takeover 2 Dec 10: 4th Annual Holiday Concert Jan 23: Neko Case Feb 1: The Wailin’ Jennys Feb 8: Art Garfunkel
GREENSBORO COLISEUM
1921 W Gate City Blvd | 336.373.7400 www.greensborocoliseum.com Dec 10: Trans-Siberian Orchestra Dec 14: Casting Crowns & for King & Country
HIGH POINT
HIGH POINT THEATRE
220 E Commerce Ave | 336.883.3401 www.highpointtheatre.com Dec 2: The Gibson Brothers Jan 20: John Sebastian & David Grisman Jan 27: American Spiritual Ensemble Feb 1: Golden Gates Feb 3: Kit & the Kats
RALEIGH
PNC ARENA
1400 Edwards Mill Rd | 919.861.2300 www.thepncarena.com Dec 3: Xscape Dec 13: Trans-Siberian Orchestra Dec 31: The Avett Brothers
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
GreensboroColiseum
@GBOColiseum GBOColiseum
Upcoming Events
December 10
Opening Night Tickets $15! Restrictions, exclusions and additional charges may apply. Subject to availability. Excludes premium seats.
GREENSBORO COLISEUM NOV 30 – DEC 3
7:00 PM
DEC 1
DEC 2
DEC 3
7:00 PM
11:00 AM 3:00 PM 7:00 PM
1:00 PM 5:00 PM
DisneyOnIce.com
1700904
43rd Annual
NOV 30
10:30 AM
The Triad’s Thanksgiving Weekend Tradition for 43 Years!
November 24, 25 & 26 Fri. 9-6, Sat. 10-6, Sun. 11-5 Hundreds of Artists & Craftsmen From Across The Nation
July 11
One-Of-A-Kind Gifts For Everyone On Your Holiday List
On Sale Now
Something For Every Style, Taste & Budget For Coupons, Ticket Information And Details, Visit The Web
www.ChristmasClassic.com Enjoy All 3 Days With Your Free Return Pass $8/Adults, $1/Child (6-12)
1921 W. Gate City Blvd • Greensboro, NC 27403
Gilmore Enterprises, Inc. • 336-288-5550
ON SALE NOW
January 27-28
ALSO COMING: www.greensborocoliseum.com
www.yEswEEkly.cOM
1-800-745-3000
Saturday March 24 -
Guilford College Bryan Series presents Leslie Odom Jr. > November 15 Banda MS de Sergio Lizarraga > November 17 Triad Antique & Collectible Toy, Hobby & Sportscard Show > November 18 HAECO Basketball Invitational > December 26-28
Event Hotline: (336) 373-7474 / Group Sales: (336) 373-2632
Safe. Legitimate. Coliseum-Approved. greensborocoliseum/ticketexchange
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017 YES! WEEKLY
17
flicks
A
SCREEN IT!
The Plot Curdles: Lavish murder-mystery derails
BY MATT BRUNSON
lthough Peter Ustinov and David Suchet would repeatedly portray Belgian detective Hercule Poirot on screens both big and small, it was Albert Finney who headlined one of the most popular and enduring of all filmic properties based on an Agatha Christie whodunnit. Released in 1974, Murder on the Orient Express proved to be a potent box-office property, thanks in no small part to an all-star cast that numbered Sean Connery, Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Bacall and Anthony Perkins among its ranks. As for Finney, his chameleonic ability to immerse himself in the role of the fastidious detective earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. Similar raves and riches will likely be withheld from the new version of Murder on the Orient Express ( ). Certainly, Kenneth Branagh deserves credit for bringing this venerable novel to
18 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
the modern screen, if for no other reason than to provide a viewing option for audiences not interested in Marvel or Madea (as someone quipped at my screening, this might qualify as Star Wars: The Last Jedi for the senior set). Ever the classicist, Branagh lets others waste their time trying to adapt video games — he prefers to deal with Shakespeare, Shelley and Cinderella (even his one stab at a superhero saga, 2011’s Thor, made sense due to the deep mythology behind the character). Branagh’s interpretation of Murder on the Orient Express, unfortunately, registers as a disappointment, with the director-star, aided by scripter Michael Green, puncturing the source material as often as someone ends up stabbing Edward Ratchett. Ratchett (Johnny Depp) is one of the travelers aboard the Orient Express, and he seeks to hire fellow passenger Poirot (Branagh) to be his bodyguard lest someone try to murder him. Realizing that Ratchett is a thoroughly detestable gangster, Poirot refuses, only to awaken
the next morning and find Ratchett slain in his own bed. Thus, the “world’s greatest detective” finds himself with his hands full interrogating the other passengers — the suspects include Ratchett’s secretary (Josh Gad), a meek missionary (Penelope Cruz in a variation of the role that won Bergman an Oscar for the ’74 take), an outspoken governess (Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ Daisy Ridley), a helpful doctor (Leslie Odom Jr., Hamilton’s Aaron Burr), a persnickety princess (Judi Dench), and a chatty widow (Michelle Pfeiffer). The changes that Branagh and Green make to the novel and the remarkably faithful 1974 version are baffling, leading to a film that feels as if it’s just skimming the surface of a compelling murder-mystery. With so much emphasis on Poirot (it’s clear the director loves his star), expository scenes that should establish the other characters prove to be choppy and unsatisfying — thus, when the case starts to clear up in the final stretch, many of the assembled players come across
as little more than extras trying to crowd into the shot. The backstory to the whole mystery — the Daisy Armstrong affair (Christie’s nod to the Lindbergh baby kidnapping) — also appears in truncated form, thereby reducing its impact on the final revelations. As director, Branagh makes some lamentable decisions, trying to frame a couple of moments as action set-pieces and elsewhere adopting strange camera angles that call awkward attention upon themselves. This is especially true of the murder sequence, which Branagh grotesquely stages as if he were auditioning to direct a remake of Carnival of Souls. If nothing else, the production values in Murder on the Orient Express look smashing, and while no single performer stands out, all tackle their roles with aplomb. For the most part, though, Branagh has taken a beloved tale and committed (to borrow the title of another Christie adaptation) murder most foul. !
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
theatre
STAGE IT!
The Nutcracker returns to High Point Theatre
H
igh Point Ballet celebrates the 30th anniversary of brining this holiday tradition to the Triad. Choreography is by award-winning Artistic Director, Gary Taylor. Sets are by award-winning designer, Howard Jones. Lighting is by Aaron Porter. Original costumes are designed by artistic director and founder Rita Taylor. This year’s performance features exciting new choreography and casting. Educators are encouraged to contact High Point Ballet in regards to the Nutcracker Student Performance Series offering special during-the-school-day performances. Dec 19, 9am and 10:45am (Subject to availability). See website for details.
FEATURED GUEST ARTIST: DAVID WARD, CAVALIER Former leading dancer with BalletMet where he spent the past seven years, David trained at the English National Ballet School and spent five years dancing with Northern Ballet in Leeds, England. Mr. Ward’s career highlights include touring across mainland China, Hong Kong, Macao and Thailand, as well as dancing for Prince Edward. He also danced in the International Ballet Stars Gala and was a WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
guest performer in Las Vegas. Mr. Ward has spent past summers as a guest performer at the National Choreographer’s Initiative for their tenth anniversary performance and with Terpsicorps Theatre of Dance in North Carolina. Mr. Ward’s favorite performances include the title roles of Hamlet, Peter Pan and Dracula. The most memorable performances include dancing the role of Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, the Cavalier in The Nutcracker and the Prince in Cinderella, The sleeping beauty and Swan Lake.
Nov 17-23
[RED]
THOR: RAGNAROK (PG-13) LUXURY SEATING Fri & Sat: 11:30 AM, 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, 11:30 Sun - Tue: 11:30 AM, 2:30, 5:30, 8:30 A BAD MOMS CHRISTMAS (R) LUXURY SEATING Fri - Tue: 12:15, 2:40, 5:05, 7:30, 9:55 VICTORIA & ABDUL (PG-13) LUXURY SEATING Fri - Tue: 11:45 AM, 2:25, 5:05, 7:35, 10:05 WONDER (PG) Fri - Tue: 11:45 AM, 2:20, 4:55, 7:35, 10:05 FRANK SERPICO (NR) Fri - Tue: 12:30, 2:50, 5:15, 7:25, 9:35 WONDERSTRUCK (PG) Fri - Tue: 11:30 AM, 2:05, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 DADDY’S HOME 2 (PG-13) Fri - Tue: 12:45, 3:05, 5:25, 7:45, 10:05 MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS (PG-13) Fri - Tue: 11:40 AM, 2:10, 4:45, 7:20, 9:55 BLADE OF THE IMMORTAL (MUGEN NO JÛNIN) (R) Fri - Tue: 12:35, 9:30 THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER (R) Fri - Tue: 11:40 AM, 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 10:10 THOR: RAGNAROK (PG-13) Fri - Tue: 12:20, 1:00, 3:20, 4:00, 7:00, 7:40, 10:00, 10:15 JIGSAW (R) Fri & Sat: 12:40, 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:25, 11:35 Sun & Mon: 12:40, 2:40, 4:55, 7:15, 9:25 Tue: 12:40, 2:40, 4:55
[A/PERTURE] Nov 17-23
TYLER PERRY’S BOO 2! A MADEA HALLOWEEN (PG-13) Fri & Sat: 11:55 AM, 2:10, 4:25, 7:00, 9:15, 11:30 Sun & Mon: 11:55 AM, 2:10, 4:25, 7:00, 9:15 Tue: 11:55 AM, 2:10, 4:25 GOODBYE CHRISTOPHER ROBIN (PG) Fri: 11:35 AM, 2:05, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 Sat & Sun: 11:35 AM, 9:40 Mon: 11:35 AM, 2:05, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 Tue: 11:35 AM, 2:05, 4:40 LUCKY Fri - Tue: 3:20, 5:20, 7:20 THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (R) Sat: 11:55 PM ROMAN J. ISRAEL, ESQ. (PG-13) Tue: 7:00, 9:40 THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI (R) Tue: 7:00, 9:35 THE FLORIDA PROJECT (R) Tue: 7:00, 9:30
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI (R) Wed: 3:30, 6:00, 8:30, Thu: 6:00, 8:30 THE KILLING OF A SACRED DEER (R) Fri: 9:15 PM, Sat: 1:45, 9:15 Sun: 1:45 PM, Mon: 9:00 PM Tue: 5:15 PM, Wed & Thu: 9:00 PM LADY BIRD (R) Fri: 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, Sat & Sun: 10:00 AM, 12:30, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, Mon: 5:30, 8:00, Tue & Wed: 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, Thu: 5:30, 8:00 WONDERSTRUCK (PG) Fri: 4:00, 6:30, 9:00 Sat: 11:00 AM, 1:30, 4:00, 6:30, 9:00 Sun: 11:00 AM, 1:30, 4:00, 6:30 Mon: 6:15, 8:45, Tue: 3:45, 6:15, 8:45 Wed: 3:45, 6:15, Thu: 6:15 PM THE FLORIDA PROJECT (R) Fri: 3:30, 6:00, 8:30 Sat & Sun: 10:30 AM, 1:00, 3:30, 6:00, 8:30 Mon: 5:00 PM, Tue: 3:30, 6:00, 8:30 Wed & Thu: 8:45 PM LOVING VINCENT (PG-13) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, Sat & Sun: 11:15 AM, 4:15, 6:45 Mon: 6:30 PM, Tue: 3:15 PM Wed: 3:15, 6:30, Thu: 6:30 PM I DID HER WRONG (NR) Mon: 7:30 PM
311 W 4th Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 336.722.8148
PERFORMANCES: High Point Theatre, 220 E Commerce Ave, High Point Wednesday, December 20, 7:30pm Thursday, December 21, 7:30pm Friday, December 22, 7:30pm Land of the Sweets Performance: High Point Theatre, 220 E Commerce Ave, High Point Saturday, December 23, 11am Saturday, December 23, 2pm (Doors open 1 hour prior for Parade of Characters festivities) Ticket Information: Reserved Seating all performances: For information and to purchase tickets visit: highpointballet.org ! NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
19
[NEWS OF THE WEIRD] WALK OF SHAME A presumably humiliated opossum “ran off” in late October after three Pennsylvania men posted photos on social media of themselves giving it Chuck Shepherd beer and kissing it. The Pennsylvania State Game Commission was unamused by the antics of Michael Robert Tice, 18, of Newport; David Mason Snook, 19, of Reedsville; and Morgan Scot Ehrenzeller, 20, of McAlisterville, and charged them on Nov. 2 with unlawful possession of wildlife and disturbing wildlife. According to TribLive, Tice kissed and held the animal while Snook poured beer on its head and into its mouth. The men couldn’t be reached for comment.
BE KIND TO ANIMALS — Donna Byrne, 53, of Polk County, Florida, was charged with driving under the influence on Nov. 2, but it was her mode of transportation that earned her an animal neglect charge. Byrne was riding her horse, Boduke, down a busy road in Lakeland in the middle of the afternoon. When officers reached Byrne, she was staggering and had red, watery eyes — explained by her breath alcohol level, which was more than twice the legal limit, Polk County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Brian Bruchey told the Orlando Sentinel. Boduke got a ride to the sheriff’s Animal Control livestock facility, but Bruchey said he’d most likely be returned to Byrne, whose rap sheet includes cruelty to animals and drug possession.
20 YES! WEEKLY
— In Darmstadt, Germany, police detained a 19-year-old man on Nov. 7 after they noticed “a significant bulge in his trousers” and discovered he was carrying a baby python in his pants. The unnamed man was carrying on a loud, drunken argument with another man when police were called, reported The Guardian. Officers took the man and the snake to the police station, where the snake was put in a box, and authorities considered whether the “non-species-appropriate transport” could be a violation of animal protection laws.
NAKEDLY WEIRD A family of three were taken from their home and forced into a car on Nov. 7 in Leduc County, Alberta, Canada, by five naked people. The man, who was placed in the trunk, quickly escaped, and his wife and baby also managed to get away, according to The Canadian Press. A passing truck driver picked up the three victims, but then the naked kidnappers’ car rammed his truck from behind, sending it into a ditch. Royal Canadian Mounted Police caught up with the criminals; of the five, two were minors and were not charged. The adults faced charges of kidnapping and resisting arrest. The RCMP gave no explanation for why the five kidnappers were naked, but posited that drugs or alcohol may have been involved.
SMOOTH REACTIONS Tempers flared in Minot, North Dakota, before 33-year-old Cornelius Marcel Young was charged with terrorizing after attacking his fiancee’s brother at a trailer park on Nov. 3. The Minot Daily News reported that Young yelled at the brother, punched him in the face and knocked him into a wall af-
Give til it helps
ter he had turned up the thermostat in the trailer, according to a Minot Municipal Court affidavit. When the brother threatened to call police, Young brandished a knife, as his fiancee jumped on his back and bit his ear “to distract him.” Two children were in the trailer during the fight but were uninjured.
OW OW OW! A Chicago wiener stand was the scene of a crime gone south on Oct. 31 when Terrion Pouncy, 19, accidentally discharged his gun, which he was trying to conceal in his pants, and shot himself in a most sensitive location. The Chicago Tribune reported police were called to the Original Maxwell Street Polish at about 6 a.m., after a hooded man threatened employees with a small-caliber pistol. One of the employees gave him money from the cash register, according to the complaint against Pouncy, after which the robber stole the man’s cellphone and wallet, and ran outside, stuffing the gun in his pants, but it went off twice, striking his “groin” and thigh. Pouncy kept running and eventually called 911 to report that he’d been shot. He was charged with two counts of armed robbery with a firearm, but couldn’t appear for his bond hearing, as he was recovering at a local hospital.
COMPELLING EXPLANATION The Stardust Ranch in Rainbow Valley, Arizona, has a lot to offer potential buyers: Just an hour west of Phoenix, the property boasts a 3,500-square-foot home with a pool, 10 acres, barns, a gated entry ... and two portals to another dimension: one at the back of the property, and one in the fireplace. Owner John Edmonds and his wife bought the property, now listed at $5 million, 20 years ago to run a horse rescue, but he says he’s killed more than a dozen extraterrestrials on the property (using a samurai sword) and has suffered many injuries in his encounters with them. Edmonds told KPNX TV in October that aliens tried to abduct his wife: “They actually levitated her out of the bed in the master chamber and carried her into the parking lot and tried to draw her up into the craft.” (She won’t enter the room anymore.) Listing agent Kimberly Gero notes: “This isn’t the type of property that you can just place in the MLS and wait for a buyer to come along.”
WHO KNEW? Poland has one of the lowest birth rates in Europe, so the Polish Health Ministry is using the example of rabbits to encourage its citizens to multiply. The ministry produced a short video with a rabbit “narrator” who explains that members of the Leporidae family enjoy exercise, a healthy
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
diet and little stress. “If you ever want to be a parent, follow the example of rabbits,” the video suggests. The ministry said in a statement to the Associated Press in early November that it was looking for a way to increase public awareness about the low birth rate that “did not offend anyone and was not vulgar.”
INEXPLICABLE Boriska Kipriyanovich, 21, of Volgograd, Russia, claims that he lived on Mars until a long-ago war wiped out all life on that planet and he has now been reborn on Earth. As a Martian, he visited Earth, where his people had close ties to ancient Egyptians; that’s how he knows there is a mechanism behind the ear of the Great Sphinx of Giza that can unlock it, which will “significantly change” life on Earth. His mother told Metro News in November that Kipriyanovich could read by the age of 1, draw by 2 and has talked about ancient civilizations since he was a small boy, despite not having been taught about them. Among his revelations about Martians: They stop aging at age 35 and are immortal; they grow to about 7 feet tall and breathe carbon dioxide; and they still live on Mars, but underground. No further word about what changes an “unlocked” Sphinx will bring.
UNUSUAL HOBBIES Kung fu master Li Weijun used his bare hands to smash 302 walnuts in 55 seconds on Nov. 1, breaking a Guinness World Record. The previous record, held by a man in India, was 212 walnuts in one minute, according to United Press International. Weijun accomplished the feat in Foshan City, Guangdong Province, China, with video cameras rolling to capture the proof, which has been submitted to Guinness for official recognition.
WAIT, WHAT? In case simply eating fried chicken isn’t enough for KFC fans in Japan, Twitter users there have an opportunity to luxuriate in the essence of one of 100 KFC “bath bombs” — bath salts infused with the fast food giant’s signature “11 herbs and spices.” KFC tells United Press International that the limited edition bath bombs won’t be sold in stores, but people who retweet the chain’s promotional post will be entered to win one. ! Send your weird news items with subject line WEIRD NEWS to WeirdNewsTips@amuniversal.com. © 2017 Chuck Shepherd. Universal Press Syndicate.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
[KING Crossword] 76 ACROSS 80 1 “The Real O’Neals” 82 network 83 4 Eye-popper 85 8 Town in NE New Jersey 88 13 Root 90 19 Old Olds 92 20 Some till fill 93 21 Obstinate reply 94 22 Nobelist Hemingway 23 Phnom Penh’s land 97 [2015] 25 Tonga’s site [2011] 100 27 Top points 102 28 Purplish-red flower 104 30 Apple product 105 31 “Beats me!” 33 Fashion’s Anna — 106 34 Aries, e.g. 36 Home of Columbus 110 40 Kitchen raiders 114 41 Neighbor of Mexico 115 [2005] 116 44 Kenya’s home [2001] 117 46 Zing 119 47 Virginia hrs. 122 48 Varieties 125 50 They’re part of French 126 Polynesia [2002] 55 Country with the capital 130 Vila [2004] 58 Tint 59 Sailor’s site 60 Big Apple NFL team, on 132 133 scoreboards 134 62 Umlaut pair 135 63 High-five sounds 136 65 Conduct, as business 137 68 Legal exam 70 “Adios!” 138 72 Harvest mo. 73 Where Tagalog is spoken 139 [2012]
www.yEswEEkly.cOM
“Finished!” Sailing Biology div. Inventive Cola brand Comic Foxx Log cutter Paradises “Hail, Livy!” Luzon province north of Isabela [2014] Its president is Daniel Ortega [2010] One who dawdles Cartoon yell Tram cargo Where balboas are spent [2006] World’s largest rain forest [2003] Cotillion girls Hose mishap “Pardon?” “— tu” (Verdi aria) Diner staple “Mamma Mia!” quartet Treatment process Greek vowel Central American archipelago [2003] Reality show of which 12 title locations are featured in this puzzle “Billy —” (2000 film) Maine city Sky color Butyl or propyl ender Titans Native of Italy’s Leaning Tower city Desires Outlaw Kelly
DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 24 26 29 32 35 37 38 39 42 43 44 45 46 49 50 51 52 53 54 56 57
Secret stuff Signal light Perpetrate Having slack German link Viking Ericson Chant for the Dream Team Aquarium swimmers, to toddlers Deuces Novelist — May Alcott Necessitate Numerical suffix Sewer’s line Whale type Horse’s mythical kin Ump’s kin 2000-15 TV drama List abbr. Nap locales Lapel sticker Affectedly adorable Old film critic James Entire scope Too — price Freeze over Havens Co. with brown trucks “True Life” channel Hgt. Soul-seller of legend Many groan-eliciting jokes Egg-hunt holiday Verbal jewels Lot division Harvest Australian airline Opposer Conforms Brief denial
[weeKly sudoKu] 61 64 66 67 69 71 74 75 77 78 79 81 84 85 86 87 89 91 95 96 98 99 101 103 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 115 118 120 121 123 124 126 127 128 129 131
“The Wizard of Oz” witch Hoity-toity Jungle beast Fee Jacuzzi joint “Do — say!” Gent partner “— get it!” Blood type, in brief Half of Mork’s farewell Film lioness “Attack, mutt!” Richard of “No Mercy” Feelers on insects Brand of spring water Del. neighbor Ground Major Turkish city Noted coach Parseghian Classy gp.? Dove’s noise River in Italy Cosmonaut Yuri Poet Ralph Waldo — John Wayne film of 1962 Group that shares a culture Flies past Actress Moore Late morning time “Vamoose!” Gazed rudely Used to exist Dance parts Dark stain Smithereens Writer O’Brien Noel Wooden nail Yale attendee Pie — mode Chop (off) RBI part
The Sportscenter Athlectic Club is a private membership club dedicated to providing the ultimate athlectic and recreational facilities for our members of all ages. Conveniently located in High Point, we provide a wide variety of activities for our members. We’re designed to incorporate the total fitness concept for maximum benefits and total enjoyment. We cordially invite all of you to be a part of our athletic facility, while enjoying the membership savings we offer our established corporate accounts. Visit our website for a virtual tour: sportscenterac.com/sportscenter-virtual-tour Contact Chris King at 841-0100 for more info or to schedule a tour!
3811 Samet Dr • HigH Point, nC 27265 • 336.841.0100 FITNESS ROOM • INDOOR TRACK • INDOOR AQUATICS CENTER • OUTDOOR AQUATICS CENTER • RACQUETBALL BASKETBALL • CYCLING • OUTDOOR SAND VOLLEYBALL • INDOOR VOLLEYBALL • AEROBICS • MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM WHIRLPOOL • MASSAGE THERAPY • PROGRAMS & LEAGUES • SWIM TEAMS • WELLNESS PROGRAMS PERSONAL TRAINING • TENNIS COURTS • SAUNA • STEAM ROOM • YOGA • PILATES • FREE FITNESS ASSESSMENTS FREE E QUIPMENT O RIENTATION • N URSE RY • T E NNIS L E SSONS • W IRE L E SS INT E RNE T L OUNGE
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
21
feature
James, meet Emma: The story of how a veteran and police officer found herself
T
he past couple years have been tough for the LGBTQ+ community nationwide, but it has been especially difficult for transgender North Katie Murawski Carolinians. From Pat McCrory’s controversial House Bill 2 Editor otherwise known as the “bathroom bill” to President Trump’s executive order to ban transgender military recruits. It seems like good, positive news is hard to come by for the LGBTQ+ community. That is, until just last week Danica Roem became the first openly transgender state legislature in Virginia, beating her opponent, the selfproclaimed “chief homophobe” incumbent Bob Marshall. At the end of October, Trump’s military ban was partially blocked by a federal court. Focusing locally, one woman in the Triad wants her story of transitioning to be told and through it, she hopes to inspire people like her. Meeting Emma Emma James Duarte-Clements (who is going through the process of legally changing her name) is a veteran with post-traumatic stress disorder, a police officer and a bisexual trans woman. She started her transition in May 2016 at the Veterans Affairs hospital in Durham, North Carolina. “Most people do not know you can do that,” she said. “First and foremost, there are a lot of state laws that are required but because the VA is run under the federal government, those laws do not apply.” Before she was Emma, she was James Duarte-Clements, retired army, father of six and a recent graduate student with a master’s degree in criminal justice. To begin her transition, Duarte-Clements was set up with a women’s clinic doctor and a counselor in Greensboro. She then started taking the bare minimum of hormones (testosterone blockers and estrogen) because she did not want to move too fast. “I wanted everyone else to transition with me because it would be too much for the kids,” she said. “They set me up with speech lessons to feminize my voice. I get
22 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
Left & middle: Emma in her Army and police officer uniform before her transition, right: Emma in her police uniform after her transition laser hair removal they do there at the VA. It is fantastic. I did not realize there were so many transgender people in the military system.” When President Trump signed an executive order in August to ban transgender military recruits, Duarte-Clements was not shy about stating her opinion on the matter. “I was infuriated, I was angry,” she said. “How dare he? I am not one to get on social media-- I do post stuff about my kids on Facebook. But when I heard he was trying to do that, I opened up a Twitter account just to rage at him.” Duarte-Clements said if she could go into the Army again just to spite the president, she would. Duarte-Clements said she receives all of her transitioning services for free through the VA and her hormones get sent to her house. If these services were to be taken away, DuarteClements said she would start rallying and joining organizations to fight it. “Just on the principle that we earned that,” she said. “If you went and dodged
bullets and rockets you earned it.” In fact, she did dodge rockets in Afghanistan, when she was a civilian contractor. “I saw more activity when I was a civilian than when I was in the Army,” she said. Duarte-Clements said it is frustrating to be a trans veteran in the United States because gender identity should not matter when it comes to serving the country. “If you want to serve your country and if you are capable to, then you should be able to,” she said. “At the end of the day that is the focus, not who or what you are but what you want to do for your country. The fact that I still get all my hormones, even though he said no, it is kind of like another in your face moment.” With Roem’s win in Virginia and Andrea Jenkins in Minneapolis City Council, Duarte-Clements was elated by the shift in transgender acceptance in the country. “It shows how far we’ve come to gaining validation in society,” she said. “It gives me hope that anyone and everyone will eventually be able to be themselves
exactly as they are and live ‘normal’ fulfilling lives without fear regardless of gender identity.” Duarte-Clements surely does not need the approval of the president to feel accepted. The people that mean the world to her, (her six children and two grandchildren) already accept her for who she is. Her 28-year-old son is the “most liberal-minded,” she said because he is bisexual himself and he fully accepts her transition. She said her 20-year-old son and 17-year-old daughter want whatever makes her happy. “Most still call me dad,” she said. “My 17-year-old calls me ‘Domma.’” DuarteClements ex-wife and her boyfriend have a hard time seeing her as anything other than a male. “They call me “Jemma,” she said. “So I take it. I know they are trying.” Duarte-Clements said that even though she would love to be called mom, she doesn’t think she has earned that title. “I really haven’t earned the right to call myself mom,” she said. “I did not birth
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
As far as going through with those big changes, such as sex reassignment surgery, Duarte-Clements said she is definitely not getting top surgery because she wants her breasts to be natural. As far as down there, she said she goes back and forth with the decision. “At the end of the day I do not need it to do what I need to do,” she said. “I may decide eventually that it is time to get rid of it.”
them. I did not play that role so I cannot just walk in and change things because I decided to change my gender. Plus, I told them to call me what they are comfortable with I am not going to make them change all that and make it uncomfortable.” She said the only child that it was a little awkward to come out to was her 11-year-old step son because he has Asperger’s syndrome. At first, she said she had to be more masculine around him and gradually change. “Now he is cool with it,” she said. “And my twins, almost 3-year-old girls are too young to care, they just know that daddy loves them.” Serving her country while finding gender identity Two weeks out of high school, DuarteClements went into the Army. Originally, she wanted to be a nurse but after realizing the time commitment of schooling, she went to do the “next best thing” in her opinion, which was being a police officer. Wanting to help people is what called her to serve. “I have always been driven for public service, I can’t quite understand it,” she said. “It has always been the way I am wired.” Duarte was deployed in Baghdad in 2003 with a mechanized infantry unit out of Germany. While there, she said she always contended with her sexuality. She had gone back and forth asking herself if she was bisexual or just gay. “Then I kind of researched it and I came to the realization that it has nothing to do with [sexuality,]” Duarte-Clements said. “I was missing something. I had the perfect life: my wife was beautiful, intelligent, I had good children, I had a good job, money was not a problem, everything was perfect. But I was still miserable.” Duarte-Clements said when she figured out her sexuality, she could not really pursue it because she was still married. “It was in my head, stuffed away,” she said. “I knew that going in the Army and I contended with it, tried to process it and understand. My wife found out I was chatting with men online. She got pissed off, rightfully so. It is kind of a shocker, but over time we fixed it and she supported me and told me to go figure it out.” After serving 15 years with the Army, Duarte-Clements was discharged due to a diagnosis of PTSD and Meniere’s disease. “My PTSD is not the extreme version,” she said. “It is more emotional and a lot of it was guilt because I made it back whole. I was in the middle of Baghdad, but I never had to see anyone get physically hurt. I was so blessed. I was in an infantry, they are on the front lines.” WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
Part of Emma’s family: ex-wife/best friend, her 11-year-old son and twin daughters. She also had a reoccurring dream that she was going to be deployed over and over again. “Not that I feared it,” she said. “I would go again in a blink of an eye if asked.” Dating and life after the military After two divorces and a newly-embraced gender identity, Duarte-Clements moved to Greensboro and then to Julian, North Carolina, where she lives now. Duarte-Clements now works as a private security police officer at the Department of Social Services building in High Point. For a while, dating seemed nearly impossible and felt strange to Duarte-Clements. “It would be easier if I was just straight or just gay,” Duarte-Clements said jokingly because she said people tend to oversexualize her or reject her for being too feminine. “Sometimes I contemplate giving up the hormones and just becoming a guy with boobies.” After dating around, and figuring out what she really wanted, Duarte happily found her current girlfriend. “She treats me better than anyone ever has,” DuarteClements said. “She treats me more like a lady than anyone ever has.” A woman living as a man in the United States military and transitioning from male to female while finishing police officer training in one of the most trans intolerant states in the U.S. makes DuarteClements’s life sound really difficult. “If it did nothing else, it gave me confidence to know I can overcome anything,” she said reflecting on her life so far. When Duarte-Clements first started her
job as a police officer, she tried to work at the Guilford County Courthouse. But in order to do that, she would have to “abide by male standards,” which meant that she had to cut her hair to work. “Ironically, I am getting my named changed through the Guilford County courthouse,” DuarteClements said with a laugh. After that job did not end up working out, she found another police officer position working at the Department of Social Services building where she can “abide by female standards” by providing a note from her doctor at the VA. “The biggest problem I have is when people, in general, assume that being transgender is automatically something sexual in nature,” Duarte-Clements said. “That it is some form of sexual deviance. It is not that at all. It has nothing to do with that whatsoever. Gender identity and sexual orientation are completely different things. It is not a choice.” Duarte-Clements sought out Youtube videos of transgender people going through the same thing she was going through to feel more connected. “All of them had the same exact story,” she said. “They knew they were different as kids, they knew something was missing, they started seeing that and started to do more masculine things so they did not have to live that way. It was like ‘OK I will go the other way and just like confirm my masculinity.’ Play sports, play with cars, go into the military, get a wife, have kids. Still, something’s missing. Once they came to the realization and transitioning, it all changed and they were finally happy.”
Emma’s future and beyond The future’s looking bright and optimistic for Duarte-Clements. Regardless of what she decides to do in her journey of transitioning, she has big plans for the future and for people like her in Greensboro. She wants to start writing an autobiography and she has even dreamed up an idea for a book series with a trans hero. She also has big plans to open a clothing store for trans people to shop and feel accepted. She would call it Emma’s Corner. “I would like to open a store in town for clothes that accommodate people like me,” she said. “I know some of the struggles I had as far as clothes. Having a male body, it is still hard to find clothes that fit.” Duarte-Clements would also like to have a seamstress available at the shop so that people can come in, pick out clothes and get fitted. She would also like to have a wide variety of wigs and shoes because those two items have been the toughest things for her to find. “Someone is always going to find something to say about you so you might as well just be you,” she said offering some advice to younger trans people. “I live my life according to me not society’s expectations or what they think I should be.” Duarte-Clements has walked around downtown and is beginning to seriously look at places for her shop. She said she would like to get started by the end of this year. “I got to the one year point with my transition and realized it has been a great journey so far,” Duarte-Clements said. “It has been really positive-- it hasn’t stood in the way of anything that I am doing in my life. I read so many stories where trans people have a hard time within society or the dysphoria of themselves. They are depressed, miserable and some are afraid to come out. I guess I just wanted to put out there, for once, just a really interesting story and two, I want to try to inspire others who are possibly realized they can do it in spite of the world.” ! KATIE MURAWSKI is the editor of YES! Weekly. She is from Mooresville, North Carolina and graduated with a bachelor’s degree in journalism with a minor in film studies from Appalachian State University in 2017. NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
23
From the NFL to orbit: Astronaut Leland Melvin speaks in Greensboro on Saturday Former NFL wide receiver and astronaut Leland Melvin became an internet sensation in February when a photo of him with his dogs, Jake and Scout, went viral. So expect a crowd at 4 p.m., Nov. 18, when Ian McDowell Melvin speaks at the Greensboro Coliseum Contributing Special Events Center, located at 1921 W. columnist Gate City Blvd. The event, which closes the Public Library’s One City, One Book celebration, is free and open to the public. Melvin’s trajectory from the Detroit Lions to the International Space Station is unique in sports or space. Born in Lynchburg, Virginia, he studied chemistry at the University of Richmond and earned his Master’s in Engineering from the University of Virginia. Melvin served on the shuttle Atlantis and the ISS and was named NASA’s Associate Administrator of Education in 2010 before retiring in 2014. Last April, his memoir Chasing Space: An Astronaut’s Story of Grit, Grace, and Second Chances, was published by HarperCollins. He never intended to be an astronaut, although he’d been science-minded since 1971 when Grace Melvin gave her 7-yearold a chemistry set and he ignited the carpet. “I got the expected spanking,” he said in a phone interview, but the experience sparked more than shag. Good at both sports and academics, he attended Richmond on a football scholarship and was drafted by the Lions. “A hamstring ended that,” he said, “but Dallas wanted me next season.” Awaiting training camp, Melvin worked as a research assistant at UVA, where a professor recommended him for the Master’s Program. Once accepted, he continued his studies while training with the Cowboys, practicing eight hours a day and watching VHS lectures at night. Except for the night he and Danny White tossed a ball around. White threw and Melvin suffered a second hamstring going for it. With his NFL career over, he concentrated on his Master’s. “When I graduated,” he said, “I was recruited by Rosa Webster, a physicist who worked with Katherine Johnson, one of the ‘human computers’ in the book Hidden Figures. She insisted I join NASA.
24 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
OFFICIAL PORTRAIT COURTESY OF NASA
Engineering paid better, but Rosa wasn’t somebody you said no to.” He never intended to become an astronaut, not even after a friend gave him an application. “Then another friend, Charlie Camarda, got accepted,” he said. “I thought if that knucklehead can get in, I can.” He did, with help from Apollo 16 commander John Young, who heard Melvin lecture at NASA Langley. “I was being interviewed by astronauts and senior leaders, and Young told them I was doing really great research. That didn’t hurt, having a man who’s walked on the moon go to bat for you.” Where many of his peers had prepared for years, Melvin learned on the fly, eventually logging over 565 hours in space. I declined to ask Melvin one question many friends suggested, as astronauts are tired of explaining how they pee in the orange “pumpkin suit.” There was another I’d sadly guessed the answer to. Not real-
izing the photo of two adorable but clearly adult lab mixes was taken eight years ago, friends wanted to hear about his dogs “Jake lived until he was 15 and had a very full life,” he said. “Scout was younger but had lymphoma.” Melvin said he’s in the process of getting another dog. “The rescue place may have some puppies coming up soon.” In September, he again went viral on Facebook and Twitter, when his disgust at Donald Trump’s very different reactions to the Charlottesville and Colin Kaepernick motivated Melvin to write a public letter to the president. “I was appalled by his calling a black man engaging in peaceful protest a son of a bitch,” Melton said. He added that he found it “particularly reprehensible” after the president “responded to Nazis with assault rifles chanting ‘Make America White Again’ at my alma mater by saying there were ‘very fine people on both sides.’”
Our conversation didn’t conclude on that dark note. Melvin is pleased by NASA’s evolution since 1966, when Ed Dwight, who could have been the first African-American in space, resigned due to hostility from the top brass, and all astronauts were male and military. “It was incredible serving with Peggy Whitson,” he said of the first female commander of the International Space Station, who recently broke the record for total days spent in space by any NASA astronaut. “A civilian woman in charge of Russian colonels and French generals represents a very different perspective than when everyone was a military test pilot.” ! IAN MCDOWELL is the author of two published novels, numerous anthologized short stories, and a whole lot of nonfiction and journalism, some of which he’s proud of and none of which he’s ashamed of.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
Put some air in your hair for Greensboro’s annual Big Hair Ball BY CARL MIZE There were a lot of “F” words being dropped at Centre Pointe’s penthouse last Wednesday evening, high above the streets of Greensboro. However, it isn’t what you might think. It was the kick-off Sponsor’s Party for the annual Big Hair Ball presented by Greensboro’s Family Service of the Piedmont, and the words were fashion, fun and fundraising. The Big Hair Ball has become one of the Hair/Make-Up Crew: (L-R) Diane Conterno-Neese, Wilbert Artis, Angel Parker, Donna Perkins (In Back), Calesha Thomppremier social events in Greensboro and son, Indira Lindsay Roberts, Mary Ingram (In Front) has been presented annually since 2012. Wednesday’s event was a chance for event organizers and sponsors to get together, socialize and discuss what is on the agenda for the 2018 extravaganza to be presented in January. The venue, the ballroom atop the Centre Point building in downtown Greensboro, featured a sweeping panoramic view of life on the street below. The idea originated as a fun and interesting way to raise funds for Family Service of the Piedmont. The first event was such a success, and it has Event Organizers: (L-R) Mary Ingram, Amy Paul, Donna Perkins, Lindsey Auman (In Back), Indira Lindsay continued for the past Roberts, Lex Kulman (In Front) six years. Young women in first African-American woman to serve Lindsey Auman, who is past chairman top as possible. The grades 10-12, who are in the capacity of president. This lends of the Family Service Foundation Board hair, of course, but also members of the Junior credence to the Guild’s enthusiasm in and Honorary Chairman of this year’s ball, the dress and make-up, Guild, compete for the regard to becoming as diverse as possible spoke eloquently of how she had sought to create as outrageous highly coveted model This year’s event and embracing all races and religions as the counseling services offered through a look as only artsy, spots by engaging in chairwoman Lindsey Auman. they seek new volunteers to accomplish Family Service of the Piedmont to help creative people can community service and their mission. her deal with a personal trauma that had conjure up. Prizes are volunteer work in the Major sponsors this year include happened to her years earlier. She used given for “Best Hair”, area. Woodruff Law and the Lenny Peters this personal testimony to illustrate how “Best Dress, etc. and since people in the The goal is that by the time they beFoundation-Bethany Medical Center. This important the agency is to the citizens of fashion industry are known to have some come seniors in high school, they will have year’s presenting sponsor is Greensboro Greensboro. of the biggest egos around, there is a achieved enough recognition through their commercial real estate developer, Roy Indira Lindsay Roberts, who chaired the lot of professional pride on the line. The work to be asked to model for the show. Carroll and his wife Vanessa of The Carroll ball in 2015, is also the current president theme for the Big Hair Ball is the circus, so However, model-type looks do not Companies. of the Guild of Family Service. Her exciteyou can only imagine what types of looks weigh into the final selection process. This year’s event will be presented on ment and dedication to the cause are that this theme is going to inspire for this In other words, even Gigi Hadid would Jan. 27, 2018 at the Empire Room in downevident as she addressed the crowd at the year’s show. not be able to strut down that runway untown Greensboro, so remember to “Go big, kick-off event. “We should be doing now While the show is an exciting and enjoyless she had done some good, somewhere or go home!” what the client needs next to advance able event, the Guild never loses sight of along the line. You can learn more about Family their agenda,” Roberts said. Passion for their primary focus. Once model slots are filled, that’s when Service of the Piedmont by going to www. helping others is a common theme that Family Service of the Piedmont exists the real work begins. Models are assigned safeandhealthyfamilies.com ! seems evident in the members of the for the purpose of providing help and to an area fashion designer (and in the organization. The Guild realize there are assistance to families experiencing crisis, interest of full disclosure, this writer was many challenges facing individuals and counseling services for children and asked to participate this year), as well as CARL MIZE is a full-time designer and a freelance writer. families today and through their comadults, battered women and an entire a hair and make-up team. Their combined He lives and works downtown with his furry, four-legged bined work and efforts, they attempt to plethora of problems facing families in efforts are to descend on the model and, partner in crime, Malachi. He is quite attracted to shiny help solve those issues. Roberts is also the today’s society. you guessed it, make it as big and over the things and even shinier people. WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
25
VISIT YESWEEKLY.COM/GALLERIES TO SEE MORE PHOTOS!
photos [FACES & PLACES] by Natalie Garcia
AROUND THE TRIAD YES! Weekly’s Photographer
Holiday Local Wine Tasting @ Deep Roots Market 11.10.17 | Greensboro
presents
hot pour BARTENDERS OF THE WEEK | BY NATALIE GARCIA Check out videos on our Facebook!
BARTENDER: Chris Flathers BAR: Stumble Stilskins & The Corner Bar AGE: 43 HOMETOWN: Woburn, Massachusetts & Hampstead, New Hampshire BARTENDING: Since 1999 Q: How did you become a bartender?
26 YES! WEEKLY
A: I got into bartending when I moved here for school. Q:What’s your favorite drink to make? A: Whatever lights on fire and makes Kenny Giard act foolish. Q:What’s your favorite drink to drink? A: Jameson Ginger or anything Mark Weddle makes Q:What’s the craziest thing you’ve seen while bartending? A: I could probably write an R
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
rated book from all the things. Q:What’s the best tip you’ve ever gotten? A: 4 front row floor VIP seats to WWF pay per view event. Q: How do you deal with difficult customers? A: Send them to Brian Belton Q: Single? A: Married
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
Angelo’s Artisan Market @ Wise Man Brewing 11.11.17 | Winston-Salem
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
27
Fem Fest was a success
F
Fem Fest @ Test Pattern 11.11.17 | Winston-Salem Photos by Katie Murawski
28 YES! WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
em Fest is a minimusic festival featuring femaledominated or supported bands coming locally and out of town to raise awareness of sexual Katie Murawski assault and domestic violence and to speak out against Editor it. Fem Fest was held at Test Pattern, located at 701 Trade St. in downtown Winston-Salem. Saturday, Nov. 11 marked the fourth year of Fem Fest and this year was considered the largest and most successful one so far. One-hundred percent of the proceeds from the show went to fundraise for Winston-Salem Family Services. Creator and founder Bryn Fox said that Saturday’s show raised $2,000 for Winston-Salem Family Services, which was double the amount raised in all the previous years. “The whole show is to promote against sexual assault and domestic violence,” Fox said. “The biggest thing was to showcase music as an outlet for women who have gone through such things.” Headliners included Winston-Salem’s own Jill Martin-Byers with special guest Nancy Devine, who played at 4 p.m.; North Carolina’s Wahyas, who played at 5 p.m.;
North Carolina’s The P-90’s, who played at 6 p.m.; Virginia’s L.A. Dies, who played at 7 p.m.; Virginia’s Ladygod, who played at 8 p.m.; Alabama’s The Old Paints, who played at 9 p.m.; New York’s BOYTOY, who played at 10 p.m.; and Greensboro’s own Bob Fleming and the Cambria Iron Co. played the last set at 11 p.m. The P-90’s Billie Feather and Wahyas’ Lindsey Sprague have been with Fox since the first Fem Fest and has played every year. Fox said she credits bands like Wahyas and The P-90’s, who are growing in popularity, for giving her the ability to expand and get bands from places such as New York, Alabama and Virginia to play at Fem Fest. “It has definitely grown every year,” Fox said. “Every year has had an amazing turnout but this year it seems to have spread its radius a little bit further and I think a lot of that is because of previous years and a lot of that is because of the new bands that are coming. One thing about every band I have picked is that they have all played in Winston-Salem before so that people would be familiar with them. This year definitely was the one year where I had to actually tell people I was already booked, so I hope it says good things about next year.” Fox said for any bands that want to come out and support next year’s Fem Fest, contact her on her Facebook page, @thebrynshow. !
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
www.yEswEEkly.cOM
OFTEN IMITATED NEVER DUPLICATED
YES!
SIMPLY BETTER
WEEKLY
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
29
last call
[HOROSCOPES]
[LEO (July 23 to August 22) Enjoy basking in the warm love of family and close friends. But don’t fall into a prolonged catnap yet. There’s still much to do before you can put up your paws and relax. [VIRGO (August 23 to September 22)
Avoid pushing others to work as hard as you do on a common project. Instead, encourage them to do their best, and they might well reward you with a pleasant surprise.
[LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Like the sensible Libra you are, you no doubt started your holiday shopping already. But be careful to keep within your budget. Shop around for the best buys. [SCORPIO (October 23 to November
21) Love and friendship remain strong in your aspect over the next several days. This is a good time to develop new relationships and strengthen old ones.
[SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to De-
cember 21) A beloved family member has news that will brighten your holidays. Also expect to hear from friends who had long since moved out of your life.
REAL PEOPLE REAL DESIRE REAL FUN.
[CAPRICORN (December 22 to Janu-
ary 19) Family and friends are in for a surprise when you accept the need to make a change without being talked into it. (Bet it surprised you, too — didn’t it?)
[AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) Restoring an old friendship might not be as easy as you hoped. You might want to explore the reasons for your former buddy’s reluctance to cooperate. [PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Your party-going activities pick up as the holiday season takes off. Enjoy your plunge into the social swim as you make new friends and renew old friendships. [ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Your work on a recent job assignment is impressive and is sure to be noticed. Meanwhile, expect to receive news about an upcoming holiday event you won’t want to miss. [TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Saving the world one person at a time is what you were born to do. So accept it when people ask you for help, especially during the holiday season. [GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Now that you’ve resolved all doubts about an important decision, you can surprise a lot of people by defending your stand with your strong and well-reasoned arguments. [CANCER (June 21 to July 22) The holiday mood stirs your need to nurture everyone from the family cat to greatgrandma. But don’t overdo it, especially with teens, who like to feel grown up. © 2017 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
[STRANGE BUT TRUE] by Samantha Weaver
* It was 17th-century English novelist and politician Edward Bulwer-Lytton who made the following sage observation: “If you wish to be loved, show more of your faults than your virtues.”
Try FREE: 800-315-3974 30 YES! WEEKLY
Ahora español/18+
* If you have an indoor/outdoor cat, you might have found yourself wondering why it sometimes shows up on your doorstep with an offering of a dead animal. Well, there’s actually a good reason for it. It seems that the cats most likely to present owners with a gory gift are spayed females, and they’re acting out behaviors seen in the wild. Feral cats teach their young how to hunt by bringing them dead or injured prey. With no kittens to teach, your cat is evidently trying to teach the family it does have — namely, you — how to find food on its own. * It’s not surprising that during the severe northern winters, the Arctic ground
NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
squirrel goes into a state of suppressed physiological activity. What is surprising, though, is that during this torpor, its body temperature can get as low as 27 degrees Fahrenheit — without the animal becoming just another chunk of ice. This nifty trick can be attributed to a biological process that clears the rodent’s blood of ice nucleators, which facilitate freezing. * You might be surprised to learn that in a 2016 survey of human resources professionals, it was reported that more than half of all workplaces offer paid time off for employees to vote. Thought for the Day: “We must believe in luck. For how else can we explain the success of those we don’t like?” — Jean Cocteau © 2017 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COMW
[THE ADVICE GODDESS] love • sex • dating • marriage • questions
PIC ME! I’m a newly divorced woman trying some online dating sites. Because I read your column, I understand how men prioritize beauty. I’m an atAmy Alkon tractive woman, but I often photograph Advice terribly, and I’m Goddess thinking of spending some money and having a professional photographer shoot some pix in a studio. Would this be a good investment? I feel like I’d have a better shot if I had really great photos. — Unphotogenic Being somewhat vain, I fear the candid camera. In fact, I not only favor the posed photo but tend to stick (rather aggressively) to a single pose — the one that doesn’t make people wonder whether I eat oats out of a burlap bag. On online dating sites especially, appearance drives whom we choose or lose. Not surprisingly, marketing researcher Jonah Berger reports that “most online contexts,” including dating sites, “are dominated by posed photos,” as opposed to the candid kind — to the point where the main leisure activity in North America appears to be standing in a bathroom making duck lips for the camera. Berger notes that people tend to assume that others will find them more likable and worth getting to know if they
present “a curated, polished version of the self.” Yet in his research, it was the candid pix that made people more interested in “being friends with or going on a date” with the person pictured. Those he surveyed also reported feeling “more connected” to those in the candid photos and liking these people more overall. “Candid photos made photo targets seem more genuine,” Berger explains. They “seem to provide a glimpse into what someone is truly like, an unvarnished perspective on how they look and behave when others aren’t looking.” However, there are times when candids are less advisable. For example, Berger found that employers on LinkedIn were more interested in hiring someone who used a posed photo. Sadly, it seems the candid “Here I am at 1 in the morning drinking my sixth glass of chardonnay” does not scream, “Hire MEEEEE!” But getting back to online dating, let’s temper Berger’s findings with what we all know: The hotter you look the more replies you’ll get on a dating site. So, because you’re somebody who often photographs “terribly,” your best bet is getting photos taken that appear to be candid. You do this by having a photographer or friend shoot you “in action” — in other words, appearing not to notice the big honking lens or the iPhone right in your face. Plan to shoot a ton of photos and at least a few will catch you looking babe-alicious. This should help you bridge the photogenic fairness gap — how there are those the candid camera loves and those it loves to make look like ringers for Winston Churchill.
WHO WILL STOP THE WANE? I’m happily married. My wife is beautiful. She used to put a lot of effort into her appearance, but she now wears sweats and T-shirts everywhere and she never wears makeup or does her hair. I felt really bad about this on our recent date night, when she just put her hair in a ponytail and wore a slouchy army jacket. I want her to keep making an effort to put herself together for me. How can I offer her constructive criticism without making her mad? — Bummed You come up behind a ragged, disheveled person standing on the corner and put a dollar in the Starbucks cup they’re holding — and then you realize your error: “Oops! Hi, honey!” I suspect the term “constructive criticism” was coined by someone who went through life without ever encountering another human being. As I explain in “Good Manners for Nice People Who Sometimes Say F*ck,” here in the real world, “criticizing people doesn’t make them change; it makes them want to clobber you.” That’s because our ancient
fight-or-flight system is a little one-note — juicing us to respond to a verbal attack as if it were an attack by some dude running at us with a bloody spear. So, though it isn’t unreasonable to want your wife to make an effort on date night, you should focus on what you do want to see rather than what you don’t. For example: “Honey, you’re so beautiful, and when it’s date night, it would make me so happy if you did your hair and wore a dress. And I’ll wear whatever you want.” And to get her to make more of an effort day to day: “I love you so much, and I want to be sure we keep the romance alive.” Make clear that you aren’t expecting her to do the dishes in an evening dress and a tiara. You’d just be thrilled if, from time to time, the thigh-highs could be fishnets instead of, well, hip waders. ! GOT A problem? Write Amy Alkon, 171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or e-mail AdviceAmy@aol.com (www.advicegoddess.com) © 2017 Amy Alkon Distributed by Creators.Com.
TR ASURE The
CLUB
ADULT ENTERTAINMENT AND SPORTS BAR & CLUB
Come see why we're the best!
answers [CROSSWORD] crossword on page 21
WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM
[WEEKLY SUDOKU] sudoku on page 21
COUPLES NIGHT SATURDAY FREE GAMES OF TEXAS HOLD’EM EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT! BEST POLE PERFORMANCES IN THE SOUTH! FREE LIMO Pick-Up and Drop Off!
7806 BOEING DRIVE Greensboro (Behind Arby’s) • Exit 210 off I-40 • (336) 664-0965 thetreasureclubs.com TREASURECLUBGREENSBORONC TreasureClubNC2 NOVEMBER 15-21, 2017
YES! WEEKLY
31