Yes! Weekly - February 22, 2017

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S H A D O W L A SOUL SNATCHING N WITH OWENS DANIELS D

YOUR ENTERTAINMENT SOURCE

FREE ELECTRIC AVENUE ting

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MESMERIZER RECORDS 1 3 Stages of " TraditionaL Plus " Music!

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SIDWILL’S CAFE

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merlefest.ORG 800-343-7857 FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 YES! WEEKLY 1


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1601 Westover Terrace By Outback Steakhouse Greensboro, NC 27408 • 336-282-0902

1601 Westover Terrace By Outback Steakhouse. Greensboro, NC 27407 336-282-0902

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Reynolda Rd. 2885 Reynolda Rd. Winston Salem, NC 27106-2230 336-842-3822

4002 Elton way, ste. 109 Elmsley area across from Walmart. Greensboro, NC 27406 336-373-1750

Archdale 2711 South Main St. High Point, NC 27263-1938 336-885-8978

Jonestown 301 Jonestown Rd. Winston Salem, NC 27104-4620 336-293-7072

Jefferson Village New Garden Target Shopping Center. 1603 A Highwoods Blvd. Greensboro, NC 27410-2066 336-632-0133

Hanes Mall 3320 Silas Creek pkwy ste 1140 Winston Salem, NC 27103-3031 336-765-8712

Eastchester 3800 Sutton Way High Point, NC 27265-1490 336-781-0755

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

Robinhood Rd. 3300 Robinhood Rd. Winston Salem, NC 27106-5404 336-760-1611

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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inside

YES! WEEKLY > FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 > VOLUME 13, NUMBER 8

5500 Adams Farm Lane Suite 204 Greensboro, NC 27407 Office 336-316-1231 Fax 336-316-1930 Publisher CHARLES A. WOMACK III publisher@yesweekly.com

SHADOWLAND

EDITORIAL Editor JEFF SYKES jeff@yesweekly.com Contributors KRISTI MAIER JOHN ADAMIAN RICH LEWIS STEVE MITCHELL BILLY INGRAM ALLISON STALBERG IAN MCDOWELL DEONNA KELLI SAYED MIA OSBORN

In the not-so black-and-white world of photographer OWENS DANIELS, the fabled doors of perception literally and figuratively lurk within a nondescript warehouse where he conjures his photographic hoodoo. Or “soul snatching,” as Daniels calls it.

Movies MARK BURGER marksburger@yahoo.com

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Theatre LENISE WILLIS lenise@yesweekly.com PRODUCTION Graphic Designers ALEX ELDRIDGE designer@yesweekly.com AUSTIN KINDLEY artdirector@yesweekly.com ADVERTISING

Advertising Manager KATHARINE OSBORNE

kat@yesweekly.com Marketing BRAD MCCAULEY brad@yesweekly.com TRAVIS WAGEMAN travis@yesweekly.com CLAUDIA BURNETT claudia@yesweekly.com KAREN SCOTT karen@yesweekly.com Promotion NATALIE GARCIA

DISTRIBUTION JANICE GANTT BRANDON COMBS 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.

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

the lead 10

WINSTON-SALEM is a shining example of why it is important to have a good education to fall back on in times of need. 11 Public transportation in Greensboro is about to get a lot greener, not to mention quieter. Plans are moving ahead to replace the city’s fleet of diesel fueled buses with battery powered ELECTRIC MODELS, with the first three electric models scheduled to hit the streets in early 2018.

voices 12

If DEEP ROOTS Market Cooperative were the proverbial cat with nine lives, one might say it has four down, five still in reserve. It survived a financial crisis in 1982, another in 1991, again in 2002, and a tight situation over the past year.

arts, entertainment & dining 24

The people behind MESMERIZER RECORDS, a recently opened record and bookstore that also hosts live shows and other events, are down with the occult mysteries, and they’re prepared

to inject a little ancient ritualistic oomph into their business. In The Barn Dinner Theatre’s THE KITCHEN WITCHES, two put-out cooks air their dirty laundry on the air as they vie for the spotlight. First of all, if you’ve never made it down to Stage Coach Trail for dinner and a show then you’re missing out. 30 Greensboro’s Barrett Stanley has created a very impressive indy COMIC BOOK. Now he wants to show other would-be creators how. Come to Scuppernong Books at 7pm on Tuesday, Feb. 28, and he will. 31 Come Sunday, with Jimmy Kimmel hosting the 89TH ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARDS live from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, it should probably take about two or three minutes before the first joke is lobbed at the current resident of the White House – and it probably won’t be the last. 32 When you walk through the doors of SIDWILL’S CAFÉ in Jamestown you’re greeted with the smell of good food followed by a warm reception from the staff. The small café gives you the feeling of sitting in your grandma’s kitchen waiting on a plate of her famous meatloaf.

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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BE there

WINTER DANCE CONCERT FRIDAY

EVENTS YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS | BY AUSTIN KINDLEY ENT MT

ART

MU SIC

FOOD

THE ATRE

FEST

THROWBACK THURSDAY THURSDAY

BRANTLEY GILBERT FRIDAY THURSDAY

23 THROWBACK THURSDAY WHAT: Join us for #TBTLBP Throwback Thursday Happy Hour in LeBauer Park! Retro games and Music. Beer and Wine available from our park restaurants, Noma Food & Co and Ghassan’s. Stay warm with our Berico Heating and Air Conditioning heaters all evening! No outside alcohol is allowed in the park. WHEN: 5-8 p.m. WHERE: LeBauer Park. 208 N. Davie Street, Greensboro. MORE: Free entry.

THURSDAY

23 ANTIGONE WHAT: On a magical night, two famous paintings, PINKIE and THE BLUE BOY are brought to life by the lights of a blue moon. Now they one night fly into all the other paintings around them, and have a once-ina-blue-moon adventure. WHEN: 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Taylor Theatre. 406 Tate Street, Greensboro. MORE: Ticket prices are $18 for adults; $12 for students, seniors, and group 10+; $9 UNCG Students.

FRIDAY

24 BRANTLEY GILBERT WHAT: American country music singer, songwriter, and record producer Brantley Gilbert comes to Greensboro this weekend with The Devil Dont Sleep Tour featuring special guests Tucker Beathard, Luke Combs, & Brian Davis. WHEN: 7 p.m. WHERE: Greensboro Coliseum Complex - Arena. 1921 West Gate City Blvd Greensboro MORE: $30-$40 tickets.

FRIDAY

24 UNC SCHOOL OF THE ARTS:

WINTER DANCE CONCERT

WHAT: Members of the Taylor II company, in residence at UNCSA, will join School of Dance students in the ebullient Esplanade, one of Paul Taylors most popular works. Merce Cunninghams Change of Address delivers a unique sound and movement environment, while George Balanchines beloved Serenade promises to delight. WHEN: 7:30 p.m. WHERE: The Stevens Center of the UNCSA. 405 W Fourth Street Winston-Salem MORE: $15-$18 admission.

FRIDAY

24 THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK WHAT: The story of Anne Frank, a young girl swept up in the turmoil of the Holocaust, captured the hearts of millions when her personal diary was published under the guidance of her father after World War II. Anne Frank’s life told through her own words provides understanding of what the Holocaust meant for thousands of families. WHEN: 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Lee Street Theatre. 329 N Lee St., Salisbury. MORE: $15 admission.

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MARDI GRAS AT CASTLE MCCULLOCH SATURDAY

FRIDAY

24 ROCKIN’ ROAD TO DUBLIN WhAT: Following sell-out shows in the Northeast, Rockin’ Road To Dublin is coming to Greensboro on their 2017 national tour! Come see the show that Irish Dancing Magazine called ‘ WORLD CLASS... a one-two punch of style and mastery...they made some magic here.’ When: 8 p.m. WheRe: Carolina Theatre. 310 S. Greene Street, Greensboro. MoRe: $20-$40 tickets.

SATURDAY

TWENTY ONE PILOTS SATURDAY

SATURDAY

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FREE DONUT WhAT: Rise Biscuits Donuts in Greensboro will be hosting a “Thank You” Day this Saturday. We’re tickled to death to be in Greensboro, but a big hug might be awkward. What about a donut, instead? This Saturday, come claim a free donut of your choice as our way of saying “thank you” for welcoming us into your community. Valid only at Rise Greensboro on Saturday, February 25th. Limit one per customer. When: 7 a.m. - 2 p.m. WheRe: Rise Biscuits Donuts. 3316 West Friendly Avenue, Greensboro. MoRe: Free event.

SATURDAY

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SATURDAY

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THE JUNGLE BOOK KIDS

MARDI GRAS THE FIRE SHOW

TWENTY ONE PILOTS

WhAT: Adapted from Disneys beloved animated film and the works of Rudyard Kipling, the Man Cub. Mowgli, bounds through the jungle and learns what it means to be human. The jungle is jumpin with a jazzy beat in Disneys The Jungle Book KIDS. When: 2 p.m. WheRe: CTG Starr Theatre. 520 S. Elm Street, Greensboro. MoRe: $5 - $9 admission.

WhAT: Join us for a night of Fire & Frolic! Feel the heat of Carnevale with our special fire show featuring sizzling entertainment and enticing costumes at the 15th annual Mardi Gras of the Carolinas! Bring your bare as you dare attitude with you and prepare to mix, mingle, see and be seen. When: 7 p.m. WheRe: Castle McCulloch. 3925 Kivett Dr., Jamestown. MoRe: $20-$54 tickets. Ages 21+ only. MAsKs ReQUIReD.

WhAT: Twenty One Pilots achieved breakthrough success with their fourth album, Blurryface (2015), which produced the singles “Stressed Out” and “Ride”. The duo have been nominated for five Grammy Awards, and have won one for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance. When: 7:30 p.m. WheRe: Greensboro Coliseum Complex. 1921 West Gate City Blvd, Greensboro. MoRe: $50 tickets.

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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2017-18 SEASON TICKET MEMBERSHIPS AVAILABLE NOW! FRI.FEB.24

vs Maine Red Claws 7:00pm 500 FREE Kemba Walker Shirts to Kids 12 and Under Greensboro Coliseum Fieldhouse

To order your tickets, visit gsoswarm.com or call 336.907.3600

8 YES! WEEKLY

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

[LOCAL TALENT]

CURTIS RICE-SEVEN STEPS TO REBUILD BY ALLISON STALBERG

Author Curtis Rice is spreading motivation through his book, Rebuild. “It’s seven steps to build a better you,” said Rice. “Step one is laying a strong foundation because no matter how much you try to rebuild, if the foundation isn’t strong, eventually a couple years down the road your life will crumble because you didn’t deal with the pain of your past.” In Rebuild, Rice writes about how to better yourself. His book focuses on steps such as seeing the vision of what you want to become, of making an inner circle of supportive friends and examining yourself to get rid of bad habits. Rebuild was born from experience. The idea for the book started in 2012 when Rice’s younger brother got into a car accident. “When I got to the hospital, when I walked into the door, it felt like depression sunk in on me,” said Rice. “It’s because that’s the same hospital that my mother died in when I was 10. It’s the same hospital that my father died in when I was 17, he was murdered, shot 10 times. All of that just sunk in all at the same time. “He (my brother) made it through and was in the nursing home for the next four years of his life. It was a struggle send-

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ing him to a nursing home because he was young; he was 25 when the accident happened. I was still struggling with my parents dying when I was at a young age. I just remember sitting on the couch and prayed and asked God to help me. That’s were Rebuild was born from. I just give seven steps that I rebuild from, that help me overcome all those dark moments.” Rice loves the feedback he has gotten since his book was published in January. “Long testimonials like ‘I’m in the rebuilding stage and I needed to hear this’ and ‘I feel like giving up on life and your book has helped me.’ That’s the most rewarding part, writing and I’m able to help someone else walk through their dark moments and their dark days.” For the future, Rice plans to always motivate people. He currently works as a Pastor at Capstone Church. While Rice faced the challenge of opening doors of his past by writing the book, he also felt that the book brought him healing. “I’m able to wake up the next morning and say ‘Hey Curtis, today is a good day to rebuild.’” Learn more about Rice and his book at www.curtisrice.org and www.rebuildwithcurtis.com !

WANT TO BE FEATURED AS A LOCAL TALENT? E-mail a photo and a short bio to editor@yesweekly.com

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[SCUTTLEBUTT] Items from across the Triad and beyond

RIVERRUN ANNOUNCES FREE FAMILY SCREENINGS AND EVENTS RIVERRUN 2017 FAMILY DAY, APRIL 1st RiverRun has put together a fantastic line-up of free events for audiences of all ages for RiverRun Family Day. Beginning with their popular Saturday Morning Cartoons program and ending with a screening under the stars, families and guests of all ages are encouraged to join the fun. SATURDAY MORNING CARTOONS Sponsored by Salem Smiles Orthodontics April 1 / Hanesbrands Theatre RATING: FM - For children ages 8 and up 9:00am – Kids’ art activity with SECCA 10:00am – Films Begin Each year RiverRun presents our own version of Saturday Morning Cartoons to our young audiences. We search high and low for the best new animated shorts that we think will appeal to both children and parents alike. This year we have a wide array of films encompassing many different interesting animation techniques and stories. Our Saturday Morning Cartoons truly

have a little something for all ages! Come early and join our friends from SECCA for hands-on interactive art-making activities from 9 - 9:45 AM before the show. Peppercorn Theatre at RiverRun Saturday, April 1st at 1:00 pm at Hanesbrands Theatre Peppercorn Theatre will present the short stage play before the screening of the animated short “Stick Man.” “WHAT GOES UP ...” A short play for ages 4 & up Two architects are at it again to find out who can build the sturdiest structure! Watch as they test their creations, and help them decide which building can stand up to the challenge and which building must come down. RUNTIME: 20 min. “STICK MAN” Screening Directors Jeroen Jaspaert and Daniel Snaddon UK / 2015 / 27 MIN. / ENGLISH RATING: Stick Man (voiced by Martin Freeman, a.k.a. Dr. Watson on BBC’s “Sherlock”)

lives in the family tree with his Stick Lady Love and their three stick children. Join Stick Man on his incredible adventure across the seasons as he runs from a playful dog, gets thrown in a river, escapes from a swan’s nest and even ends up on top of a fire and other adventures along the way, finally encountering Santa (voiced by Hugh Bonneville aka Lord Grantham of “Downton Abbey”). Will he get back to his family in time for Christmas? OUTDOOR SCREENING – “WILLY WONKA & THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY” Sponsored by Mast General Store April 1 / Bailey Park Opens at 6: 30 p.m., film begins at 8 p.m. (or sunset) Director: Mel Stuart USA / 1971 / 100 MIN / ENGLISH RATING: G Enjoy a free outdoor screening of the beloved 1971 Gene Wilder film. The event will feature food trucks, Hoots Beer Company and Dewey’s Ice Cream. A limited number of chocolate bars from Twin City

Hive will be given out, five of which will contain a “Golden Ticket!” Golden Ticket holders will receive fun prizes! Description: Willy Wonka, the world famous candy maker, suddenly announces that five lucky people will be given a tour of the factory and one will win a lifetime supply of Wonka Chocolate. Young Charlie wants to find a Golden Ticket more than anything in the world. Charlie and his beloved Grandpa Joe, join four other children and their parents to visit Wonka’s Chocolate Factory. Five go in and only one will emerge the winner. Will it be Charlie? ADDITIONAL FREE FAMILY FUN AT RIVERRUN: SATURDAY MORNING CARTOONS Sponsored by Salem Smiles Orthodontics April 8 / Hanesbrands Theatre RATING: FM - For children ages 8 and up 9:00am – Peppercorn Theatre at RiverRun presents “The Prop Shop Pop Up” 10:00am – Films Begin !

Piedmont Opera and HanesBrands, Inc. present Rossini’s

The Italian Girl in Algiers A GIrl who uses her noodle! Isabella is The Italian Girl in Algiers who is shipwrecked on the African coast, where chieftain Mustafà captures her. Isabella is a modern woman full of spice – just the dish for Mustafà - despite his wife’s objections. But Earlier Isabella’s lover, Lindoro, was also captured by Mustafà and they are reunited. Through madcap schemes that involve wine, pasta and her street smarts, she manages to bamboozle Mustafà and escape back to Italy with LinDoRo.

March 17th at 8:00 PM March 19th at 2:00 PM March 21st at 7:30 PM The Stevens Center of the UNCSA PiedmontOpera.org or 336.725.7101

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2/14/2017 12:06:14 PM FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 YES! WEEKLY

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the lead

POLITICS, UPDATES, TRENDS AND OTHER VITAL INFORMATION

Wake Forest Innovation Quarter looking toward busy 2017 BY RICH LEWIS

W

PHOTO BY KEN BENNETT/WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY

inston-Salem is a shining example of why it is important to have a good education to fall back on

in times of need. A bit over two decades ago, textiles were bidding farewell to the WinstonSalem scene and tobacco as a business was going into its long, steady decline. Small cities around the country with similar losses have withered away and become just shells of their previous selves. But in Winston-Salem, the city dug in and started reinventing itself – creating new industries, promoting entrepreneurship, developing its art scene and most importantly, leveraging the educational resources on hand to chart a path to a better day. Wake Forest University was at the forefront of that charge and their longstanding relationships with both the Reynolds family and Reynolds corporate assets would create one of the cornerstones of the city’s rebirth, the Wake Forest Innovation Quarter. Since the first work more than 20 years ago, the Wake Forest Innovation Quarter has converted old Reynolds properties into a high tech entrepreneurial hub for the city while melding history and new ideas into opportunities. As office spaces were developed, companies began flocking to the area bringing research, technology and marketing jobs (among others to the area). The project has continued to grow and grow and grow.

This year, the Wake Forest Innovation Quarter may have one of its busiest growth spurts so far. “We’ve had a good start to the year,” WF Innovation Quarter President Dr. Eric Tomlinson said. “Wake Downtown has moved 18 new undergrad courses here and that will mean hundreds of students and faculty will be coming here each day eventually.” These courses will center on biomedical sciences and engineering and will make use of the Reynolds Tobacco Co. 60 Series building. Tomlinson was quick to point out that while the WF Innovation Quarter does feature Wake Forest in its name, partnerships with Winston-Salem State University and Forsyth Technical Com-

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

Wake Forest students ride the shuttle to the new Wake Downtown classrooms and labs on the first day of classes on Jan. 10. munity College have been cornerstones of the development. In addition, the overall success of the project had been greatly influenced and assisted by the City of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County. Dr. Tomlinson also said the Bailey Power Plant property within the Quarter would be seeing major activity this year. Approximately two thirds of the large facility will be redeveloped by Wexford Science and Technology, a realty company that focuses on bio-medical clients and properties. “We’re right on track to begin work on the main structure beginning in December of 2017,” Dr. Tomlinson said. “The project will bring together office, retail and entertainment spaces suited for small company presences and larger enterprises.” Projects like this one and the overall WF Innovation Quarter are an opportunity for corporate America to participate alongside of the innovation level grassroots entrepreneurs, benefitting interests both big and small, Dr. Tomlinson explained. Residential spaces are a big part of the WF Innovation Quarter project as well. Not only can adding residential facilities provide housing for some of the workers, it can also provide real time customers and patrons to the support businesses springing up within the project and those growing in its shade. This summer, Dr. Tomlinson said, the 757 Patterson project will finish, unveiling 115 luxury apartments in the 700 block of Patterson Avenue right in the heart of the quarter. This will be joined in the coming months by a very large, more affordable living set of apartments.

Called the Link Apartments, Tomlinson said the project is being done by Grubb Properties and will feature a 343-apartment complex designed to meet the growing demand for affordable housing downtown. The apartments will be built around a dedicated parking deck that should house upwards of 900 spots for residents’ automobiles, addressing a need that would have to be met to make downtown living more hospitable and economical. The parking deck should be completed in 2017 and the projected completion of the apartments is scheduled for 2019. Another amenity to the WF Innovation Quarter will be the completion of two sections of the Greenway Trail this June, opening up bicycling and walking opportunities for the area. Venture Café Winston-Salem will also debut this year for the WF Innovation Quarter. Beginning this spring, the Venture Café will begin hosting weekly events aimed at providing entrepreneurs and innovators with links to experienced business and research developers. Dr. Tomlinson explained the events will focus on entrepreneurial development and participants can learn about building businesses, handling finances and a host of other subjects. Winston-Salem will only be the fifth city in the world to host a Venture Café (others are located in Cambridge, UK; St. Louis; Miami, and Rotterdam, the Netherlands.) ! RICH LEWIS is a father, husband, writer and cook who makes his home in Greensboro, NC.

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Greensboro’s first electric buses to hit the road next year MUSIC. FOOD. SPIRITS 101 West Fifth Street WSNC 27101 336.723.3700 Tickets Sold on ETIX

Celebrate MARDI GRAS with

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Special Drink Menu BY MIA OSBORNE Public transportation in Greensboro is about to get a lot greener, not to mention quieter. Plans are moving ahead to replace the city’s fleet of diesel fueled buses with battery powered electric models, with the first three electric models scheduled to hit the streets in early 2018. The city’s switch to electric made the news in December 2016, when Duke Energy awarded the Greensboro Department of Transportation (GDOT) a $450,000 grant for the purchase of a rapid charging station for the electric buses. The charging station, which will be installed at the J. Douglas Gaylon Depot on East Washington Street, will be able to fully charge a bus battery in seven to 10 minutes. GDOT Director Adam Fischer said the city is ready to finalize the order of the charging station as well as the first three electric buses, but that the results won’t be immediate. “The order will take about a year to complete,” said Fischer. The wait is due to the made-to-order nature of electric vehicles. “They don’t just have electric buses sitting around waiting to roll off the lot. You have to place an order and then they build them for you,” Fischer explained. GDOT wants to switch to all electric in the next 10 years, but the change will not happen all at once. The city plans to use the annual federal funds granted to replace buses that have reached the end of their 12-year or 500,000 mile lifespan WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

with their electric counterparts. Electric buses cost significantly more than buses powered by diesel, so the city will use $4.5 million in voter approved transportation bonds from last November’s ballot to help ease the transition to electric buses. “We’re getting ready to place the order for three electric buses now,” said Fischer. Greensboro’s current fleet of buses contains 47 diesel models and 11 hybrids, which alternate between diesel and electric engines. The hybrid buses were introduced in 2011, as a way for the city to reduce fuel emissions and save money on diesel costs. Fischer said that while the hybrid models have helped somewhat, electric buses have since proven to be even more cost effective. “Overall maintenance and operations costs of the electric buses pan out to be better over the long haul. Hybrid buses save us some on fuel, but not as much as we’d anticipated,” said Fischer. Electric buses pose no fuel costs or emissions, and they also present fewer mechanical problems (another unexpected drawback of the hybrid buses). “There’s still a pretty major maintenance routine that you have to go through with hybrid buses,” said Fischer. “You still have to change the oil; there are various transmission issues that go on. The electric bus motor system is much simpler. We’re anticipating much less maintenance cost with the electric vehicles.” A 2016 study conducted by Columbia University found that on average, an electric bus needs $39,000 less upkeep than

a diesel bus each year. So over the average 12-year lifespan of each electric bus, the city can expect to save around $468,000 compared to diesel. A fleet made up entirely of electric buses could also represent health care savings for city residents. The same Columbia University study found that the reduced air pollution caused by introducing just one electric bus would save residents of New York City roughly $100,000 per year in health care costs. That number would likely be lower in a small city like Greensboro, where air pollution related illness is less of a problem. But the savings are still nothing to sneeze at (or rather, cough at). Greensboro’s switch to electric buses is just one part of a state and nationwide shift away from fossil fueled vehicles. The 2016 GDOT grant for the charging station is linked to Duke Energy’s Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure Project. The project aims to make North Carolina more environmentally friendly by installing 200 electric vehicle-charging stations around the state for use by passenger vehicles. There are already nearly 800 such charging stations around North Carolina, but the Duke Energy project represents a 30 percent increase in stations statewide. With electric vehicles gaining ground in both the public and personal spheres, it looks like Greensboro’s transportation and environmental policies will keep rolling toward the future. ! MIA OSBORN is a Greensboro-based freelance writer who hails from Birmingham, Alabama.

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voices

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f Deep Roots Market Cooperative were the proverbial cat with nine lives, one might say it has four down, five still in reserve. It survived Joel Landau a financial crisis in 1982, another in 1991, again in 2002, Contributor and a tight situation over the past year. Now, as Deep Roots approaches its 41st anniversary celebration next month, this communityowned business is looking towards a midlife resurgence. My YES! Weekly editor, knowing that I’m actively involved with Deep Roots, asked me to provide an update on what’s going on at the Co-Op. Disclosure: I was elected to the Deep Roots Board of Directors last May, and became Board President last month. I was also General Manager from 1982-1989, 1991-1994, and 2006-2013. Deep Roots is a community-owned business with thousands of Owners. Whereas most businesses focus solely on the bottom line of financial profit, Deep Roots historically has been a “triple bottom line” business. This means that it focuses not only on financial profit, but also on its impact on people and on the environment. You certainly have to at least break even moneywise to stay in business, but that has never been the sole concern of this Cooperative. As an example, even though retail space is at a premium in the relatively small grocery store, nonetheless space was set aside for a Community Room. This room is available for groups to use at no charge. Hopefully people who use the room do some shopping while they’re at the store, but they aren’t required to do so. Even if they do, it still wouldn’t make up for the financial volume that could be generated by converting the room to retail space. That’s okay because providing community services is part of how Deep Roots determines its success as a business. When Deep Roots moved to its current location it was known that finances would be tight. This goes back to its financial crisis of 2002 that used up all the cash accumulated over the preceding years. The crisis also incurred substantial debt. The Co-Op’s subsequent financial recovery was then interrupted by the Great Recession. As a result the move to the current location had

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

Back to the roots to be negotiated with little cash on hand. This required unusually large amounts of debt to be taken on to finance the move. So what was known would be a tight situation became critical when sales faltered at the new location. There’s not space for a full review of all that’s occurred, but here’s a summary of what’s happened during recent months: DEPARTURE OF THE GENERAL MANAGER. In October, the Board of Directors and the General Manager (GM) of two years agreed to a separation. My personal view is that the GM, despite a long successful grocery career as a department manager, was unable to meet the additional challenges of being a GM. RESIGNATION OF 5 DIRECTORS. At the November Board meeting, five of the nine Directors announced their resignations effective December 31. This reflected a split that had developed as to how best to move ahead. Since Deep Roots bylaws prioritize Board decisions by consensus, this split made it difficult to move forward with the unity required of Board actions. The outgoing Directors decided to step aside to allow the remaining Directors the opportunity to chart direction. BOARD REORGANIZATION. The remaining Directors called a special meeting that took place Jan. 9 for the purpose of electing new officers. They also made appointments to some of the open seats. Two were purposely left open for the Co-Op Owners to vote on at this May’s Annual Owners Meeting. HIRING AN INTERIM GENERAL MANAGER. The Board hired Nicole Villano as Interim General Manager (IGM), effective February 1. Ms. Villano has extensive managerial-level natural foods grocery experience. She has natural leadership skills. Most importantly, she is excellent at, and delights in, customer service. The Board feels fortunate to have her in place. THE NATIONAL COOPERATIVE GROCER. The National Cooperative Grocer (NCG) is an association of U.S. retail grocery co-ops. NCG represents almost $2 billion in annual retail sales. It has negotiated key contracts on behalf of its member co-ops. These deals are far more beneficial than what the individual co-ops could negotiate on their own. They allow Deep Roots to be

price competitive with the other natural food outlets in town. NCG has been fully supportive of Deep Roots during this difficult transition time. They’ve provided on-site consultants to help guide and support different aspects of store operations as the departed GM left many areas needing immediate attention. LANDLORDS. The Co-Op’s landlords, North Eugene Partners, have been fully supportive of Deep Roots efforts and have helped out in different ways. Thanks Vernon, Bob, and George! THE DOWNTOWN GREENWAY. The 4.1 mile Greenway being built around downtown will replace the sidewalk directly in front of Deep Roots. When completed it will provide a lovely upgrade to the streetscape. It will also provide a ready connection by foot and bike to many nearby neighborhoods. Construction has been underway in front of the store since November and is scheduled to end midMarch. Unfortunately, even though there is always clear access in and out of the parking lot, the street work in front of the store has significantly decreased sales putting an additional strain on finances. But the end is in sight and we look forward to the Greenway gracing our sidewalk. PRODUCT POLICY. The sad truth about food production in the U.S. is that the vast majority of products on supermarket shelves contain at least one item known to contribute to obesity, diabetes, hyperactivity, intestinal problems, heart disease, or any of a host of other ills. Historically, Deep Roots’ mission has been to promote health and avoid questionable ingredients. Last

Spring the General Manager and Board concluded that market conditions required an adjustment to this business strategy. While the focus remained on natural and organic, “conventional” products were added to the product mix. This change is now under review. The Board has begun planning a series of meetings with Deep Roots Owners to get their input on product preferences and overall store direction. At the same time, Management will be conducting surveys with existing customers as well as people in the surrounding neighborhoods to find out what products, if any, they would likely buy if Deep Roots stocked them. It’s worth noting that the Co-Op has been a leader in various areas. To the best of my knowledge it was the first grocery store in town to: stock organically grown produce; host a Farmers Market in its parking lot; install a bulk water machine where customers could reuse their own containers and get purified water for gallons on the dollar; offer a bonus to employees who commute to work by foot, bike, bus, or carpool; discontinue offering plastic bags at the checkout counter; prioritize and emphasize buying locallymade produce and other products; do presentations before City Council about the importance to our economy of supporting our local businesses; successfully petition two different Mayors to proclaim an “Eat Local Month”. In other words, Deep Roots hasn’t been one to follow the herd. Stay tuned to see what these changing times bring. ! JOEL LANDAU’s column appears the 4th Wednesday of each month.

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[KING CROSSWORD] ACROSS 1 4 9 14 19

20 21 22 23 26 27 28 29 31 35 36 37 38 41 44 47 51 52 54 55 56 62 64 65 66 67 69 71

Seer’s “gift,” for short Pig noise Tosses out Some choir women With 74-Down, “Such gall!” Tree-toppling ax wielder Expiate, with “for” Statue of Liberty feature African beast submerged? Ranch rope Unit of Time Park or Fifth: Abbr. Like partially spoiled oil? Five-alarm, for one? Mao -- -tung British isle Slyly derisive Mocked by imitating Humdrum Amor or Eros Magic lamp owner’s language? Purpose Property unit Hereditary unit Daphnis’ lover Tan-colored door security feature? Banknotes Wichita-to-Akron dir. Fueled (up) Tennille or Braxton “Misty” crooner Johnny Hero of Sophocles’ “Electra” It’s hidden in this puzzle’s 10 longest answers

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73 77 79 81 82 85 86 88 90 92 93 94 98 102 103 104 105 106 109 114 119 120 121 122 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133

Native of Cuba’s capital Fail to do as promised Watson of “The Bling Ring” Texas border city “The Simpsons” clerk Q-V link Snap-on parts of a tot’s tote? Friend of the Lone Ranger Tenderfoot Do injury to Jockey (for) “Farewell, Ms. Clooney!”? Wading birds Raccoon relative Israel’s Eban Texas city near Dallas Dick -- Dyke Washroom, informally Thoroughly clean some sour fruit? Tune about Houdini? Several eras Flat piece of microfilm Flat, as pop Cause Reagan to digress? By itself Without -- (worry-free) Sandbank Thigh’s place Fiery feeling Faked out, in ice hockey Utilized a keypad “What -- the odds?”

DOWN 1

Set of values

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 24 25 30 32 33 34 39 40 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 53 57 58 59

-- kebab Giant in soda Providing with footwear Modern, in Muenster Rent-to- -Adjust on a timeline -- Fountain (Rome landmark) Skull bone Great Salt Lake’s state -- moment too soon Honored a king, maybe Bondmen Razor name Pork cut Like phone calls and outlines 1 followed by 27 zeros Like arbors Living proof? Relating to the kidneys McEntire of country -- Grande Confound Scholastic meas. Sword part Pres. before JFK Of a large store of data Opposite of “yep” “Hasta --!” (Spanish “Later!”) Often-quoted Wilde Sonnet, e.g. In one’s own house Peruvian of yore Below, in a 46-Down “Meh” mark Decide Pre-’91 empire Fade away Xanadus

60 61 63 67 68 70 72 74 75 76 78 80 82 83 84 86 87 89 91 95 96 97 99 100 101 104 105 107 108 110 111 112 113 115 116 117 118 123 124 125

Lover of Lennon Top part of some forms Intend to “Well, I declare!” Actress Mia Brawl Diplomat’s bldg. See 19-Across Allow to enter Snoots Fellas Toothpaste box org. -- loss for words Many a Net radio host Teamster ID Utterly fail Toothbrush brand Pekoe, e.g. Irish actor Stephen Annoy Crunches crunch them Slot car, say Kilmer of “Top Gun” Not divided into parts “-- Thro’ the Rye” Forceful Line of motor scooters President of Syria Verbalize Be sweltering City NNE of Tampa N.J. Devil, e.g. Swamp plant As well Look keenly Neighbor of Mont. Actor Richard TV’s Turner Keystone policeman Carly -- Jepsen

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[news of the weird] The Man WiTh The Golden Mop

San Francisco’s best-paid janitor earned more than a quarter-million dollars cleaning stations for Bay Area Rapid Transit in 2015, according to a recent Chuck Shepherd investigation by Oakland’s KTVU. Liang Zhao Zhang cleared almost $58,000 in base pay and $162,000 in overtime, and other benefits ran his total income to $271,243. He worked at San Francisco’s Powell Street station, a hangout for the homeless, who notoriously sullied the station 24/7 (urine, feces, and needles, especially), necessitating overtime hours that apparently only Zhang was interested in working. In one stretch during July 2015, he pulled 17-hour days for two and a half straight weeks.

WronG place, WronG TiMe

An Abbotsford, British Columbia, burglar was successful in his Feb. 7 break-in at a home, but his getaway was thwarted by a snowfall that blocked him in on a

roadway. He eventually decided to ask a passerby for help — and inadvertently picked out a man (of the city’s 140,000 residents) whose house he had just broken into (and who recognized him from reviewing his home’s security camera footage). The victim called police, who arrested the man (and reported that it was the second residential break-in that night in which the snowfall had foiled a burglar’s getaway.)

everyday hazards

— In Portland, Oregon, in January, Ashley Glawe, 17, a committed “goth” character with tattoos, piercings and earlobe holes (“gauges”) was, she said, “hanging out” with Bart, her pet python, when he climbed into one of the lobes. She couldn’t get him out, nor could firefighters, but with lubrication, hospital emergency workers did (thus avoiding an inevitable split lobe if Bart had kept squeezing his way through). — Iraqi forces taking over an ISIS base in Mosul in January reported finding papers from at least 14 Islamic State “fighters” who had tried to claim “health” problems, asking commanders to please excuse them from real combat (and martyrdom).

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One (a Belgian man) actually brought a note from a doctor back home attesting to his “back pain.” Five of the 14 were initiated by volunteers from France, a country that endures a perhaps-deserved national reputation for battle-avoidance.

GOVERNMENT ACTION

Legislators in Iowa and Florida recently advanced bills giving women who receive legal abortions up to 10 years (or longer, in Iowa) to sue the doctor if the abortion winds up causing them “emotional distress.” (Doctors in all states are already liable, of course, for actual “negligence” in their practice.) In the Iowa version (which the Des Moines Register reported would likely face amendments), even a signed consent form by the patient would not immunize the doctor (but might mitigate the amount of damages awarded).

GREAT ART!

German art collector Rik Reinking paid the equivalent of about $138,000 in 2008 for a resplendent, complex drawing by Belgian artist Wim Delvoye, but it was one created in ink on the skin of (the stillalive) tattoo parlor manager Tim Steiner — to be delivered only upon Steiner’s death, when his skin will be displayed in Reinking’s collection. (The deal also requires that, in the meantime, Steiner personally showcase his back at galleries three times a year, and BBC News recently caught his latest appearance.)

MORE THINGS TO WORRY ABOUT

Higher Math: The first robots to have survived journeys close to the “core” of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan (which melted down in a 2011 earthquake) returned a reading of 530 “sieverts” per hour. (Some scientists label just 4 Sieverts an hour fatal to half the people exposed to it.) Since the robots stopped short of the actual nuclear fuel, and since they only visited one of the three cores, the true danger of Fukushima remains unknown. (On a more optimistic note, scientists in February said they have developed a computer chip that would survive on the surface of Venus for 21 days, eclipsing the old record of two hours — long enough to send back meaningful data, including the temperature. The current estimated temperature is 878 degrees Fahrenheit.)

PRIESTS GONE BAD

— Prominent Tallahassee, Florida, pastor O. Jermaine Simmons, a community leader who ministers to the homeless and downtrodden, was rescued by police on Jan. 17, naked and hiding behind a fence after making a run for it when the husband of his mistress found the two in

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bed. The husband, screaming, “I’m gonna kill him,” ran for his handgun, and the mistress summoned police, but by Jan. 30, all involved had declined to press charges. Simmons, married with a son, is highly regarded for good deeds such as running a “cold night” shelter. — The decidedly uncelibate Catholic priest Don Andrea Contin, 48, of Padua, Italy, was accused by three women in December of having as many as 30 different lovers over the years, organizing “orgies” on church property, visiting a “swingers’” resort in France several times, making pornographic home videos of his trysts, “encouraging” one woman to have sex with a horse and “always” carrying a briefcase full of vibrators, sex toys and bondage equipment. Contin has not yet been charged with a crime but, said a Catholic official, is “finished” as a priest. (Bonus: The boxes for his home videos were labeled by the names of Popes.)

at his tablet computer. Ayers, of Florence, New Jersey, was free at the time, pending sentencing in another New Jersey court on earlier counts of distributing child porn.

said, is that Mom and Dad were buying and selling in their children’s accounts if they had illegal insider information — because they feared getting caught by regulators if they used it for their personal accounts. The kids’ accounts (including those held by babies) were almost 50 percent more profitable than their parents’. (The study, reported by NPR, covered 15 years of trades in Finland, which, unlike the U.S. and most other countries, collects traders’ ages.) !

A NEWS OF THE WEIRD CLASSIC (APRIL 2013)

Those Clever Toddlers of Finland: A University of Kansas professor and two co-authors, in (2013) Journal of Finance research, found that children age 10 and under substantially outperformed their parents in earnings from certain stock trading. A likely explanation, researchers

© 2017 Chuck Shepherd. Universal Press Syndicate.

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In January, a New York City judge dismissed the original indictment of John Kennedy O’Hara, 55, who had been convicted in 1996 of the crime of “felony voting” — the only person convicted under that state law since Susan B. Anthony, who cast a ballot in 1872 even though females were barred from the polls. O’Hara was indicted for voting in 1992 and 1993 after registering in Brooklyn elections from a “bogus” address — a basement apartment that was considered uninhabitable. (A judge in 2017 determined that the apartment “could” have been habitable.) O’Hara paid $15,000 in fines and did 1,500 hours of community service.

LEAST COMPETENT CRIMINALS

Recurring Themes: Once again, in January, curiosity got the better of a perp. Adriana Salas, 26, allegedly stole a truck in Jonesboro, Arkansas, and drove it to Fort Smith, 260 miles away, but then could not resist stopping by the local sheriff ’s office to ask whether the truck had been reported stolen. (It had; deputies, taking a look outside, read Salas her Miranda rights.)

THE PASSING PARADE

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Photographer Owens Daniels is building a successful body of work in the WinstonSalem area, capturing iconic musicians such as bassist Matt Kendrick, shown here in a portrait session for the photographer’s “Birth of the Cool” collection.

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S H A D O W L A N D SOUL SNATCHING WITH OWENS DANIELS

FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

BY ED BUMGARDNER In the not-so black-and-white world of photographer Owens Daniels, the fabled doors of perception literally and figuratively lurk within a nondescript warehouse where he conjures his photographic hoodoo. Or “soul snatching,” as Daniels calls it. There is no business sign, no visible address plate, no formal marking of any sort to indicate to visitors that they are within country miles of a photography studio - or much of anything else, for that matter. The industrial location seems lifted from a Mafia movie - a grim, isolated, seemingly abandoned place to take care of business, to disappear ... or “get disappeared.” Daniels arrives as the sun begins its daily descent. The feeling of displacement intensifies as he silently slips inside the dark building, then re-emerges to lead visitors into the warehouse. Step through the door ... What the ... The mind reels as preconception and reality collide. The building’s vast interior stretches into a shadowland of dark corners, mountainous clutter and dim lighting. Everywhere one looks, the lump disarray of the room’s hoarder decor seems to bear witness to a life discarded. An abandoned car sits covered in dust and detritus. Containers of noxious chemicals and inks are everywhere. Makeshift shelves blend into a maze of display cases, stained sofas, shaky chairs, industrial machinery and strewn auto parts. The jumble is accentuated by colorful piles of various custom-designed T-shirts - the only concrete evidence that the space also doubles as a functioning screen-printing business. The incongruity of it all quickly shifts from disoriented disbelief to bizarre fascination. “It’s kind of a crazy studio,” said Matt Kendrick, a renowned Triad jazz bassist and music educator who has been definitively (and stunningly) photographed by Daniels. “But I thought, ‘OK, this looks cool. “I could discern an artist vibe.” Carefully walk to the back of the building, hang a left, look toward the beckoning light, and walk into a side room ... It is akin to stepping through a portal in which a visitor’s public demeanor - one’s outward personal and protective armor is slyly stripped of artifice to reveal one’s true essence. The door of perception has opened. Reality has been altered. The soul is ready to be snatched and documented for posterity.

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Daniels captured guitarist Rob Slater of Luxuriant Sedans during a recent session for a CD cover. Welcome to the photo studio of Owens Daniels. This is where the magic happens. “When I take portraits of people, I want to see who they really are, not who they present themselves to be,” Daniels said. “Creative people, especially musicians, are fascinating. I have managed to figure out how to make them comfortable as I begin to draw out who they are from what they are.” Daniels accomplishes this transmogrification through a process of isolation, acclimation, skill and seduction. When shooting musicians, each subject is instructed to bring his or her instrument. He or she is placed in front of a huge black backdrop. Daniels begins to chat as he sets up the shot. Favorite music plays, and the musician is encouraged to play along, a natural reaction. There is only a single light in the dark room; it is trained on the subject. The room is cleared so not to break the WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

mood. Daniels disappears - he shoots hidden, some 30-feet away - and the transformation begins as the musician, alone in total privacy, reacts to and interacts with his or her muse. The outside world disappears. Minutes feel like seconds. Man and muse mate, shamelessly, and create magic through manipulation of soul, light and image. “Leaving a musician alone with his instrument is crucial,” Daniels said. “A musician’s DNA is all over their instrument. There is nothing in life that is closer to them than their instruments. “This powerful bond, this intimacy with their instruments, is what allows them to find creative solace in the company of strangers. “The way I think about it, the musicians are more of a prop to the instruments than the other way around.” Rob Slater, a Triad guitarist, was recently photographed by Daniels. He said that he has never been comfortable in front of

Percussionist Hashim Saleh “The Last Poet” taken from the photographer’s collection, “Birth of the Cool”. FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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Daniels shot the Luxuriant Sedans during the band’s recent CD release party for their second album, Double Parked at the Garage in Winston-Salem.

the camera, but that he found the process of being photographed by Daniels to be as enlightening as it was mind-boggling. “Looking at photos of myself is like climbing out of my car to look at body damage after being rear-ended,” Slater said. “But the genius of Owens is how he manages to draw what he needs through his lens without the interference of selfconsciousness. “I was completely unaware of being manipulated and being taken completely outside myself. “It was like a session with a good shrink.” Daniels said that it was a collection of his portraits of veteran Triad musicians, curated in a 2014 show titled “Birth of the Cool,” that finally enabled him to grab the full attention of the Triad arts community. The collection is dominated by stunningly evocative black-and-white images (Daniels’ preferred medium) offset by a handful of striking color prints. Each portrait emphasizes and celebrates Daniels’ remarkably individualized use of shadow and light. All are undeniable in their purity, as assertive and bold

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

as they are expressive and personal. Every image offers fresh revelation. Each portrait is undeniable, even shocking, in Daniels’ ability to capture, convey and celebrate the soul and spirit of each musician and the music he or she makes. Daniels sees the “Birth of the Cool” show as his creative and professional turning point. “I tend to think conceptually,” he said. “That show, at least to me, was where I finally realized what I was trying to say and do. It really was the point that I became ‘Owens Daniels.’ “I had been in shows previous to that, but I was still looking for who I was. It was that show that really exposed what makes my work original to me.” Daniels, 58, grew up middle-class in Richmond, Va., one of six children. His father was a gifted brick mason, and his mother was the secretary to the Secretary of Education in Virginia. “We were all encouraged to be creative as we grew up, despite not always having a lot of obvious black role models in the arts at that time,” Daniels said. “I grew up in the era of Jet magazine and Ebo-

ny magazine, and I fell in love with the photography in those magazines. “You have to remember that back then, you just didn’t see a lot of photographs of black people, and to my delight, there was nothing but black people in those magazines. “It really inspired me. I loved the way we looked in those photographs. It made me proud.” Daniels enlisted in the Army while in his late teens. It was during his training as a cartographer that he was given his first camera - a Canon, which he still uses on occasion - and learned the fundamentals of photography. Interest creeped toward obsession. “When I was in the service I found this photo book - The Black Photography Annual of 1973,” he said. “The book was filled with nothing but black-and-white photographs by some of the greatest Negro photographers of the time. “I never went anywhere without that book. It cast a spell on me. When I left the service, that book left with me, and I am never without it to this day.” Daniels went to school for a time - Vir-

ginia State University and Central Texas College - got married and, in 2005, came to North Carolina to start working as a Food Service Director. He rose through the ranks. He was making good money. Life should have been good. It wasn’t. “I began to hate my job,” Daniels said. “Something inside of me was not right. I began to feel depressed. One day I arrived at work and spent 45 minutes sitting in my car in the parking lot. I had an anxiety attack. “I realized the only thing that made me really happy was taking photographs. So I quit my job in 2008, got divorced and got serious. I totally immersed myself in photography. “I put it all on the line.” Daniels joined photography groups and clubs. He apprenticed with photographers he met and admired. He even took a job at Olan Mills where he spent several years learning the finer points of portraiture. “You would be surprised at what you learn when you have just 10 minutes to take a great photo,” Daniels said. “That

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Model Emma Jackson shown as part of the photographer’s “Brown Paper Bag” collection currently on exhibit at AFAS Unleashed Arts Gallery.

was the beginning of me learning to look inside the person whose picture I was taking, not just at the person. “You learn that there are no strangers.” Daniels tried his hand at still-life photography, nature photography - he even dabbled in shooting nudes (which he did not like). He kept returning to taking pictures of everyday people, walking the streets in search of interesting faces to photograph. “Street portraiture made me excited,” Daniels said. “I started riding the bus to Raleigh or Charlotte. I would get off and walk around, taking pictures of people that fascinated me in some way, never spending more than 30 seconds on a portrait. “When someone I respected would tell me my composition was boring - which happened - I would freak out, then listen to what they had to say and integrate that alongside my own style. And when someone told me I was good, I kept it in perspective, even though it made me feel good. “This was my path, and I soon became aware that I was growing.” WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

The depth and reach of Daniels’ curated works and projects is beginning to cast a long shadow. His style as a photographer has developed into something highly individualized and instantly recognizable to anyone even casually familiar with his work. Some of his work - such as his collection of photographs from a Black Lives Matter march, the John Coltrane International Jazz & Blues Festival or his photographs of the protests that accompanied the recent Presidential Inauguration - blur the worlds between art and photo-journalism in often electrifying ways. But his more pointed, conceptual collections - the mixed-media America Wants; the HB2-themed American Gothic or his most recent show, the wellreceived Brown Paper Bag - emphasize Daniels deep-rooted desire to cut to the heart of what troubles American society through explorations of race, ageism, sexuality, class, homelessness, privilege and politics. As a strong black man, Daniels has seen many of these problems up close and personal, and he feels it is duty to

Owens Daniels shown in a self-portrait. “I have always known who I was. I want my work to follow in the footsteps of the great Negro photographers who understood and showed the world who we were as a race of individuals, and how we really looked and lived.”

confront these issues in a way that makes people feel. They might laugh. They might cry. They might gasp at the beauty of an image or sentiments. They might recoil at the ugliness of a harsh truth. The might see someone they know. They might see themselves. The main thing, Daniels said, is that people think. “Owens is tireless in his push to advance and make things happen, and I think he has seen a tremendous push forward in the last six months,” said Corey Madden, the Executive Director of the Thomas S. Kenan Institute for the Arts at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts. Daniels has spent the past year working with The Kenan Institute, which is devoted to encouraging the development of knowledge and the way artists, organizations and communities approach creative challenges. “He has embraced this opportunity,” Madden said. “He believes every person has a story and a voice, and he has used diversity to explore these issues and chal-

lenges in a manner that is dramatic and emotional.” To that end, Daniels said that he is finally comfortable with who and what he is - even if the politically correct world has not caught up with him. “Too often, matters of race and identity are filtered through the evolution of white people,” he said. “My aim is to help preserve our broad culture and my culture. In my lifetime, I began life as a Negro. Then I was told I was a black man. Now, I am a person of color.” “I have always known who I was. I want my work to follow in the footsteps of the great Negro photographers who understood and showed the world who we were as a race of individuals, and how we really looked and lived. “So I am a Negro photographer.” He paused “But my work is for everyone.” !

WANNA

see?

Owens Daniels’ photo exhibition, “Brown Paper Bag,” will run through March 3 at Unleashed Art Gallery, 205 W. 6th St., Winston-Salem. FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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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

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218 South Fayetteville St. | 336.610.3722 foursaintsbrewing.com Feb 25: Emma Lee and Tyler Millard Feb 25: Earleine Mar 3: Wolfie Calhoin Mar 4: Heads Up Penny Mar 10: 18 Strings Mar 11: Steely James Mar 15: Irish/Celtic Music Session Mar 17: Shiloh Hill Mar 25: Old State Travelers Mar 31: Jakon’s Ferry Stragglers Apr 1: Earleine Apr 7: Wolfie Calhoun

clEmmOnS

RIvER RIdGE TAPHOUSE 1480 River Ridge Dr | 336.712.1883 riverridgetaphouse.com Feb 23: Seth Williams Feb 24: Southern Eyes Mar 3: Exit 180 Mar 10: Southern Eyes

BIG PURPLE

Mar 17: Big daddy Mojo Mar 24: Nine Lives Apr 7: Pop Guns! Apr 14: Exit 180 Apr 21: Southern Eyes Apr 28: Big daddy Mojo

812 Olive St. | 336.302.3728

THE BLINd TIGER

dAnBuRy

GREEN HERON ALE HOUSE 1110 Flinchum Rd | 336.593.4733 greenheronclub.com

gREEnSBORO

ARIzONA PETE’S

2900 Patterson St #A | 336.632.9889 arizonapetes.com Feb 24: 1-2-3 Friday Mar 3: 1-2-3 Friday

ARTISTIkA NIGHT CLUB

523 S Elm St | 336.271.2686 artistikanightclub.com Feb 24: dJ dan the Player Feb 25: dJ Paco and dJ dan the Player

1819 Spring Garden St | 336.272.9888 theblindtiger.com Feb 22: The Movement w/ Elusive Groove Feb 23: Sightlow w/ Antihero, Freaky, Spunge Feb 24: Big Something w/ Aqueous Feb 25: Big Something Feb 26: The Sweet Lillies, Seth Williams, Lauren Light Feb 28: TAUk Mar 3: Patterns Mar 4: Cosmic Charlie Mar 6: Bit Bigade plays Castlevania Mar 8: The Barons Mar 10: Justin Fulp Mar 11: Cash’d Out - Tribute to Johnny Cash Mar 13: Badfish, A Tribute To Sublime Mar 16: Pato Banton Mar 17: The Mantras Mar 18: Melvin Seals & The JGB Mar 31: John 5 and The Creatures

BUCkHEAd SALOON

1720 Battleground Ave | 336.272.9884 buckheadsaloongreensboro.com Fe 24: Back@ya Feb 26: Bad Romeo

CHURCHILL’S ON ELM

213 S Elm St | 336.275.6367 churchillscigarlounge.com Mar 11: Sahara Reggae Band Mar 18: Jack Long Old School Jam

THE CORNER BAR

1700 Spring Garden St | 336.272.5559 corner-bar.com Feb 23: dC Carter Mar 2: Jim Mayberry Mar 9: Bradley Steele Mar 16: Jon Montgomery(Norlina)

COMEdY zONE

1126 S Holden Rd | 336.333.1034 thecomedyzone.com Feb 24: Shaun Jones Feb 25: Shaun Jones Mar 3: Burpie Mar 4: Burpie Mar 10: Mike Gardner Mar 11: Mike Gardner

COMMON GROUNdS 11602 S Elm Ave | 336.698.3888 Mar 11: Bernardus Apr 4: Tamara Hansson

CONE dENIM

Bringing the coast t

o you sin ce 1 9 5

3

MARCH 1ST 6 PM - 8PM AT COTSWOLD AVE LOCATION

Foothills Brewing

tap takeover

$1 OYSTERS • $1 OFF ALL BURGERS • $3 PINTS W/ FREE LOGO GLASS

20 YES! WEEKLY

FOUR LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU:

3920 Cotswold Ave. • 3011 Randleman Rd. Mayberry Mall, Mount Airy • 1629 Freeway Dr., Reidsville

Greensboro’s Oldest Independent Restaurant FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

Z T N U AL YO HEWS N O T S MP WITH A FRIDAY & SATURDAY

FEBUARY 24-25 FRI 8:30 | SAT 8 & 10 PM WITH HOST JJ JOHNSON TICKETS $10 & AVAILABLE AT WWW.LAUGHINGAS.NET 2105 PETERS CREEK PKWY WINSTON-SALEM, NC 27127 | (336) 608-2270

117 S Elm St | 336.378.9646 cdecgreensboro.com Mar 4: Appetite For destruction Mar 18: Jeezy Mar 26: Chris d’Elia Apr 1: The dan Band Apr 5: kehlani Apr 6: Jojo Apr 7: The Machine Apr 21: Blues Traveler Apr 27: Marsha Ambrosius & Eric Benét

THE GREEN BEAN

341 S. Elm St | 336.691.9990 thegreenbeancoffeehouse.blogspot.com

GREENE STREET CLUB

113 N Greene St | 336.273.4111 greenestreetclub.com Mar 16: Riff Raff LIvE Mar 23: #NastyNightOWT - A Pretty Nasty Affair Apr 22: Robin Bullock

www.YEswEEklY.comw


ham’S gatE citY

3017 Gate City Blvd | 336.851.4800 hamsrestaurants.com Feb 24: Sahara

ham’S nEw gardEn

thE idiot box comEdY clUb

2134 Lawndale Dr | 336.274.2699 www.idiotboxers.com Feb 24: batman roast

1635 New Garden Rd | 336.288.4544 hamsrestaurants.com Feb 24: Second glance

villagE tavErn

mcphErSon’S bar & grill

world oF bEEr

5710 W Gate City Blvd | 336.292.6496 mcphersonsgreensboro.com

print workS biStro

1903 Westridge Rd | 336.282.3063 villagetavern.com 1210 Westover Terrace | 336.897.0031 worldofbeer.com/Locations/Greensboro

high point

702 Green Valley Rd | 336.379.0699 printworksbistro.com Feb 22: Evan olsen & Jessica mashburn

aFtEr hoUrS tavErn

SomEwhErE ElSE tavErn

blUE boUrbon Jack’S

5713 W Friendly Ave | 336.292.5464 facebook.com/thesomewhereelsetavern Feb 24: the damn bruners Feb 25: desired redemption, novarium, nevernauts mar 4: divine treachery, mechabull, Fan the Flames, written in gray mar 10: thundering herd mar 11: black plague, divine treachery, mindjakked, Unhenged, Zestrah mar 18: Snake & the plisskens, the dick richards, Sibannac, nevernauts, grim details, i, atlas mar 25: ozone Jones, october, terminal resistance, dirtyfoot, candlelit, aftermath apr 8: desired redemption, nevernauts, blackwater drowning

mwww.YEswEEklY.com

1614 N Main St | 336.883.4113 afterhourstavern.net mar 9: nonii ryan

1310 N Main St | 336.882.2583 reverbnation.com/venue/bluebourbonjacks mar 3: too much toni mar 24: Southern Eyes apr 24: Jukebox revolver

claddagh rEStaUrant & pUb

130 E Parris Ave | 336.841.0521 thecladdaghrestaurantandpub.com Feb 22: craig baldwin Feb 23: Sam Foster Feb 24: david & Joel | paris avenue Feb 25: midnight gypsys

ham’S palladiUm 5840 Samet Dr | 336.887.2434 hamsrestaurants.com Feb 24: brothers pearl

libErtY brEwErY

914 Mall Loop Rd | 336.882.4677 hghosp.com

jamestown

thE dEck

118 E Main St | 336.207.1999 thedeckatrivertwist.com Feb 24: bare the traveler Feb 25: norlina

kernersville

dancE hall daZE

612 Edgewood St | 336.558.7204 dancehalldaze.com Feb 24: the delmonicos Feb 25: Silverhawk

EclEction

221 N Main St | 336.497.4822 eclectionnc.com

thE EmpoUriUm

734 E. Mountain St. | 336.671.9159

lewisville

old nick’S pUb

191 Lowes Foods Dr | 336.747.3059 OldNicksPubNC.com Feb 24: karaoke w/ tyler perkins Feb 25: the Usual Suspects

oakridge

Jp loonEY’S

2213 E Oak Ridge Rd | 336.643.1570 facebook.com/JPLooneys Feb 23: trivia

Mardi Gras Party

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 7PM - 10PM Karaoke with DJ Tyler Perkins CAJUN FOOD / CLASSIC NEW ORLEANS COCKTAILS / MASKS & BEADS / KING'S CAKE Best Mardi Gras Costume Contest with Prizes 1480 River Ridge Dr, Clemmons, NC 336-712-1883 / riverridgetaphouse.com

Latham’s Luthiers

Instrument Repair

Full Evaluation of Instrument Quick Turnaround! Individual or Business Repair Works with Music Instrument Retail Businesses Will Come to You for Service Serving the Triad FOR MORE INFORMATION: @EROCK4YOU / LATHAMSLUTHIERS@GMAIL.COM CALL OR TEXT AND ASK FOR ERIC: 336-543-3499

25 YEARS EXPERIENCE WILL BEAT ANY PRICE!

FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 YES! WEEKLY

21


randleman

ridEr’S in thE countrY 5701 Randleman Rd | 336.674.5111 ridersinthecountry.net Feb 25: darrell harwood

# DT WS

winston-salem

2nd and grEEn

207 N Green St | 336.631.3143 2ngtavern.com

6th & vinE

209 W 6th St | 336.725.5577 6thandvine.com

bull’S tavErn

408 West 4th St | 336.331.3431 facebook.com/bulls-tavern Feb 23: travis griggs & Friends Feb 24: Music club hosted by doug davis Feb 25: Fruit Smoothie trio

DOW NTOW N

r e s tauran t we ek F E B R U A R Y

2 0 - 2 6

2 0 1 7

fo r

d e ta i l s

vi s it

d ow ntow n ws.com Garage Branding

22Down YES! WEEKLY FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 Town Winston Salem

Mac & nElli’S

4926 Country Club Rd | 336.529.6230 macandnellisws.com Feb 22: karaoke Feb 23: darrell hoots Feb 24: John & david Feb 25: Morgan keene band Feb 26: Stephen henson Feb 27: Mike bustin

MEllinniuM cEntEr

3870 Bethania Station Rd | 336.815.1664

Finnigan’S wakE

MilnEr’S

cb’S tavErn

620 Trade St | 336.723.0322 facebook.com/FinnigansWake Feb 24: dana & Evan Feb 25: Jim Mayberry

630 S Stratford Rd | 336.768.2221 milnerfood.com Feb 26: live Jazz

FoothillS brEwing

5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 Feb 23: open Mic with country dan collins Feb 24: wood tone Slim Feb 25: Seth williams Feb 26: rob Price Mar 2: open Mic with country dan collins Mar 3: Sam Foster Mar 4: casey noel

thE garagE

Whatever hunger craving you have, you can satisfy during Restaurant Week. Enjoy prix fixe meals at participating downtown restaurants. $20 - $30. Great food? Memorable evenings? Find it here.

2105 Peters Creek Pkwy laughingas.net Feb 24: al Yountz Feb 25: al Yountz Mar 10: Edward aundraus Mar 11: Edward aundraus

101 West 5th Street | 336.723.3700 MCenterevents.com Feb 24: Perpetual groove w/ Marvelous Funkshun Mar 11: the Stranger billy Joel tribute Mar 17: Envision

638 W 4th St | 336.777.3348 foothillsbrewing.com Feb 22: redleg husky Feb 25: Stray local Feb 26: Sunday Jazz Mar 4: cc3 Mar 11: abe reid & the Spike drivers Mar 17: St. Patrick’s day Mar 25: big bump and the Stun guns

# DT WS

laughing gaS coMEdY club

110 W 7th St | 336.777.1127 the-garage.ws Feb 24: cash bash Mar 3: all them witches with irata Mar 10: cactus black album release with Sinners & Saints, Power animal Mar 11: hectorina, Foxture, and andy loebs

JohnnY & JunE’S Saloon

2105 Peters Creek Pkwy | 336.724.0546 johnnynjunes.com Feb 23: dJ Snow Feb 25: tim Elliot Mar 18: Muscadine bloodline Mar 24: them dirty roses Mar 31: daniel Johnson

MuddY crEEk caFE

MuddY crEEk MuSic hall

5455 Bethania Rd | 336.923.8623 Feb 23: redleg husky Feb 24: wonderwall the tribute (the beatles) Feb 25: tom Young and taylor vaden Feb 26: across the blue ridge w/ Paul brown Feb 26: the honeycutters

QualitY inn

2008 S. Hawthorne Rd | 336-765-6670 Feb 18: Motown revue

thE QuiEt Pint

1420 W 1st St | 336.893.6881 thequietpint.com

www.YEswEEklY.comw


[CONCERTS] Compiled by Alex Eldridge

BOJANGLES COLISEUM

2700 E Independence Blvd | 704.372.3600 www.bojanglescoliseum.com Mar 11: Casting Crowns

Mar 17: The Decibel Magazine 2017 Tour Mar 17: Regina Spektor Mar 18: Judah & the Lion Mar 19: Katatonia Mar 22: Simple Plan - No Pads, No Helmets

THE FILLMORE

OVENS AUDITORIUM

CHARLOTTE

1000 NC Music Factory Blvd | 704.916.8970 www.fillmorecharlottenc.com Feb 22: Louis The Child Feb 23: Less Than Jake & Pepper Feb 24: Cherub & The Floozies Feb 24: Daya Feb 25: Juicy J Mar 2: Sleigh Bells Mar 4: The Marshall Tucker Band Mar 5: Cold War Kids w/ Middle Kids Mar 6: Overkill Mar 7: Colony House Mar 8: Young the Giant Mar 10: Deafheaven w/ This Will Destory You & Emma Ruth Rundle Mar 10: Face 2 Face Mar 11: St Paul & The Broken Bones Mar 12: Bad Suns Mar 15: TroyBoi Mar 16: The Highway Finds Tour

YES Weekly_9.9x5_Jan25 BW.indd WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

2700 E Independence Blvd | 704.372.3600 www.ovensauditorium.com Feb 22: The Piano Guys Feb 24: Nu Soul Revival Tour Mar 6: We Are Here Mar 10: The Head and The Heart w/ Mt. Joy

TWC ARENA

333 E Trade St | 704.688.9000 www.timewarnercablearena.com Mar 9: Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience

DURHAM

CAROLINA THEATRE 309 W Morgan St | 919.560.3030 www.carolinatheatre.org Feb 23: Tommy Emmanuel

Mar 1: Ladysmith Black Mambazo Mar 3: Southside Johnny & The Asbury Jukes Mar 7: Valerie June Mar 13: Gordon Lightfoot Mar 17: Robert Earl Keen Mar 20: Odessey & Oracle Mar 21-22: Stephin Merritt & The Magnetic Fields Mar 23: Black Violin

DPAC

GREENSBORO COLISEUM 1921 W Gate City Blvd | 336.373.7400 www.greensborocoliseum.com Feb 24: Brantley Gilbert Feb 25: Twenty Øne Piløts Mar 23: Florida Georgia Line Mar 25: Winter Jam

HIGH POINT

HIGH POINT THEATRE

220 E Commerce Ave | 336.883.3401 www.highpointtheatre.com Feb 25: Manhattan Transfer & Take 6 Mar 31: The HillBenders

123 Vivian St | 919.680.2787 www.dpacnc.com Mar 2: Martina McBride Mar 5: Dawes Mar 10: Get The Led Out Mar 23: Celtic Woman

RALEIGH

PNC ARENA

GREENSBORO

1400 Edwards Mill Rd | 919.861.2300 www.thepncarena.com Mar 10: Casting Crowns w/ Danny Gokey & Unspoken Mar 19: Stevie Nicks w/ Pretenders

CAROLINA THEATRE

310 S Greene St | 336.333.2605 www.carolinatheatre.com Feb 23: Arlo Guthrie Feb 24: Rockin’ Road to Dublin Feb 26: UNC Clef Hangers’ Mar 31: The Earls of Leicester

!

CHECK IT OUT!

Click on our website, yesweekly.com, for more concerts.

merlefest.ORG 800-343-7857

Zac Brown Band

The Avett Brothers

Sam Bush Bush Band Band Sam

Jerry Douglas

Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives

Peter Rowan

Del McCoury Band

Artist Stee[p Canyon Rangers

Plus Many More Performers! 1 3 Stag es o f " Trad itional Plus " M us ic!

Natalie MacMaster & Donnell Leahy ting

30

Celebra

YEARS

ON THE CAMPUS OF wilkes community college, wilkesboro, NC 1

23

1/17/17 12:02 PM FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 YES! WEEKLY


tunes

HEAR IT!

Mesmerizer Records keeps it mystical BY JOHN ADAMIAN | @johnradamian

M

aybe 18th Century Scottish philosopher/ economist Adam Smith’s famous concept of the “invisible hand” was a mystical, occult thing. The idea helped explain the cold mechanics of capital, labor, profit and business, giving it a poetic flourish. The author of “The Wealth of Nations” envisioned an unseen force that moves markets and balances supply and demand, keeping prices and resources and work all dancing together in the name of commerce guided by everyone’s own selfinterest. Smith probably wasn’t thinking of pagan energies or mystic symbolism, but who knows. The people behind Mesmerizer Records, a recently opened record and bookstore that also hosts live shows and other events, are down with the occult mysteries, and they’re prepared

24 YES! WEEKLY

to inject a little ancient ritualistic oomph into their business. You might think you’re just handing over some cash for a sweet David Bowie album, but they view it as more than that. Amanda Lindsey is part of the team of creative business people who launched Mesmerizer Records, which sells both new and used vinyl, on the corner of E. 4th St. and Patterson Avenue in Winston-Salem, on the spot of where Camel City Tattoo Shop was before moving up the street, around the block from Krankies Coffee, and a few doors down from the where Reanimator Records had been operating until late last year. Mesmerizer is also linked -- spiritually -- to The Black Lodge, an excellent small bar next door, with a pronounced occult vibe, part ritual lair, part shrine to the dead of the music/art/ culture pantheon, part gypsy wagon, part hipster bar that seems to always play only the best music.

Lindsey, 35, originally from New Hampshire, is a musician and songwriter and sometime grad-student in the field of archeology. She’s a relative newcomer to Winston-Salem, having moved here in late summer of 2015, after falling in love with the city following some shows that her Chapel Hill band did here. “I did not want to leave WinstonSalem,” says Lindsey. “It was my favorite show I’ve ever played in my life.” Now she lives in Kernersville, working by day at Mitch Easter’s Fidelitorium Studios, and coming into town to run the record shop, which is an afternoon and evening affair at the moment. The idea for Mesmerizer Records took shape in April of last year, when Lindsey and her friend Blake Tesh, a musician and bartender at the Black Lodge, took a trip to New Orleans to see The Cure. Tesh says the spirit of healthy hedoFEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

nistic anarchy, what you might call the safe and sanctioned release of unstable energies, was something that struck them about New Orleans and the culture of Bacchic festivities there. “You don’t need to be controlled,” he says. There’s a do-as-thou-wilt vibe to the enterprise. And Tesh sees The

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Black Lodge and Mesmerizer Records as businesses that are as much about atmosphere as they are about objects or drinks. “Both places are in the business of creating an experience for someone,” he says. Lindsey says that she sees a connection between archeology and record buying. “The more I think about it, the more I realize that this is incredibly archeological,” says Lindsey. “I have that feeling when I look for records, for books – it’s like treasure-hunting. The field of archeology that I’m really interested in is objects, and how people keep them and discard them.” Of course, over the last 20 years people have tossed out old ways of playing music and embraced streaming and digital technology, which leave little or no physical trail to rummage through. So the pendulum swing back to vinyl records and cassettes is something that makes sense to Lindsey, from a psychological perspective. The music industry might be dying, but people still love music and they often long for something that represents that. “It seems like if they do want something, they want this beautiful thing, like a record,” says Lindsey. “They want something that’s tied into sensorial experiences. You can smell it and touch it.” The 750-square-foot space at Mesmerizer could make you think of a sort of midden mound from the late 20th century, with compact layers of history there to be explored, only it’s alphabetized and aggressively curated so customers don’t have to do all of the digging and sifting. Votive candles and fragrant smudge stick give the place a rich olfactory signal, a kind of bottom-end smell -- not the standard musty waterlogged funkiness of many record shops. The location -- as one focal point of Winston-Salem’s renegade arts and culture scene, with a history of creative performance, living, exhibit and shopping spaces -- is meaningful to Tesh and Lindsey. “We’re trying to hold on to an innovative spirit that was started on this block two decades ago,” says Tesh. “Music and performance and art is something that needs to stay on this block.” In that spirit, the venue has already hosted a number of noteworthy and energetic events -- a grand opening to coincide with the winter solstice, a yoga event to mark the new year, a potluck, dance and microtonal electronic music, and a sweaty and packed rock show. As students of ancient history know, many of our signature holidays were appropriated from or grafted on to key festivities in the pagan world; spring fertility imagWWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

ery morphed into the Easter bunny; winter solstice rituals became the Christmas tree, pagan temples became the sites of early Christian churches. In the spirit of tipping the hat to the ancients, Mesmerizer will take part in a multi-venue love-a-thon event that will blend pagan, Christian and candy-and-card-selling capitalist/secular festival traditions. A Valentine’s festival at Delurk Gallery (a few blocks away at 207 W. 6th St.) with a performance by Dark Prophet Tongueless Monk and Darsombra was followed by a Lupercalia Love Parade. Lupercalia, in case you’ve never been much of classicist, is the ancient Roman festival, which was marked by public nudity and revelry as part of a purification ritual. The Winston-Salem Lupercalia parade was a little more low-key, with revelers following a trail of heart-shaped balloons leading to Mesmerizer, where Judy Barnes performed to close the night. Shows are free at Mesmerizer, in part because the expense of having someone tend the door and monitor comings and goings is too much for the space and the crowds, but also because Tesh and Lindsey want people to be able to come to the events, even if they don’t have a ton of cash to spend. Donations are collected, and those can be significant for performers. And if people don’t have to pay $10 to get in at the door, maybe they’ll be more likely to buy that Cure record or book of Borges short stories. The pair sees any money coming into their business as something that infuses the network of businesses and enterprises that all feed off of each other’s success. It’s a microeconomy situation. “I think money is a form of energy,” says Lindsey, “and you should spend it on things you believe in.” As much as commerce has been distilled down to a this-for-that logic for many of us, there are businesses that have a philosophy and a communitybuilding ethos, a spirit of pooling people’s buying power to drive something that goes beyond simple profit. The people at Mesmerizer take their mystic principles seriously, and it doesn’t appear to be some sort of superficial occult dabbling. They mean it. “We’re all volunteers here, essentially,” says Tesh. “We’re trying to raise a consciousness level. It’s bigger than money.” !

Having Our Say

THE DELANY SISTERS’ FIRST 100 YEARS

FEB 22-MAR 5 BUY TICKETS TODAY!

2 0 9 N . S P R U C E S T. | W I N S T O N - S A L E M | 3 3 6 . 2 7 2 . 0 1 6 0 | T R I A D S TA G E . O R G

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.

FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017 YES! WEEKLY

25


Fri Feb 24

[CHOICE BEATS] Upcoming shows you should check out

MARVELOUS FUNKSHUN/ PERPETUAL GROOVE

www.lincolntheatre.com FEBRUARY

Th 23 LOUIS THE CHILD

w/Imad Royal / Manila Killa 7p

Fr 24 THE LACS w/Almost Kings 8p Sa 25 LAST BAND STANDING 6:30p w/After Party feat: INDECISION Sa 25 CHERUB/FLOOZIES @ THE RITZ Su 26 JOE HERO (Foo Fighters Tribute) w/Amuse (Muse Tribute) 6:30p MARCH

T h 2 JAZZ IS PHSH 7:30p F r 3 WHO’S BAD Michael Jackson Trib Sa 4 LOS LONELY BOYS w/ Sugar Dirt & Sand 7p

Su 5 We 8 Fr 10 Sa 11 Su 12 Th 16

AFTON MUSIC SHOWCASE 6p DAVID BROMBERG w.Austin Shaw THE CLARKS w/Michael Tolcher BOWIE BALL Trib to DAVID BOWIE HOLLY BOWLING THE HIP ABDUCTION

Fr 17 Sa 18 Su 19 We 22 Th 23 Fr 24

VANESSA CARLTON w/Tristen 7p GLOWRAGE “Carnival of Color” 8p RODI FEST: Moderna/DirtyRemnatz RISING APPALACHIA 7p HIPPIE SABOTAGE REVEREND HORTON HEAT

Sa 25 Su 26 We 29 Th 30

w/The Get Right Band 8p

w/Unknown Hinson / BirdCloud + WHISKEY MYERS w/Steel Woods LOX w/Uncle Murda 7p

BLUE OCTOBER “GRATEFUL BALL” THE TRAVELIN’ MCCOURYS/ THE JEFF AUSTIN BAND 7:30p Fr 31 THE BREAKFAST CLUB Sa Su Th Su

APRIL

1 2 6 9

RUNAWAY GIN SUPER DUPER KYLE/Cousin Stizz PANCAKES & BOOZE ART SHOW BOWLING FOR SOUP 7p

Sa 15 Fr 21 Sa 22 Th 27 Fr 28 Sa 29 5 - 6 5-13 5-15 5-17

PIGEONS PLAYING PING PONG JONNY LANG w/Quinn Sullivan 7p Y&T 8p CODY JINKS w/Ward Davis+ THE MANTRAS DANGERMUFFIN Album Release SPRINTER METALFEST MOTHERS FINEST 7p REAL ESTATE w/Frankie Cosmos MAYDAY PARADE

w/Runaway Kids / Direct Hit

Adv. Tickets @Lincolntheatre.com & Schoolkids Records All Shows All Ages

126 E. Cabarrus 919-821-4111

26 YES! WEEKLY

St.

FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

The Millennium Center (101 W. 5th St. Winston-Salem) Friday Feb. 24 8-11 p.m. “Marvelous Funkshun, or “The Funkshun,” as fans like to call them, released their first album Live at Ziggy’s in February 2016, and we’re glad it found its way into the Jamwich rotation. The band’s sound is a captivating, strangely danceable fusion of southern rock and jam sounds, mixing a little funk in there, too. The steel lap guitar paired with improvisational jams and psychedelic sounds makes for a party on the scale of a Widespread Panic show. Though the album is only five songs, they average in around 10 minutes, giving you a great feeling of their live flow and transporting you to Ziggy’s, right there with the band. The show that was recorded was actually their set from a day they played with Ballyhoo and Snoop Dogg. “We were really just trying to play to a crowd that probably was not really there to see us. The philosophy was just to keep it funky, but still be ourselves.” Sam Robinson says that “it wasn’t originally supposed to be an album actually,” and it just happened to be recorded by his friend Sean Grogan when mixing for the show that night. They liked it and had it run through analog gear and mixed. “Everything is exactly how it was played, no edits.” The first song, “Liquor Store,” gives you a taste of their bluesy side but throw you a curveball with a funky bassline. This is where we get our first taste of their sound, before launching into what is my favorite track, “Hear My Train a Comin.’” The beginning builds in a harmonizing riff, building into a triumphant release of an instrumental jam and blistering guitar solos. Marvelous Funkshun’s style can be unpredictable, and the 14 minute “Hear My Train a Comin’” took the tone way down into a slow-tempo blues exploration. “ The similarities to the Sacred Steel tradition made “Hear My Train” a perfect choice,” Sam Robinson says of the track. “Rest My Bones” takes no time in giving us a beat to dance to in this feel-good blues rock tune. They end the album with their funkiest song of all, “Shaky Ground.” “Shaky Ground is always fun to dance to,” says Sam. The track does in fact induce involuntary head-bobbing and toe-tapping, so be warned. It’s a great way to go out with a bang, but leaves us wanting more. Thankfully for us, you can listen to the album on Spotify or buy it on iTunes now.“ - Sam Robinson

The Lacs Sat Feb 25

@ The Ritz

Indecision Sat Feb 25

Who’s Bad Fri Mar 3

Sat Mar 4

Los Lonely Boys

Wed Mar 8

David Bromberg

THE MOVEMENT W/ELUSIVE GROOVE

The Blind Tiger (1819 Spring Garden St. Greensboro) Wednesday Feb. 22 9 p.m. “The Movement’s sixth studio album, GOLDEN, was released April 8, 2016, on Rootfire Cooperative. It debuted at #1 on the Billboard Reggae Chart. Formed in 2004 by a trio of Sublime and Pixies fans, Joshua Swain, Jordan Miller, and John Ruff, aka DJ Riggles, launched The Movement with their “alternative reggae” debut album, ON YOUR FEET. In 2008, the group met Chris DiBeneditto, a Philadelphia-based producer who had worked with like-minded acts such as Slightly Stoopid and G. Love & Special

Sauce. Relocating to Philadelphia, they recorded SET SAIL at DiBeneditto’s Philadelphonic Studios. The Movement expanded with the addition of Jason “Smiles” Schmidt on bass and Gary Jackson on drums. In 2012, Miller left the group, and the trio, now fronted by Swain, released their fourth album SIDE BY SIDE, debuting at #2 on the Billboard Reggae Chart. In 2014 The Movement released BENEATH THE PALMS, a surprise acoustic album as a free gift to their fans. Shortly thereafter they began working on what would become their finest album to date, GOLDEN. Keyboardist Ross Bogan joined the group full time in Spring 2016.” - via Facebook !

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drama

[PLAYBILL]

STAGE IT!

The oven mitts are off in The Barn Dinner Theatre’s The Kitchen Witches

W

hen two become one isn’t always a good thing, especially when it’s two competitive chefs who are forced to co-host a cooking show. In The Barn Dinner Theatre’s The Kitchen Witches, two put-out cooks air their dirty laundry on the air as Lenise Willis they vie for the spotlight. First of all, if you’ve never Contributing made it down to Stage Coach Trail for dinner and a show then columnist you’re missing out. Actually, quite a few people know to visit The Barn Dinner Theatre for a spirited evening, and yet it could still be considered one of Greensboro’s best kept secrets, somewhat tucked away from the downtown arts community. But this past weekend I was reminded not only of how fun their shows are, but how dedicated and passionate the staff are to its community. The whole way through, from my entry to the door to meeting my dedicated waiter, to listening to the pre-show announcements, I felt cared for. The staff truly thinks through the entire dining and theatre experience to make sure a good time is had by all. Not only were the wait staff incredibly respectful, attentive and accommodating, but the producer and general manager, Ric Gutierrez himself, hones the BDT’s friendly spirit in his announcements, too. Now I realize it’s a bit ridiculous to include the pre-show announcements in a theatre review, but in this case I had to. I greatly respected how much time Gutierrez took to get to know his audience, calling out every birthday, anniversary and celebration in the crowd. And one might think that it would have gotten old or boring and had a “get on with the show” moment, but Gutierrez’s natural humor and warm demeanor erected quite the opposite. In fact, by the end of the announcements, I felt a part of the audience—like we were in something together. And that’s a hard feeling to come by these days. Now on to The Kitchen Witches. As its core it’s a pretty simple and silly comedy about two older women who had a falling out over a man long ago. Since then, their long-time friendship has turned into a bitter rivalry that comes to an ugly head on live air. After both of their cooking shows are cancelled, their producer sees an opportunity to bring them both back in the spotlight, but together in a Jerry Springer type fashion. What ensues is a slew of hilarious and very dirty cuts at one another. Overall, the show was a blast. I laughed and smiled throughout and it was just a great break from a busy week. Susan Jones and April J’Callahan Marshall, who play “the kitchen witches” had a wonderful chemistry and added their own twists of WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

hilarious gestures to their already funny lines. There were a few more tongue-tied moments in the dialogue than I would have expected in a nearly finished run, but the mood at The Barn is so light that I hardly noticed. I can’t stress enough the fullness of the experience there and I would definitely recommend a visit. It’s just a casual, light-hearted way to end the week and share a robust laugh. There’s only one weekend of performances left for The Kitchen Witches, but that doesn’t mean you’ll have to miss out on BDT’s warm spirit and convivial evening. Up next to continue its 53rd season is the comedy, BINGO! The Winning Musical, which runs March 3-31. The hilarious musical features long-time friends and bingo pals Vern, Honey and Patsy, who brave a terrible storm to make it to the annual celebration of the birth of bingo. But when the storm knocks out the power to the Bingo Hall, Patsy and Honey are reminded of the ominous night 15 years ago that began in the same way, but that led to an evening of mishaps and schemes. This show is a perfect fit for BDT since the audience will get to participate and actually play bingo during the performance. !

WANNA

go?

The Barn Dinner Theatre, located at 120 Stage Coach Trail, Greensboro, presents The Kitchen Witches this week through Sunday and BINGO! The Winning Musical March 3-31. Tickets are $43-$48 and include a buffet dinner. For tickets and more information call 336-292-2211 or visit barndinner.com.

by Lenise Willis North Carolina A&T State University celebrates Black History month this week with an inspiring concert on the life and experiences of forgotten African-American composers, including music from the Antebellum Period through the Civil Rights Movement and modern times. Famed violinist Tami Hughes will perform compositions she’s collected in “Legacy: Violin Music of African Composers,” a visual concert of her album, as part of the school’s Lyceum Series, which is dedicated to bringing the most provocative, culturally diverse programs to the university campus and surrounding community. If you’re looking for a little less thought provocation, Theatre Alliance continues its electric production of Rock of Ages this week through Sunday. The rock concert includes the hits from such 80s rock bands as Pat Benatar, Journey, Poison and Bon Jovi. Another fun production continuing its runs this week is Barn Dinner Theatre’s The Kitchen Witches, in which two competitive TV hosts are paired together for a dramatic cooking show that likens to Martha Stewart combined with Jerry Springer. Productions run this week through Sunday. Wednesday through Friday UNC Greensboro presents Antigone by Sophocles with translation by Don Taylor. Oedipus has just passed away in Colonus, and Antigone and her sister decide to return to Thebes with the intention of helping their brothers avoid a prophecy that predicts they will kill each other in a battle for the throne of Thebes. Performances are in Taylor Theatre. The Greensboro College Department of Music presents its annual Winter Concert at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Gail Brower Huggins Performance Center in Odell Building on campus. Admission is free and open to the public. In other news, Triad Stage announced its 17th season Monday night, so stay tuned on what to expect from the professional theatre. One sneak peek is that next spring it will be performing a scandalous thriller, The Passion of Teresa Rae King, which I’m particularly excited about. Before then though, check out their grand musical, South Pacific, coming in September and the comedy Buyer & Cellar in October. !

FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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27


flicks

SCREEN IT!

LEGO Batman : The Dark Knight cometh

Given the success of The LEGO Movie (2014), which exceeded all critical and financial expectations, followups were inevitable, and the first such spin-off is The LEGO Batman Movie, which Mark Burger pulls out all the stops and encomContributing passes seemingly every character in columnist the DC Comics Universe – all of them presented in LEGO form, naturally. Will Arnett reprises his voice-over role to terrific effect, growling and snarling his way through the character of The Dark Knight, the tireless Gotham City crimefighter who prefers solitude. Another successful exploit is rewarded with lobster thermidor (reheated in a microwave oven) and, perhaps, a screening of Jerry Maguire

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(1996), followed by some impromptu jamming on his electric guitar. A battalion of screenwriters (Seth GrahameSmith, Chris McKenna, Erik Sommers, Jared Stern and John Whittington) have fashioned an inspired send-up of Batman and superhero trappings in general, gleefully tossing out a barrage of in-jokes and puns that come so fast and furious they may sail right over the heads of children but will doubtless please, and impress, the DC faithful. (Even Adam West gets his due.) For all the mockery and self-mockery, The LEGO Batman Movie clearly understands the character, in some instances better than previous live-action Batman movies. The film opens at such a high pitch that it occasionally struggles to maintain that breakneck pace, and grows a little repetitious, but its giddy spirit and splashy presentation are positively infectious. Resistance truly is futile. Other notables lending their vocal skills to trademark (and trademarked) characters are Zach Galifianakis as the Joker, whose ongoing relationship with Batman is initially one-sided (The Joker hates Batman, Batman couldn’t care less about the Joker), Michael Cera as a zealously eager Robin, Rosario Dawson as tough, practical police commissioner Barbara Gordon, and Ralph Fiennes (an inspired choice) as Batman’s faithful butler Alfred. Hector Elizondo, Conan O’Brien, Mariah Carey, Jenny Slate, Zoe Kravitz, Channing Tatum, Jonah Hill, Eddie Izzard, Jemaine Clement, Eddie Izzard, Seth Green, director Chris McKay and Billy Dee Williams can also be heard (from time to time), and Bat-fans will doubtless recall that Williams played Harvey Dent in Tim Burton’s first Batman (1989) but denied the opportunity to play Two-Face later. Here, even after almost 30 years, that situation has been rectified. !

Oscar-nominated I Am Not Your Negro a potent history Raoul Peck’s fiery, Oscar-nominated documentary I Am Not Your Negro is not a biography of the renowned writer, poet and social activist James Baldwin (1924-’87) in the strictest or conventional sense of the term, yet it is told in Baldwin’s own words, and narrated Samuel L. Jackson – an inspired and excellent choice. Peck uses Baldwin’s unfinished manuscript Remember This House (begun in 1979) as the springboard for this chronicle of racism in America, as well as scores of notes, letters and correspondence that Baldwin wrote throughout his life. There are some biographical asides to Baldwin’s own life, but primarily I Am Not Your Negro offers Baldwin’s perspective, shaped and molded by events – the majority more tragic than triumphant – as he recalls such major black figures as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and Medgar

Evers, all slain martyrs in the cause of Civil Rights. In addition to Baldwin’s eloquence, insight and anger, the film’s vintage newsreel footage, which has been expertly assembled, packs quite a wallop, offering a potent reminder of how far into the 20th century – and beyond – that racism has been a (sad and tragic) factor in American culture. Many of these images are indelibly imprinted in history, for better or – all too often – worse. Yet toward the end, the filmmakers tend to overstate their case, even when their message has been made and their point put across. The film lays it on just a bit thick, although a valid argument could be made that such repetition pounds the message home, which it undoubtedly does. – I Am Not Your Negro opens Friday !

Sleepless in Seattle: Fifty Shades Darker Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) and Fifty Shades Darker are any indication, the screen trilogy based on P.D. James’ best-selling novels is shaping up to be a tepid trio. Fifty Shades Freed, which was filmed concurrently with Darker, is due for release next Valentine’s Day. Once again, we join star-crossed lovers Christian Grey (Jamie Dornan) and Anastasia Steele (Dakota Johnson), the heavy-breathing, hot-and-bothered duo introduced in the earlier film. “Last time was different,” Anastasia announces, but don’t you believe it. (Actually, she doesn’t sound convinced, either.) The widely reported contretemps between executive producer James and the first film’s director, Sam Taylor-Johnson, have seen the reins passed to James Foley, who also directed Freed, but there’s little discernible difference. Stylishly shot by cinematographer John Schwartzman, the screenplay slavishly follows the novel, perhaps because screenwriter Niall Leonard is married to James in real life. There’s the vague undercurrent of innocence corrupted (in Anastasia’s case) and corruption possibly redeemed (in Christian’s), but beyond the smoldering

glances and rounds of kinky sex these vapid characters aren’t particularly interesting, although Dornan and Johnson are attractive, whether clothed or otherwise. Dornan’s a little less reptilian this time around, and even manages to imbue a measure of sly humor into such eye-rolling dialogue as “Calm really isn’t my forte.” To be fair, Fifty Shades Darker is no worse than Fifty Shades of Grey, but it’s not any better, either. There’s little character development, less character involvement, and nary a surprise to be found. Marcia Gay Harden, Rita Ora, Eloise Mumford, Max Martini, Luke Grimes, Victor Rasuk and Andrew Airlie reprise their roles from the first film, but are essentially wasted. Likewise, series newcomers Bella Heathcote (as Christian’s unstable former “submissive”), Eric Johnson (as Anastasia’s patently predatory new boss), and Kim Basinger (as a “family friend” of the Greys) have little to do after being summarily introduced, although it’s strongly hinted at that they’ll be back for the finale. One can only wait, breathless with anticipation. !

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[CARMIKE]

Feb 24 - Mar 2

GREENSBORO

Feb 24 - Mar 2

[RED]

FIFTY SHADES DARKER (R) LUXURY SEATING Fri - Thu: 11:30 AM, 2:15, 5:00, 7:45, 10:15 HIDDEN FIGURES (PG) LUXURY SEATING Fri & Sat: 11:55 AM, 2:40, 5:25, 8:10, 11:00 Sun - Thu: 11:55 AM, 2:40, 5:25, 8:10 MANCHESTER BY THE SEA (R) LUXURY SEATING Fri - Thu: 1:55, 9:25 JACKIE (R) LUXURY SEATING Fri - Thu: 11:35, 4:45, 7:05 COLLIDE (AUTOBAHN) (PG-13) Fri & Sat: 12:05, 2:25, 4:45, 7:05, 9:20, 11:35 Sun - Thu: 12:05, 2:25, 4:45, 7:05, 9:20 GET OUT (R) Fri & Sat: 12:10, 2:35, 4:55, 7:20, 9:40, 11:55 Sun - Thu: 12:10, 2:35, 4:55, 7:20, 9:40 DON’T KNOCK TWICE (R) Fri & Sat: 12:40, 2:50, 5:00, 7:15, 9:25, 11:35 Sun - Thu: 12:40, 2:50, 5:00, 7:15, 9:25 A CURE FOR WELLNESS (R) Fri & Sat: 11:45 AM, 2:40, 5:40, 8:35, 11:30 Sun - Thu: 11:45 AM, 2:40, 5:40, 8:35 FIST FIGHT (R) Fri & Sat: 12:40, 2:45, 4:50, 7:15, 9:30, 11:45 Sun - Thu: 12:40, 2:45, 4:50, 7:15, 9:30

20TH CENTURY WOMEN (R) – 4:00 A DOG’S PURPOSE (PG) – 12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:35 ARRIVAL (PG-13) – 4:00, 9:20 COLLIDE (PG-13) – 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 CURE FOR WELLNESS (R) – 12:15, 3:25, 6:35, 9:45 FENCES (PG-13) – 1:00 FIFTY SHADES DARKER (R) – 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 FIST FIGHT (R) – 12:45, 3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 GET OUT (R) – 12:00, 1:30, 2:30, 4:00, 5:00, 6:30, 7:30, 9:00, 10:00 HACKSAW RIDGE (R) – 1:00 HIDDEN FIGURES (PG) – 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 JOHN WICK CHAPTER 2 (R) – 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 9:45 LA LA LAND (PG-13) – 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 LEGO BATMAN MOVIE 2D (PG) – 12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:30 LION (PG-13) – 1:00, 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 MOONLIGHT (R) – 6:45 PASSENGERS (PG-13) – 6:50 SPACE BETWEEN US (PG-13) – 1:15 SPLIT (PG-13) – 11:45, 2:20, 4:55, 7:30, 10:05 THE FOUNDER (PG-13) – 9:40 THE GREAT WALL 2D (PG-13) – 11:45, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:25 THE GREAT WALL 3D (PG-13) – 12:25, 2:50, 5:15, 7:40, 10:05 WHY HIM? (R) – 4:05, 6:50 XXX: THE RETURN OF XANDER CAGE 2D (R) – 9:35

!

D L O C E H T T A E B

, T SOUPS WITH HOR HOT SAKE! ,O HOT TEA

[A/PERTURE]

THE GREAT WALL (PG-13) Fri & Sat: 11:50 AM, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:20, 11:40 Sun - Thu: 11:50 AM, 2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:20 2017 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS ANIMATED (NR) Fri - Thu: 11:45 AM, 8:30 2017 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS LIVE ACTION (NR) Fri - Thu: 1:30, 10:15 JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 2 (R) Fri - Thu: 11:40 AM, 2:10, 4:40, 7:25, 10:00 A DOG’S PURPOSE (PG) Fri & Sat: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15, 11:30 Sun - Thu: 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15 SPLIT (PG-13) Fri - Thu: 11:40 AM, 2:20, 4:55, 7:20, 9:55 ALONE IN BERLIN (R) Fri: 4:10 PM Sat - Thu: 4:10, 6:20 LA LA LAND (PG-13) Fri - Thu: 11:30 AM, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10

Feb 24 - Mar 2

2017 OSCAR NOMINATED SHORTS ANIMATED (NR) Fri - Sun: 2:45, 4:45, Mon: 4:45 PM, Tue: 2:45, 4:45, Wed & Thu: 4:45 PM I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO (PG-13) Fri: 3:30, 6:00, 8:45, Sat: 10:30 AM, 1:00, 3:45, 6:00, 8:45, Sun: 10:15 AM, 12:45, 3:45 Mon: 6:00, 8:45, Tue: 3:30, 6:00, 8:45 Wed & Thu: 6:00, 8:45 PATERSON (R) 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, 4:15, Mon: 6:30, 9:00, Tue: 4:00, 6:30, 9:00, Wed & Thu: 6:30, 9:00 FENCES (PG-13) Fri: 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, Sat: 11:45 AM, 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, Sun: 10:00 AM, 1:00, 4:00, Mon: 5:30, 8:30, Tue: 2:30, 5:30, 8:30, Wed & Thu: 5:30, 8:30 TONI ERDMANN (R) Fri: 8:00 PM, Sat: 11:30 AM, 8:00 Sun: 11:30 AM, Mon - Thu: 8:00 PM

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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29


visions

SEE IT!

Local comics creator wants to show you how to do it BY IAN MCDOWELL

G

reensboro’s Barrett Stanley has created a very impressive indy comic book. Now he wants to show other wouldbe creators how. Come to Scuppernong Books at 7pm on Tuesday, Feb. 28, and he will. “I’m not sure if I should call this event a proper workshop,” he says. “I think it will be more of an introduction to the process of making a comic. I’m testing the waters here and want to gauge the interest level. It’s something I’ll bring up in the talk and see if there are people who’d be interested. People don’t really need to bring anything in particular unless they want to jot down some notes.” Barrett’s Heartbreak Quadrant, currently on sale at Scuppernong Books and Acme Comics, is a quirky characteroriented sci-fi adventure that somewhat resembles a more intimate and feminist version of Joss Whedon’s cult TV series Firefly crossed with the work of the great European Heavy Metal comics artists Jean

“Moebius” Giraud and Enki Bilal. It’s about the raffish exploits of Ida and Kumi, two young women who make their living buying, selling, and trading artifacts from planet Earth, which was destroyed 20 years earlier. They travel the galaxy in the Red Grapefruit, a salvaged alien ship, always seeking the big score that would let them settle down and live comfortably in the Charm Quadrant. Unfortunately, their days are filled with doublecrossing clients, technological disasters, and sub-standard replicated nachos. In their first adventure, they run afoul of a former business associate and his mysterious enforcer, who are determined to take Kumi and melt her down for her unusual DNA. “The first issue is a sort of ‘pilot episode’ and is about 60 pages - it gives you a pretty good introduction to the characters and

Scuppernong Books

&

film screening and book discussion I Am Not Your Negro, documentary on James Baldwin by Raoul Peck Fire Next Time by James Baldwin

Saturday, February 25, 1pm | tickets $8 a/perture cinema | 336-722-8148

311 W 4th St. Winston Salem NC 27101 scuppernongbooks.com | scuppernongbooks@gmail.com

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FEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

plot, With this workshop, I plan to give the attendees a first-hand look at how I went about creating Heartbreak Quadrant, from the initial concept and preliminary sketches to the finished product.” Barrett is the first to admit that creating it wasn’t easy, especially as he did it without a traditional publisher, financing it through a modest but successful Kickstarter campaign. “I’m the writer, artist, and letterer, so it’s kind of a one-man show. The first issue took about three years, all told, which sounds ridiculous, but working full time and having a family didn’t leave me with very much time to work on it on any given day. I would generally spend a few hours on it each night, but there were definitely days when I just couldn’t get to it. It was a painfully slow process, but I tried to focus on my short-term goals and deadlines. During the drawing and inking process, I was trying to get one page done each week. Sometimes I missed the deadline, but not often.” I ask him if he wrote a complete script before he started to draw it. “In the beginning, I was scripting pretty thoroughly, but not very far in advance. I knew the outline of the plot, but I didn’t sit down and script the whole issue at the outset. By the halfway point, I’d stopped scripting the dialogue completely and was just laying out the pages with thumbnails and a basic idea of what was being said in each panel in mind. It actually worked really well for me and in following that plan with the second issue.” I ask how much he had completed when his Kickstarter began. “The issue was 95% finished before I started the campaign. I was paranoid about completing it on time, plus I wanted to post a large portion of the issue for potential backers to see. At that point I felt confident I could finish it quickly if the Kickstarter was funded.” That campaign took place in the Fall of 2016. “It ran for a month and I had a very positive experience working with Kickstarter. They selected Heartbreak Quadrant as a staff pick and even chose it as the ‘Project of the Day’ across the entire site one day. Their support really helped boost my fundraising, and the project passed its funding goal by almost a thousand dollars. I’m planning to launch

another campaign for the second issue this year.” Barrett is 40 and lives in Greensboro with his wife of 17 years and their 8-yearold daughter. A graduate of Grimsley High School, he studied art at Appalachian State University and has dabbled in a number of media, including fine art, graphic design and sculpture. “I’ve worked in a lot of different media, from painting to printmaking to pottery to tattoo to illustration. I grew up reading comic books, spending Saturday mornings at Acme Comics back when it was a dark, cigarette-smoke-filled little shop downtown. Back then, it was mostly superhero titles. By the early 90s, I was starting to lose my taste for comics, and to be honest, mainstream comics were going through a pretty bad patch during that time. I was away from comics for a good long while, but then a few years ago a couple of friends started introducing me to some current comics and creators, and my interest came back pretty quickly. The Prophet series by Brandon Graham, Old City Blues by Giannis Milonogiannis, Copra by Michel Fiffe, plus artists like Ashley Wood and Frank Quietly were all inspiring, plus I discovered European comic artists like Moebius, Enki Bilal, and François Schuiten. I started buying old copies of Heavy Metal from the 70s and 80s and found a lot of amazing gems in there. My work draws influence from those oldschool visuals, but with a more modern sensibility behind it.” While he was putting the first issue together, Barrett was a Department Head at a local grocery store, but since then has begun working for himself. “Nowadays I’m basically doing comics and art full time, along with taking care of my awesome daughter. People in Greensboro have been really supportive. If I were to point to one person who’s thrown a ton of support my way (aside from my wife, that is), it would probably be Jermaine from Acme Comics. He has promoted the book pretty relentlessly and has given me opportunities to participate in events at the shop, and has just been a great resource as I try to get myself out there. That said, I truly appreciate everyone who’s helped me along on this journey.” !

WANNA

go?

You can check out more pages from his story at heartbreakquadrant.tumblr.com. His “Pre-Workshop” at Scuppernong Books at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 28 is free and open to the public.

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Oscar race reaches home stretch Come Sunday, with Jimmy Kimmel hosting the 89th annual Academy Awards live from the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, it should probably take about two or three minutes before the first joke is lobbed at Mark Burger the current resident of the White House Contributing – and it probably won’t be the last. columnist Be that as it may, it’ll probably be another long evening in La La Land, and with a record-trying 14 nominations it’s starting to look a lot like La La Land (the film) will dance away with Best Picture … and probably a few more Oscars. We’ll see how the evening proceeds ...

BEST PICTURE Arrival, Fences, Hacksaw Ridge, Hell or High Water, Hidden Figures, La La Land, Lion, Manchester by the Sea, Moonlight. Good films all, but narrow it down to the traditional five nominees and you’d probably end up with Fences, Hacksaw Ridge, La La Land, Manchester by the Sea and Moonlight. La La Land is definitely a “feel-good” movie, a charming and bittersweet valentine to Hollywood. The others could be classified as “important” films, either based on a true story or addressing such issues as family turmoil, grief, sexual identity, and redemption. Moonlight or Fences could surprise, but La La Land seems a la-la lock.

BEST DIRECTOR Arrival (Denis Villeneuve), Hacksaw Ridge (Mel Gibson), La La Land (Damien Chazelle), Manchester by the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan), Moonlight (Barry Jenkins). The Academy’s been itching to recognize Villeneuve, and Academy voters looked past Mel Gibson’s stormy personal life and recognized his directorial proficiency. Lonergan, an esteemed playwright, has a better shot being recognized for his screenplay than his direction. Thus, it boils down to the two newcomers in the bunch. La La Land is Chazelle’s third feature and Moonlight Jenkins’ second. Forget about an upset; it’ll be one or the other – and WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

it’s really up for grabs, although Chazelle might have a slight edge because of the plethora of nominations. One thing’s for sure: Neither will have any trouble getting their next projects off the ground.

BEST ACTOR Casey Affleck, Manchester by the Sea; Andrew Garfield, Hacksaw Ridge; Ryan Gosling, La La Land; Viggo Mortensen, Captain Fantastic; Denzel Washington, Fences. Despite his own bout with bad publicity, Affleck seemed a shoo-in for his careerbest turn as a grief-stricken blue-collar loner in Manchester by the Sea, but Washington (a two-time Oscar winner) has come on strong of late. Garfield and Mortensen are long-shots, but Gosling could surprise. He’s proven his comedic and dramatic chops, and now he’s singing and dancing – quite nicely, thank you very much. Traditionally, it would be the other way around: Funnymen and singers would more often be recognized when they transitioned to drama (think Frank Sinatra in From Here to Eternity, Red Buttons in Sayonara or Fred Astaire’s nomination for The Towering Inferno). I interviewed Affleck years ago (for Drowning Mona – no Oscar nominations there!), and one can’t overlook the fact that he has progressed and grown as an actor, and he’s made his name primarily in the independent realm. The recent infusion of younger (and, yes, more diverse) voters generally come from that realm, too – which gives him an edge. Maybe.

son, Portman – and she looks to ride the La La Land tide, but again the addition of more international Academy voters could swing it to Huppert. For her it would very much be in recognition of her career as well as her excellent performance. Don’t be surprised.

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Mahershala Ali, Moonlight; Jeff Bridges, Hell or High Water; Lucas Hedges, Manchester by the Sea; Dev Patel, Lion; Michael Shannon, Nocturnal Animals. Shannon is a great actor and a very cool guy (as anyone who met him at RiverRun a few years back can attest), and hopefully his time will come. Bridges earned his first Oscar nomination 45 years ago (for The Last Picture Show), has proven himself a durable and versatile actor, and is much-loved in Hollywood (and himself a Hollywood legacy). Despite his overdue win for Crazy Heart (2008) – as much for his career as the performance – he could surprise here. Patel and Hedges (who took a sabbatical from the UNCSA School of Drama to make Manchester) are talented young actors.

But, let’s face it, Ali’s performance in Moonlight blows everyone away. When he exits the narrative, a piece of the film’s heart goes with him, and if only they explained what happened to his character …

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Viola Davis, Fences; Naomie Harris, Moonlight; Nicole Kidman, Lion; Octavia Spencer, Hidden Figures; Michelle Williams, Manchester by the Sea. Kidman (a Best Actress winner for The Hours), Spencer (a Supporting Actress winner for The Help) and Williams (a fourtime nominee) all give fine performances, but it’s between Harris and Davis. Harris, who filmed her Moonlight scenes over a three-day period (playing her character at three different ages), enjoys the sort of small but meaty role that earlier won Oscars for Beatrice Straight (Network) and Judi Dench (Shakespeare in Love) – she makes every second onscreen count. But in the case of Viola Davis, enjoying her third nomination (the most ever for a black actress), there’s the unmistakable sense that her time has come and that this is her year. !

BEST ACTRESS Isabelle Huppert, Elle; Ruth Negga, Loving; Natalie Portman, Jackie; Emma Stone, La La Land; Meryl Streep, Florence Foster Jenkins. Think of it: Meryl Streep made her screen debut 40 years ago (in Julia), and this is her record-breaking 20th nomination … and she’s the underdog! Portman, who deservedly won Best Actress for the otherwise overrated Black Swan (2010), appeared an early front-runner but seems to have faded. Negga, superb as Mildred Loving in the otherwise overlooked Loving, is a potential surprise, but the front-runners are clearly Huppert, among the most acclaimed actresses in the world (this is only her first Oscar nomination!), and Stone. Hollywood loves to crown a new queen – Jennifer Lawrence, Brie LarFEBRUARY 22-28, 2017

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chow

EAT IT!

SidWill’s: A plate full of love and opportunity

BY CHANEL R. DAVIS

W

hen you walk through the doors of SidWill’s Café in Jamestown you’re greeted with the smell of good food followed by a warm reception from the staff. The small café gives you the feeling of sitting in your grandma’s kitchen waiting on a plate of her famous meatloaf. The business, which is located on Main Street behind the The Deck in Jamestown, has a constant chime from the bell on the door as the flow of customers come through for lunch, dinner or special orders Monday through Friday beginning at 11 a.m. and Saturday at noon. Owners William Wyatt and Sidney Young began the business as a subsidiary catering business to Wyatt’s then Libby Hill Franchise. Wyatt worked for Libby Hill for 28 years, with 15 of those years as a Libby Hill franchisee in Danville, Va. and Madison. When Wyatt exited the Libby Hill business in 2012 and Young retired in 2014, they

32 YES! WEEKLY

decided to crank the catering aspect back up but add a café as well. Opening the café’s doors in June 2014, they couldn’t have imagined that they’d be where they are now. “The café was to originally help keep the catering business afloat. After about eight months, the café really took off and gained its legs. It has actually helped grow the catering aspect of the business,” Wyatt said. “SidWill’s is comfort food. It certainly has a southern flair but I wouldn’t consider it soul food. We feed a very diverse group of people here. The place is kind of eclectic in its look but people from every background and ethnicity eat here, comfortably.” The café is a dream come true for both partners. According to Wyatt, he always envisioned his own place and this café fits his dream of being able to cook, prep and talk to his customers at the same time in a very intimate environment. “I can do that here until it gets busy. Then my focus is on production,” he said. “I get to share with folks that come in

whether it’s about what’s going on in the economy, daily or just what’s going on in their lives.” For Young, it’s all about the food. He loves to cook and jokes that if this wasn’t an option he’d have to join a health club. When asked how he comes up with his menu choices he explains that he simply thinks about what he would want to eat. “We wanted to come up with something that would appeal to everyone including people who wanted to get away from the drive-thru but not spend all that time in the kitchen. SidWill’s means that they don’t have to cook,” Young said. “I cook pretty much anything but we were looking around and there weren’t many places for you to go for comfort food and there was no place in Jamestown. We decided to start there and see if there was a market there and it was.” Besides offering its top sellers like beef and turkey meatloaf, macaroni and cheese or collard greens, the café offers job opportunities to those in need. Their employees may come from work programs, be retirees, teenagers or someone

just looking for a second chance. “We’ve always viewed this as a ministry so we’ve found the opportunity to find some people who are committed to learning. They don’t have to have all the skills. Someone who may have started off washing dishes may now work on the line,” Wyatt said. He said that there are two requirements that they ask of employees: that they have a great attitude and that they work hard. “The majority of folks we’ve hired, we look at their strengths and go from there. We make it work if they are willing to,” Wyatt said. “Our goal is to grow them as far as we can here and then move them in another direction. We want them to take the skill sets that they learn here, put them on their resume so it can catapult them to the top of whatever field they want to go to.” Young agrees, saying that he teaches the staff standard kitchen skills and safety that are of a higher standard than the health departments. “One of the things that was important

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SidWill’s partners William Wyatt and Sidney Young. to both of us was that we provide jobs for the community. It feels good to know that you’re bringing something to the community that the community finds valuable,” Young said. “When they move on to a better position it makes you feel proud. We don’t want to see them go but as they develop on to something bigger we become their biggest cheerleader.” In its third year of business, Wyatt and Young have done what most startups don’t get a chance to do – hit the black. “Unfortunately, for startups that aren’t franchisees, only 10 percent of them make it through the first year and only one percent make it through the first five years,” Wyatt said. “We feel blessed that we’re two and half years and going strong.” He said that after eight months in the business they weren’t hitting the numbers they needed to be successful and weren’t taking a salary. After already agreeing with his wife that he would walk away if after a year if the business didn’t show a profit, Wyatt was looking at bringing in someone to take his place. “In that ninth month, a lot of good things began happening for us. We picked up a lot of catering events and did a program on Fox 8 for Recipe Wednesday,” Wyatt said. “By the time our first year came around we were in the black and moving in the right direction. For the last year and a half things have just continued to grow at an incredible pace.” A lot of that success has come from word of mouth. “When I moved here I was concerned that we were hard to find. The first thing WWW.YESWEEKLY.COM

that someone told me was if you’re good in Jamestown people will tell everybody. If you’re not good in Jamestown people will tell everybody,” Wyatt said, laughing. “People that like this place love this place. It’s hard to find but people are determined to find it. Once they do, they send friends, relatives and they come back. On my menu, there’s a saying that says ‘It’s the anointing that makes the difference’ and we certainly believe that. We feel like there’s a special anointing in this place and we want to provide a great dining experience and want folks to feel better after coming in here.” Although Young isn’t on any of them, he credits social media with their success as well. “Folks who are on social media spread the word for us. The response has been amazing,” he said. The men hope to have an operational food truck within the next year and a second location strictly for catering in the next 18 to 24 months, allowing them to do parades, homecomings, races and lunch to local businesses. “Jamestown has become a stopping place within itself for folks who come through. Some of the best things are hidden gems. That’s what we are,” Wyatt said. For more information visit www.SidWills.com or call (336)-454-0021. !

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!

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BARTENDER: Greg Gerald BAR: The Blind Tiger (previously Bull’s Tavern & Ziggy’s) AGE: 35 HOMETOWN: Kernersville, NC BARTENDING: 12 Years Q: How did you become a bartender?

34 YES! WEEKLY

A: Wanted to make more money. Q:What’s your favorite drink to make? A: Top Shelf Margaritas Q:What’s your favorite drink to drink? A: Tequila and Millerlite Q:What’s the craziest thing you’ve seen while bartending? A: I have seen it all. Nothing surprises me anymore!

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VOTE!! VOTE ONLINE NOW The

Triad’ s Best 2017

last call

[HOROSCOPES]

[LEO (July 23 to August 22) You or someone else may want you to feel guilty because you are unable to make things better. Recognize that you are not the magician you would like to be and let go of the guilt. Whatever happens now, you are highly prone to think dark thoughts about yourself. This is passing. Let it go. [VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Your ability to concentrate upon projects that require management of details is strong. Organizing files, closets and cabinets will clear the clutter from your mind. The new wrinkle in your life occurs through your partnership(s). That may be business or personal. [LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Venus, the ancient goddess of love and financial resources, will turn retrograde in your partnership house. You and your partner have need of increased space between you. It does not matter who initiates the idea for a breathing space. It comes from a joint need. This does not mean anything about love, so don’t misinterpret and create trouble where there is not. [SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) You and Aries have things in common this week. An emotional explosion or accident may suddenly alter the picture. There may be consequences on your health, at your workplace, or in rental property that you own. Drive and handle tools very carefully. [SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Organize files and details early in the week in preparation for an event near Feb. 27 that will elicit a passionate response. You’ll want to come from an informed and organized place in your head before that occurs. [CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) There are developing problems in and around your home that may suddenly become visible. If not property, then the restlessness and potentially surprising events may become apparent in your family life. Usually there are clues ahead of time about the nature of the disorder.

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[AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) If you focus your mind on a mentally challenging project that can have an identifiable outcome, things will move smoothly through the early part of the week. The New Moon Eclipse occurs in your territory of personal resources. That can be money, time, and/or energy. See the lead paragraph. [PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Please read the lead paragraph carefully. This eclipse in your sign signifies that something new, but very small, will be entering your consciousness soon. It will involve reshaping your sense of identity to include another factor. Your sense of compassion will increase, slowly at first. If, instead, you are being used by a vampire, you will realize this soon. [ARIES (March 21 to April 19) There will be an explosion in the sign of Aries. You may set a bonfire, have an accident, or join activist movements. Motion and action are prominent. There is potential for your explosion to bring some kind of consequences having to do with career. Maybe this has happened just recently. [TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) On Mar. 4 your ruling planet will be turning retrograde for a few weeks. It is possible you are already leaning into withdrawal from one or more relationships while you evaluate their impact on your life. This is not necessarily a permanent change. It is designed to help you decide if the relationship(s) are for you. [GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) This is an excellent time to pursue any activity that requires your mental concentration. Contracts and written communications, along with short distance travel, have go signals. The New Moon Eclipse plants a new seed in the house that describes life direction. You may not see it quite yet, but soon. [CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Follow your instincts about where you need to be, particularly if that includes a new social situation. Then give attention to whomever or whatever new enters your life. It will serve as a helpful teacher and guide you in the next direction. ! Are you interested in a personal horoscope? Vivian Carol may be reached at (704) 366-3777 for private psychotherapy or astrology appointments. There is a fee for services. Website: http//www.horoscopesbyvivian.com

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[THE ADVICE GODDESS] love • sex • dating • marriage • questions

SAVINGS AND ALONE

I’m a 28-year-old guy in a corporate job. I’m out there trying to meet women and date (or hook up), but I’m not doing so well. In Amy Alkon college, I was able to hook up and get girlfriends pretty Advice easily, and I haven’t Goddess put on 100 pounds or anything. I’ve noticed that three of my male co-workers (at my same level at work) are getting lots of girls. All three are in major debt from buying clothes and leasing cars they really can’t afford. Is being on the road to bankruptcy really what it takes to impress the ladies? — Living Within My Means Candlelight all over your apartment is really romantic — unless you’re using it because they’ve cut your power off again. When women finally start looking to settle down and make a life with a man, the last thing they want is some creditcard-surfing spenditarian who gets his exercise running from collection agents. However, despite this, women can also be like blue jays on shiny objects — especially shiny objects with, say, Audi emblems — and men’s “mate competition” through spendy-spend-spending reflects that. Research on men and women ages 18 to 45 by evolutionary social psychologist Daniel Kruger found that men who had

run up credit card debt were more likely to have multiple sex partners than their more sensibly spending bros. (Women’s debt level didn’t have any meaningful effect on their sexual body count.) Again — rather obviously — women aren’t all “I’m looking for a man who’ll eventually have to crowdfund our children’s dental bills.” However, looking at Kruger’s findings, another evolutionary psychologist, Glenn Geher, speculates that men’s overspending “may act as a false signal of wealth, and although it is a false signal” (of the ability to provide resources for a woman and any children) “sometimes this deception is effective.” As for why that might be, just as a guy doesn’t get to ask a woman whether her genes or steel-belted Spanx are the force behind her supermodel abs, a woman won’t be poring over a guy’s credit report at the bar. She’ll just paw admiringly at the cashmere hoodie he took out two loans and sold his twin brother into slavery to buy. This isn’t to say you need to go into the red to get girls. It’s ultimately a bad strategy for any guy who wants more than a string of flings. However, what would probably lead more women to give you a chance are the first-glance trappings of success — beautiful shoes, designer eyeglass frames, that fab cashmere sweater, and maybe a really nice soft leather jacket. The thing is, you can get these items simply by shopping shrewdly — like at end-of-year sales or on eBay. They’ll surely cost more than the duds you’d otherwise buy, but consider them invest-

ments to get you in the door. Remember, even women who want a boyfriend who’s fiscally responsible are likely to be impressed by that sweater that took four years combing a Mongolian goat to make. And let’s say some woman’s just looking for a hookup. It’s all good; she won’t know you long enough to discover that although you do drive a brand-new “alternative-fuel” vehicle, it isn’t a Tesla; it’s a Schwinn.

MAN OVERBORED

I love my girlfriend and try to be good to her. However, her folks came to visit, and she thinks I was rude because I seemed uninterested and was on my phone the whole time. I told her that I think her parents are boring. I was just being honest. She got really mad. Am I supposed to lie about being entertained by her parents? — The Boyfriend There comes an age when other children’s parents shouldn’t have to hire monkeys and birthday clowns. Twenty-some years ago, in the hospital maternity ward, your girlfriend’s mom and dad heard the wonderful news — and

it wasn’t, “It’s an iPhone!” So, when her folks are visiting, there’s a reasonable expectation that, yes, you would redirect your attention from “Words With Friends” to words with parents. Surely, this is not news to you — or really anyone whose brain has not been relocated to a jar. So you might ask yourself whether this ignore-athon of yours reflects some subconscious desire to sabotage your way out of the relationship. If that’s not the case, consider something the late German social psychologist Erich Fromm pointed out: “To love somebody is not just a strong feeling — it is a decision, it is a judgment, it is a promise.” In other words, loving someone is something you do. Tragically, this acting lovingly business may sometimes require you to put your entertainment needs second — even if the only way to survive the crushing tedium of being with your girlfriend’s folks is to spend the evening secretly pacing the floater in your right eye. ! 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.

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