60’s-inspired ‘Midsummer’ staged at Spreckels

When mounting a Shakespeare production, companies usually pick either a well-known adaptation or inject a “concept.”

Rohnert Park’s Spreckels Theater Company, however, has chosen to do both with its three-hour-long production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream…60’s Style! The result is a really good Shakespearean production that often seems to break out into a jukebox musical. The ambitious show runs through Feb. 25.

Don’t get me wrong; both shows are good. Co-directors Sheri Lee Miller and James Pelican have a firm grasp of the bard and have some of the county’s finest Shakespearean actors at work. Amongst the very strong cast, Taylor Diffenderfer’s Helena and John Browning’s Demetrius (hilarious in their haplessness), and Matt Cadigan’s Oberon (somehow simultaneously stoned and commanding) are of special note. Even the changeling child, played by the adorable Jacey Dae Covella, is engaging.

The same is true of the jukebox musical component. Under the musical direction of Jared Emerson-Johnson, Serene Elize Flores (Titania), Austin Aquino-Harrison (Hermia) and Noah Vondralee-Sternhill (Lysander) all give vibrant performances of some very familiar ’60s songs.

Using Titania’s fairies as backup singers is an inspired yet logical choice. However, it does necessitate that the fairies and mechanicals not be double cast (as they commonly are), which robs the play of a bit of its magic.

Only Alex Delzell’s performance as a flower-powered Puck felt fully grounded and at home in both worlds.

This visually striking set design by Eddy Hansen and Elizabeth Bazzano, costume design by Donnie Frank and lighting design by Eddy Hansen all strongly supported the blending of the production’s high-concept with the adaptation. Their work is actually close to brilliant.

The audience was invested, the cast and orchestra were talented, and the atmosphere was fun. But every time a song came up, the entire play stopped. The songs often broke the flow of the lines, which felt contradictory to the work being done by the actors, making me wonder why further script cuts were not made to keep the songs from repeating information already given and elongating the show’s run time.

To be fair (and in the spirit of full disclosure), Midsummer was the first show I appeared in (as a child), and 20 years later it was the last show in which I acted (both as Cobweb). It’s a play that holds deep and meaningful associations for me. It’s a play I thought held no more surprises.

Real Douglas fir and bay laurel trees on stage were a delightful surprise.

‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ runs through Feb. 25 at Spreckels Performing Arts Center, 5409 Snyder La., Rohnert Park. Fri-Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 2pm; $16-$42. 707.588.3400. spreckelsonline.com.

Melissa Etheridge at Graton

Novelist Thomas Wolfe once famously quipped that one can never go home. Clearly, he never met Melissa Etheridge, whose latest album, One Way Out, consists of seven songs she penned in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

While this material is roughly three decades old, the seed for Etheridge’s 16th studio album was planted in 2013. At the time, she was working on a proposed box set of archival recordings when she came across this cache of material the Kansas native felt compelled to revisit.

“A lot of these were things I had recorded for different albums where I’d done one take and then decided I couldn’t do it and moved on,” she said in a recent phone interview. “These were songs I’d done demos of and forgotten about. This is stuff I wouldn’t write now because I’m not feeling sexually frustrated. And ‘For the Last Time’ was written at a time when I didn’t want everybody to know how sexually frustrated I was.

“All of these are songs that I loved back then, but it was done before I came out (as gay). ‘Wild Wild Wild’ was obviously about a woman, so I pushed it aside and left it. But it’s fun to sing those songs. It’s like finding a treasure and seeing that I can do this again—rock and hit you in the teeth. And while it’s truthful, I don’t have to have gone through it now. It’s so nice to look back at them and know I can play them now,” she continued.

While the box set never came to fruition, she did go back into the studio with her old band of guitarist John Shanks, bassist Kevin McCormick and drummer Fritz Lewak. Once the group reunited, they hit the studio and recorded new versions of the songs that were intended for this proposed multi-disc anthology.

Instead, Etheridge parted ways with longtime label Island Records, and since she paid for the sessions, the singer-songwriter owned the masters, which wound up in the vault. In the near-decade since she cut those songs, the 61-year-old rocker survived cancer, cut three records and was ready for a fresh start coming out of the pandemic.

“When Covid-19 hit and BMG approached me and said they’d love to release something, I said I actually happened to have something that was already recorded and all done,” she explained. “It fits this time. The songs are ready, and I love coming back on tour with these songs. It’s really fun.”

One Way Out opens with the title track, a cut that blisters with smoldering guitar riffs, filthy harmonica runs and a sinewy groove. From here, the rest of the album plugs into a barroom rock ’n’ roll vibe that ranges from the Stonesy strut of “As Cool As You Try” to the more ruminative “I’m No Angel Myself,” a confessional nod to a former partner, to “For the Last Time,” an in-your-face stomper in the vein of vintage Humble Pie. Tying it all together are “You Have No Idea” and “Life Goes On,” a pair of songs recorded live in 2002 at West Los Angeles’ Roxy.

The experience of pulling together One Way Out proved surreal in a way that made Etheridge feel like she was bending the time-space continuum far differently than in her prior recording experiences.

“Each album is a growing and learning experience for me, and I love each one so much because they’re all different in their own way,” she said. “This one is unique because it’s older songs recorded newer, but also a few years ago. It’s a time capsule of a time capsule, and I dig that. Now I’m going to go out and perform these live and probably make recordings now of these songs that go back. And it’s still 100% me.”

With venues fully open, Etheridge is thrilled to be back on tour, having spent a year-and-a-half live streaming from her garage five days a week onto an Internet channel called EtheridgeTV, where she could bring shows and entertainment to fans who subscribed. When asked what fans can expect from her concerts, Etheridge is bubbling over with excitement to be back in her natural element—playing music before a live audience.

“You can expect me to be having so much fun,” she said. “Because I’ve had so much time to think about it, I’ve decided to have the band learn 50 more songs than they knew,” Etheridge said, noting she may delve into deep cuts or highlight certain albums from her catalog. “We’re kind of going to steer in there, do the hits, jam on some songs and have a good time. We’re going to be back with people loving music.”

‘Melissa Etheridge: I’m Not Broken Tour,’ 7pm, Friday, March 15 at the Graton Resort & Casino, has sold out as of press time.

Regulate Airbnb

Americans have been on a vacation binge since the easing of Covid-19 restrictions. In particular, the vacation rental company Airbnb is thriving. Late last year, the company posted its highest-ever profits.

Meanwhile, cities are seeing rising rents, unaffordable home prices and increased homelessness. Authorities are now linking these crises partly to Airbnb—and some are now passing strict regulations.

Just as companies like Uber were once touted as a way for working people with cars to earn a little extra spending cash, Airbnb offered the promise of supplementary income for those with an extra room or converted garage.

I’ve rented several Airbnb homes over the 15 years since the company was founded. In the early years, staying in other people’s houses felt like an act of rebellion against corporate hotel chains. The privacy, convenience and often lower cost enabled tourists with tighter budgets to enjoy family vacations that otherwise might have been unavailable.

Now, however, the market is increasingly dominated by a small number of corporate “hosts” and professional property managers—wealthy elites and corporate entities that scoop up large numbers of properties and turn big profits by renting them out to travelers. And that’s driving up housing costs for everyone.

While cheaper vacation stays are certainly desirable for those of us who love to travel, vacationing is a privilege in the U.S. More than a third of Americans, a 2023 survey found, are unlikely to take a summer vacation. And of those, more than half say they simply can’t afford it.

A 2019 Economic Policy Institute study pointed out that “Airbnb might, as claimed, suppress the growth of travel accommodation costs, but these costs are not a first-order problem for American families.” What is a first-order problem is affordable housing.

While regulating Airbnb will not mitigate all economic injustices facing Americans, it certainly will move the needle in the right direction.

Sonali Kolhatkar is the host of ‘Rising Up With Sonali,’ a television and radio show on Free Speech TV and Pacifica stations.

Your Letters, Feb. 21

Announcement of Candidacy

I am nearly 73 years old, hearing-impaired, forgetful, degenerate, infirm, cognitively challenged, unfocused, lame, imbecilic, thoughtless, incoherent, syphilitic, worn out and incapable of original thought.

The last time I was worth a damn to society, they were creating a bonfire with disco records out in left field at Comiskey Park.

There is only one thing left to do for which I am qualified, based on observations of what’s happening in our country.

I’m running for president.

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Gerontocracy

President Joe Biden and his new rock ’n’ roll band, the Dystopiacrats, will soon embark on their 2024 Propaganda/Censorship Tour.

While on the road, the band will be performing favorite songs from their new album, including “Ode to Genocide Joe: Tallakerchie Bridge,” “Yes—We Will Be Fooled Again,” “Eco-terrorist Blues,” “2000 Light Years From Reality” and their new hit single, “Crimea River.”

Economists predict that this year’s tour will not make any money but actually go into debt, (another) trillion dollars. The band isn’t worried, though…they know that the ticket holders (their adoring fans) will be more than happy to pay for the whole thing.

Weird Doug Haymaker (Leftie)

Penngrove

Journo God Descends Upon Book Passage

Corte Madera

Fishwrap

Book Passage hosts a conversation between Calvin Trillin and Michael Krasny, centered around Trillin’s latest work, The Lede: Dispatches From A Life In The Press. This rare event is scheduled for 1pm, Saturday, Feb. 24, at 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera. Admission is free, which we journos find astounding given that Trillin is one of journalism’s most distinguished figures. The Lede provides a captivating look at journalism and its architects, as seen through the lens of Trillin’s unmatched six-decade tenure as a bestselling author and a stalwart of The New Yorker. Dwight Garner of The New York Times remarks, “’The Lede’ contains profiles… that are acknowledged classics of the form and will be studied until A.I. makes hash out of all of us.” Trillin himself shares, “I’ve been writing about the press almost as long as I’ve been in the game. At some point, it occurred to me that disparate pieces from various places in various styles amounted to a picture from multiple angles of what the press has been like over the years since I became a practitioner and an observer.” For more details, visit bookpassage.com.

Mill Valley

Wine & Dine

Gravity Tavern in Mill Valley is set to host an exclusive Honig Wine Dinner from 5:30 to 9pm, on Thursday, Feb. 29. The event, priced at $140, includes a five-course meal crafted by chef Pedro Villalobos, paired with wines from the award-winning Honig Vineyard. Steve Honig, the vineyard’s representative, will be present. The dinner features dishes such as Ahi Tuna Poke Taco and Slow Braised Lamb Shoulder Ragu, each accompanied by select Honig wines. The price covers wines, tax and tip. Honig Vineyard, a family-owned operation since 1964, is known for its sustainable, solar-powered production focusing on cabernet sauvignon and sauvignon blanc. Gravity Tavern uses locally sourced ingredients to blend old-world comfort food with modern tastes. Located at 38 Miller Avenue, Mill Valley, the restaurant serves lunch, brunch and dinner, with to-go orders available online or via UberEats and DoorDash. For more information, call 415.888.2108 or visit gravitytavern.com.

Santa Rosa

Law Review

The Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO) in Sonoma County is hosting a strategic planning workshop through its Community Advisory Council. Scheduled from 10am to 2pm, Saturday, Feb. 24, the event aims to engage the public in setting the agency’s priorities for the upcoming year. The workshop will be held at the Sonoma County Regional Library, located at 9291 Old Redwood Highway, No. 100, Windsor. Supervisor David Rabbitt, Sonoma County Board of Supervisors chair, and Sheriff Eddie Engram are slated to speak to attendees. IOLERO aims to foster a stronger bond between the Sheriff’s Office and the community by enhancing transparency and outreach. The Community Advisory Council seeks to involve the community in understanding IOLERO and the Sheriff’s Office’s roles more clearly. Those unable to attend can contribute their ideas via email to CA*@***********ty.org.

Sebastopol

Slick


Gold Ridge Organic Farms invites lovers of olive oil to experience its 2023 olive harvest with its Olio Nuovo Olive Oil Tasting event. Scheduled from 11am to 3pm, Friday, Feb. 23, and Saturday, Feb. 24, the event offers the opportunity to explore the freshest olive oils directly from the source—specifically, 3387 Canfield Road in Sebastopol. Founded in 2001 by Brooke Hazen, Gold Ridge Organic Farms consists of 88 acres of organically farmed olives, heirloom apples and citrus. The farm produces four olive oil blends—Tuscan, Picholine, Arbequina, Minerva—and grows 21 olive cultivars. All organic olive oils are milled on-site within hours of harvest to ensure the highest medicinal quality, maximum freshness and unparalleled flavor.

Tickets range from $50 to $156, for a range of tasting experiences. Reservations are now open. For more information or to make a reservation, visit Gold Ridge Organic Farms’ website at goldridgeorganicfarms.com.

Free Will Astrology: Week of February 21

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries filmmaker Akira Kurosawa was one of the greats. In his 30 films, he crafted a reputation as a masterful storyteller. A key moment in his development as an emotionally intelligent artist came when he was 13 years old. His older brother, Heigo, took him to view the aftermath of the Great Kantō earthquake. Akira wanted to avert his gaze from the devastation, but Heigo compelled him to look. Why? He wished for Akira to learn to deal with fear by facing it directly. I think you Aries people are more skilled at this challenging exercise than all the other signs. I hope you will call on it with aplomb in the coming weeks. You may be amazed at the courage it arouses in you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “When a mountain doesn’t listen, say a prayer to the sea,” said Taurus painter Cy Twombly. “If God doesn’t respond, direct your entreaties to Goddess,” I tell my Taurus friend, Audrey. “If your mind doesn’t provide you with useful solutions, make an appeal to your heart instead,” my Taurus mentor advises me. This counsel should be useful for you in the coming weeks, Taurus. It’s time to be diligent, relentless, ingenious and indefatigable in going after what you want. Keep asking until you find a source that will provide it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Gemini philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson offered advice that’s perfect for you right now. He said, “Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us, or we find it not.” Here’s what I will add. First, you very much need to commune with extra doses of beauty in the coming weeks. Doing so will expedite your healing and further your education—two activities that are especially important. Second, one way to accomplish your assignment is to put yourself in the presence of all the beautiful people, places and things you can find. Third, be imaginative as you cultivate beauty within yourself. How? That’s your homework.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I bet that sometime soon, you will dream of flying through the sky on a magic carpet. In fact, this may be a recurring dream for you in the coming months. By June, you may have soared along on a floating rug over 10 times. Why? What’s this all about? I suspect it’s one aspect of a project that life is encouraging you to undertake. It’s an invitation to indulge in more flights of the imagination; to open your soul to mysterious potencies; to give your fantasy life permission to be wilder and freer. You know that old platitude “shit happens”? You’re ready to experiment with a variation on that: “Magic happens.”

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): On Feb. 22, ancient Romans celebrated the holiday of Caristia. It was a time for reconciliation. People strove to heal estrangements and settle long-standing disagreements. Apologies were offered, and truces were negotiated. In alignment with current astrological omens, Leo, I recommend you revive this tradition. Now is an excellent time to embark on a crusade to unify, harmonize, restore, mend and assuage. I dare you to put a higher priority on love than on ego!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My poet friend, Jafna, likes to say that only two types of love are available to us: too little and too much. We are either deprived of the precise amount and quality of the love we want, or else we have to deal with an excess of love that doesn’t match the kind we want. But I predict that this will at most be a mild problem for you in the coming weeks—and perhaps not a problem at all. You will have a knack for giving and receiving just the right amount of love, neither too little nor too much. And the love flowing toward you and from you will be gracefully appropriate.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If the devil card comes up for me in a divinatory Tarot reading, I don’t get worried or scared that something bad might happen. On the contrary, I interpret it favorably. It means that an interesting problem or riddle has arrived or will soon arrive in my life—and that this twist can potentially make me wiser, kinder and wilder. The appearance of the devil card suggests that I need to be challenged so as to grow a new capacity or understanding. It’s a good omen, telling me that life is conspiring to give me what I need to outgrow my limitations and ignorance. Now apply these principles, Libra, as you respond to the devil card I just drew for you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A taproot is a thick, central and primary root from which a plant’s many roots branch out laterally. Typically, a taproot grows downward and is pretty straight. It may extend to a depth greater than the height of the plant sprouting above ground. Now let’s imagine that we humans have metaphorical taproots. They connect us with our sources of inner nourishment. They are lifelines to secret or hidden treasures we may be only partly conscious of. Let’s further imagine that in the coming months, Scorpio, your taproot will flourish, burgeon and spread deeper to draw in new nutrients. Got all that? Now I invite you to infuse this beautiful vision with an outpouring of love for yourself and for the wondrous vitality you will be absorbing.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Behavioral ecologist Professor Dan Charbonneau has observed the habits of ants, bees and other social insects. He says that a lot of the time, many of them just lounge around doing nothing. In fact, most animals do the same. The creatures of the natural world are just not very busy. Psychologist Dr. Sandi Mann urges us to learn from their lassitude. “We’ve created a society where we fear boredom, and we’re afraid of doing nothing,” she says. But that addiction to frenzy may limit our inclination to daydream, which in turn inhibits our creativity. I bring these facts to your attention, Sagittarius, because I suspect you’re in a phase when lolling around doing nothing much will be extra healthy for you. Liberate and nurture your daydreams, please!

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): “Education is an admirable thing,” wrote Oscar Wilde, “but it is well to remember that nothing worth knowing can be taught.” As I ponder your future in the coming weeks, I vociferously disagree with him. I am sure you can learn many things worth knowing from teachers of all kinds. It’s true that some of the lessons may be accidental or unofficial—and not delivered by traditional teachers. But that won’t diminish their value. I invite you to act as if you will in effect be enrolled in school 24/7 until the equinox.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The planets Mars and Venus are both cruising through Aquarius. Do they signify that synchronicities will weave magic into your destiny? Yes! Here are a few possibilities I foresee: 1. smoldering flirtations that finally ignite; 2. arguments assuaged by love-making; 3. mix-ups about the interplay between love and lust or else wonderful synergies between love and lust; 4. lots of labyrinthine love talk, romantic sparring and intricate exchange about the nature of desire; 5. adventures in the sexual frontiers; 6. opportunities to cultivate interesting new varieties of intimacy.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Unlike the Pope’s decrees, my proclamations are not infallible. As opposed to Nostradamus and many modern soothsayers, I never imagine I have the power to definitely decipher what’s ahead. One of my main mottoes is, “The future is undecided. Our destinies are always mutable.” Please keep these caveats in mind whenever you commune with my horoscopes. Furthermore, consider adopting my approach as you navigate through the world—especially in the coming weeks, when your course will be extra responsive to your creative acts of willpower. Decide right now what you want the next chapter of your life story to be about. You can make it what you want.

Homework: What helpful tip would you like to deliver to the person you will be a year from now? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

‘Guerrilla Gardener’ Responsible for Santa Rosa Daffodil Explosion

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5) Have you been noticing a suspicious amount of daffodils popping up around downtown Santa Rosa this season? The Press Democrat has answers. “The guerrilla gardener” responsible for this cheery scene is a local attorney who has been quietly burying bulbs under cover of darkness, after work and on weekends, the paper reports — driven by the delightful thought of “a February surprise.” Annnd it’s kind of hard to imagine anything sweeter than that. “Armed with only an orange vest and a cordless drill with an auger for digging, attorney Paul Miller has planted 10,000 daffodil bulbs in medians and under freeways near his downtown Santa Rosa office” over the past three years, the story goes. “He does it in the slivers of dirt between parking lots and sidewalks, in weedy medians that divide busy streets, and in the barren roadsides beneath highway overpasses. In the places no one anticipates experiencing beauty, or color even, Miller quietly leaves his mark.” Gahhhh. It’s almost too much to take. More from the PD: “About five years ago, Miller was outed as the guy behind the sunflowers that bloomed on the edges of the parking lot bordered by South E and Second and Third streets. His handiwork in those parts also included a bed of cosmos, tomatoes and basil just outside the door of his law offices. A city worker recognized him as the guy tending the plot on public property, and Miller was certain the jig was up. But alas, instead of shutting down what Miller called his ‘guerrilla garden,’ the city ran a bit of regular water to it, added some top soil and otherwise legitimized the effort. So Miller kept going.” The local flower hero himself explains his motives to the paper: “It’s just an unexpected burst of beauty in an unexpected place. No one expects to see a curtain of sunflowers or a sea of daffodils in a big parking lot full of concrete.” Also: “People have asked me, ‘Your backyard must look amazing.’ Nope, it doesn’t. I put my efforts out here.” 😭😭😭 (Source: Press Democrat; paywall)

River Area Musician Missing, Loved Ones Say

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4) Friends and family members of Sky Daniel O’Banion, a well-known and loved local blues musician and father of two from the Lower Russian River area, say he’s been missing for nearly a month now. His sister Valerie posted a “MISSING” poster on Facebook last week, and says she’s been handing out physical flyers around town as well. “He has graying blonde hair and blue eyes, is 6’2″, 225 lbs,” the flyer says. “He was last seen in Guerneville 1/21/24.” And the mother of Sky’s children, Rhiannon Guerrero, said in her own post: “He has not been seen or heard from in over three weeks. He is… a hard person to miss. He was last seen in Guerneville but is known to frequent many spots in Sonoma County. Please keep a look out for him.” (Rhiannon tells me that a missing person’s report has been filed, but I haven’t seen anything official from police yet.) One of Sonoma County’s most famous blues musicians, Charlie Musselwhite, commented on Facebook: “We used to communicate regularly and then he just disappeared and I’ve been wondering what happened and haven’t heard a thing.” Sky’s sister Valerie is asking anyone with information about his possible whereabouts to call her at (707) 703-0084. For decades, Sky has been a regular gigger at music venues across the county, oftentimes playing blues harmonica and singing alongside guitarist Derek Irving. But friends say online that he’s been “struggling” for a while. For what it’s worth, a few years ago, Sky set up a GoFundMe to help make ends meet. “I’ve got the blues because I done went n’ injured my harmonica holdin’ hand!” he wrote on the fundraising page. “The Doc told me it’ll probably be around 6-8 weeks of squeellin’ and healin’ until I can put it back to work again. That also means that now I’m outa work until then too. See it aint just my harmonica holdin’ hand that I done messed up, but it’s my nail holdin’ while I hammer-it-in hand, my ladder holdin’ while I’m climbin’ it hand, my bolt holdin’ while I’m wrenchin’ it hand.. You get the idea. So I’m pretty much outa work and outa luck until my hand gets aaall healed up. And I guess that also means I’m pretty much outa dough ’till then too. Now if it weren’t for me  tearin’ up my mic & harmonica holdin’ hand, I’d probly be workin’ on settin’ up a live gig right this very minute.  But I can’t even play my way outa the blues this time. If you’re the kinda person who’d buy me a cuppa joe when I was feelin’ down and out, well, here’s your chance..” (Source: Facebook Groups & Nic Alberico & Valerie Bird via Facebook & Sonny Lowe via Facebook & Rhiannon Guerrero via Facebook & North Bay Live Music & GoFundMe)

Napa’s Summer ‘Porchfest’ Canceled for 2024

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3) Another popular summer festival in the wine country has been canceled for 2024. (The first being the three-decade-old Bodega Seafood, Art & Wine Festival.) This time, the organizers of Napa Porchfest — a music festival that takes place on the porches of historic buildings across the City of Napa, beloved by locals and tourists alike — are reportedly calling off the event because they want to focus on other priorities, and the festival is a huge suck of bandwidth. Unlike the Bodega festival, though, there are pretty solid plans to bring Porchfest back in 2025. Here’s the whole deal, courtesy of the Napa Valley Register: “Napa County Landmarks said the group is looking to hand over the work to some of its longtime organizers, giving the festival new life in 2025. Architect Juliana Inman, a then board-member of the nonprofit, was the driving force behind its 2011 debut. The group has been the main sponsor of the event every year since, except for a pandemic-related pause in 2020. The 2023 event, held on the last Sunday in July, drew more than 10,000 people to downtown Napa and areas surrounding Fuller Park. Hundreds of musicians performed outside 73 homes that year, the largest grouping in its history, Micah Malan, the festival’s music director, said at the time. The cost of admission is zero, similar to dozens of similar ones that happen across the country — each taking its inspiration from the one that started in Ithaca, New York in 2007. Putting it on, though, is not free. Napa County Landmarks Executive Director Christine Madrid French said the group decided to move away from the event to better focus on its core mission of ‘historic preservation advocacy, policy and education.’ She said she was tasked with focusing and reinvigorating the group’s mission when she took over in August of last year — and moving away from Porchfest was necessary to do just that.” So now, the Landmarks group is trying to set up a separate nonprofit to run Porchfest in the future. Anyone with interest in donating or sponsoring “can send a note to in**@***********st.org,” the Register reports. “And, for those who don’t want to wait for 2025, San Rafael is having its Porchfest in September.” (Source: North Bay Bohemian & Napa Porchfest & San Rafael Porchfest & Napa Valley Register; paywall)

Mass Mystery Illness at Napa High School

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2) And then, over in the City of Napa, we have the mysterious case of the sick kids in the choir room at Vintage High School. Investigators still don’t know why this happened, but during first period on Thursday, around 25 choir students found themselves struck by a sudden nausea, all at once. One Vintage High kid, the town crier of the situation, told TV news reporters: “A couple students had passed out and one was throwing up and everyone just came inside and started getting people out and putting them into a different room to test everyone.” Five of the students reportedly had to be taken to the hospital — they’re all OK now, reports say — and the rest of the student body had to shelter in place for a spell. The remainder of the school day at Vintage High was obviously shot. “We heard that there was like a SWAT team, police and firefighters were there and so everyone was just kind of chaotic really,” that same town-crier student tells ABC7, “and people were calling their parents wanting to go home because we didn’t know what was going on.” Originally the leading theory was a possible gas or carbon monoxide leak, but local fire officials and PG&E inspectors have ruled that out. “The fire department, police department and PG&E have deemed not only the choir room but the band room that is adjacent to it and the entire building as safe for use,” Julie Bordes, a spokesperson for the Napa Valley Unified School District told reporters Friday. So the coast is clear, but the case of the mass mystery illness at Vintage High goes unsolved for now… (Source: ABC7)

60’s-inspired ‘Midsummer’ staged at Spreckels

When mounting a Shakespeare production, companies usually pick either a well-known adaptation or inject a “concept.” Rohnert Park’s Spreckels Theater Company, however, has chosen to do both with its three-hour-long production of A Midsummer Night's Dream…60’s Style! The result is a really good Shakespearean production that often seems to break out into a jukebox musical. The ambitious show runs through...

Melissa Etheridge at Graton

Novelist Thomas Wolfe once famously quipped that one can never go home. Clearly, he never met Melissa Etheridge, whose latest album, One Way Out, consists of seven songs she penned in the late 1980s and early 1990s. While this material is roughly three decades old, the seed for Etheridge’s 16th studio album was planted in 2013. At the time, she...

Regulate Airbnb

Click to read
Americans have been on a vacation binge since the easing of Covid-19 restrictions. In particular, the vacation rental company Airbnb is thriving. Late last year, the company posted its highest-ever profits. Meanwhile, cities are seeing rising rents, unaffordable home prices and increased homelessness. Authorities are now linking these crises partly to Airbnb—and some are now passing strict regulations. Just as companies...

Your Letters, Feb. 21

Announcement of Candidacy I am nearly 73 years old, hearing-impaired, forgetful, degenerate, infirm, cognitively challenged, unfocused, lame, imbecilic, thoughtless, incoherent, syphilitic, worn out and incapable of original thought. The last time I was worth a damn to society, they were creating a bonfire with disco records out in left field at Comiskey Park. There is only one thing left to do for...

Journo God Descends Upon Book Passage

Corte Madera Fishwrap Book Passage hosts a conversation between Calvin Trillin and Michael Krasny, centered around Trillin's latest work, The Lede: Dispatches From A Life In The Press. This rare event is scheduled for 1pm, Saturday, Feb. 24, at 51 Tamal Vista, Corte Madera. Admission is free, which we journos find astounding given that Trillin is one of journalism's most distinguished...

Free Will Astrology: Week of February 21

Free Will Astrology: Week of February 21
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries filmmaker Akira Kurosawa was one of the greats. In his 30 films, he crafted a reputation as a masterful storyteller. A key moment in his development as an emotionally intelligent artist came when he was 13 years old. His older brother, Heigo, took him to view the aftermath of the Great Kantō earthquake. Akira...

‘Guerrilla Gardener’ Responsible for Santa Rosa Daffodil Explosion

5) Have you been noticing a suspicious amount of daffodils popping up around downtown Santa Rosa this season? The Press Democrat has answers. "The guerrilla gardener" responsible for this cheery scene is a local attorney who has been quietly burying bulbs under cover of darkness, after work and on weekends, the paper reports — driven by the delightful thought...

River Area Musician Missing, Loved Ones Say

4) Friends and family members of Sky Daniel O'Banion, a well-known and loved local blues musician and father of two from the Lower Russian River area, say he's been missing for nearly a month now. His sister Valerie posted a "MISSING" poster on Facebook last week, and says she's been handing out physical flyers around town as well. "He...

Napa’s Summer ‘Porchfest’ Canceled for 2024

3) Another popular summer festival in the wine country has been canceled for 2024. (The first being the three-decade-old Bodega Seafood, Art & Wine Festival.) This time, the organizers of Napa Porchfest — a music festival that takes place on the porches of historic buildings across the City of Napa, beloved by locals and tourists alike — are reportedly calling...

Mass Mystery Illness at Napa High School

2) And then, over in the City of Napa, we have the mysterious case of the sick kids in the choir room at Vintage High School. Investigators still don't know why this happened, but during first period on Thursday, around 25 choir students found themselves struck by a sudden nausea, all at once. One Vintage High kid, the town...
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