School Rocks

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Wanna learn how to rock? The North Bay offers a veritable “greatest hits” line up of places to learn.

School of Rock, a national franchise, emphasizes rock. Students start from day one by joining an in-school band to learn through playing together. The chain has several locations with local owners, including San Rafael and Santa Rosa.

“It’s kind of like sports. You’re not going to practice baseball alone. You can do some drills and such, but you’re going to join a team to learn how, right?” said Josh Walden, owner and general manager of School of Rock Santa Rosa. “So same thing here; we put you right in a band.”

Located in a black walled space that will be familiar to anyone who has rented a rehearsal studio, School of Rock Santa Rosa just feels like a place for bands.

“The cool thing is, our music community is a very inclusive, welcoming, comfortable community for beginners,” said Walden. After being nervous for the first couple of rehearsals, beginners “realize it doesn’t matter if you can make a mistake; nobody cares. You go home and you practice, and you try to come back a little bit better next week.”

Learning at School of Rock starts with a free trial lesson. Students get a tour of the studio and some one-on-one time with instructors. Based on evaluation of their level, the student either goes into the beginner program or the core program. In either case, they join a band.

For those interested in the technical side of the artform, and the professional opportunities that can come with it, a new sound engineer workshop series is kicking off in Sebastopol.

Designed with young adults in mind, or others with some experience in sound engineering and ready for the next step, Sanctuary Sound is trying something new—a hands-on weekend in September at its recording studio just outside of Occidental.

“[The approach] is great because you can just ask questions. Like ‘Yo, I don’t know how to compress well,’ or ‘I’m not doing well with stereo imaging,’ all this kind of stuff,” said studio owner and engineer Matt McDavid. The chance to ask really specific questions helps get tracks radio ready.

“I’ll do all the production and recording one day, and then we’ll have a guest mixer coming and do the mixing for the second day,” he said. The second instructor helps students learn to look at problems from different perspectives.

“Once we’ve got all that fun nerdy stuff out of the way, we’re going to get into production. How to produce an act, what it takes to wrangle five people in a room and get everyone feeling good,” said McDavid. “Keep that vibe going.”

Meanwhile, Play It Forward, a Sonoma County non-profit, helps to connect youth students with scholarships for one-on-one lessons and donated instruments. Founded by local music teachers, the program is continually evaluating how best to provide for the needs of the underserved.

“As a non-profit, we’re just trying to raise funds to find where there’s need and build programs around that,” said Play It Forward cofounder, Nick Simmons. Many of the programs supported by Play It Forward are in schools. But funds are also reserved for the scholarship and donations programs. While Play It Forward can’t guarantee that every student will be accepted, “anyone is welcome to apply on our website,” Simmons noted. That website is pifmusic.com.

The group’s mission statement reads in part, the community “nurtures the human need to relate, create, and inspire together.” Teachers and local residents make music accessible to students. It is a “positive program [that] inspires learning and playing for all types of students and musicians.”

In Napa, the Napa School of Music offers a well-rounded music education, with classes in Garage Band 101, A Cappella, Music Together toddler movement classes, as well as summer rock band camps and beginners camps for singing, guitar, ukulele and violin.

At the camps, which take children from ages 7 to 15, kids with prior experience on their instrument learn to play in a rock band, write one or two original songs, record their song and create their own music video. All instruments are accepted.

Fall Arts Make Seasonal Return

The turn of season from summer into fall is a marker of powerful energy in many traditions. From the Assumption of Mary—just past on Aug. 15, the summer festival of my family and ancestors—to Dia de los Muertos after the autumn equinox, themes of harvest and afterlife and death make this time of year fertile for artistic endeavor. The spirit races.

Many excellent such events are being offered throughout the North Bay. It’s time to do art, see art, be art.

Ballet Folklorico

Perhaps the first art form was dance. The art known as Ballet Folklórico is performed at An Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Celebration at the Sebastopol Community Cultural Center by El Valle de St. Helena. The St. Helena based non-profit Mexican folk dance group teaches the traditional dances of Mexico to learners of all ages.

“Ballet Folklórico has been danced for hundreds of years and can be traced all the way back to ceremonial dances of Indigenous people,” says the event website. Known as the Dance of the People, the style incorporated traditional dance forms from throughout Mexico.

“Mexican Mariachi music is made to move you. It is direct, driving and designed to instill emotion,” say the event’s promoters. “El Vallé creates an intoxicating and joyful way to experience Mexican culture by way of folkloric dance traditions.”

Ballet Folklorico, El Valle at 2pm, Sunday, Sept. 17. Sebastopol Community Cultural Center, 390 Morris St. For tickets, go to seb.org/hispanic-latinx-heritage-celebration.

Sunday Funday

Stand-up Comedy Matinee plays every Sunday at the Barrel Proof Lounge, Santa Rosa. Not often talked about as an art form, stand up comedy remains one of the most connected and vibrant creative outlets. Local artists of all performing disciplines learn artistically from doing comedy and its cousin, improv.

Being a regular at an event like this is a way to follow local artists developing their chops. Audience members can see comedians from across the Bay Area perform while drinking off that morning brunch. Or for those who haven’t eaten before, they can get Tipsy Tacos, right next door. Mimosas and beers are available during the show, with hosted trivia after.

Sunday Funday-Comedy Matinee. 2pm, Sunday, Aug. 20 and 27. Barrel Proof Lounge, 501 Mendocino Ave., Santa Rosa. The free shows are 21 and over. Doors: 1:45pm.

Bodega Seafood, Art & Wine Festival

Any event that has on its schedule both piccolo players and a Punch and Judy show is bound to whet the creative palate.

Featuring 50 wineries and brewers, not to mention hard cider, the 27th Annual Bodega Seafood, Art & Wine Festival is a West County event that has all the pleasures of a wine and food fair, along with a wealth of entertainment.

Behind the little tiny curtain at the Punch and Judy show is Brian Patterson, son of the Renaissance Faire’s original producers. Patterson has been performing the puppet theater classic since 1990, after a childhood of intense regular exposure to “theater and puppetry, including Punch and Judy,” said the artist. A traditional slaptick of intramarital mayhem, Punch and Judy arose in the 1660s United Kingdom.

Event goers can listen to multi instrumentalist Pascal Bokar use voice and guitar to connect American music of the South to the Ngoni, the traditional four-string instrument from West Africa. Bokar also plays the West African balafon, an ancestor of the xylophone, which has a multi sonic rhythm.

The festival sports three stages for the packed schedule of entertainment, including a kid-friendly comedy stage, as well as activities.

“A portion of the proceeds goes to Stewards of the Coast & Redwoods, the non-profit working in tandem with the California State Parks in the Russian River region, and the Bodega Volunteer Fire Department,” said event promoters.

There may be unicycles.

10am-5pm Aug. 26 and 27. Watts Ranch, 16855 Bodega Hwy., Bodega. Buy tickets at bodegaseafoodfestival.com. Prices vary.

Art House Hotel’s Inaugural Art Exhibition

Santa Rosa’s Art House Hotel’s first exhibition is coming to a close on Aug. 31. The calligraphy, art and poetry of Sherrie Lovler provide a look into the inner world of the artist and indeed all artists. That is to say, all humans.

The Cherry Street district hotel began the rotating art exhibitions as a way of “showcasing the incredible artistic talent of Sonoma County and enhancing your experience at the hotel,” said promoters. New shows will continue through the fall and winter.

‘Inner Work: The Art and Poetry of Sherrie Lovler’ will hang in the Gallery Lounge through Aug. 31. All work is available for purchase. Those interested may inquire during business hours at the Art House Hotel, 620 7th St., Santa Rosa.

Art Trails Preview

The preview show for the upcoming season of 2023 Sonoma County Art Trails will take place at Corricks in downtown Santa Rosa. In the stationery’s gallery, which housed Art Trails artists throughout the year, selected art from the 20 new and 97 returning 2023 Art Trails artists will be displayed. The Sonoma County art community institution is continuing its mission to use “art to revive connection” by bringing people into artists’ creative spaces.

Art Trails is from 10am-4pm Saturday and Sunday on the weekends of Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, and Oct. 7 and 8.

Sonoma County Art Trails Gallery at Corrick’s September-October 2023 Art Trails​ Open Studios Preview Exhibit Receptions are 5-7pm Friday, Sept. 1, and 5-7pm​ Friday, Oct. 6 at Corrick’s, 637 4th St., Santa Rosa.

On the Theater Side of Things

Santa Rosa Junior College Theatre Arts season opens on Sept. 29 with a mystery classic.

Clue, directed by Reed Martin at the Burbank Main Theatre, is based on the screenplay by Jonathan Lynn, written by Sandy Rustin, with additional material by Hunter Foster and Eric Price.

Clue is a hilarious farce-meets-murder mystery” that is “based on the iconic 1985 Paramount movie, which was inspired by the classic Hasbro board game,” according to promoters. The comedy whodunnit has fans of all ages, with famous twists and turns of the plot designed to engage newcomers as well as long standing fans.

Tickets to the 2023–2024 season go on sale early September.

Studio Art Pass

For those ceramics artists ready to take the next step in creating the perfect piece, the Nimbus art studio pass system gives expanded access to open studio workspace. The Studio Art Pass holders will “have access to our studio spaces, tools and materials, one on one advice with professional artists and technical assistance,” according to the group’s website.

The studios offer mosaic work as well as ceramics. All they ask to be considered is to “share your artistic experience and background with us” or take one of the studio’s many classes.

For more information about scheduled studio arts pass fees, hours and availability, contact in**@********ts.org. For classes, check out nimbusarts.org/class-camps.

‘Place Matters’ Ignites Big Ideas

Sonoma County has always been special—a place where the landscape still informs how its people live and work.

From the rivers and forests to the rocky coastline and rolling hills, the many unique features of this area inspire what’s created and enjoyed here. This includes an internationally recognized wine industry and restaurants serving locally-grown food, all in a region loaded with the sometimes hidden talents of expert artisans, scientists and more.

Now the locale has inspired a set of new events, offered by Carin Jacobs of the appropriately-named Place Matters. These speaker-series social events are designed to entertain, inform and connect people through engagement with regional experts. From breadmakers to oyster farmers, geographers to floral designers, here, the local makers, designers and scientists emerge from their work and step into the limelight.

Currently, there are three monthly offerings. They include “Life by Design” at Barber Cellars, where a curated pair of designers engages in conversation with each other and the audience. Also offered is “Makers Among Us” at Della Fattoria, featuring the many makers of Sonoma County. And finally, “Sonoma Science” at Brooks Note Winery, where regional experts on topics like climate, oceans or geography share their work.

“I have been doing content-based programming across disciplines for years that lives at the nexus of learning, engagement and the alchemy of unexpected combinations of people, places and ideas,” Jacobs says. “After decades of curating these experiences for museums, universities and other cultural venues, I decided to try it on my own, creating something nomadic and nimble.”

All the events feature two speakers discussing a topic related to their expertise and the series focus. For example, at “Makers Among Us,” attendees socialize at Della Fattoria Downtown Café, grab something to eat and drink, then settle in to hear two “makers” talk shop. A ceramicist and a winemaker might speak about their processes, then compare and contrast how they work. And in this case, the café even uses bowls made by the ceramicist.

It’s a cross-pollination of artists, business and the public, some of which become the other. The Brooks Note winemaker was a speaker at the maker series and now hosts the science series at his winery. The venues welcome new customers on a night they usually aren’t open. Speakers share and discuss what they do. And the public has a one-and-done night out with food, drink and entertainment in one spot.

One of Jacobs’ favorite moments was an intergenerational conversation between a speaker in his 70s and an attendee in her 20s connecting over marine biology. Personal and professional connections often occur at the events, making for an organically growing community.

And it’s not only a way to learn something new about the area—for many, this kind of low-stakes socializing is what’s needed right now. Dominique Fougère, a local product designer and series attendee, said, “We are in need of weaving together a new creative social fabric post-pandemic, and I’m very intrigued to see how this pattern develops.”

Likewise, area newcomers like Kathy Scott have found new friends. “As a relatively new resident of Petaluma,” she said, “I loved that the evening put me face-to-face with new neighbors—a welcome change from my remote work Zoom world.”

In only a few months, the series has surged in popularity. Consequently, Jacobs is adding a fourth series in Petaluma and plans to expand to West County in 2024.

The events showcase why place does matter and how entwined humans truly are with it.

For more information, go to placematters-sonoma.com.

Makers Among Us Social hour 6pm. Program 7–8:30pm. Third Wednesdays, Della Fattoria, 143 Petaluma Blvd. North, Petaluma.

Sonoma Science Social hour 6pm. Program 7–8:30pm. Fourth Mondays, Brooks Note Winery, 112 Washington St., Petaluma.

Life by Design Social hour 6pm. Program 7–8:30pm. Second Tuesdays, Barber Cellars 112 Washington St., Petaluma.

Magic Shop Studios Casts a Spell

They say those who don’t believe in magic will never encounter it. Luckily, Jennifer Tatum is a believer.

Five years ago, Tatum rented a studio from Cemill Hope of HopeBuilt, a cabinet making business in a warehouse on the Petaluma River. The ambient sounds from the woodshop conjured up numerous creative thoughts.

“The massive creative energy and dedication coming from the team of woodworkers

fed me with inspiration,” Tatum says. “It was the sound of ideas in action buzzing around me. Even if I did nothing but sit and listen, I felt ideas pouring in.”

Then, in October 2019, the WTRSHD building began its remodel, and the renters in the building moved out. An idea Tatum had brewing was to create a collective of art studios there. She now had to decide whether to also move out—or propose her idea of an art collective to the building’s owner, Joshua Peterson.

It’s uncommon to ask for something so unlikely. But Peterson agreed to the idea, and in January 2020, Magic Shop Studios was born.

“I named the space Magic Shop Studios because Cemill Hope’s son, Bodhi, popped into my studio one day and said, ‘Your studio is like a magic shop,’” she laughs. “I definitely feel like a lot of magic has happened here and will continue to happen.”

The collective began with six studios in a smallish space in the warehouse—which was still undergoing remodeling. Over time, Magic Shop acquired more space and partitioned it off into new studios, a printmaking workroom and three galleries. Now there are 11 artmaking spaces with 14 artists creating work there. The new printmaking workroom is available to all artists in the collective and soon to the public as well.

While there is a 20-person waiting list for studios, Tatum encourages anyone interested to join the list and to also investigate the other arts collectives in town, including Wonderstump, and the nearby Slough City Studio.

The first artists to jump into Magic Shop Studios were Andrea Jackson, Renee Kelly, Sarah Rodebaugh, Julie McNamara, Johanna Gharman and Cat Alden. It was a leap of faith for some. When Alden, a mixed media/soft sculpture artist, first rented a studio there during COVID, she was skeptical of Tatum’s big ideas for the space. Tatum’s dreams of adding the printmaking studio, as well as having open studio days and potluck get-togethers, seemed like a stretch. And maybe it was—but sometimes what’s needed is a healthy stretch.

“At the time, it all sounded like a pipe dream to me,” says Alden, “but I was proven wrong. Many people talk about ‘creating community,’ but Magic Shop Studios has actually done it.”

The reasons Tatum believed an arts collective was needed propelled her along.

“It’s knowing that someone is there without needing to ask anything of them,” she explains. “And the random moments of intersecting, with the potential to ignite ideas, problem solve, build faith to experiment and dive deeper into all of our work, are so important,” she says.

Magic Shop’s next trick is to include the larger arts community in the space. Nascent ideas include book readings and bringing in outside artists for events.

“We want to create a serendipitous experience here, without any expectation for artists and the public,” adds Tatum.

Quarterly Open Studios Evening and Art Show

5-8pm, Saturday, Sept. 2.

Hot Off the Press!’ works on paper

Monthly Arts Alive

5-8pm, Third Thursdays

Weekly Open Gallery and Artists in Action Art Experiences

11am-4pm, Fridays and Saturdays

Haiku You: Poetry for the Moment

None need reminding how these are uncertain times or how culture wars could leave us frozen in our tracks. But how many take heed of a simple way to access freedom from worries by simplifying an outlook?

One such practice requires no overhead, no prescription, yet it’s proven to increase our lifespan. It is the act of writing. Let’s be beginners and try out history’s shortest form, the haiku. Here are three ways writing could change your life.

Slows Down Time

How many of us remark in frustration that time is rushing past? The quality of our attention has an impact on that experience. While we all have the same number of hours in a day, some feel luxuriously indulgent while others feel short-handed. Whoever felt like they’d wasted time after a full body massage? Getting in a haiku mind is like a massage for our senses and stabilizes the truth of our essential connection to nature.

Uplifts and Broadens Outlook

“Writing poetry is a way to still the murky waters,” said Francesca Bell, Marin County’s poet laureate.

Discovering something up close opens a hidden mirror to its universal quality or pattern. A seashell on the shore is quite the entirety of sound, salt and sun when held to the ear, as every conch holder knows.

Builds Brain Resilience

Engaging in creativity builds brain synapses between the left and right hemisphere … proven with MRI scans, and none does this more productively than writing. It adds problem-solving skills as each word choice heightens attention to the sublime. Take for example this haiku by local doctor and poet David Watts: this year / I need more layers / barbed wire wind

Although nature-based, any subject is fair game for the 17-syllable set. Around the Marin Art and Garden Center, there’s a large artifact of construction named The Bottle House. Although it served as the county fair’s ticket-box, over a half-century ago, it still appears like a poetic rendezvous.

Here’s to welcoming that fresh, clear mind using poetry, nature and a pen.

Jayne McPherson hosts a haiku writer’s soiree quarterly at Marin Art and Garden Center, Ross.

Your Letters, Aug. 23

Salty Situation

Fort Ross State Historical Park is a treasured part of many visits to the Sonoma coast. Today, its parkland is threatened by a scheme to pump salt water out of our national marine sanctuary there, store it in a reservoir on the top of a nearby ridge and then run turbines as it comes back down the hill.

This wasteful project would decimate a lovely redwood grove, intrude on what is obviously a valued piece of our history and be built directly on top of where the San Andreas Fault moved fences and roads 10 feet sideways during the 1906 earthquake.

A comment period is running on this plan until Aug. 28, and interested members of the public are invited to provide their thoughts on this at SaveFortRoss.com.

Richard Charter

Bodega Bay

Innocent Until

Wow! I’m almost certain Donald Trump’s last incarnation was as a circus barker or ringmaster.

That aside, I believe he is innocent until proven guilty.

For his entire presidency, he was wrongly prosecuted by the press and public for Russia-gate. The New York Times’ and Washington Post’s shared Nobel Prize award citation was for their deeply sourced and relentlessly reported coverage that furthered the public’s understanding of Trump and his Russian interference in the 2016 election.

I saw no retractions after the Durham Report cleared Trump. Loretta Bresh (“Indictment Excitement,” Aug. 16) wrote that a trial must proceed without political interference. Whoops; too late.

Leland Dennick

Sebastopol

Real Astrology, Week of Aug. 23

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): None of the books I’ve written has appeared on The New York Times best-seller list. Even if my future books do well, I will never catch up with Aries writer James Patterson, who has had 260 books on the prestigious list. My sales will never rival his, either. He has earned over $800 million from the 425 million copies his readers have bought. While I don’t expect you Rams to ever boost your income to Patterson’s level, either, I suspect the next nine months will bring you unprecedented opportunities to improve your financial situation. For best results, edge your way toward doing more of what you love to do.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Addressing a lover, D. H. Lawrence said that “having you near me” meant that he would “never cease to be filled with newness.” That is a sensational compliment! I wish all of us could have such an influence in our lives: a prod that helps arouse endless novelty. Here’s the good news, Taurus: I suspect you may soon be blessed with a lively source of such stimulation, at least temporarily. Are you ready and eager to welcome an influx of freshness?

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Humans have been drinking beer for at least 13,000 years and eating bread for 14,500. We’ve enjoyed cheese for 7,500 years and popcorn for 6,500. Chances are good that at least some of these four are comfort foods for you. In the coming weeks, I suggest you get an ample share of them or any other delicious nourishments that make you feel well-grounded and deep-rooted. You need to give extra care to stabilizing your foundations. You have a mandate to cultivate security, stability and constancy. Here’s your homework: Identify three things you can do to make you feel utterly at home in the world.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): On Instagram, I posted a favorite quote from poet Muriel Rukeyser: “The world is made of stories, not atoms.” I added my own thought: “You are made of stories, too.” A reader didn’t like this meme. He said it was “a nightmare for us anti-social people.” I asked him why. He said, “Because stories only happen in a social setting. To tell or hear a story is to be in a social interaction. If you’re not inclined towards such activities, it’s oppressive.” Here’s how I replied: “That’s not true for me. Many of my stories happen while I’m alone with my inner world. My nightly dreams are some of my favorite stories.” Anyway, Cancerian, I’m offering this exchange to you now because you are in a story-rich phase of your life. The tales coming your way, whether they occur in social settings or in the privacy of your own fantasies, will be extra interesting, educational and motivational. Gather them in with gusto! Celebrate them!

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Author A. Conan Doyle said, “It has long been my axiom that the little things are infinitely the most important.” Spiritual teacher John Zabat-Zinn muses, “The little things? The little moments? They aren’t little.” Here’s author Robert Brault’s advice: “Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.” Ancient Chinese sage Lao-Tzu provides a further nuance: “To know you have enough is to be rich.” Let’s add one more clue, from author Alice Walker: “I try to teach my heart to want nothing it can’t have.”

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I don’t believe that in order to be interesting or meaningful, a relationship has to work out—in fiction or in real life.” So says Virgo novelist Elizabeth Curtis Sittenfeld, and I agree. Just because a romantic bond didn’t last forever doesn’t mean it was a waste of energy. An intimate connection you once enjoyed but then broke off might have taught you lessons that are crucial to your destiny. In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to acknowledge and celebrate these past experiences of togetherness. Interpret them not as failures but as gifts.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The amount of rubbish produced by the modern world is staggering: over 2 billion tons per year. To get a sense of how much that is, imagine a convoy of fully loaded garbage trucks circling the earth 24 times. You and I can diminish our contributions to this mess, though we must overcome the temptation to think our personal efforts will be futile. Can we really help save the world by buying secondhand goods, shopping at farmers’ markets and curbing our use of paper? Maybe a little. And here’s the bonus: We enhance our mental health by reducing the waste we engender. Doing so gives us a more graceful and congenial relationship with life. The coming weeks will be an excellent time to meditate and act on this beautiful truth.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I hope that in the coming weeks, you will wash more dishes, do more laundry and scrub more floors than you ever have before. Clean the bathrooms with extra fervor, too. Scour the oven and refrigerator. Make your bed with extreme precision. Got all that, Scorpio? JUST KIDDING! Everything I just said was a lie. Now here’s my authentic message: Avoid grunt work. Be as loose and playful and spontaneous as you have ever been. Seek record-breaking levels of fun and amusement. Experiment with the high arts of brilliant joy and profound pleasure.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Dear Sagittarius the Archer: To be successful in the coming weeks, you don’t have to hit the exact center of the bull’s-eye every time—or even anytime. Merely shooting your arrows so they land somewhere inside the fourth or third concentric rings will be a very positive development. Same is true if you are engaged in a situation with metaphorical resemblances to a game of horseshoes. Even if you don’t throw any ringers at all, just getting close could be enough to win the match. This is one time in your life when perfection isn’t necessary to win.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I suspect you are about to escape the stuffy labyrinth. There may be a short adjustment period, but soon you will be running half-wild in a liberated zone where you won’t have to dilute and censor yourself. I am not implying that your exile in the enclosed space was purely oppressive. Not at all. You learned some cool magic in there, and it will serve you well in your expansive new setting. Here’s your homework assignment: Identify three ways you will take advantage of your additional freedom.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Though my mother is a practical, sensible person with few mystical propensities, she sometimes talks about a supernatural vision she had. Her mother, my grandmother, had been disabled by a massive stroke. It left her barely able to do more than laugh and move her left arm. But months later, on the morning after grandma died, her spirit showed up in a pink ballerina dress doing ecstatic pirouettes next to my mother’s bed. My mom saw it as a communication about how joyful she was to be free of her wounded body. I mention this gift of grace because I suspect you will have at least one comparable experience in the coming weeks. Be alert for messages from your departed ancestors.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “Those who know the truth are not equal to those who love it,” said the ancient Chinese sage Confucius. Amen! Seeking to understand reality with cold, unfeeling rationality is at best boring and at worst destructive. I go so far as to say that it’s impossible to deeply comprehend anything or anyone unless we love them. Really! I’m not exaggerating or being poetic. In my philosophy, our quest to be awake and see truly requires us to summon an abundance of affectionate attention. I nominate you to be the champion practitioner of this approach to intelligence, Pisces. It’s your birthright! And I hope you turn it up full blast in the coming weeks.

A Fortune in Film and More

San Rafael

‘Fremont,’ the Film

Director Babak Jalali appears in person for a thought-provoking post-screening discussion of his new feature film, Fremont. The film follows Afghan refugee Donya, who lives in Fremont but works at a fortune cookie factory in San Francisco. Seeking connection, she decides to send a message out to the world through a cookie in this offbeat vision of the universal longing for home. See the on-stage conversation with Babak Jalali. 8:30pm, after a 7pm screening on Saturday, Aug. 26. Smith Rafael Film Center, 1118 Fourth St., San Rafael. $13.25 general tickets, $9.75 discounts.

 
Guerneville

Tapas Short Play Festival

Pegasus Theater Company’s long standing Tapas Short Play Festival will feature seven original short plays by playwrights from all around northern California. “We’ve produced a lot of wonderful short plays over the years, but this year’s crop is outstanding—entertaining, provocative and unexpected,” says the theater company’s website. “And several of our playwrights are homegrown Sonoma County talent, including Scott Lummer and Darlene Kersnar.” Curtain time is 7pm Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 pm for Sunday matinees, from ​​Sept. 15 through Oct. 8. The door will open a half hour earlier. Mt. Jackson Masonic Lodge, 14040 Church St., Guerneville. Tickets are $20.

 
Napa

Panic at the River Stage

Percussion-rock band Widespread Panic has been together over three decades, releasing many recordings of “exceptional shows spanning the band’s entire career. With legendary sold-out concerts at Red Rocks Amphitheatre and at arenas throughout the South, Panic has headlined most major U.S. festivals, including Bonnaroo (eight times), Lollapalooza and Outside Lands. They are sure to thrill along the Napa River. A gold ticket includes gold section viewing, dedicated entrance, dedicated restrooms and dedicated cash bar. 6pm, Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 26 and 27. Oxbow River Stage, 1100 West St., Napa. $69.50 for general admission, $150 for a gold ticket.

Santa Rosa

Low Stakes

Lost Church Live Band Karaoke takes over the house every fourth Thursday at the Lost Church Santa Rosa. This is the hosted event in which audience members become the band’s lead singer! Participants pick from a list of 110 songs with words on stage. Guest singers are offered a fun and friendly band with a rotating lineup of talented local musicians. Singers sound and feel great; band members drawn from Staggerwing and Stakes Are Low will sing with guests as much or as little as they want. 8pm, Thursday, Aug. 24 and every fourth Thursday. The Lost Church, 427 Mendocino, Santa Rosa. $15 general admission tickets at tinyurl.com/LiveBandKaraokeTLC.

Crossroads: SMART gears up for existential sales tax fight

In June, the Marin County Civil Grand Jury posed an existential question for the North Bay’s passenger rail agency.

“SMART at a Crossroads: Here Today, Gone Tomorrow?”, a report by the volunteer investigatory body, focuses on how the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit agency plans to pass a sales tax extension by the end of the decade—and, to a lesser extent, what will happen if the measure fails.

“The Grand Jury has found that SMART is highly dependent on sales tax revenues for its operations. Without those funds SMART will not be able to continue even if it substantially increases the number of riders or obtains additional federal, state, or regional funding from existing programs,” the report states in part. According to the report, roughly 60% of the agency’s annual revenue comes from the sales tax, compared to 4% from fares.

The existential question was no doubt already on the minds of SMART’s board of directors, which formally responded to the report at its Aug. 16 meeting, agreeing with all of the report’s findings and recommendations.

As part of that, the board will publicly examine within the next year “how SMART might continue funding its operations beyond April 2029, including an evaluation of when the voters would decide whether to continue levying a sales tax for SMART’s operations.” The agency will also develop a written communications and outreach plan and budget to educate Marin and Sonoma county voters on the community benefits of the continued operations of the train, and consider hiring consultants to advise them on the feasibility and timing of another sales tax renewal ballot measure.

Voters first passed a tax measure in 2008, supporting the train with funding running through April 2029. Measure I, a March 2020 attempt to extend the tax, faced a well-funded opposition campaign and fell far short of the needed 66% support from voters in both counties.

Throughout its history, SMART has undershot its original ridership projections and construction goals. It has also been beset by some disasters outside of managements’ control—shortly after trains began running in 2017, the Tubbs Fire hit. Then, in 2020, the COVID pandemic cratered ridership on public transit agencies across the country.

While SMART officials like to point out that their ridership numbers are bouncing back from COVID faster than other Bay Area transit agencies, the figures are still well below the projections voters were given when they voted on the 2008 sales tax.

This July, SMART’s average weekday ridership was 2,550. While that’s high for SMART, it’s half of the 5,050 weekday riders by 2025 projected in a 2006 environmental impact report. At last week’s meeting, SMART‘s general manager, Eddy Cumins, said that he expects ridership will increase this month as students return to school.

Cumins took over the agency in early 2022. Since then, he has led a series of public outreach meetings aimed at identifying the agency’s strengths and weaknesses.

This June, SMART launched a shuttle service at the Sonoma County Airport to ferry passengers to the train station 1.5 miles away. So far, shuttle use is lower than expected, serving an average of nine passengers per weekday, Cumins said at last week’s meeting.

A.I.rony: State Sen. Bill Dodd automates resolution writing

Add lawmakers to the list of workers whose jobs could be threatened by artificial intelligence.

Weighing in on one of the hot topics of the year, the California Legislature last week unanimously adopted a statement expressing the state’s commitment to examining and possibly regulating AI, the headline-grabbing technology.

The twist? The seven paragraph statement is the first AI-drafted resolution in the country, state Sen. Bill Dodd’s office claimed in a statement last week.

Don’t worry wordsmiths; as a piece of writing, the resolution isn’t a literary masterpiece—and, presumably, Dodd’s office spell and fact checked it before sending it out into the world.

The measure, officially titled Senate Concurrent Resolution 17, simply states the basics in a series of “Whereas” and “be it resolved” statements: While AI may improve efficiency in certain sectors, the technology poses risks to “democracy and the rights of the public,” due to potentially biased or discriminatory algorithms and other issues.

The statement also affirms the state’s commitment to “Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights,” a document created by President Joe Biden’s staff earlier this year outlining the administration’s principles for regulating the emergent technology.

“This is [a] significant step toward ensuring California is at the forefront of responsible AI deployment and use. The principles outlined here will help protect the rights of the public while leveraging the benefits of AI. I appreciate the bipartisan support of my colleagues,” said Dodd, whose district includes Napa and other neighboring counties.

While we’re making light of it here, AI isn’t seen as a laughing matter. Although the ability of the technology to replicate human labor products at this stage is debatable, AI investors continue to build the hype, while plenty of industries seem eager to experiment.

A poll by the Los Angeles Times released on Aug. 6 found that 45% of respondents were concerned that AI would impact their industry. Case in point: Use of the technology is one of the contentious issues in the deadlocked Hollywood writer’s strike centered in Southern California.

“This is [not just] a Hollywood phenomenon. AI is literally eating the world,” an AI startup executive, who may or may not have been excited about the beast’s appetite, told the paper.

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A.I.rony: State Sen. Bill Dodd automates resolution writing

Photo by Fakurian/Unsplash
Add lawmakers to the list of workers whose jobs could be threatened by artificial intelligence. Weighing in on one of the hot topics of the year, the California Legislature last week unanimously adopted a statement expressing the state’s commitment to examining and possibly regulating AI, the headline-grabbing technology. The twist? The seven paragraph statement is the first AI-drafted resolution in the...
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