Trivia Cafe

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QUESTIONS:

1 What type of Chinese after-dinner treat was invented in San Francisco?

2 What is the largest island in the Caribbean Sea?  

3 This is possibly the only food that does not spoil. Archaeologists who found some in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs said it was still edible. What was it?

4a. VISUAL:  Throughout his amazing 12-year NBA career, Steph Curry has made what percent of all his free throws? (…ends with 0.) And what percent of his 3-pointers? (…ends with 3.)

4b. A player gets to shoot one or two free throws, and his team retains possession of the ball, when the referee calls a what?

5 How many dice do you use in a game of Yahtzee?

6 VISUAL:  Give the title of the popular 1998 Pixar film about very small animals?

7 What agency within the United States Department of the Treasury is in charge of printing money?

8 In 1935, Kodak produced the first color roll film for cameras, known by what brand name?

9 VISUAL:  Actor Michael Keaton starred in three movies with one-word titular characters whose names end with ‘man.’ What were they?

10 What two future U.S. Presidents signed the newly written Constitution of the United States, on September 17, 1787?

BONUS QUESTION:  When H. Ross Perot ran for the Presidential nomination in 1992, his campaign song was what country music hit written by Willie Nelson and recorded by Patsy Cline?

TAGLINE:  Want More Trivia for your next Party, Fundraiser, or Special Event? Contact Howard Rachelson at ho*****@********fe.com.

ANSWERS:

1 The Fortune Cookie

2 Cuba

3 Honey

4a.  90% fouls / 43% of 3-pointers.

4b.  Technical foul or flagrant foul

5 Five dice

A Bug’s Life

7 Bureau of Engraving and Printing

8 Kodachrome

9 Batman, Birdman, Spider-Man

10 George Washington, James Madison  

BONUS ANSWER: Crazy (that’s quite a campaign song, no?!)

Blue Note Napa Reopens in November with Lineup of Local and Touring Stars

After 20 long months, with hundreds of performances postponed by the Covid pandemic, Blue Note Napa will celebrate its reopening in November with a concert lineup of jazz greats and a newly renovated look.

The downtown Napa jazz club has been closed since March 2020, the onset of the pandemic and subsequent shutdown. In the interim, Blue Note Napa staged an outdoor concert series outdoors at Charles Krug Winery featuring the likes of Dave Koz, Los Lobos, Pink Martini, Taj Mahal and Chris Botti among many others.

Now, with indoor events returning to the region, Blue Note Napa, located on the first floor of the Napa Valley Opera House, is ready to reopen its doors in downtown Napa and welcome back live music lovers from the Napa Valley and beyond.

Wanting to open with a local touch after all this time, Blue Note hosts special pre-opening show on Thursday, Nov. 11, featuring Napa locals and Bay Area favorites, vocalist Kellie Fuller and the Mike Greensill Trio.

Following that performance, Blue Note presents two nights featuring smooth jazz great Eric Darius on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 12–13.

On November 19, the club welcomes the Django Festival All-Stars, featuring Samson Schmitt, Pierre Blanchard, Ludovic Beier, Doudou Cuillerier, and Antonio Licusati. Other confirmed events include Blood, Sweat and Tears preforming on Dec. 3–5, and a New Year’s week run with a regular Blue Note performer, Kenny G, playing December 30, 31 and January 1.

The iconic club will also unveil some exciting modifications after renovations to the club’s main areas. The remodeling allows Blue Note Napa to offer additional seating options and an elevated viewing area inside of the club.

“First and foremost, I cannot thank the local community enough for their overwhelming and continued support through the past 20 months,” Ken Tesler, Managing Director of Blue Note Napa, says in a statement. “Honestly, we would not be re-opening if not for Napa’s emotional support, people holding on to tickets and buying more through-out the pandemic,”

Most event dates feature two shows per night, and dinner, wine, beer and cocktails are available for purchase throughout the evening.

Due to the intimate size of the club, ticket purchase in advance is strongly recommended. All attendees will be required to be fully vaccinated to enjoy the performance.

“We couldn’t be more excited about this lineup from Eric to Kenny G, and we are especially happy to have Kellie and Mike back to the Blue Note stage for the first night back at our club,” Tesler says. “They are the perfect act to celebrate our grand reopening as we thank the community for continuing to support not only Blue Note Napa, but live music in the Napa Valley.”

Blue Note Napa is located at 1030 Main St., Napa. Tickets to shows can be purchased at Bluenotenapa.com or by calling the Box Office at 707.880.2300.

Season of the Witch

By Christian Chensvold

5th generation witch Veronica Varlow is here to turn up the magick in your life. Photo provided by Christian Chensvold.

Witchcraft can be learned, but the best teacher is always a blood relative. That’s what’s known as a family tradition, and for Veronica Varlow witchery is five generations strong in her clan, which hail from the land of Bohemia. Varlow shares the wisdom passed down from her grandma — spiced up with rock and roll attitude — in “Bohemian Magick,” out November 2 from Harper Design. We caught up with Ms. Varlow to get a taste of her potion-filled book. 

Q: What is your definition of magic?

A: I believe it’s being able to first accept that there is something supernatural in the world and yourself. Magic is being able to raise that inside you, and project it out in order to create the world that you would like to live in. I grew up in a space where none of the family died, they just became invisible guardians, and if you need their help, you can speak to them out loud, and receive responses from them. My grandmother learned magic from her mother in Bohemia at the turn of the century, and taught me tarot as a child, which I could “read” because it was pictures, which I associated with the stories she told me. 

Q: Your book focuses on reclaiming our true selves. How do we lose sight of this deeper self? 

A: Growing up in our world. If we were six years old and playing together, we know we’re magic. We’re in tune with our intuition because we have to be: we’re just learning language. We’re open to anything, because no one’s told us it’s impossible. The magical people in my life don’t allow the world to say it doesn’t exist. The more you step away from the everyday world, the better off you are. 

Q: How do we know a good witch from a wicked one? 

A: When muggles interview me they often ask if I could hex them. But when I was bullied as a child, my mother took my hair and left it for the birds, which can find it easily. She said, “Baby birds are going to sing their first song nestled in your hair, so why would you care what those kids have to say about you?” When I tell that, journalists say it would be so much better if your grandma put a hex on them. But if she had taught me how to do that, then I would have spent my entire existence putting hexes on people, because there are always going to be bullies, especially when you’re living an outsider’s life like we are.

Shock Waves—A Haunted Drive Along the Pacific Coast Highway

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‘Creature Features’ walks among us!

By Christian Chensvold

I’d never understood how people get so excited over Halloween, as if there’s something missing in their lives throughout the year that can only come out during these waning days of late autumn. But then what happened to me one dark and stormy Oct. 31 of yore changed me forever.

I was driving along Highway 1 in a state of agitation. My aunt had died, and I and my three sisters had gone to apportion her estate in the seaside village of Timber Cove. But our family’s dysfunctional dynamics, the result of generations of eccentricity and occasional madness, soon caused my sinister siblings to fight furiously over Aunt Babsie’s occult library, which consisted of ancient grimoires bound in vellum that seemed to give off a sickly glow suggestive of unspeakable horrors. My eldest sister wished to keep the books for herself in order to master their infernal secrets, while the avaricious middle sister sought to pocket the proceeds. And the youngest wished to donate them to a museum, especially the collection’s most valuable volume, that masterpiece of witchcraft reeking of incense and lactic acid known as The Nipples of Isis, one of two copies known to exist. 

As their bickering reached its crescendo, my sisters opened the books and began shouting spells at one another without the slightest concern for what malefic spirits they might be summoning to haunt us for eternity. No bitter pharmaceutical could soften my anxiety at this scene of evil depravity, and so I stormed from the house and embarked on the lonely drive home. But as I curved along the crashing coast, a fog bank crept in and wrapped me in its sullen shroud. In my excited state it proved most disorienting, and I soon came to the realization that I was no longer on the highway and had veered onto a desolate road, unlit save for the glow of a jaundiced moon in the night sky. Furious at my inattention, I hurriedly turned the car around, only to sink into a soggy bog alongside the road. With no cellular signal in this god-forsaken backwood, I was forced to seek assistance from an edifice of sinister magnificence, where a sickly orange glow shone from its drooping window, and which a decrepit sign indicated as Poulter Mansion.

I rapped on the door and was greeted by a gentleman, apparently the butler, who seemed to confuse surliness with dignity. I explained my predicament, and with reluctance the man, who identified himself as Livingston, allowed me to enter the dilapidated estate provided I wore a mask. I reached into my jacket pocket for the cloth face covering required in this age of pestilence, but Livingston reminded me that it was All Hallow’s Eve, and instead made me wear a mask cast in the mold of Frankenstein’s monster, whose distinctive rubber smell awakened buried childhood memories as if by necromancy. 

I followed him through the musty house, which was guilty of the most heinous crimes of Victorian aesthetics. My ears picked up the faint sound of music, though I use the term loosely, for it sounded as if the melancholy last waltz of Von Weber were being played on a chalkboard by an ensemble comprised of feral cats. Livingston summoned a misshapen lackey named Handrew—for “handy Andrew,” a jejune pun if ever there was one—and asked him to “unstable the horses” and dislodge my car. Unsettled by the ghastly aura of the abode, I thanked them obsequiously, causing Livingston to remark I seemed like a man whose problems were far greater than a muck-stuck motorcar. With a nervous laugh I confessed that I felt as though I were one of those people who are badly stitched together and who could unravel at any moment.

“Let me guess,” Livingston said with a fiendish grin, “you often feel torn between your heart and your head?”

“That’s right.”

“Almost as if they belonged to different people?”

“Precisely!”

“I have an idea,” he said, then disappeared down a candlelit corridor.

As the moments dragged by, I found myself unable to contain my curiosity and succumbed to the impish impulse to investigate the source of the musical murder. I tiptoed down a hallway until I reached a set of double-doors from which came the dissonant noise. I pried them apart and peeked inside, where, in addition to the harmonic horror, I could also hear the sound of shuffling footsteps and ruffling taffeta—a veritable vortex of dancing couples—and yet I could see no one. The cold voice of Livingston startled me from behind.

“That’s an after-party for those gone to the afterlife,” he said, “and I’m afraid you would liven up the place. Now please follow me, for the lord of the manor would like to see you.”

We climbed a staircase and proceeded across a threadbare rug that failed to muffle the creaks and groans of our footsteps and made it sound as if we trod upon the dead. We arrived at a door Livingston opened to reveal the most horrid sight of the whole wretched evening: the grotesque form of a middle-aged man getting glammed up by two rocker groupies as if he were some has-been frontman of a ’90s heavy-metal band.

It was the most ridiculous Halloween costume I’d ever seen. 

“So you’re the miserable bloke who encroached upon my estate?” he said in a British accent, really playing the part. “And for God’s sake take that bloody mask off.”

I de-Frankensteined, causing my host to remark that my sweat-drenched face was positively lunar. I confessed the evening had overtaxed my delicate nerves.

“Well sit down, lad,” he said jovially. “I merely jest. Have some wine.”

I plopped into a wing chair of distressed leather, causing a cat to screech vindictively at my intrusion. My host handed me a silver goblet filled with a musty vintage thick with sediment, adding that he considered the cellar’s vintage bottles “unclean” and only drank “fresh wine.” After several gulps I said I felt better, though confessed I found the house’s bone-chilling temperature rather uncomfortable. My host snapped at his attendants, Colleen and Colby, who quickly draped me in a cape of coarse wool lined in scarlet satin.

The man surveyed me approvingly. “You know, with that seasick expression you could really look the part.” He motioned to the ladies, and before I knew what was happening, my face had been powdered, my lips painted crimson and my hair slicked back into a widow’s peak. 

“Drink up,” my host said heartily. “Wine warms the blood, and blood is the life.” He was really getting into this whole Gothic rock-star thing; clearly one of those people who loves Halloween a little too much.

“Life sucks,” I said with growing impatience, wondering if my car had been extricated from the mud pit.

“Bollocks! You just need to find what gets your heart racing, mate.” He consulted an old grandfather clock, which indicated it was two minutes to midnight. “I know what does it for me: rock and roll!” It was time to play his guests the last waltz, he said, filling my goblet. “Relax,” he said. “You’ll be on your way in no time. Just watch for Tangella. She’s known to deploy blow darts on Hallow’s Eve.” And with an extension of his serpentine tongue and a devil’s-horn salute, the made-up rock star and his groupies disappeared. I wrapped the cape around me like a blanket, settled more deeply into the chair and closed my eyes. But my nap was soon disturbed by what felt like a hornet’s sting, and then the room went black.

I awoke to a feeling of indescribable terror, for my greatest fears since entering the horrible house had been realized: I was a prisoner. Flitting about the room was a wraith-like creature with hair like a mop, a veritable rag-doll come to life—or rather partly to life—so gruesome was her appearance. The cape I’d cozied into had been removed; in its place was white gauze that covered my entire body like a mummy, rendering me immobile and unable to speak. Around me spanned a circle of dripping candles and a smoldering censer of myrrh, the balm of immortality. As I writhed and grunted in futility, my silent captor opened the clasp of an antiquarian book and mumbled incomprehensibly. It was then that my brain was wracked with such fright I thought it might explode and run out my nostrils; ffor the book’s title, which I could just decipher in the half-light, was none other than The Nipples of Isis!

When the mop-top muppet finished her demonic incantation, she opened the closet, causing my fevered mind to imagine scenes of medieval torture—of never-ending agony and legendary suffering. She proceeded to wheel out an old film projector, clearly intending to document her handiwork, the little sicko. But then she pulled down from the wall a screen strewn with claw marks, and with a rickety whirr the projector began to spin. What then appeared on the screen was so shocking that I screamed beneath my bandaged mouth.

Creature Features! This was the most joyful ray of light in my unhappy childhood, and there it was: the spooky animations, the logo in toxic green and bloody purple, just as it was when launching on KTVU in 1971. And wait, there was the butler, that surly Livingston! And this ghastly ghostly girl, called Tangella, was the ward of the lord of the house, who was no pear-shaped oaf dressed for Halloween, but an actual retired British rock star! His name was Vincent Van Dahl, former frontman of Prince Of Darkness, who left Bel Air for Bodega Bay, acquiring Poulter Mansion along with a vault of classic horror movies from the 1930s to ’80s. Risen from the dead in this digital age, Creature Features streams on YouTube, Roku, Vimeo and Apple TV, and airs on KOFY TV20 at 10pm on Saturdays. Now I did not squirm in my bonds from seeking escape, but rather from writhing in joy, as if transported to the paradise of childhood and blessed with immortality.

The next thing I remember is waking up to the sensation of a steering wheel pressed against my forehead. I clasped my stiff neck, unsure whether it was from the awkward position into which I’d fallen asleep or the dreamlike memory of being shot with a dart. I climbed out of the car and saw that it stood in the middle of Bay Hill Road, pointed west towards the foamy waters of Bodega Bay, upon which broke the first rays of dawn. Mud covered my car’s wheels, but when I looked up the hill there was nothing but tawny grass and barren trees.

Back in the car, I noticed an orange box wrapped with black ribbon. I opened it to find a Frankenstein mask, Dracula cape and mummy wrapping. An envelope, sealed with wax and bearing the sigil “CF,” revealed a note elegantly penned in crimson cursive, that read simply, “Now you understand the black magic of Halloween.”

Trivia Cafe

QUESTIONS:

1 The Golden Gate Bridge opened for traffic on May 27 of what year?

2 VISUAL:  Those hollowed-out Halloween pumpkins with an illuminated, cut-out face are known by what name?

3 How many teaspoons make up one tablespoon?

4 The Australian state of Queensland and the U.S. state of Florida share what common name?

5 Facebook’s logo is represented by what body part?

6 VISUAL:  The surprise movie hit of 2002, which earned over $200 million at the box office while costing only about $5 million to make, was what independent romantic comedy written by Nia Vardalos?

7 No country name begins with what letter?

8 Which baseball player, popular in the 1960s–1980s, played more games than any other, had more hits than any other, was at bat more than any other, had more singles than any other and made more outs than any player ever?

9 Every year on a national holiday, the country of Turkmenistan hosts the “Most Beautiful … what animal?… of the Year” contest?

10 VISUAL:  What 17th-century monk and cellar master at the Benedictine abbey in Hautvillers, Northeastern France, was an early pioneer of modern winemaking?

BONUS QUESTION: What’s the only country that lies on the equator as well as the Tropic of Capricorn?

Tagline:  Want MoreTrivia for your next Party, Fundraiser or Special Event, live or on Zoom?  Contact ho*****@********fe.com.

Answers:

1 1937

2 Jack O-Lanterns

3 Three teaspoons

4 Sunshine State

5 Thumbs-up

6 My Big Fat Greek Wedding

7 The letter “X”

8 Pete Rose (Charlie Hustle). Hits (4,256); games played (3,562); at-bats (14,053); singles (3,215); and outs (10,328).

9 Horse

10 Dom Pérignon (1638–1715)  

BONUS ANSWER:  Brazil; thanks for the question to Anita Ertel from Perth, Australia.

Open Mic: Reluctant Warrior Collin Powell, 1937-2021

By E.G. Singer

“Reluctant warrior” was the phrase Colin Powell used to describe himself when it came to the various positions he occupied over much of his lifetime.

He knew the battles of immigrants—being of Jamaican ancestry—on the streets of New York City, but also in Vietnam, where he served and commanded during two tours of duty. He knew, firsthand, what war was and what it entailed; the casualties that ensued, the lives irreparably changed, the visible and invisible wounds and scars carried—he had walked that walk. And those lessons were not lost on him, later in his career in both military and civilian life. The drive and integrity instilled early on and over his lifetime garnered him awards and accolades on both sides of the aisle.

He was an inspiration to many, especially those people of color who saw in him what determination and hard work could accomplish in a country that often turned its back on those very same people after they had served the nation.

It is not often that mistakes are admitted by powerful people that serve this country. Colin Powell recognized the errors made in foreign policy under his watch, but did not arrogantly dismiss them. He went public with his opinions. When he became disenchanted with the Republican Party—his party—and their attempts to denigrate and insult then-Sen. Barack Obama—he spoke of his disappointment and the direction he saw the country moving in—he endorsed Sen. Obama for president, stating the country needed to turn the page.

Finally, with age came the infirmities—prostate cancer, multiple myeloma and Parkinson’s disease—of which he spoke publicly about in his later years, before his death, from Covid-19. 

But perhaps his most sweeping victory, in the end, was that this warrior no longer remained reluctant, and became all too human with his statement of being “one of you” when he went public with his multiple myeloma diagnosis to a hushed room, some years ago.

 Colin Powell’s life was truly “mission accomplished.”

E.G. Singer lives in Santa Rosa.

Letters to the Editor: A Callout of Andy Lopez Documentary

Three Seconds in October

I’m glad to see the documentary Three Seconds in October: The Shooting of Andy Lopez being promoted by Kathleen Finigan—in this paper and on its website. I believe that a national airing is being planned. It’s an important work which sheds light on details most of the public does not know.

But in one way it is very misleading. It gives credit to the Board of Supervisors for the creation of IOLERO—the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach—and the Board should get next to none. IOLERO exists—for what it’s worth under the mis-leadership of Director Karlene Navarro—solely as the result of sustained action by the Latino community and local activists.

Sonoma County had been asked, for at least 15 years, to create some form of oversight of law enforcement. The supervisors had, for at least 15 years, refused. And after Andy was killed and an angry community came to their chambers, the supervisors told them to be nice, to be polite and not to be angry. This was unacceptable to us, and we persisted, and they were forced to act.

And it is particularly galling to see Sonoma County Supervisor Shirlee Zane represented in a positive light and rewriting history. She and Supervisor David Rabbitt were major stumbling blocks. Several times, in meetings, Zane told us how much she loves men in uniforms. One time she even leaned out towards the public and asked, “Aren’t I right, ladies?”

That the public will come away giving credit to local government instead of the community is a major flaw in an otherwise excellent documentary. It takes public pressure to make change. Always has and always will.

Susan Collier Lamont

Santa Rosa

Culture Crush: A Great Pumpkin Party, FUNtazmagoria, Hometown Halloween in Napa, and More.

Sonoma

Great Pumpkins

The community gathers for a fall celebration at the Sonoma Community Center’s Great Pumpkin Party. Attendees can bring their already-carved and/or -decorated pumpkins to be entered into the Pumpkin Contest; or come and decorate a provided small gourd or pumpkin, or join in a communal art project on a large pumpkin. Additionally, attendees can purchase seasonally appropriate refreshments while enjoying classic Halloween music or viewing the Peanuts classic 1966 Halloween special, It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. Party with pumpkins on Thursday, Oct. 28, at 276 E Napa St., Sonoma. 5:30–7pm. Free. sonomacommunitycenter.org.

Novato

Being There

Opening its 102nd season, Novato Theater Company presents The Importance of Being Earnest for their first full in-person production since the pandemic began. The company updates Oscar Wilde’s Victorian setting to the swinging 1960s in England, highlighting the era’s gender-bending fashion, long hair, rock music and counterculture thinking. Bring proof of vaccination and photo ID, along with face coverings, for Novato Theater Company’s live run of Earnest, opening with a preview performance on Thursday, Oct. 28, and running Fridays and Saturdays, 7:30pm, and Sundays, 2pm, through Nov. 21, at 5420 Nave Dr., Novato. $15–$27. novatotheatercompany.org.

Santa Rosa

Spooky Fun

For two days in October, the Children’s Museum of Sonoma County transforms into the FUNtazmagoria, an interactive and illuminating Halloween experience for families that promises to spook, but not scare. Highlights of the fundraising event include the pumpkin plop, in which engorged gourds fall from the sky and go splat. There’s also a mad scientist lab, a glow-in-the-dark art studio, carnival games, a haunted garden bursting with hands-on activities and more. FUNtazmagoria is open to the public Friday and Saturday, Oct. 29–30, at 1835 West Steele Lane, Santa Rosa. 1–8pm. $14, free for museum members. Cmosc.org.

Napa

Halloween Town

Napa starts Halloween fun on Saturday, Oct. 30. Kids and their adults can come in costume for Hometown Halloween, where downtown stores and businesses that display orange and black balloons will hand out candy from 11am to 1pm. Elsewhere, the Napa Farmers Market turns into the Halloween Haunted Market with a photo booth, prizes and treats, from 8am to noon. The Meritage Resort and Spa hosts the Family Fall Fest, featuring games, crafting, candied apples and a pet costume contest, noon to 6pm. Feast It Forward presents Feast or Treat, offering trick-or-treat stations, face painting and wine pairings for the adults. Donapa.com.

—Charlie Swanson

FREE WILL ASTROLOGY

Week of October 27

Rob Brezsny

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries philosopher Emil Cioran wrote, “When I meet friends or people I know who are going through a difficult period, I usually have this advice for them: ‘Spend 20 minutes in a cemetery, and you’ll see that, though your worry won’t disappear, you’ll almost forget about it and you’ll feel better.’” I don’t think you’re weathering a terribly difficult phase right now, Aries, but you may be dealing with more riddles and doubts and perplexities than you’re comfortable with. You could be feeling a bit darker and heavier than usual. And I think Cioran’s advice would provide you with the proper stimulation to transform your riddles and doubts and perplexities into clarity and grace and aplomb. If you can do Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here’s a costume suggestion: the spirit of a dead ancestor.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): According to some spiritual teachers, desire interferes with our quest for illumination. It diverts us from what’s real and important. I know gurus who even go so far as to say that our yearnings deprive us of freedom; they entrap us and diminish us. I strongly disagree with all those ideas. I regard my longing as a primary fuel that energizes my drive to free myself from pain and nonsense. How about you, Taurus? In alignment with astrological omens, I authorize you to deepen and refine and celebrate the yearning in your heart. Your title/nickname could be: 1. Yearning Champion. 2. Desire Virtuoso. 3. Connoisseur of Longing.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Author Jessamyn West confessed, “I am always jumping into the sausage grinder and deciding, even before I’m half ground, that I don’t want to be a sausage after all.” I offer her testimony as a cautionary tale, Gemini. There’s no astrological reason, no cosmic necessity, that decrees you must become like a sausage anytime soon. Such a fate can be easily avoided. All you must do is commit yourself to not jumping into the sausage grinder. Also: In every way you can imagine, don’t be like a sausage. (To meditate on sausage-ness, read the Wikipedia entry: tinyurl.com/SausageMetaphor.)

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Our fellow Cancerian, author Franz Kafka, told us, “It is often safer to be in chains than to be free.” And yes, some of us Crabs go through phases when we crave safety so much that we tolerate, even welcome, being in chains. But the fact is that you’re far more likely to be safe if you are free, not in chains. And according to my reading of the astrological omens, that’s extra true for you now. If you can celebrate Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here are costume suggestions: runaway prisoner, escape artist, freedom fighter.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Some of us yearn for allies who can act like saviors: rescue us from our demons and free us from our burdensome pasts and transform us into the beauties we want to become. On the other hand, some of us do all this hard work by ourselves: rescue ourselves from our demons and free ourselves from our burdensome pasts and transform ourselves into the beauties we want to become. I highly recommend the latter approach for you in the coming weeks, Leo. If you can do Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here is a costume suggestion: your own personal savior.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “One of the reasons people are so unhappy is they don’t talk to themselves,” says author Elizabeth Gilbert. “You have to keep a conversation going with yourself throughout your life,” she continues, “to see how you’re doing, to keep your focus, to remain your own friend.” Now is a favorable time to try such an experiment, Virgo. And if you already have skill in the art of carrying on a vibrant dialog with yourself, now is a perfect moment to upgrade and refine it. Try this experiment: Imagine having a conversation with the Future You.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “In the absence of willpower, the most complete collection of virtues and talents is worthless.” Libran occultist Aleister Crowley wrote that, and I agree. But let’s phrase his idea more positively: To make full use of your virtues and talents, you must develop a strong willpower. And here’s the good news, Libra: The coming weeks will be a favorable time to cultivate your willpower, along with the assets that bolster it, like discipline, self-control and concentration. If you can do Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here are accessories I recommend for you to carry with you, no matter what your costume is: a wand, a symbolic lightning bolt, an ankh, an arrow, a Shiva lingam stone or crystal.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Mardi Gras is a boisterous festival that happens every February all over the planet. One hotspot is New Orleans. The streets there are filled with costumed revelers who enjoy acting in ways that diverge from their customary behavior. If you want to ride on a float in the parade that snakes down Royal Street, you must, by law, wear a festive mask. I invite all of you Scorpios to engage in similar festivities for the next three weeks—even if you’re not doing much socializing or partying. It’s a favorable time to experiment with a variety of alternate identities. Would you consider adopting a different persona or two? How could you have fun playing around with your self-image?

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Jungian psychotherapist and storyteller Clarissa Pinkola Estés reminds us, “In fairy tales, tears change people, remind them of what is important, and save their very souls.” I hope you’re open to the possibility of crying epic, cathartic, catalytic tears in the coming weeks, Sagittarius. According to my analysis, you have a prime opportunity to benefit from therapeutic weeping. It could chase your fears and cure your angst and revivify your soul. So please take advantage of this gift from life. Be like a superhero whose superpower is to generate healing by crying.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Filmmaker Wim Wenders said, “Any film that supports the idea that things can be changed is a great film in my eyes.” I’ll expand upon that: “Any experience, situation, influence or person that supports the idea that things can be changed is great.” This is a useful and potentially inspiring theme for you to work with right now, Capricorn. In accordance with astrological rhythms, I hope you will be a connoisseur and instigator of beneficial, beautiful transformations.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Fitness buff Jack LaLanne was still doing his daily workout when he was 95. He was also famous for performing arduous feats. At age 65, for example, he swam a mile through Japan’s Lake Ashinoko while towing 65 boats filled with 6,500 pounds of wood pulp. I think you’re currently capable of a metaphorically comparable effort, Aquarius. One way to do it is by mastering a psychological challenge that has previously seemed overwhelming. So meditate on where your extra strength would be best directed, and use it wisely! If you can do Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here are costume suggestions: fitness buff, bodybuilder, marathon runner, yoga master.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): When birdwatchers describe a bird, they speak of its “jizz.” This term refers to the distinctive character of its habitual movements, flying style, posture, vocal mannerisms and coloring. One aficionado defines jizz as the bird’s “indefinable quality,” or the “vibe it gives off.” I’ve got a theory that right now you’re as bird-like as you’ve ever been. You seem lighter and freer than usual, less bound to gravity and solemnity and more likely to break into song. Your fears are subsiding because you have the confidence to leave any situation that’s weighing you down. If you can do Halloween without risk from Covid-19, here’s a costume suggestion: the bird that has your favorite kind of jizz.

[Editor: Here’s this week’s homework:]
Homework: Tell me what worked for you when all else failed. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

True Stories: Weekly World News Starts Studio

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As the saying goes, “If you remember the ’90s, you were there and bored.” That’s unless you were a reader of an inky supermarket tabloid that boasted headlines about the fabled “Bat Boy” and other “journalistic” meshugas that instantly turned your coffee table into a Ripley’s Believe it, Or Not exhibit. Well, believe it or not—it’s back: The Weekly World News is alive and well, and coming to a screen near you.

We can thank Weekly World News CEO and editor-in-chief Greg D’Alessandro for this stunning development for the original “fake news.” Why? Because, as their PR explains, “The top publishers in the media industry wouldn’t dare cover stories about the five members of the US Senate who are extraterrestrials or the allegations that the CIA kept classified documents about underwater UFOs or the failed attempts to recruit a cloned Adolf Hitler into QAnon.” That’s why.

In 2019, Greg D’Alessandro and a cavalcade of interested parties purchased the assets of the enterprise from American Media, which are ripe for development into film and TV properties. Think “mini-Marvel,” but instead of superheroes there are the aforementioned Bat Boy, a sex-worker sasquatch and an alien who’s had its picture taken with every sitting president. D’Alessandro and his collaborators recognized that the archives of the WWN didn’t just contain decades of old newspapers so much as a treasure trove of beloved intellectual property.

He wasn’t the only one. In an earlier incarnation the team had a protracted pas-de-deux with the powerhouse agency CAA, which led to interest from a self-professed fanboy and renown mega-director we’ll simply call Steven.

“That went on for years!” recalls D’Alessandro, who would shop properties to various entities (like the “Lake Erie Monster” to a sci-fi-themed outlet or the Hunt for Manigator, which caught the attention of a brand name educational channel). “Every time I would go to pitch stories,” recall —CAA would say, ‘Ah, no. You got to wait for Steven.”

Eventually, “waiting for Steven” became akin to Waiting for Godot—spoiler alert: he never shows. Now, the team is in charge of its own destiny—Bat Boy projects are in discussion and a documentary about WWN’s illustrious history in the works.

“We’ve started the studios where now we can produce our own,” explains D’Alessandro. “The first one is the ‘Zombie Wedding,’ which is not using any of our iconic characters, but still in the wheelhouse.”

Meanwhile, D’Alessandro is introducing WWN’s cast of characters to a new generation online and on social media. Now, the Internet be kept perpetually abreast of the latest alien abductions, Bigfoot sightings, biblical prophecies, and cryptid phenomena that’s come to define this American life.

Weekly World News CEO and editor-in-chief Greg D’Alessandro.

“It’s funny, [WWN] has been on the air a lot more lately,” says D’Alessandro. “Howard Stern’s talked about it a bunch in the last year and a half. Colbert, Fallon, Kimmel—they’ve all mentioned or held it up. Anderson Cooper held it up.”

Basically, WWN was writing about the weird shit that haunts the popular imagination before it was cool.

“We wrote a lot about UFOs and aliens, and it was all just dismissed,” laughs D’Alessandro. “Now the Pentagon comes out and is like, ‘Maybe UFOs are real, and maybe there are aliens.’ And we’re like, ‘Well, that’s what we were reporting about for 30 years!’”

As D’Alessandro adds wryly, “We’re the world’s only reliable new source. There’s a lot of people that say that the government tries to make people think that it’s not true,” he laughs. “They’re always trying to suppress us. They’re always after the Bat Boy and always trying to hide all this.”

Visit WeeklyWorldNews.com

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Culture Crush: A Great Pumpkin Party, FUNtazmagoria, Hometown Halloween in Napa, and More.

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Sonoma Great Pumpkins The community gathers for a fall celebration at the Sonoma Community Center’s Great Pumpkin Party. Attendees can bring their already-carved and/or -decorated pumpkins to be entered into the Pumpkin Contest; or come and decorate a provided small gourd or pumpkin, or join in a communal art project on a large pumpkin. Additionally, attendees can purchase seasonally appropriate refreshments...

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Week of October 27 Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): Aries philosopher Emil Cioran wrote, “When I meet friends or people I know who are going through a difficult period, I usually have this advice for them: ‘Spend 20 minutes in a cemetery, and you’ll see that, though your worry won’t disappear, you’ll almost forget about it and you’ll feel better.’”...

True Stories: Weekly World News Starts Studio

Weekly World News
As the saying goes, “If you remember the ’90s, you were there and bored.” That’s unless you were a reader of an inky supermarket tabloid that boasted headlines about the fabled “Bat Boy” and other “journalistic” meshugas that instantly turned your coffee table into a Ripley’s Believe it, Or Not exhibit. Well, believe it or not—it’s back: The Weekly...
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