Culture Crush: Live and Local Events Rebound

Live Concert

Sacramento native Scott Hansen makes music as Tycho and visual art as ISO50, and he combines both forms with his first live shows in over a year this weekend. Tycho will be in the North Bay for a four-night residency-performing two shows each night–courtesy of Blue Note Napa and Another Planet, which are teaming up to present world class entertainment outside on the grounds of Napa Valley’s Oldest Wine Estate this summer. See (and hear) Tycho live from Thursday to Sunday, June 3–6, at Charles Krug Winery, 2800 Main Street, St. Helena. 5:30pm and 8:30pm each night. $55–$85. Bluenotenapa.com.

Live Event

Napa Valley invites residents and visitors alike to partake in small town specials at the weekly Yountville Locals Day, starting this week and featuring special offers from the town’s shops, restaurants, tasting rooms, spas and resorts. Culinary offers include complimentary corkage, treats and cocktails at several of the town’s Michelin-starred restaurants, as well as wine tastings and other deals. In addition, retail deals and spa experiences abound in town, and locals can see it all in a leisurely stroll on Thursday, June 3. For more information, including a complete list of Yountville Locals Day offers, visit Yountville.com/localsday.

Live Theater

Left Edge Theatre, the resident company of the Luther Burbank Center for the Arts, performed online for most of its 2020-2021 season. Now, the company returns to the live stage with in-person performances for its final show of the season, Slow Food. The relationship comedy looks at a couple in the midst of an anniversary meal that turns to an examination of their past and future with the help of a wacky waiter. Experience Slow Food in person with performances June 4–6 and June 11–13. 50 Mark West Spring Rd., Santa Rosa. Fri and Sat, 7pm; Sun, 2pm. $15-$20. The show will be online June 15-20. Leftedgetheatre.com.

Online Theater

Even with no live audience in attendance, Novato Theater Company is moving in the right direction to reopening when it takes the stage to present the romantic drama, The Last Five Years, in live broadcast performances. Carl Jordan directs Robert Nelson and Amanda Morando Nelson in this uplifting and heartbreaking depiction of the life and death of a young couple’s relationship. The common story is told in an uncommon manner when The Last Five Years broadcasts live online June 4–6. Fri and Sat, 7pm; Sun, 2pm. $15, free to NTC members. The show streams on June 7–13. Novatotheatercompany.org.

Live Event

Discover a curated selection of handmade goods by more than 75 local makers, crafters and artists at the Patchwork Modern Makers Festival. Attendees to the live, outdoor shopping experience can find artisanal clothing, home goods, accessories, art, ceramics, and even apothecary items. In addition, the Patchwork Junior booths feature young entrepreneurs and several hands-on craft stations let participants bring home their own handmade treasures. The family-friendly show adheres to Covid-19 safety guidelines when it commences on Sunday, June 6, at Sonoma County Fairgrounds, outside the Hall of Flowers, 1350 Bennett Valley Rd., Santa Rosa. 11am to 5pm. Free admission. Dearhandmadelife.com/patchwork-show.

Get Out and About at North Bay Pride Gatherings

Every June, Pride Month celebrates the LGBTQ community with events across the country.

Last June, Pride was all but canceled due to the Covid-19 pandemic, though the North Bay is slowly returning to normal and several groups are hosting safely distanced Pride events throughout the North Bay this June.

Sonoma County Pride is used to hosting big parades and parties. This year, the organization has adopted the theme “Beyond the Rainbow: Surviving, Reviving, and Thriving,” and is reimaging its month-long schedule of events and activities with offerings such as the “Beyond the Rainbow Drive Through Parade” on Saturday, June 5.

Sonoma County Pride welcomes back Graton Resort & Casino as the Annual Title Sponsor of this year’s Pride celebrations, and the resort will host the drive-through parade, in which dozens of local organizations and sponsors will set up stationary floats and displays in the resort’s parking lot for parade attendees to enjoy from their cars.

The drive-through parade is one of several “micro-events” that Sonoma County Pride will host in June. Other planned events include an outdoor comedy show featuring openly gay standup star Jason Stuart at Deerfield Ranch Winery in Kenwood on June 18; the “Behind the Curtain” dinner and The Wizard of Oz sing-along hosted by Jan Wahl at Sally Tomatoes in Rohnert Park on June 19; and the “Rainbow City Concert” featuring openly gay singer, rapper, choreographer and lifelong The Wizard of Oz devotee Todrick Hall at the Sonoma County Fairgrounds in Santa Rosa on June 26. (sonomacountypride.org)

After being limited to its Pride Cruise Night and March in June 2020, Napa Valley LGBTQ Pride also boasts a variety of live events scheduled this June.

To keep things socially distant, Napa Valley Pride once again will host a Pride Cruise Night on Saturday, June 5, along Jefferson Street in downtown Napa. They invite the public to decorate cars and blast KVYN 99.3 FM The Vine, which will broadcast Pride music by DJ Rotten Robbie. Following the parade, the after-party kicks off at the Hollywood Room at Napa Valley Distillery.

Other Napa Valley Pride events include the LGBT Q&A panel for parents and teens on June 11, the Rainbow Play Date for families with little ones at Fuller Park on June 12, the Wine & Pride concert featuring Grammy-winning artist Jody Watley outdoors at the Charles Krug Winery in St. Helena on June 26, and the American Canyon Pride Pop-Up on June 27. (napavalleypride.org)

In Marin County, the Spahr Center–which serves the LGBTQ+ community and supports those affected by HIV–is holding an LGBTQ+ Pride rally at noon on Saturday, June 26, at Novato City Hall, 901 Sherman Avenue in Novato. The event is being held to thank City and Town Councils throughout Marin, as well as the Board of Supervisors, for flying the LGBTQ+ Pride Flag during the month of June, and to present the center’s LGBTQ+ agenda for Marin County. As with all events, they encourage masks and social distancing. (thespahrcenter.org)

Letters to the Editor: Write On

First I want to acknowledge and congratulate Peter Byrne for his outstanding articles regarding the Point Reyes National Seashore issues, including its dairies. 

Your May 26 issue included a letter which closed with the following inquiry: “How do we get Deb Haaland to shut down this cow-shXX show once and for all?” With due respect to the letter writer and your publication, it’s probably not by writing a letter to the editor. 

Rather, contact the U.S. Department of the Interior online at www.doi.gov directly, as I did on May 7, 2021, stating the following: 

“Honorable Secretary Haaland, it is long past time that leases for cattle ranches in the referenced protected place managed by the National Park Service should cease, expiring at the next termination dates rather than being further extended. The properties involved have been owned by the US for decades. Any “historic” uses related to cattle are trivial compared with the Coast Miwoks claims. While I often agree with positions taken by the local Congressmember Jared Huffman, on this issue of public policy his usual environmental ethos has apparently been forgotten. Please listen to pleas of those seeking to better serve the national interests for protection of archeological sites specifically and the environment generally.” 

Tim Smith, Former Mayor of Rohnert Park

Open Mic: My Friend, Tony Good

By Nikki Silverstein

I’ve been corresponding with an intelligent, quick-witted Pacific Sun reader for more than a decade. Tony Good lived on the streets of San Rafael. Although just 44, he suffered from several medical conditions and disabilities, and sometimes from drug addiction. He recently told me he thought he was going to die. Two weeks ago, I found out his demons got the better of him. He passed away.

Tony was born in San Antonio, Texas, and attended the University of Texas at Dallas. An avid writer, he previously worked for the Dallas Morning News, Digital Press Magazine and Electronic Games Magazine. You could also frequently read Tony’s musings in the Pacific Sun’s Letters to the Editor section.  

Well-read and up on current events, Tony was always prepared for a rousing debate on politics. I was forever on the losing end, even though we both leaned to the left.

Tony was a regular visitor at video arcades, where he loved playing classic video games. He often boasted he held the world record on his favorite game, Do! Run Run, and consistently played for one to two hours on a single quarter. He once jokingly asked me to include these achievements in his obituary.

My world has dimmed with Tony’s passing. I didn’t realize what a big part of my life he occupied, but his messages popped up every time I turned on my computer. In the same email, he could completely frustrate me and then make me laugh out loud. Until today, I didn’t know that Tony could also bring me to tears.

Tony is survived by his mother Lupe Bueno and sister Wendy Askew. His father, Antonio Bueno, preceded him in death.

Rest easy, Tony. You will be missed.

Nikki Silverstein writes a weekly news column for the Pacific Sun. We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

LA Times Weighs in on North Bay ‘Newspaper War’

The ever-expanding black hole around former Windsor Mayor Dominic Foppoli is nipping at the heels of the North Coast’s largest newspaper, the Santa Rosa Press Democrat

In a May 30 article, the Los Angeles Times’ media critic James Rainey weighed in on the ongoing “newspaper war” between the San Francisco Chronicle and Sonoma County’s daily paper. The conflict began in early April after the Chronicle published the first of many articles laying out numerous womens’ sexual assault and abuse allegations against Foppoli.

Foppoli finally resigned from public office in late May, but his now-toxic brand has continued to tarnish the reputations of his former supporters and associates. That includes the Press Democrat, which got wind of the Foppoli story years ago but failed to act.

Ironically, Rainey wasn’t the first to cast the Press Democrat’s role in the Bay Area newspaper market in violent terms.

In a 2013 speech to the California News Publishers Association, Darius Anderson, a prominent Sacramento lobbyist and an investor in Sonoma Media Investments, the company which owns the PD and six other Sonoma County print publications, was full of bluster. 

“I plan to go to San Francisco and rape and pillage other publications and take their talent and bring it to Santa Rosa,” Anderson told the crowd of media types, according to a report from Sonoma West publisher Rollie Atkinson.

Eight years later, many of the Press Democrat’s staff are leaving, retiring or being placed on leave. In short, if this is a war, the PD is losing at least by attrition.

The upside? Readers are finally getting a peek into the messy world of Sonoma County’s political class as the Press Democrat scrambles to compete with its big-city rival. Let’s hope that the Foppoli scandal triggers better coverage of Sonoma County politics in the long term.

Sonoma County Teenagers Participate in 266-Mile Climate March

On Friday, May 28, seven young climate activists set out from Paradise to complete a 266-mile march to San Francisco in an effort to bring attention to the worsening effects of climate change on Northern California. 

“I’m tired of inaction while watching my city burn. Living in California is terrifying, in the past 4 years alone I’ve had to pack more than ten evacuation bags,” Madeline Ruddell, a 16-year-old Sonoma County resident participating in the action, said.

The march was organized by the Sunrise Movement, a youth-led climate action organization with local chapters around the country. The marchers—impacted by the worsening impacts of climate change and the ever-declining economic prospects of America’s younger generations—are attempting to pressure Rep. Nancy Pelosi and Senator Dianne Feinstein to support the creation of the Civilian Climate Corps (CCC), a proposed government program to hire people to construct projects to recover-from and stave-off the impacts of climate change. 

The proposal would amount to a 21st Century version of the Civilian Conservation Corps, a short-lived government program which hired Americans to work on wildland conservation projects between 1933 and 1942, between the Great Depression and the start of World War II.

If created, the new CCC would be the first step towards passing the Green New Deal, a legislative proposal that Sunrise and other backers say would pair climate improvements with additional climate-friendly jobs—a two-for-one deal which seems especially appealing for young Californians considering living through years of worsened wildfires, droughts and sea level rise.

Backers estimate that the $10 billion program, which is included in President Joe Biden’s American Jobs Plan, could create 1.5 million jobs over the next five years.

The Covid-19 pandemic’s disastrous effects on increasingly fire-prone Wine Country offer an example of why such a jobs program could be effective. As workers were laid off in the early months of the pandemic, instead of repeatedly calling the state’s inadequate unemployment insurance phone line, some could have been paid by the government to prepare the region for the coming wildfire season.

“There are millions of us looking for good work, and so much that needs to be done. It will take all of us to build a renewable energy grid, restore our parks, and retrofit old buildings as well as carbon-intensive transit infrastructure,” a statement from Sunrise California announcing the march states. 

Organizers see the CCC as the first part of the Green New Deal, a green jobs proposal which has become a rallying cry for activists in recent years.

“I’m marching because when I’m a mom, I know I’ll have to tell my kids a story about how when I was their age, fires would devastate my community every year. But then I want to be able to finish that story by talking about my power: The power I had to walk 266 miles and demand a CCC from our leaders,” said Lola Guthrie, a 17-year-old Sonoma County participant in the march.

Whether or not the march is successful in its goals, the participants are not alone in grappling with the numerous monumental problems facing the world these days. The California march is paired with a similar journey from New Orleans to Houston. 

The California procession is expected to pass through the cities of Winters, St. Helena and Napa on June 7 and 8, before heading on to Santa Rosa on June 9 and 10. Supporters of the protest will hold a rally at Santa Rosa’s Julliard Park at 10am on Thursday, June 10. The march will conclude in San Francisco on Monday, June 14.

You can follow the climate procession in real time on Twitter @smvmtgenonfire or on Instagram at @sunrisegenonfire

Art at the Source Resumes Self-Guided Art Tours in Sonoma County

For more than two decades, Sonoma County artists have opened their studios each spring to showcase and sell their work to the public during the self-guided Art at the Source studio tours, hosted by the Sebastopol Center for the Arts.

Taking place over two weekends, Art at the Source is one of the biggest art events each year in the North Bay. Yet, the studios were forced to close their doors amid the pandemic last year, and Art at the Source moved online to continue to show and sell work when social gatherings were impossible.

This month, as pandemic-related restrictions on gatherings ease, Sebastopol Center for the Arts recently announced that Art at the Source will once again take place live at artist studios throughout Sonoma County with current Covid-19 safety guidelines in place.

Over 90 artists will open their studios to the public on Saturday and Sunday, June 5-6 and June 12-13, for the 2021 Art at the Source self-guided tours. Sebastopol Center of the Arts is also exhibiting its annual “Art at the Source Preview Exhibit” in-person until June 13. Art enthusiasts who are unable or unready to return to live events can view the art and purchase work in an online marketplace through the end of the month.

“This is the first in-person open studio program held by Sebastopol Center for the Arts since the pandemic started over a year ago. We are so excited that the artists are showcasing their work to visitors because there is no comparison to the inspiration and joy that one gets from visiting an artist’s studio,” says Sebastopol Center for the Arts creative director Catherine Devriese in a statement. “A painting or sculpture or any original artwork is a long-lasting investment that can be enjoyed every day, as it brightens our lives and lifts our spirits.”

As with previous years, Art at the Source’s main draw is the self-guided tour throughout Sonoma County, which allows visitors to curate their own art experience with the help of a free catalog available at the Sebastopol Center for the Arts and other locations around the Bay Area or online.

With the catalog in hand, visitors can plan their routes and follow the bright yellow directional signs placed along the roadside each weekend to find their favorite artists or to discover new studios featuring a range of artwork including painting, collage, drawing, printmaking, glass art, fiber arts, sculpture, jewelry and assemblage.

The Art at the Source self-guided tours are open to the public on Saturday and Sunday, June 5-6 and June 12-13, from 10am to 5pm each day. Visitors can also view local art Preview Exhibit at the Sebastopol Center for the Arts Gallery in person Thursdays through Sundays, between 10am and 5pm, until June 13. There are also showcase exhibits open to the public at Corrick’s/My Daughter the Framer in Santa Rosa until June 26; at Gallery One in Petaluma until June 27; and at Oli Gallery in Guerneville until June 25.

Viewers can visit Sebastopol Center for the Arts’ website to see the “Art at the Source Preview Exhibit” online and purchase the art from the comfort of their home. Additionally, an online marketplace is open between June 1 and June 30 for visitors to view and shop for any participating artists’ work, including reproductions and other art objects.

“Art tells stories, allowing us to connect and get in touch with our emotions. Now more than ever before, we are searching for art to help us find joy in our lives while we deal with a global pandemic,” Devriese says. “An original piece of art has the imprint of a brushstroke, the hand of the artist embedded in the work. This Open Studios event allows visitors to take time to let the artwork speak to them, to feel and discover the radiance unique to each work.  And if you fall in love with a painting or a sculpture, it is a long-lasting pleasure and a reminder of that visit and connection with the artist.”

ArtAtTheSource.org

Baker & Cook Makes Perfect Pivot

When I dropped by Baker & Cook, two chaps behind the counter were as cheerfully synched up as Fry and Laurie.

One steamed up coffee drinks while the other bagged muffins and relayed bagel orders to the kitchen. If they’d been up late the night before, neither showed any sign of wear and tear that morning. They were both earnest and industrious, while also emanating an organic air of contentment.

They’re part of a rare ecosystem where one aspect of the trickle-down theory actually works. If the people in charge give you some room to be yourself, happiness abounds. In a previous life, one of their bosses, Nick Demarast, worked for Alice Waters at Chez Panisse. He says that his experience of Waters was that she didn’t micromanage. Nick explained, “Alice was really good at hiring people and allowing them to have creative space in the restaurant.” He and his wife Jen, the baking half of Baker & Cook, have adopted a similar approach at their first bakery.

In 2006, the Demarasts opened Harvest Moon Cafe on Sonoma’s town square and closed it—being both lucky and prescient—right before the pandemic hit. After running the restaurant for more than a decade, Jen decided that she wanted to have her own bakery. Nick was on board because he rarely spent time with their daughter.

“We’re really happy we made the switch,” Jen says. “Not only lifestyle-wise, like being able to be at home at night, but from a business standpoint. In our current situation, it was definitely a good move.”

The original concept included Nick making dinner two or three nights a week. But when everything came to a halt, Baker & Cook switched gears and repurposed half of the dining area, turning it into a grocery store. Jen explains that while there were shortages in stores they decided to offer whatever ingredients they had in house. “It could save people a trip to the grocery store.” Customers came in to pick up their CSA box and a baguette, and were good to go. She adds that customers appreciated the fact that Baker & Cook stayed open throughout the ups and downs these past few months. Since my visit, the menu has continued to expand to include items including quiche, a pomegranate tartlet and a few more sandwiches.

Jen says her style of baking doesn’t favor France over other countries, but she didn’t anticipate that croissants would be the core of their daily sales. “They’ve taken off with a life of their own,” she says. She now dedicates one day a week to making sure they have enough to last. They were making their own bread at Harvest Moon so Jen brought the starter with them. The baguettes, which she varies with different flavors, are selling as well as the croissants. “I feel like we can’t make enough of them,” she says. “We do a few things that are vegan, which have a definite following as well.”

Nick says that what he appreciates the most about Jen’s pastries and desserts is the way she cuts back on the amount of sugar. “I feel like a lot of places are just so heavy-handed with sugar,” he says. “We’re finding out that people are more receptive to having just enough sugar, whatever it is supposed to be.”

“My main thing is that I do everything from scratch,” Jen says. “I don’t buy anything pre-made.” She focuses on getting high-quality ingredients and not cutting corners. “I feel like that makes a difference in what the final product is.” She says that it doesn’t cross their minds to make things any other way.

Baker & Cook, open Wed–Sun 8am to 2pm, 18812 Hwy 12, Sonoma. 707.938.7329. Bakerandcooksonoma.com

Healdsburg Raises Pride Flag for First Time in City History

First designed by Gilbert Baker in 1978, the rainbow flag is now the most iconic symbol of LGBTQIA+ Pride. 

In the four decades since its debut, the rainbow flag has become an international symbol for Pride Month in June. More rainbow flags have also been designed to celebrate the broader community and the progression of LGBTQIA+ rights.

Now, the city of Healdsburg joins the Pride movement with its first ever official Pride Flag Raising Ceremony on Tuesday, June 1, at Healdsburg City Hall.

The flag that will be raised is called the Progress Pride Flag and was designed in 2018 by Daniel Quasar. The Progress Pride Flag adds a five-color chevron to the six-color rainbow to honor the transgender community and LGBTQIA+ people of color.

Throughout the month of June, all of Healdsburg’s city government buildings will show their Pride and allyship with the LGBTQIA+ community thanks to a new resolution, written by Vice Mayor of Healdsburg Ozzy Jimenez and unanimously approved by Healdsburg City Council.

Jimenez, who owns Noble Folk Ice Cream and Pie Bar, is the first Latinx city councilperson in almost three decades and is believed to be the second-ever openly councilperson. 

“This is such a personally meaningful milestone,” says Jimenez. “I’m so proud to see my city make this public display of LGBTQIA+ support.”

On June 1, Jimenez will raise the Progress Pride Flag at Healdsburg City Hall (401 Grove Street) at 6pm, and both he and Mayor Evelyn Mitchell will speak at the ceremony. Afterwards, the public is welcome to walk to Healdsburg Plaza for an all-ages Pride celebration happening 6:30pm to 8:30pm and hosted by LGBTQ Connection and Positive Images–two local organizations that serve the LGBTQIA+ community.

The plaza celebration will feature music, snacks, activities and keynote speakers including councilperson Skylaer Palacios and Noe Naranjo, a young LGBTQIA+ activist from Healdsburg.

Napa Valley Museum Sets Sights on June Reopening Date

After closing its doors to the public more than a year ago due to the pandemic, Yountville’s acclaimed Napa Valley Museum is ready once again welcome in-person visitors next month when it reopens all galleries to the public on Friday, June 18, 2021.

While several Napa County venues are already reopening, Napa Valley Museum is subject to stricter health regulations because the museum sits on the grounds of the Veterans Home of California. Still, the Museum has maintained an active online presence, including a virtual version of its popular exhibition, “Lucy Liu: One Of These Things Is Not Like The Others,” which opened a month before the pandemic hit the North Bay.

In the last year, the museum has also virtually exhibited well-regarded student shows and a vivid photography exhibition on the Napa and Sonoma County wildfires featuring images by Tim Carl.

“People from all over the world have viewed the ‘Lucy Liu’ virtual tour, which was our first exhibition filmed in 3D inside the gallery and a fundraiser for our reopening,” says Museum Executive Director Laura Rafaty. “But there is no substitute for seeing the works in person. We are so grateful that Lucy has allowed us to keep these works and reopen the exhibit to the public in our Main Gallery on June 18, on display through August 29. The virtual tour will continue to be available on our website, so people unable to travel to Napa Valley won’t have to miss out.”

This U.S. premiere exhibition of Liu’s paintings and sculpture comprises an intimate collection of deeply personal artwork, ranging from large-scale paintings to inventive mixed media works to intricate wood sculptures. Napa Valley Museum’s exhibit also includes a video title wall and other film showing Liu in her studio as she demonstrates and explains her techniques and inspirations.

“When we closed in March of 2020, we were seeing strong interest in the newly-opened ‘Lucy Liu’ exhibition, and getting ready to open a particularly strong student-curated exhibition in March,” says Rafaty. “We never dreamed we would be closed this long, and are lucky that we’ve been able to obtain government loans, grants and donations enabling our small nonprofit to remain viable. Many of our employees were furloughed, and some moved on to other things. In the meantime, many other exhibitions have been developed and scheduled, only to fall victim to our persistent closure. We so look forward to welcoming the public back to the Museum at along last, and to bringing our museum family – our artists, visitors, staff, trustees and members – back to our galleries.”

In addition to “Lucy Liu: One Of These Things Is Not Like The Others” in the main gallery, the Napa Valley Museum is exhibiting “The Yates Collection” in the spotlight gallery, showcasing exquisite works collected by the Yates Foundation and on long-term loan to the Museum.

The museum is also exhibiting “Land and People of the Napa Valley” in a new permanent gallery configuration in the history gallery that includes a display of the Veterans Home’s history.

The Museum is observing all Covid-related safety protocols, which are updated as the state, county and Veterans Home requirements change. The Museum’s virtual exhibitions will continue to be available on its website.

The Napa Valley Museum is located at 55 Presidents Circle in Yountville. Its scheduled reopening hours are Fridays–Sundays, 11am to 4 pm. The Museum hopes to resume its regular Wednesday–Sunday schedule as attendance demands.

Napavalleymusuem.org.

Culture Crush: Live and Local Events Rebound

Live Concert Sacramento native Scott Hansen makes music as Tycho and visual art as ISO50, and he combines both forms with his first live shows in over a year this weekend. Tycho will be in the North Bay for a four-night residency-performing two shows each night–courtesy of Blue Note Napa and Another Planet, which are teaming up to present world...

Get Out and About at North Bay Pride Gatherings

Every June, Pride Month celebrates the LGBTQ community with events across the country. Last June, Pride was all but canceled due to the Covid-19 pandemic, though the North Bay is slowly returning to normal and several groups are hosting safely distanced Pride events throughout the North Bay this June. Sonoma County Pride is used to hosting big parades and parties. This...

Letters to the Editor: Write On

First I want to acknowledge and congratulate Peter Byrne for his outstanding articles regarding the Point Reyes National Seashore issues, including its dairies.  Your May 26 issue included a letter which closed with the following inquiry: "How do we get Deb Haaland to shut down this cow-shXX show once and for all?" With due respect to the letter writer and...

Open Mic: My Friend, Tony Good

By Nikki Silverstein I've been corresponding with an intelligent, quick-witted Pacific Sun reader for more than a decade. Tony Good lived on the streets of San Rafael. Although just 44, he suffered from several medical conditions and disabilities, and sometimes from drug addiction. He recently told me he thought he was going to die. Two weeks ago, I found out...

LA Times Weighs in on North Bay ‘Newspaper War’

The ever-expanding black hole around former Windsor Mayor Dominic Foppoli is nipping at the heels of the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.

Sonoma County Teenagers Participate in 266-Mile Climate March

Sunrise Movement California march 2021
Two Sonoma County teens are among a group marching from Paradise to San Francisco in an effort to draw attention to green jobs legislation.

Art at the Source Resumes Self-Guided Art Tours in Sonoma County

For more than two decades, Sonoma County artists have opened their studios each spring to showcase and sell their work to the public during the self-guided Art at the Source studio tours, hosted by the Sebastopol Center for the Arts. Taking place over two weekends, Art at the Source is one of the biggest art events each year in the...

Baker & Cook Makes Perfect Pivot

Baker & Cook
When I dropped by Baker & Cook, two chaps behind the counter were as cheerfully synched up as Fry and Laurie. One steamed up coffee drinks while the other bagged muffins and relayed bagel orders to the kitchen. If they’d been up late the night before, neither showed any sign of wear and tear that morning. They were both earnest...

Healdsburg Raises Pride Flag for First Time in City History

First designed by Gilbert Baker in 1978, the rainbow flag is now the most iconic symbol of LGBTQIA+ Pride.  In the four decades since its debut, the rainbow flag has become an international symbol for Pride Month in June. More rainbow flags have also been designed to celebrate the broader community and the progression of LGBTQIA+ rights. Now, the city of Healdsburg...

Napa Valley Museum Sets Sights on June Reopening Date

After closing its doors to the public more than a year ago due to the pandemic, Yountville's acclaimed Napa Valley Museum is ready once again welcome in-person visitors next month when it reopens all galleries to the public on Friday, June 18, 2021. While several Napa County venues are already reopening, Napa Valley Museum is subject to stricter health regulations...
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