DIY Culture Gets Virtual Boost at Santa Rosa Zine Fest

0

Even in today’s digitally dominant world, many artists, crafters and do-it-yourselfers still make Zines. The self-published art form that often resembles a pocket-sized book can still be seen in local shops or circulated in local libraries, and in the North Bay there is a community of zine artists and admirers waiting to meet each other at the first annual Santa Rosa Zine Fest, now running online Saturday, Nov. 7, from 2–5pm.

Originally intended as an in-person event, the Santa Rosa Zine Fest will still create a space for the arts community during a three-part virtual program that will feature conversations between local artists, a zine-making workshop and an online gallery of art, all offered for free with advance registration through Sonoma County Library.

The Santa Rosa Zine Fest is the brainchild of volunteer organizers Meredith Morgan and Melissa Andrade.

“Melissa and I are both artists, a lot of our friends are artists, and we realized so many of our friends were making these awesome zines about their personal experiences, or their identity, or different kinds of cats they liked,” Morgan says. “It’s such an awesome, wide-reaching genre that people find a lot of freedom of expression with zines.”

Zines can indeed be about anything; they can be informational or personal, and likewise they can be thought provoking or silly. Morgan also notes that zines are not bound by narrative structures the way other literary works may be because zines do not have to go through traditional editorial or publishing channels.

“You can have an idea and get it out there,” Morgan says. “That is what we are seeing with our personal friends and then also with the people who are the presenters and artists in the fest.”

The virtual fest on Nov. 7 will be presented in both Spanish and English. The program begins at 2pm with an artist conversation between RJ Simon and Amanda Ayala, who will discuss what kinds of art they make and how they go from idea to finished art piece. That session will be followed by a panel discussion between Maia Kobabe and Tessa Hulls, who will talk about making protest art in 2020 and fitting self care into personal projects. The fest will then feature a demonstration and workshop led by Leah Yael Levy that is open to artists of all ages and skill levels or anyone interested in zine making.

Registration for each session is open now, and Morgan hopes attendees will join the fest for the entire day and register for all three sessions. The fest also features a pre-recorded showcase of artist’s works on YouTube, and zine starter kits are available for young people age 12 to 18 for curbside pick-up at several Sonoma County library locations (call your local library branch to reserve a kit).

With the history of zines closely tied to social and political movements, the organizers of the Santa Rosa Zine Fest are also using the event to help uplift people of color, queer and trans folks, people of all ability levels and others who feel underrepresented in the Sonoma County arts scene.

“We wanted the inclusivity and the diversity of this event to be baked in,” Morgan says. “Myself and other organizers identify as queer, I identify as non-binary. A lot of our presenters come from a diverse range of backgrounds, and our artists do as well. I thought it was important in Sonoma County to reflect this diverse community. You don’t have to go to Oakland or San Francisco to find a diverse group of artists making incredible art. Those people also exist here.”

Santa Rosa Zine Fest takes place online Saturday, Nov. 7, 2–5pm. Free; registration required. Sonomalibrary.org.

‘Trump Train’ Descends on Marin City Shopping Center

0

Days before a contentious election, hundreds of President Donald Trump’s supporters drove into Marin County’s only Black community, sparking fear and anger among residents.

The Trump Train, consisting of approximately 300 pickup trucks, cars, motorcycles and retired fire trucks, flew Trump flags and rolled down Highway 101 to Marin City.

The motorcade, which started in Santa Rosa and made a stop at the Vintage Oaks Shopping Center in Novato, exited the freeway at about 11:15am and pulled into the Marin Gateway Shopping Center in Marin City as part of a series of Trump Train events across the country Sunday.

Up to 100 people from Marin City came outdoors to watch more than 1,000 Trump supporters take over the center’s parking lot, according to attendance estimates from the Marin County Sheriff’s Office. The cacophony was almost unbearable as the Trump demonstrators honked their horns, ranted through loudspeakers and screamed.

The Marin County Sheriff’s Office, Sausalito Police Department and California Highway Patrol were present in the parking area but took little action, except to direct traffic. A sheriff’s deputy on the ground said they were there to keep the peace.

Sergeant Brenton Schneider, a spokesperson for the Marin Sheriff’s Office, said the demonstration did not have or need a permit, because they were exercising their First Amendment rights; however, he did not know whether they were lawfully permitted to assemble on the shopping center’s private property.

“We did not give them [Trump supporters] permission to be on the property,” said Terri Henry, property manager of the Marin Gateway Shopping Center. “They just showed up.”

It was likely illegal to hold a political action within 100 feet of the official ballot box located in the shopping center, according to California state law.

“At vote by mail ballot drop boxes, loitering near or disseminating visible or audible electioneering information” is prohibited, Chapter 806 of Senate Bill No. 286 states.

“‘Electioneering’ means the visible display or audible dissemination of information that advocates for or against any candidate or measure on the ballot,” the law continues.

The caravan of vehicles blocked the area directly in front of the ballot box as the rally bled out the exits of the parking lot, bringing traffic to a virtual standstill. The Trump supporters took this opportunity to taunt Marin City residents lining the streets.

“A voter was trying to use that box and felt intimidated,” said Lynda Roberts, the Marin County Registrar of Voters. “I reported it to the Marin County Sheriff’s Department and the California Secretary of State as soon as I learned about it.”

In interviews with the San Francisco Chronicle, caravan participants denied allegations that they chose the Marin City shopping mall to intimidate Marin City’s Black residents. Some residents weren’t convinced.

“Why didn’t the Sheriff’s Department let the community know the rally was coming?” Damian Morgan, a Marin City resident and board member of the Marin City Community Services District, said in an interview Monday. “When Black people demonstrated recently in Tiburon and Sausalito, the police let their communities know.”

Schneider said the Sheriff’s Office didn’t know until 15 minutes before the MAGA supporters arrived in Marin City, when the Novato police informed them. Morgan disputes the timeline.

“Deputy Josie Sanguinetti told me they had a three-hour heads-up,” Morgan said. “That was plenty of time to email people they know in the community or to alert us on Nextdoor. They could have at least told us there’s going to be 300 cars in our community.”

Though they received no notice, most Marin City residents remained calm, even as the unwelcome rally goers stormed their neighborhood. Racial epithets and curse words were tossed from the Trump supporters. Schneider, the Sheriff’s spokesperson, said counterdemonstrators shot paintballs and threw eggs at the caravan cars.

The Sheriff’s Office received 911 calls about physical altercations; however, law enforcement didn’t observe any physical fights, and no victims have come forward, Schneider said. Marin City residents hope Election Day is calm and peaceful, though there is concern this type of unrest may be a precursor of things to come.

“You can never be too careful,” Morgan said. “I would like to think there’s not going to be any trouble, but we have to be prepared and have our eyes open. We just don’t know.”

Election Update: Newcomers Outraise Incumbents in Petaluma Council Race

0

Newly-released campaign finance documents reveal that three political newcomers running as a slate have raised more money than a competing group of incumbent City Council members in Petaluma’s seven-way race to fill three City Council seats.

Newcomers Brian Barnacle ($32,082), Dennis Pocekay ($28,733) and Lizzie Wallack ($16,499) have raised a total of $77,314, according to their individual filings dated Friday, Oct. 30.

Incumbent candidates Michael Healy ($16,825), Gabe Kearney ($13,250) and Kathy Miller ($18,185) have raised a total of $48,260, according to their individual Oct. 30 filings.

Susan Kirks, a seventh candidate running without a slate, has raised $2,055.

The campaign finance documents are available to view here.

Snail Mail

The document dump comes after a week-long delay in releasing a previous batch of campaign finance forms which reveal how much money four of the seven active candidates in the race—including three incumbent council members who are campaigning for reelection as a slate—raised and spent between Sept. 20 and Oct. 17.

While the previously unreleased filings, formally known as a Form 460 or second pre-election filing, were due on Thursday, Oct. 22, they did not appear on the Petaluma City Clerk’s website until Friday, Oct. 30.

The filings were for Mike Healy, Gabe Kearney, Kathy Miller and Dennis Pocekay, who mailed in their paperwork. Forms for candidates Brian Barnacle, Susan Kirks and Lizzie Wallack, all of whom filed in person, were available on the city website days earlier.

Robert Conklin, the eighth candidate in the race, did not raise enough money to be required to file the form.

Kendall Rose, Petaluma’s new City Clerk, also published a third batch of campaign finance forms, known as a third pre-election filing, on Friday afternoon. The third pre-election filings, due Friday, cover campaigns income and expenses between Oct. 18 and Oct. 29.

In interviews and emails this week, Rose said she has advised council candidates that they can arrange in-person appointments to drop off their pre-election campaign finance filings at City Hall—which is mostly closed due to Covid-19 restrictions—or mail in the forms as long as they are postmarked prior to the filing deadline.

However, state campaign finance laws mandate a bit more haste if a candidate chooses to mail their second pre-election filings. The California Political Reform Act (PRA), the state law which governs campaign finance disclosure filings and other matters, requires candidates to submit second pre-election filings, the form due on Oct. 22, “by guaranteed overnight delivery service or by personal delivery” if electronic submission is not available in a city.

In an interview on Friday, Rose told the Bohemian she did not know that the second pre-election filings due on Oct. 22 had to be mailed by overnight service.

Rose confirmed that all four candidates whose paperwork was unavailable online until Oct. 30 had mailed their forms prior to the Oct. 22 deadline. She said that some of the mailed filings had been submitted by overnight delivery while others had not.

In any event, Rose only began the process of redacting and uploading the four mailed forms on Friday, Oct. 30, after she had received all of the mailed filings.

Whatever the reason for the delayed publication, the effect is the same: Petaluma voters, many of whom voted by mail in the past several weeks, were unable to see who funded the campaigns of four of seven candidates between Sept. 20 and Oct. 17.

In order to simplify the filing process in future elections, Rose, who took over as Petaluma’s City Clerk in September, is preparing to ask the City Council to require future political candidates and campaigns to file electronically through a widely-used program called NetFile. Rose says the City Council will discuss the change at a Nov. 16 meeting, after the November 2020 election comes to a close.

Rose said NetFile automatically uploads and redacts campaign filings as soon as they are submitted by candidates, potentially saving city staff about 20 minutes of processing time per form. Santa Rosa uses NetFile while Sonoma County uses a competing electronic system to manage filings.

Kearney Case Still Open

The delay in publishing the filings in the City Council race comes more than a month after the Bohemian broke news about a campaign finance complaint against Gabe Kearney, one of the incumbents running for reelection.

The complaint, filed with the state Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC), alleges Kearney missed 16 campaign finance filing deadlines over the past four years. Some of Kearney’s campaign-finance paperwork, which should have been filed at the end of his 2016 City Council campaign, is still not available on the Petaluma City Clerk’s website.

Last month, when the Bohemian first reported the story, Kearney said he planned to resolve the case within a few weeks.

Yet more than five weeks later, Kearney has yet to settle the case, according to the FPPC’s website. Kearney did not reply to requests for comment on the status of the FPPC case.

Marijuana Measure Divides

In August 2020, after years of dickering, the city of Sonoma finally voted to allow SPARC—which has a marijuana farm in Glen Ellen and dispensaries in Santa Rosa and Cotati—to open a weed shop on Highway 12. 

SPARC seemed to be home free, but in October the city council withdrew its approval. Seems that shenanigans sealed the deal with SPARC. Now there’s bickering among council members, some of whom are crying foul, and there’s Measure Y on the ballot November 3 in this city that has long had a tangled love/hate relationship with marijuana.

If Measure Y were to pass, some zoning laws would change. The opportunities for cannabiz would expand. SPARC’s Erich Pearson warns there could be dispensaries on every corner. Proponents of Y call that fear tactics aimed at defeating it.

Jon Early, the author of Measure Y (sonoma-access.com), says he wants competition in the marijuana market place and an end to backroom deals.

“What motivates me is democracy,” he tells me at his home in Sonoma where he and his wife have lived since the 1970s. “The attempt to undermine Measure Y—which gives citizens the opportunity to vote on dispensaries— has been shameful,” he says. “People have died defending the ballot box.” Early risked his own life in Vietnam. “I got a taste of that side of things,” he adds. 

Over the years, Early has seen some of the same issues in Sonoma as he has seen in the nation’s capital.

“Small town politics can be almost as bad as big city politics,” he tells me. In fact, Early suggests that there’s been a conspiracy afoot against Y and maybe against him personally. The city council came out unanimously against Y. Early has foes, but he has many friends, including former mayor Ken Brown. Early points out that the State of California would have oversight of any new dispensaries in town.

Local rules stipulate that cannabis can’t be sold or consumed near a school or around the library, nor on the plaza where locals and tourists are free to consume alcohol from 11:30am to sunset. Years ago, Early wanted to open a dispensary. Now he’s not sure. Years ago, he also smoked a lot of weed. Not at 73.

“I’ve reached out repeatedly to the city of Sonoma and to cannabis groups,” Early says. “No one has come forward to talk.”

Whatever happens with Y, the town needs a mediator to help heal the rifts in the community.    

Early can be reached at Ym*******@***il.com. Jonah Raskin is the author of Dark Past, Dark Future: A Tioga Vignetta Murder Mystery.

Home De Coeur

0

This issue is ostensibly “home decor” themed, which at any other moment in our collective social history is perfectly fine. But with less than a week before the most epochal election since the one that resulted in Lincoln’s second term, I’d have to be tone deaf to focus on Chez Nous when the nation is crumbling. 

I tried anyway. And I failed. I strolled through San Anselmo looking for inspiration and found it in the window display of a tiny home and design storefront. It was a jar of table tennis balls and a couple of haphazardly laid paddles. The overall effect belied an aesthetic of blunt honesty–who cares? 

I admire the display for a few reasons. It not only looks like my house (finally my living room looks like a window display) since two boys live here, but it also resembles a Fluxus-style installation qua deconstruction of home decor. For those who forgot their art history, “Fluxus was an international, interdisciplinary community of artists…who engaged in experimental art performances which emphasized the artistic process over the finished product,” thus spake Wikipedia. 

My favorite window display ups the ante by depicting the “artistic process” in media res, at the precise moment when the artist said “f— it.” When it comes to home decor, I think many of us have reached that point. Apart from kicking an ottoman around the room, not much has changed at my place and why should it? No one is going to see it unless they’re doing CSI-style analysis of my Zoom calls, barking “enhance!” at the screen until the aforementioned ottoman comes into focus and one turns to the other and says, “Yep, that’s where he said f— it.”

“It’s like an epidemic with these people,” the rookie will reply and they’ll be right. Well, more of a pandemic; but with 200,000 dead, why split mohairs?

No, the only significant change in my home decor is the amount of election-themed collateral that’s appeared courtesy of my stepson, whose graphic design efforts have been replicated throughout Petaluma (you may have seen his wave of Keith Haring-esque “Vote” signage). It’s telling that a 13-year-old has taken over the look of the living room. This is their world, we’re just voting in it.

To that end, a recent study found that two of the most voter-friendly cities in the nation for the 2020 Presidential Election are Novato and San Rafael. Both earned A- or A ratings for their voting infrastructure. Good. Now, go out and vote, then straighten up your damn living room.

Daedalus Howell lives at daedalushowell.com.

Open Mic: Rethinking Halloween

0

I’ve long been disturbed by Halloween, and here we are again. Money spent on lights, plastic skeletons, bones and headstones to frighten small, costumed children eager to stuff themselves with sugar. Perhaps a cynical view of the holiday, but one that arises as I walk in my neighborhood during this season.

If the message were, “We’re dying here, death is real, we must do all we can to save this precious planet on which we depend for life.” Then I might get behind it. If we put out bowls of autumn fruit, an offering of the harvest which the season actually celebrates. Then I might get behind it.  If we stopped training children to use sugar to dull fear trumped up by bones, ghouls and skeletons looming at them out of the darkness. Then I might get behind it. If we stopped to consider what else might be done with money spent on decorations, wigs and empty calories. Then I might get behind it.  

I haven’t participated in the ritual for many years. It’s easy to avoid the flow of children at our house, situated on a hill with no street lights and down a flight of wooden steps. But this year I am tempted. I would put out the scariest thing I can imagine: large white letters on a black background, red Christmas lights illuminating the words, CLIMATE CHANGE! Alongside the sign a bowl of crisp apples with an invitation to take one if you’re hungry, give it to someone who is if you’re not. And a parting message, placed so visitors see it as they’re leaving, “Join hands against the darkness.”

Of course, all this is impossible in the year of our frustrated Lord, 2020. We can’t hold hands, we can’t give out apples, fear having long convinced us a potential razorblade is the real enemy. How convenient to focus on razor blades, candy and consumerism instead of what really matters. How long will it be before we heed the voice calling out, “When will you stop destroying Eden?”

Laura Bachman is a writer, retired body worker and library assistant living in San Anselmo.

Letters: Talking Props

NO! The point of prop 13 was to not force families to sell due to property taxes. THIS WILL FORCE SALES DUE TO PROPERTY TAXES. (“Prop the Vote,” Oct. 21) I have no objection to people being able to transfer assessed value, but Prop 19 will be the slow death of family ranches and dairies in this area.

A million-dollar exemption on a low-impact livestock ranch is small compared to the total market value. The profit from livestock ranching is small. The next generation of multi-generation stewards of the land who put in so many hours caring for the land will often be forced to sell or put in grapes or cannabis, which many can’t due to slopes, water or other issues. Regulations make it also difficult to put in campgrounds, and they must compete with county sales tax subsidized campgrounds, which is unfair. Going from a $10,000 tax bill to a $80,000 tax bill on a few hundred acres of low-income, open-space pasture is only doable for very high-income people, which few ranches are. Ranches pay school and hospital assessments, but livestock do not attend. And the ranch family does not use any more property tax-funded services than other families. 

Save family farms and ranches and vote NO.

Farmer Jane

Via Bohemian.com

Kids Are All Right

Thank you very much for this inspiring article about how teenagers are finding ways to thrive even during these challenging times (“From A to Gen Z,” Oct. 7). Our family has a fourteen-year-old in the house and it’s wonderful to be able to share this article whenever they say something like “things are really hard, I can’t do anything because of the pandemic!” More content like this would be wonderful!

Healdsburgian

Via Bohemian.com

A reflection on online home-decor inspiration

0

My friend Heather and I met at UC Santa Barbara during our junior year, in Literature of the Reformation (out of respect for her privacy, we’ll keep on a first name basis here).

I used to wave to her as she rode around Isla Vista on her beach cruiser in a long peasant skirt and pink Jellies, her long strawberry curls trailing behind her in the breeze. She smiled a lot. Heather was one of the few students I knew with her own room in a real house, with a new mattress and high-thread-count sheets.

At 20—and decades before Instagram and Pinterest and Pottery Barn—she had a flair for pattern, color, texture and quality second-hand clothing. We both thought David Nagel prints were not only ugly, but the sign of an undisciplined mind.

I saw her last week for the first time since the March lockdown. Honoring our tradition, we went thrift-store hopping and then ate lunch at El Molino, both of us wearing masks and feeling frayed around the edges with too many daytime inhabitants in our respective domestic spaces.

“So, how much time do you spend looking at Zillow?” I asked in the dishware shelves.

She laughed. “Omigod. How did you know? Too much.”

“Have you seen that house in Bolinas?” I didn’t even have to specify which one.

“Bolinas isn’t happening for us,” she said. “I like Fort Bragg.”

Sometimes I spend hours in the listings. It seems like everyone I talk to these days is on Zillow.

“You can look at the inside of people’s houses,” I said. “Some of the desert houses are wild, but I’m still seeing balloon curtains in homes.”

“Don’t get me started,” she said.

Alone-time has all but disappeared for many of us, while for others life has become a 24/7 dialog with CNN and crane flies. With spouses and partners working from home, with adult children returning to the nest with IKEA bed frames and plastic tubs, and with thrift stores so backlogged with donations that many aren’t accepting more, the domestic sphere can feel like life on the inside of a hamster ball. Residents have taken to putting items on the sidewalk in hopes that their trash is someone else’s treasure. Most often it’s not.

But for creative types like Heather, the lockdown has unlocked potential to reimagine the home, to fearlessly shirk design trends and to turn domesticity on its head without worrying about the Joneses. While the home has been repurposed as an office, a gym, a daycare, a studio, a campus, a greenhouse, a test kitchen, a Zoom stage and a dojo, it’s also being reinvented. Heather describes her home decor as somewhere between “cabinet of curiosities and opium den.” She credits her matrilineage.

“My grandmother and my mother were very ahead of their time, very avant garde in their tastes,” she says. “My great grandmother was from Guadalajara and my great grandfather built custom furniture in Philadelphia. He mixed traditional furniture design with elements of Mexican folk art. Both my mother and I inherited a love of objects. For example, some of my favorite things in my house are on my desk; a brass crab, an inkwell from my grandmother, a handmade silver bookmark from my grandfather.”

Heather’s house is made from both materials and memories. She doesn’t shop for new stuff, and she doesn’t follow trends.

“The Marin farmhouse chic is just stamped out,” she says. “I’ve always been into repurposing, restoring and rule-breaking; I like every room to evoke memory and emotion when you walk into it. My daughter goes through things that I put away, and helps me reacquaint myself with what I have. The pandemic has given me a certain sort of freedom to experiment with a style that is more for me than other people since nobody is coming over to look or judge. There is a need right now, I think, to be surrounded by things that provide comfort—there is so much that is leaving and going out of our lives, and fading. I keep a lot of rocks.”

Comfort is often quite different than luxury.

In The Poetics of Space, Gaston Bachelard writes, “We comfort ourselves by reliving memories of protection… Memories of the outside world will never have the same tonality as those of home and, by recalling these memories, we add to our store of dreams…” Thus spoke Zillow.

Because we are breaking with so many traditions in the home, we can now see ourselves in different kinds of spaces, environments and places and with different kinds of things.

“We are tired of our own spaces,” Heather says. “With websites like Zillow, you can vividly imagine these changes, which can be both positive and negative.”

Zillow is as full of $25,000-a-month coastal luxury rentals as it is of foreclosures, drive-by photos with the occasional shot of sagging curtains in the windows and sad, dead garden shrubs.

You might just want to stay put after all that snooping.

In my house, we’ve been letting kids paint the walls for years. In the living room four teenage girls painted a mural, an homage inspired by Klimpt’s “Tree of Life” and populated by the characters in Miyazaki’s Princess Mononoke. In one of the rooms my older daughter hand-painted wallpaper with a design by French textile artist Paule Marrot. I painted a mural in my kitchen I found on the design blog “The Selby,” and have used work by Eugène Séguy, Ukrainian artist Polina Rayko and Vanessa Bell. The boundary between home and studio for artists is often poorly defined. I’ve always thought it’s better to paint the walls than climb them. And speaking of boundaries, let’s not forget the great outdoors, brought indoors during our extended stay inside. Shelter-in-place has been a boon for nurseries. I myself have acquired five banana trees.

In a recent Washington Post article on the rise of the houseplant, gardening columnist Adrian Higgins writes, “… I now sit and watch current affairs and news programs on the TV, not for the perspicacity of the pundits, but to see how they’ve decorated their home offices. Some of the wall art is so bad, it’s good, but I’m on the lookout for the quantity and quality of the vegetation. Tip to commentators: Enough of the bookshelves — we know you’re smart; load up on far more houseplants and tropicals.”

As if we weren’t buried enough in our own long-neglected crap—both material and psychological—many women my age, including myself, have cared for, or lost, parents during these last few grueling months and now find ourselves not only dealing with grief but acting as lead curator of our parents’ possessions. Maybe for the first time, people have started to contemplate in earnest the total life cycle of things, as the life cycle of everything else becomes more precarious.

An artist friend who recently lost her mother told me, “I’m torn between the obligation of honoring my mother by taking care of her things and the burden of holding onto belongings I might not love. Do we all want to be perpetual curators of our own lives? I don’t think so—one thing the pandemic has taught us is that our time here is so limited. I’ve had to confront the reality that some of my clutter is not so creative. Swedish death cleaning is on my mind a lot.”

Bachelard agrees. “It is better to live in a state of impermanence than in one of finality.”

In the past, peeking inside a seaside mansion in Pebble Beach or a Napa Valley estate might have evoked feelings of impossible outsiderness and envy. Now these palatial spaces resemble empty hotel lobbies, halls of mirrors filled with designer furniture and fixtures that the future has neither room nor desire for; these are the lonely hunting grounds of the Wendigo, rooms appointed with store-bought grandeur on an inhuman scale when humanity is what’s in order. So much clutter is not going to just disappear when the new owners move in. Maybe after the thrift stores open donations back up, they’ll take what’s left.

Virtual & Walking Cemetery Tours Share North Bay History This Halloween

Whoever said, “Dead men tell no tales,” never visited a cemetery tour like the ones that pop up in the North Bay every Halloween season. Even with this year’s pandemic making group gatherings difficult in parts of the region, two local groups are telling tales about the historical figures residing at local cemeteries.

First up, Tulocay Cemetery in Napa holds a thousand stories waiting to be told among its grassy hills and century-old tombstones. This week, the Napa County Historical Society launches the first phase of an ambitious three-year project to tell several of these stories through interactive, self-guided and virtual tours of Tulocay and the surrounding community.

The society debuts “Echoes of Napa Valley: The Tulocay Project” on Thursday, Oct. 29, online at 7pm. The creative team at NCHS will be on hand for a discussion about the project before NCHS presents a virtual cemetery tour that is “hosted” by an actual historical figure.

Of course, the dead are not actually rising from the grave, but actors will embody figures like Maria de Jesus Higuera Juarez (1815-1890), who comes to life to host the virtual Oct. 29 tour.

“Echoes of Napa Valley: The Tulocay Project” will cover figures like Juarez and her husband Don Cayetano Juarez, early North Bay settlers who obtained the original land grant from the Mexican government for what is now Napa and gifted Tulocay’s acreage.

Other figures who are coming to life for virtual tours includes Nathan Coombs, founder of the city of Napa. The project will also highlight the First Peoples of the Napa Valley, the Patwin and Wappo, whose stories remain largely untold.

The project is operating in partnership with New Tech High School in Napa, where students are developing dramatic monologues and graphic displays, and Napa Valley College Performing Arts, which is providing opportunities to workshop new performances.

NCHS also hopes to inspire the audience to research their own stories and ask themselves important questions about community, identity and culture.

‘Echoes of Napa Valley: The Tulocay Project’ debuts on Thursday, Oct. 29, at 7pm. $10 donation. Napahistory.org.

In Marin County, Mt. Olivet Catholic Cemetery has stood for 140 years in San Rafael, situated on twenty acres of hilltop property along Los Ranchitos Road. The cemetery currently provides a final resting place for over 14,000 persons. Some of those people are famous; some of them are infamous.

This weekend, Marin History Museum hosts the Halloween-appropriate “Walking Tour: Mt. Olivet Cemetery & Its Famous–and Infamous–Residents,” on the morning of Oct. 31. Historian Marcie Miller will lead the guided tour and will reveal who resides at the cemetery, from some of Marin’s most prominent pioneers to convicts executed at San Quentin State Prison such as Juanita Spinelli, aka “The Duchess,” who was the first woman to be executed by the state of California via San Quentin’s gas chamber in 1941.

The walking tour of Mt Olivet Cemetery, 270 Los Ranchitos Road, San Rafael, begins at 10am on Saturday, Oct. 31. To pre-register, email ma****@**********ry.org or call 415.446.8869.

Local Bands Dress Up for Phoenix Theater’s Virtual Halloween Concert

0

Petaluma’s historic Phoenix Theater looks stunning right now, thanks to a new paint job. The roof is also in fine form after being replaced earlier this year, and the sprinkler system is almost installed and up to the city’s codes.

Unfortunately, the inside of the Phoenix Theater is effectively closed to the public due to Covid, and the popular concert venue and teenage hangout has been unable to host events since March.

Nonetheless, in keeping with tradition, the venue will present its annual Halloween Covers Show this Saturday, Oct. 31. The only difference is that this year’s concert will be virtual, with several local bands and artists dressing up as classic rock groups and performing their songs for the camera instead of a live audience. The concert will be available to view on YouTube at 8pm on Oct. 31.

“The show is very cool, and it existed long before we hosted it,” says Jim Agius, talent buyer for the Phoenix Theater and co-host of the venue-based podcast Onstage with Jim & Tom. “It was a fixture at one of the punk houses in Santa Rosa. In 2016, we offered to take it and we hosted it, and from there we put our own spin on it.”

The annual Halloween Covers Show is one of the North Bay’s biggest yearly parties, and the participating bands and artists go above and beyond to embody the classic bands they are covering; perfecting the clothes, the between-song banter and more.

“All of the things I love about Halloween are represented in this show,” Agius says. “It gets a great variety of people from all sorts of different musical corners.”

In past years, local bands have performed as everything from AC/DC to the Spice Girls, and this year’s virtual lineup is another varied assembly of musical genres and artists.

Seven bands appear at this year’s online concert. Marin County’s young rock star Matt Jaffe—with bleached blonde hair—embodies Lou Reed and leads a Velvet Underground set. Marin natives The Happys don socks (and nothing else) to perform as the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Young Sonoma County punks Kurupi take on Rage Against the Machine, and local performer Kara Ferro sings as Loretta Lynn with a full backing country band. Other sets include Moon Sick performing as Toadies, Dry Ice Queen performing as No Doubt and several young rockers from various local bands performing as The Strokes.

Also in keeping with tradition, this year’s Halloween Covers Show ends with a massive balloon drop.

“It’s a wonderful dot on the exclamation point to end the show,” Agius says. “This year, of course, there’s no audience. It’s very surreal actually to see 800 balloons sitting where the audience would have been.”

Despite its current inability to host live shows, the Phoenix Theater’s nonprofit foundation is staying afloat through the pandemic thanks to private donors and the Paycheck Protection Program.

“It looks like the Phoenix is going to be OK,” Agius says. “Obviously, things can change and who knows how long this is going to go on for, but we’re feeling positive about coming out the other end of it.”

The Phoenix Theater’s Halloween Covers Show debuts on the “Onstage with Jim & Tom” Youtube channel on Saturday, Oct. 31, at 8pm. Find more details at Facebook.com/thephoenixtheater.

DIY Culture Gets Virtual Boost at Santa Rosa Zine Fest

Free online event presents program of art, talks, demos and more.

‘Trump Train’ Descends on Marin City Shopping Center

Days before a contentious election, hundreds of President Donald Trump’s supporters drove into Marin County’s only Black community, sparking fear and anger among residents. The Trump Train, consisting of approximately 300 pickup trucks, cars, motorcycles and retired fire trucks, flew Trump flags and rolled down Highway...

Election Update: Newcomers Outraise Incumbents in Petaluma Council Race

Newly-released campaign finance documents reveal that three political newcomers running as a slate have raised more money than a competing group of incumbent City Council members in Petaluma’s seven-way race to fill three City Council seats. Newcomers Brian Barnacle ($32,082), Dennis Pocekay ($28,733) and...

Marijuana Measure Divides

In August 2020, after years of dickering, the city of Sonoma finally voted to allow SPARC—which has a marijuana farm in Glen Ellen and dispensaries in Santa Rosa and Cotati—to open a weed shop on Highway 12.  SPARC seemed to be home free, but in October the city council withdrew its approval. Seems that shenanigans sealed the deal with SPARC....

Home De Coeur

This issue is ostensibly "home decor" themed, which at any other moment in our collective social history is perfectly fine. But with less than a week before the most epochal election since the one that resulted in Lincoln's second term, I'd have to be tone deaf to focus on Chez Nous when the nation is crumbling.  I tried anyway. And...

Open Mic: Rethinking Halloween

I’ve long been disturbed by Halloween, and here we are again. Money spent on lights, plastic skeletons, bones and headstones to frighten small, costumed children eager to stuff themselves with sugar. Perhaps a cynical view of the holiday, but one that arises as I walk in my neighborhood during this season. ...

Letters: Talking Props

NO! The point of prop 13 was to not force families to sell due to property taxes. THIS WILL FORCE SALES DUE TO PROPERTY TAXES. ("Prop the Vote," Oct. 21) I have no objection to people being able to transfer assessed value, but Prop 19 will be the slow death of family ranches and dairies in...

A reflection on online home-decor inspiration

My friend Heather and I met at UC Santa Barbara during our junior year, in Literature of the Reformation (out of respect for her privacy, we’ll keep on a first name basis here). I used to wave to her as she rode around Isla Vista on her beach cruiser in a long peasant skirt and pink Jellies, her...

Virtual & Walking Cemetery Tours Share North Bay History This Halloween

Napa and Marin historical organizations host events.

Local Bands Dress Up for Phoenix Theater’s Virtual Halloween Concert

Annual covers show goes online due to Covid.
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow