Super Soy Me

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Like any typical chump, I planned to start an ambitious new diet on New Year’s Day. Fine, the day after New Year’s Day.

The diet was strict, but had just one simple rule: Eat food, mostly frozen, as much as I want, on a $100 per week budget. And here’s the kicker: Eat only food that’s made by Amy’s Kitchen, the privately held natural foods manufacturer based in Petaluma. Yes, it was a bold plan.

Day 1: I load a frozen, gluten-free tofu scramble breakfast wrap in the microwave oven, starting the day’s calorie count at 300. At lunch it’s a chili mac bowl, 420 calories, and later a spinach pizza pocket sandwich, 280 calories. Dinner brings a longtime favorite to the table; veggie loaf with mashed potatoes, peas and carrots. But those 340 calories don’t feel like enough, so I round out the evening with a spinach pizza snack, and 380 additional calories.

Day 2: I’m a little hungover. Ugh, what happened?

The Perils of a Cruelty-Free Diet

I’m on this diet partly to see if man can live on Amy’s alone. While it’s a controlled experiment, it’s not an inhumane experiment, so I did not forswear the enjoyment of a few glasses of wine with dinner, before dinner, or after dinner. Besides, eliminating the beverage variable might have skewed the results, right? Instead, I opt for certified organic wine, in the spirit of Amy’s Kitchen, whose listed ingredients are nearly all prefaced with “organic,” save the sea salt and black pepper.

The problem: after unpacking five frozen meals from five cardboard cartons, I’d only packed in 1,720 calories on that first day. No doubt the wine hit a little harder because that’s well below the 2,000 daily calories that nutrition labels are based on, or the recommended 2,400 calorie diet of a moderately active male of my age, and weight.

Ah, that weight. The other reason for the diet was to lose a little of it. I demur from saying what that weight is, lest some readers then wish to knock me around a bit, but suffice it to say that I feel like the image of some kind of corpulent, late career Orson Welles. (More like Audrey Hepburn, remarked a more portly friend a few years back. That smarts a bit, but then again—such style!) What’s that about body image self-acceptance? Stuff self-acceptance in a cheeseburger. I demand to get back that flat belly that I haven’t seen since age 29, and I’ll try any diet in that service. The allure of Amy’s is the quick and easy calorie counting, printed right on the box, and de facto portion control. The convenience of simply reheating frozen food, too, leaves more time for that moderate activity.

Lesson learned, on to Day 2: Country bake breakfast, 420 calories; veggie sausage, 55 calories; brown rice and vegetables bowl, 260 calories; meatless Italian sausage, mushroom and olive pizza, 930 calories. Yes, I know the pizza is supposed to be three separate servings, but the day’s total is only 1,665 calories. Yet I feel stuffed. Might be because I’m not used to consuming so many carbohydrates (see the surprise tally at the end of the article), and that’s a criticism I’ve heard of products like Amy’s: organic or not, isn’t it too high in sodium, too stuffed with carbohydrates, like other processed snack foods? When I announced my dietary goal to someone at the company (who shan’t be named), in fact, the response was: “But what about vegetables?”

In an era when consumers are being advised to eat whole foods, and lower on the food chain, Amy’s occupies an interesting space in between the good reputation of organic foods and the bad rap on processed foods. Frozen foods have taken some heat since the “TV dinner” days of my childhood, when, notwithstanding mom’s cooking being the best, it was a special treat to have those tin foil tray dinners once a week. Meanwhile, Amy’s Kitchen, launched by Rachel and Andy Berliner in 1987 (the original conceit was that they couldn’t find any time-saving convenience foods that were of homemade quality, after the birth of their daughter, Amy, who is now a co-owner in the company), has puffed up from one pot pie sold in what used to be called “health food” stores in Northern California and Oregon, to 260 products sold in megastores the likes of Target, in 29 countries. Revenue in 2017 totaled $500 million.

Can they stay true to home-cooked ideals at such a scale? I’ve got to get behind the kale curtain, and see how the organic tofu sausage is made.

Amy’s, Can You Hear Me?

Day 3: I’ve had no luck trying to contact the public relations desk at Amy’s, so, fueled only by their breakfast scramble, 360 calories, and veggie sausage, 55 calories, I set out by bicycle for the company headquarters in Petaluma. Am I helping to offset the carbon footprint of these packaged meals, or is their economy of scale inherently more efficient than my home stovetop? Will there someday be fewer veal crates, like the ones that I’m passing by on Stony Point Road, because of vegetarian options like Amy’s provides? These are things I think of on my ride. Besides that biking in heavy traffic sucks veggie meatballs.

It wasn’t enough. On Lakeville Highway, a few blocks short, and fatigued, I have to turn back or else miss the last SMART train back to Santa Rosa until late afternoon.

Breakthrough at the Drive-Thru

I get a new idea on the train, remembering the Amy’s Drive-Thru restaurant in Rohnert Park. It’s a long shot, but at the very least, after ordering a single veggie cheeseburger and fries (alas, I am not asked to “super-size” my order to the signature double patty “Amy” burger), I can ask for any kind of help at the register. I’m in luck—Dave Wolfgram, president of Amy’s Drive-Thru Restaurants, is working on his laptop a few tables over. He seems genuinely concerned and promises to hook me up with HQ.

Although this joint is as bustling as it was on my first visit over three years ago (“Understanding Amy’s,” Sept. 9, 2015), Amy’s has rolled out their takeover of the fast food nation at, well, an organic pace. An outpost in SFO (Amy’s “fly-thru”?) is scheduled for July, with a Corte Madera drive-thru opening in 2020.

How the Organic Tofu Sausage
is Made

I’m in! I meet Paul Schiefer for a tour of Amy’s flagship production facility, which has been located on Santa Rosa’s Northpoint Parkway since the early days. Schiefer, who is a nephew to the Berliners, grew up with the business, and is now senior director of sustainability.

On the way to the dressing room where I’ll don a smock, hairnet and beard net, I’m already distracted by a novel sight: two vending machines in the break room are stocked with Amy’s entrées. They’re sold to employees for just $1 to $1.50. But the Blue Sky organic cola in the adjacent vending machine, Schiefer admits, isn’t as popular with employees as Pepsi. No strict diets here: there’s a Frito-Lay option, too.

Workers are everywhere on the plant floor, monitoring computer screens, carting multi-level tray carts here and there. Look, there goes my old friend, the lentil loaf! Over there, veggie sausage, destined for a country bake. In one room, which is as big as most winery cellars I see, pinto beans cascade in an industrial waterfall, while a worker tends to a steaming kettle perched high in the middle distance.

A smaller room houses one of the largest tofu-making facilities on the West Coast, according to Schiefer. Here are whole soybeans, soaked and removed of fiber, which goes to a dairy. Then, hot soy milk pours forth, and further down the line, blocks of fresh tofu, some 9,400 pounds per day, are cut and sent on to their rendezvous with organic oats, organic bulgar wheat and organic onions and more to, yes, make the tofu sausage.

On the kettle deck, an enchilada sauce has just been made—we see it later on down the line, where freshly frozen entreés clank off the conveyor belt. Tomato sauces are made from fresh tomatoes. Vegetables such as broccoli may be fresh, or flash frozen, since there are only two harvests a year from their supplier. “We’d rather get it all fresh, in season, than go to the ends of the earth to bring it in,” says Schiefer.

In the burrito room, bean and cheese filling plops onto tortillas, made fresh in the room next door, in a way that my minder from the marketing department doesn’t wish me to photograph. But it’s all hand work after that. One employee tells me, still folding while turning away from the assembly line to explain, that she’s been honing her technique for 21 years, shaping the filling, and folding six or more ways in a flash of hand movements I can hardly follow.

One thinks of frozen foods as the ultimate deracinated, non-local product. But here, I have the dissonant revelation that, at least for the North Bay, this is truly local. All this time, my frozen bean burrito (and another 160,000 of them per day) has been hand-rolled just across town. (Soups are made in Idaho, however; pizza in Medford, Ore.)

The Results

At the end of a week, I had to stop the experiment. Not necessarily because I felt “over stuffed” on just 1,940 calories, as I noted on Day 6, or “strangely tired” on Day 7. My weight jumped up at first, but I ended up a few pounds lighter. Still, I would have been willing to carry out a more rigorous one-month experiment. But if I didn’t bust my waistline, I busted my budget: $140 for seven days.

I should note that the company does not endorse an all-Amy’s diet. Instead, they offer meal plans on their website incorporating fresh fruits and vegetables, nuts and smoothies, most with just one Amy’s product per day. That said, I felt that I might have had a real serving of veggies with their Asian-inspired entrées, like the dumplings in savory Hoisin sauce, and for a frozen food, they tasted fresh enough. And in the harvest casserole bowl, there’s surely close to a half-cup of sweet potatoes, kale and Swiss chard—it’d be hard to excuse all that quinoa otherwise.

According to Schiefer, I’m correct in my assessment that while the frozen food business is stagnant in general, Amy’s is bucking the trend, and has been growing faster than the category for years. Still, some of the traditional tray-style dinner styles have been pulled off the line: RIP, Southern meal, chili and corn bread, and good ol’ veggie steak and gravy.

All told, I ate not more than 1,700 calories per day. The protein count averaged 67 grams daily — not bad — and carbohydrates actually averaged less than the Daily Value, at 200. But sodium indeed hit more than 3,200 milligrams per day, higher than the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommendation of less than 2,400, but a little under the average American’s intake. Amy’s does offer low sodium versions with less than half that of the typical entrée.

The next week I flipped a 180 and launched an ultra-low-carb diet of meat, cheese and vegetables for the next month. I felt pretty good on it. And I gained back five pounds.

Difficult Reading

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In the 1973 film Soylent Green, Detective Thorn (Charlton Heston) finds a copy of the Soylent Oceanographic Survey Report: 2015 to 2019 in the home of a murdered Soylent Corporation executive.

Thorn gives the book to his roommate, Sol (Edward G. Robinson), an intellectual old man who grew up in a time before the world went to hell from overpopulation and global warming. Sol discovers in the Survey Report‘s pages that the oceans are wrecked beyond repair and cannot produce the plankton the Soylent Corporation claims goes into its miracle food, Soylent Green. This stark revelation sends Sol to a euthanasia center where—spoiler alert—the Soylent Corporation turns his body into a bunch of little green crackers.

Well, it’s 2019 and the real-life Survey Report is spring’s most talked-about book. David Wallace-Wells published The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming, a follow-up to his 2017 New York article of the same name. I knew I had to get my hands on a copy. However, when I logged onto my Sonoma County Library account, I discovered that the reservation queue was 99 people long. To skip the queue, I bought a digital copy for my second-hand Kindle. (Yes, I was trying to be ecologically friendly, but even Amazon was out of physical copies!)

After reading a few chapters, I immediately understood why just about everyone in Sonoma County is trying to get their hands on The Uninhabitable Earth: we’re living it. In the last two years, we’ve been burned, smoked, and most recently, drowned. Of the Camp Fire, the author comes to the same grim conclusion that there is something uniquely awful and foretelling about a town called Paradise burning to the ground.

As a Tubbs Fire survivor, I initially felt strange reading about events I experienced firsthand. It was then I realized that Wells’ book was providing what North Bay residents need: context. The chapters on ocean acidification, sea level rise and economic effects taught me much about how the North Bay’s recent misery ties into climate change’s greater story. To paraphrase Shakespeare, ours is one of the millions of small stages where the climate change drama is playing out. Wells is helping us step back and see the whole story.

As you might expect, The Uninhabitable Earth offers very little hope for the near future. For instance, Wells predicts that by 2050—the year I’ll be the same age my mother is now—we will live in a world without coral reefs, a world where more than 10 million people die each year from air pollution alone. And that’s the absolute best-case scenario.

But Wells clings to optimism. He credits this feeling to becoming a father while writing his book. He mourns the fact that his little girl will come of age in “interesting times,” but even so, he believes that a good future is possible. Because there is still so much we can save.

The Sonoma County Library may not have an available copy of The Uninhabitable Earth for a long time, but considering the book’s message, I hope the queue never dips below 90. If you can’t wait, save a tree and buy a digital copy.

The Xavier Factor

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By any account, it looked like a pretty busy day yesterday at Xavier Becerra’s office. The state attorney general’s office pushed out four press releases, mostly directed at holding Washington D.C. accountable—but also at police accountability in the state.

In one announcement, Becerra denounced President Donald Trump’s rollback of offshore drilling rules that came about after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

He also stood ready to defend Californians against Trump’s “faith-based” refusal-of-care announcement at the National Prayer Breakfast this week, that will, Becerra charged, “allow broad, sweeping refusals of care based on religious or moral objections, even in emergency circumstances.” The LGBTQ community has denounced the move and Becerra pledged to protect them.

The activist AG further announced that California, leading a coalition of 20 states had filed a reply brief to Trump’s challenge to their lawsuit, California et. al. v Trump, et al., over the president’s national emergency declaration at the southern border.

While not mentioned by name, the fourth May 2 press release from Becerra was obliquely tied to the president, to the extent that Trump has enacted a Muslim ban while defending racial profiling and stop-and-frisk police policies—and pardoning racial profilers such as former Arizona sheriff Joe Arapio.

The fourth release announced a new video to help enhance public buy-in of an ambitious police-accountability law. In 2015, the state of California passed the Racial and Identity Profiling Act, (AB 953), a first-in-the-nation law which requires, by 2023, that all law enforcement agencies across the state collect detailed information and recordings of stops and searches, including data on the officers’ perception of the person being stopped, in order to combat policing profiling of suspects.

But earlier this year, the board that was created with the passage of RIPA released a report that found very little evidence of racial profiling in California in 2017.

The California Racial and Identity Profiling Advisory Board (comprised of a cross-section of law enforcement personnel, community representatives, and other appointees) was created to “shepherd this data collection and provide public reports with the ultimate objective to eliminate racial and identity profiling and improve and understand diversity in law enforcement through training, education, and outreach.”

In 2017, it cast a wide net to determine the extent of the racial-profiling problem California—but the results indicated that there was practically no racial-profiling problem in California. Of the 453 agencies subject to RIPA reporting in 2017, 79 said they had no civilian complaints reported that year; 374 agencies reported that the had one or more complaint.

According to press reports, the RIPA board was split on what the data meant: For some law enforcement representatives it meant that there wasn’t much of a racial profiling crisis in California. For police-accountability advocates, it meant that the data-collection process under RIPA was either flawed or corrupted by the so-called police “blue wall,” or both.

Multiple civilian complaints were reported by 141 agencies, which received 865 complaints (out of a total of 9,459) that alleged racial or identity profiling during a police stop. Ten percent of the complaints that reached a disposition were sustained. The remainder were either un-sustained, exonerated, or determined to be unfounded.

This spring, eight large agencies—the California Highway Patrol, the Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, the San Diego Police Department, and the San Francisco Police Department—sent a year’s worth of data to the state Department of Justice on April 1, under the timetable set by the RIPA law when it was enacted.

In all, the data collected over the past year represents 1.8 million “interactions between peace officers and the public,” according to the May 2 release and will be analyzed for next year’s annual report.

As it reported a low number of civilian complaints in its 2017 study (released this March in the RIPA board’s 2019 report), the board addressed a possible absence of public buy-in in RIPA’s data-collection process as the culprit behind what to many police-accountability activists were seen as surprisingly or even shockingly low numbers.

The board aimed in the annual report released in March to “enhance the transparency of the stop data collection process by providing the public with detailed information on how the data is collected and submitted and how the Department [of Justice] and law enforcement agencies ensure the integrity of this data.”

That information includes the date, time and duration of a stop, the reason for a stop, the officer’s perception of the race, ethnicity, age, gender, disability or language fluency of the person stopped.

Now the board has released a video to address the major concern raised by the 2017 study: how to gain and the public’s trust and maintain the integrity of the data collected by officers.

The video sets out to “describe some of the mechanisms in place to data is complete and accurate,” according to the AG’s May 2 press release, which goes on to explain that “these efforts include local internal compliance audits, error notifications automatically built into the state collection system, and review of the data by government and academic researchers who can check for anomalies during analysis.

“The Board recognizes that working to address community concerns by building confidence in the data collection process is an important step in achieving its larger purpose of eliminating racial and identity profiling. Additionally, the video also features community organizations and academic institutions discussing how the data collected on police interactions with the public can be used to better understand who is stopped and why.”

The RIPA rollout is pegged to the size of law enforcement agencies around the state. Under the law signed by then Gov. Jerry Brown, agencies with more than 1,000 peace officers had to file their first reports with the state Department of Justice by April 1 of this year. Agencies with between 667 and 1,000 peace officers will submit their first reports by next April 1; those with between 334 and 667 peace officers will be RIPA-compliant by 2022 (this includes the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office), and agencies with fewer than 334 officers will issue their first reports in 2023.

Skinhead in the Game

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Confederate flags at the Petaluma July 4 parade. Racist graffiti scrawled on an RV in Healdsburg. Allegations of bias crime in gay-friendly Guerneville and a Sebastopol Road dollar store. Identity Evropa stickers at Santa Rosa Junior College and in downtown Windsor. Clearly, the North Bay hasn’t been immune to an upsurge in white nationalism, hate crimes and bias-related outbursts over the past few years.

Last July, a report from state Attorney General Xavier Becerra found a 17 percent jump in hate crimes in California between 2016 and 2017. As the AG prepares this year’s “state of hate” report, there’s a big anti-hate event at the Congregation Shomrei Torah in Santa Rosa this weekend. Saturday night starting at 7pm, the documentary White Right—Meeting the Enemy will be screened, and former white supremacist Arno Michaelis will be on hand to give a talk.

Michaelis left his skinhead past behind and in 2017 coauthored The Gift of Our Wounds with Pardeep Singh Kaleka, whose father was murdered at the Milwaukee Oak Creek Sikh Temple massacre in 2012.

Michaelis has come a very long way from his skinhead days, when he would get drunk, crack skulls, and play in a race-metal band called Centurion—while also organizing the world’s largest racist skinhead organization.

He started writing My Life After Hate in 2007 and published it in 2010; the book pulls no punches about Michaelis’ violent, hateful past and how he came to eventually knock on doors for Barack Obama’s presidential run (and form an education-and-healing nonprofit called Life After Hate). His exit from the skinhead movement came about, Michaelis writes, when he became a single parent at the age of 24 and realized that—like many of his friends—he was headed to prison or an early death if he didn’t change his ways and his perspective on his white identity.

“I know where racists are coming from, and I pity them as much as I pity their victims,” he writes. “Hate takes a terrible toll on life. Fear is indeed the mind-killer. We all have the option of living a life of love and compassion, and I’m here to say that the world really is as beautiful a place as you care to envision.”

The North Bay is, by and large, a beautiful place but there’s always room for more love and compassion, even here. In January, a Santa Rosa woman was sentenced to three months in jail and probation after being convicted by Sonoma District Attorney Jill Ravitch for racially charged hate crimes committed against a Mexican woman and her children at a dollar store in Santa Rosa.

“Fortunately, we rarely come upon hate crimes in our community,” Ravitch noted at the time of the sentencing. “But when the facts support charging a hate crime we will do so and will seek an appropriate sanction, including incarceration.”

Guerneville’s gay community has also been victimized by hate, according to the D.A. Last month, a man was sentenced to nine months for a “criminal threat constituting a hate crime” which took place in 2018 when the perpetrator hurled a homophobic slur and threatened to blow up a gay barista at Starbucks (along with Safeway and the Guerneville Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office substation).

The man had previously stolen a gay pride flag from the town flagpole. When he was sentenced, Ravitch said in a statement that “in a community known for tolerance of all sorts of people and issues, this conduct was rightly prosecuted and punished. The outcome of this case should serve as a strong message to anyone considering the use of hateful speech or conduct.”

A third alleged hate crime occurred in Santa Rosa earlier this year when a 22-year-old man beat up a 67-year-old Korean man and tried to rob him. Police scanner reports posted online reported that the assailant questioned the man’s citizenship while assaulting him—“Are you from the United States?”—leading to a hate crime charge. The alleged assailant was charged with elder abuse, battery with serious bodily injury, and robbery. He was sent to jail, and bail was set at $35,000. What’s the takeaway?

“Every minute you spend hating someone is a hole in your life,” Michaelis writes in My Life After Hate. Come hear him talk about it on Saturday.

Congregation Shomrei Torah, 2600 Bennett Valley Road. May 4, 7pm. Free.

Tunnel Visions

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The California Department of Water Resources announced today that it was withdrawing proposed permit applications for former Gov. Jerry Brown’s twin-tunnel ‘WaterFix’ project in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.

The move formally puts to rest Brown’s much-derided and decades-long pursuit of two massive water- and fish-conveyance tunnels to ensure water security in the state while protecting the fragile Delta ecosystem. That plan would have cost California at least $20 billion—and up to $70 billion by some estimates.

Gov. Gavin Newsom pledged to pull the plug on Brown’s plan as a candidate and has called for a smaller, single tunnel to modernize the state’s water delivery system. The DWR says the single-tunnel project is needed to protect water supplies from seawater intrusion into the Delta, and to mitigate potential damage from earthquakes. “It will be designed,” says DWR of Newsom’s tunnel vision, “to protect water supply reliability while limiting impacts on local Delta communities and fish.”

North Bay State Sen. Bill Dodd cheered Newsom and the DWR’s move to rescind the Brown-era applications and twin-tunnel plan, which he describes as “fatally flawed.”

“By closing this chapter on the euphemistically named WaterFix,” says Dodd in a statement, “I believe we can move to a thoughtful, collaborative approach that meets our water needs while safeguarding the environmental and economic vitality of the Delta.”

Welcome to Lumaville

After a drug overdose, art student Theda becomes an unwitting participant in her university’s experimental psychology program. Undergoing a new drug therapy, Theda begins to see the branching possibilities of reality, experiences alternate universes and contends with a doppelganger. Determined to escape the therapy, Theda mentally travels through a looking glass of quantum physics and ultimately must look into her own nature.

That’s the audacious plot of the new feature film, Pill Head, which dives into the deep end of cinema’s absurdity pool with arthouse flair. Conceived of, produced and filmed almost entirely in Petaluma, Pill Head is the latest creation from producer Karen Hess and writer-director Daedalus Howell, who collaborate on outside-the-box interactive art experiences in their ongoing endeavor, Culture Department.

“We created Culture Department as a vehicle for our projects,” says Hess.

“As a way to contain them,” says Howell.

Pill Head is by far the pair’s most ambitious project yet, and the film unintentionally turned into a love letter to the filmmakers’ hometown.

Pill Head is set within Howell’s fictional take on Petaluma, “Lumaville,” a sleepy Northern California college town in the grips of a startup boom that was also the setting for his 2015 sci-fi novel Quantum Deadline.

In addition to the themes of identity and mental health, Pill Head also wrestles with notions of nostalgia and redemption.

“I was interested in the possibilities of one’s life, and how every possibility could be realized if we had enough time,” says Howell. “I really enjoyed the idea of somebody who had crossed one step too far, and how far back the journey back would be.”

In the case of Pill Head, it’s college student Theda, brilliantly played by actress and Petaluma native Emily Ahrens (now Emily Tugaw), who takes one dose too many and finds herself in a drug-induced wonderland of possibilities.

“When I read it, I really loved it,” says Hess. “It had a different vibe to it and I wanted to make sure it happened.”

“Karen is great to work with because she’s super supportive,” says Howell. “She’s able to not just see a vision, but to complement and amplify a vision.”

Conceptually, Pill Head is a movie that plays out like a memory; nothing is exactly as it seems, but rather as it is remembered.

“There’s a theme of nostalgia, but it’s not pure nostalgia,” says Hess. “We’ve had people comment that the film reminds them of when they were young, but from different eras.”

“There’s something in the film that allows people to project a vision of their own youth to a degree,” says Howell.

For the Petaluma-born Hess and Howell, who have seen the city’s transformation from farm town to bustling hub, Pill Head is also a snapshot of the town as they see it today.

“This film is a time capsule,” says Howell.

Howell and Hess are also very aware of the history of filmmaking in Petaluma, and part of the impetus of Pill Head was to revisit Petaluma locations that were used in films like American Graffiti and Peggy Sue Got Married and, as Howell puts it, to reclaim them.

“Petaluma is like our own back lot,” says Howell. “We went to Paramount studios at one point scouting, really just hanging out in the lot, but they took us to their alley set, and it was a dead ringer for American Alley.”

The brick-lined American Alley is featured in the film, as are other downtown locations like the recently reopened music venue the Big Easy (see Music, pg 23), the Petaluma Masonic Hall and David Yearsley River Heritage Center, situated along the Petaluma River.

The film also features cameos by local characters like Eli Lucas, a longtime fixture known for roller-skating through Petaluma dressed in a Unitard, curly wig and aviator sunglasses and carrying a boombox blasting disco music.

“That’s a touchstone of Petaluma that George Lucas forgot to get,” says Howell with a laugh.

Stylistically, the black-and-white feature takes its main inspiration from the French New Wave and films like Breathless and Cleo From 5 to 7 that employed handheld cameras and nontraditional staging to achieve a cinéma vérité aesthetic that’s akin to a documentary. Other inspirations came from the early work of cult film veterans Jim Jarmusch and David Lynch.

“That filmmaking production style seemed to suit our budget and timeline,” says Howell, who shot at 20 locations within Petaluma and Santa Rosa.

The filmmaking process was not without its challenges and the sheer amount of work almost overwhelmed the team, especially given that Pill Head started shooting in October 2017, when wildfires brought the North Bay to a standstill.

After a two-week break in shooting, Hess redid the production schedule, and shooting ran through the end of 2017.

From there, Howell and Hess spent months at the editing deck. As Pill Head took shape, additional post-production editors helped with technical aspects like giving the soundtrack a Dolby 5.1 surround sound mix.

“I think the movie transcends the sum of its parts, and a lot of it has to do with the energy that everyone brought to it,” Howell says.

Prior to a video-on-demand release on May 16, Pill Head is getting a limited theatrical run in the North Bay, with screenings scheduled for May 9 in Santa Rosa, May 13 and 15 in Petaluma and May 13 in Sonoma and Fairfax.

“There’s so many ways to see Petaluma that really pop on the big screen,” says Howell. “I don’t think Petalumans have seen Petaluma this way.”

Indeed, Howell and Hess began to see Petaluma differently during the making of the film.

“I didn’t realize how much I love Petaluma until I saw the film in its final cut,” says Howell. “Petaluma is weird, and there’s no way around it. And the artists here will always remind you and reveal to you how weird it is and how weird you are.”

“As much hipster shellac that gets dripped over this place, there is something, it’s in the water, there is something here that is vital and that cannot be obscured by whatever pour-over coffee trend may occur,” says Howell. “If we’re not keeping Petaluma weird, we’re at least keeping ourselves weird in Petaluma.”

Mall Cats

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Santa Rosans woke up Monday morning a circling helicopter and news that a juvenile mountain lion was spotted camping out under at bush near Macy’s downtown at the Santa Rosa Plaza.

Headline machines cranked up around the North Bay to describe the peculiar phenomenon—”Mauled at the Mall!” was one headline we were glad to not see—as the animal was quickly tranquilized by the California Department of Fish & Wildlife, who said the animal would be released back into the wild. A leading theory from state officials was that the animal had found its way to Santa Rosa by following the city’s namesake creek downtown, or via the Manzanita creek.

“We’ve had a lot of interest and a lot of the public connecting with us about the mountain lion in the mall, says Dr. Quinton Martins, the Director and Principal Investigator with Living with Lions, which tracks the animals’ presence in the state. The sighting of large wild animals juxtaposed in urban environments is not a new story in the North Bay but it does have a new twist in recent years. Multiple online resources devoted to the life and times of apex predators, not to mention California environmental organizations, have noted an uptick in the number of animals loping into urban areas in recent years—mostly due to their habitats being squeezed by development or, as the case may be, a year-round fire season that’s seen beasts of all size and dimension fleeing the flames for un-scorched earth.

“It’s funny that it takes a mountain lion to go shopping at Macy’s to get people really aware of the fact that we are living with lions,” says Martins, who says the cat was given an ear tag to track it, and that its DNA was collected for testing before it was released. He estimates the cat to be between eight and 10 months old and says his organization will now try to figure out where it came from and see if it’s related to any of the other 17 cats the Living With Lions is tracking.

A posting on the mountain lion–loving site knowyourneighbors.com was characteristic in describing the phenomenon that hit home this week: “As mountain lion habitat becomes more fragmented, dispersing young mountain lions often find their way into urban areas by accident. Urbanization and habitat fragmentation disrupts the natural dispersal landscape, and reduces the amount of available territory for dispersing young.”

That site, among others, shares some recommendations on how to deal with the arrival of mountain lions: keep the pets locked up, not to mention the goats and sheep, and other vulnerable animals, from dusk ’til dawn.

The mountain lion was spotted at around 9am, and by 10am life had returned to normal on the corner of 4th Street and Avenue B. It was an hour that will live on in the imaginations of Santa Rosans mesmerized by the bizarre spectacle. We anticipate that a limited-edition Mountain Lion Malt Ale to emerge from nearby Russian River Brewery any day now, to commemorate the occasion.

But there’s a larger “what’s it all mean” storyline here that’s of a more spiritual question in search of an answer. While rare in Santa Rosa, mountain lions do appear on occasion in West Marin and especially in the Mt. Tam watershed—and when it happens, folks out in unicorn bush country tend to be both freaked out (hide the Pomeranian!) and spiritually awestruck at the sighting.

The Marin Municipal Water District reports on its website that the agency’s “watershed management staff occasionally receive reports of mountain lion sightings on Mt. Tamalpais Watershed lands. These sightings are not cause for alarm, but the district recommends that visitors to public lands follow the mountain lion precautions provided by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.”

Those precautions include never hiking or jogging alone, refraining from leaving pets or small children outdoors unattended, and to “acknowledge that you live in mountain lion country and make a commitment to educate yourself.”

For all the caution recommended, it’s also helpful to educate oneself about the mountain lion’s heavy symbolism for the spiritually inclined, especially since Fish & Wildlife says that “mountain lion attacks on humans are extremely rare,” and that the animal is likely more scared of the humans it encounters than vice versa.

As a spiritual matter, for example, the noble animal pops up in Jimi Hendrix’s “Voodoo Chile,” right after the moon turns fire red and Jimi’s gypsy mother drops dead upon seeing the dread spawn she’s just birthed. Abandoned to his fate, like Moses, Jimi sings, “Well, mountain lions found me there waiting, and set me on an eagle’s back.”

Hendrix was part Cherokee, and First Nations folklore holds the mountain lion in very high totemic regard; the animal is conferred the status of “magical sun dancer,” and one of the bits of wisdom that pops up on sites devoted to animal symbolism is that if a mountain lion should appear in your cosmology, at your local mall or atop your local mountain, its message is that the human beings who engage with it must “find the balance between freedom and maintaining boundaries.”

In life as in redevelopment, that’s a message with some real poignancy. It’s especially wise counsel for a North Bay now under an intensive rebuilding regime after the 2017 wildfires wiped out five percent of the housing stock in Santa Rosa—a rebuild that’s met with increasing housing unaffordability for an underpaid North Bay workforce from Larkspur to Cloverdale, not to mention an anticipated population spike in coming years up and down the Highway 101 transit corridor to San Francisco.

Those “boundaries” alluded to by First Nations people are presumably inclusive of the locally legislated “urban growth boundaries” that have kept the North Bay from morphing into a gigantic sprawl with even less wild space to accommodate the occasional beast that wanders into town to check out the sale at Macy’s. Organizations including the Sonoma Land Trust have put a emphasis on maintaining, or developing, so-called “wildlife corridors,” around the region to mitigate against any local destruction of animals’ traditional rangelands at the hands of, for example, expanded vineyard footprints and the like.

Any time a big animal shows up downtown, it’s serious business—a potentially dangerous animal on the loose in a populated area. And, while mountain lion attacks on humans are rare, they do occur. After a mountain lion killed a bicyclist in Washington State, in 2018, the Mercury News reported that it was only the sixth fatal mountain-lion attack in the country over the preceding 25 years; three of the attacks occurred in California.

But if this episode is repeated Fish & Wildlife recommends that you fight back like it’s Black Friday and you’re beating off fellow shoppers to be first in line for the Christmas sales at Sears. “Research on mountain lion attacks suggests that many potential victims have fought back successfully with rocks, sticks, garden tools, even an ink pen or bare hands,” the state reports. “Try to stay on your feet. If knocked down, try to protect head and neck.”

Healdsburg State Senator Mike McGuire is hosting a hearing this Friday, May 3, that’s devoted to the prospects for offshore wind energy in the region and how it may impact California fisheries.

Earlier this year we reported on a push to develop wind farms off the Humboldt coast that’s been generally supported by California coastal electeds ranging from U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman to McGuire himself (“Full Tilt,” Feb. 27). McGuire is Chair of the Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture and says in a statement that he’s calling the meeting to take a close look “at any potential environmental impacts it could have on our state’s fisheries.”

The hearing is being presented as a question in search of answer that’s already been answered: “California’s Fisheries and Wildlife: Can they co-exist with Offshore Wind Energy Development?”

The answer appears to be, “They’re going to have to figure out a way to co-exist,” given McGuire’s support for offshore wind farms, which are increasingly being presented as a fait accompli, given the state’s robust push to go all-renewables by 2045—and by the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management initiating an offshore-leasing program in 2018.

Earlier this year, the American Jobs Project, a Democratic-leaning nonprofit think tank founded by former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm, issued a white paper in support of two wind farms under consideration—one at Morro Bay and the aforementioned Humboldt County coast—and said that a combination of federal leases and state interest could see the first offshore wind farm leases as early as next year.

Coastal congressman Jared Huffman signaled support for a locally based wind energy project run by the Redwood Coast Energy Authority (Humboldt’s communitychoice aggregate), as he noted its potential benefit to Sonoma and Marin counties, both of which have their own CCA’s, Sonoma Clean Energy and Marin Clean Energy. Those entities purchase renewable energy from solar and wind farms that are often many miles down the electric wire from the point of consumption. Huffman says offshore wind in Humboldt could be of service to those CCAs, given that “there’s way more energy potential than there is demand,” in Humboldt County.

McGuire notes in his statement that “the burgeoning Pacific offshore wind energy industry is going to be a critical component of our state’s energy supply,” as he highlights the need for input from fisheries experts in advance of any leases.

As we reported last month, offshore wind projects on the East Coast had a traditional base of opposition driven by the fishing industry’s concerns over the tethered windmills’ potential impact on their gear and on their traditional fishing grounds.

Those concerns gave way over time, and the nation’s first big offshore wind-farm went online off the coast of Rhode Island in 2016. As we reported in February from the department of irony, Fishermen are now using their boats to haul “eco-tourists” to the site to check out the windmills, whose blade-span is more than the length of a football field and quite impressive to behold.

Friday’s meeting is taking place up in Eureka from 11am to 2pm and will be live-streamed via the state’s Joint Committee on Fisheries and Aquaculture online portal. Speakers are coming from a range of shareholders—including the BOEM, the California Coastal Commission, representatives from the windmill-energy industry, the National Resources Defense Council, and several organizations representing fishermen’s interests. They may be tilting at windmills.

Not So Easy

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When Amber Driscoll and her partner Roger Tschann opened the Big Easy five years ago in downtown Petaluma, they envisioned the underground space as a vibrant music venue.

Located in a former sensuality shop on American Alley near Driscoll and Tschann’s small-plate restaurant, Speakeasy, the Big Easy became a lively destination in the town’s cultural scene for visitors and locals alike, offering live jazz, folk, rock and other music four to five nights a week for little or no cover charge.

In addition to hosting local bands and musicians, the Big Easy is also a popular destination for North Bay charity events, fundraisers, weddings and other private events.

Last fall, the music at the Big Easy was silenced when city inspections lead to permitting problems.

“I’m chalking it up to bad luck, really,” says Driscoll. Following an initial inspection by the fire department in late October, which resulted in some minimal retrofitting requests, re-inspections suddenly incorporated over a dozen city officials in departments like building and planning, wastewater and health, triggering a closure of the venue.

“I tried to fight [closing the venue], but wanted to play along because I thought it would be pretty quick,” says Driscoll. “But they kept coming at us with new lists.”

After several back-and-forth attempts to resolve permitting and construction issues, Driscoll made a plea to the Petaluma city council and the public to support their efforts to get back open.

Soon, Driscoll found an advocate in Petaluma Economic Development manager Ingrid Alverde; an online crowdfunding campaign raised nearly $10,000 for construction costs.

“It was a crazy learning experience,” says Driscoll. “But the good thing is that I think the community, having had this venue taken away, realized how much they missed us.”

The Big Easy came out the other side of the ordeal and reopened April 3. Currently, the club is hosting bands on Wednesday through Saturday, with local acts like the Incubators, Citizen Flannel and the Wednesday Night Big Band taking the stage this week.

“The community really wants this space,” says Driscoll. “It’s a good reminder for everyone that this town values art and entertainment.”

Final Fight

Like many others at the end of a life of violence, the would-be demiurge Thanos (Josh Brolin) has retired to the country. His new planet looks like upcountry Maui. Dissolving half of all life was a tough job, but now he’s hung up his armor to rust, a scarecrow in his vegetable garden. Thanos is boiling himself a meal of outer-space taro root, when suddenly, through his roof bursts a living blast of light that was once known as Carol Danvers.

In the early scenes of Avengers: Endgame—indeed, throughout the entire movie—you get what was ordered: Thanos gets barbecued and body-slammed by several of Earth’s mightiest heroes. The ingenuity here is that this attack comes at the beginning of the film, not the end. The problem of the so-called ‘Infinity Stones’ proves to be a difficult anti-rapture, whose first step is triggered by the paws of a storage-room rat.

This massive cycle is a feat of cinematic engineering for which there is no parallel. Completing it, the Russo Brothers use their three hours not just for the usual battle royales, last stands and self-sacrifice, but also to capture the mood of a grieving Earth. As Ant-Man, the least respected member of the team, Paul Rudd does the great old Ebenezer Scrooge at the graveside scene, seeing his name on a cenotaph to “the Vanished” in Golden Gate Park. Survivors have moved on—Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) has also resettled in the country with wife Pepper (Gwyneth Paltrow) and child; Mark Ruffalo’s Bruce Banner, no longer bifurcated, but a scholarly Hulk with glasses, signs autographs for the kids who tug his sleeve.

In heading off Thanos at the pass, Stark gets to see his father one last time. Thor—who reacted to the extermination of half the universe by becoming a beer-bellied seaside town slouch—visits his mother on Asgard once more.

Avengers: Endgame didn’t seem a moment too long, and there wasn’t an awkward performance among its cast. The film has as much faith in quietness as in the noise of mile-long spaceships. For something that ends up nigh-Armageddon, there are a lot of scenes around lakes, scenes of fathers and daughters, quiet tearful farewells and the trilling of birds.

‘Avengers: Endgame’ is playing everywhere.

Weed Workers Unite?

Sounds like we need an ICE raid in
the cannabis industry (“Look for the
Union . . . Edible,” March 19)

via sanjoseinside.com

This is clearly work for slave labor, undocumented Democrats that don’t pay taxes.

via sanjoseinside.com

Renewables
Reaction

There needs to be some skepticism regarding the number of jobs created by wind and solar installations (“Full Tilt,” February 26; see also this week’s News Briefs). In Michigan, we were told a large number of jobs would be created by a 700 acre solar “farm” to be placed on actual prime farmland. When pressed for the actual number of FTE jobs, the developer admitted the cited jobs would only be during construction and after that, they would only have 2 to 5 FTEs. While there is a need for more clean energy, it needs to be placed responsibly. The proposed 700 acres of solar would not reduce CO2 in the air as much as the same acres of crops.

via goodtimes.sc.com

Stuttering Awareness

Do you stutter? Do you know someone who does? Most people do. More than three million Americans and 70 million people across the globe stutter, but sadly it is still quite misunderstood. Help us change that. May 13-19 is National Stuttering Awareness Week. To support the stuttering community, the nonprofit Stuttering Foundation launched a new website—stutteringhelp.org—with easy-to-find information like articles, brochures, magazines, videos, research reports and counselor referrals, with a new laptop- and mobile-friendly interface.

The Stuttering Foundation has accurate, trusted information about stuttering and free help on its new website—StutteringHelp.org.

Please take a look and tell a friend.

Via Bohemian.com

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

Super Soy Me

Like any typical chump, I planned to start an ambitious new diet on New Year's Day. Fine, the day after New Year's Day. The diet was strict, but had just one simple rule: Eat food, mostly frozen, as much as I want, on a $100 per week budget. And here's the kicker: Eat only food that's made by Amy's Kitchen,...

Difficult Reading

In the 1973 film Soylent Green, Detective Thorn (Charlton Heston) finds a copy of the Soylent Oceanographic Survey Report: 2015 to 2019 in the home of a murdered Soylent Corporation executive. Thorn gives the book to his roommate, Sol (Edward G. Robinson), an intellectual old man who grew up in a time before the world went to hell from overpopulation...

The Xavier Factor

By any account, it looked like a pretty busy day yesterday at Xavier Becerra’s office. The state attorney general’s office pushed out four press releases, mostly directed at holding Washington D.C. accountable—but also at police accountability in the state. In one announcement, Becerra denounced President Donald Trump’s rollback of offshore drilling rules that came about after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon...

Skinhead in the Game

Reformed white supremacist in Santa Rosa this weekend to preach anti-hate message

Tunnel Visions

The California Department of Water Resources announced today that it was withdrawing proposed permit applications for former Gov. Jerry Brown’s twin-tunnel ‘WaterFix’ project in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. The move formally puts to rest Brown’s much-derided and decades-long pursuit of two massive water- and fish-conveyance tunnels to ensure water security in the state while protecting the fragile Delta ecosystem. That...

Welcome to Lumaville

Filmmakers Daedalus Howell and Karen Hess capture the weirdness of Petaluma.

Mall Cats

Santa Rosans woke up Monday morning a circling helicopter and news that a juvenile mountain lion was spotted camping out under at bush near Macy’s downtown at the Santa Rosa Plaza. Headline machines cranked up around the North Bay to describe the peculiar phenomenon—"Mauled at the Mall!" was one headline we were glad to not see—as the animal was quickly...

Not So Easy

When Amber Driscoll and her partner Roger Tschann opened the Big Easy five years ago in downtown Petaluma, they envisioned the underground space as a vibrant music venue. Located in a former sensuality shop on American Alley near Driscoll and Tschann's small-plate restaurant, Speakeasy, the Big Easy became a lively destination in the town's cultural scene for visitors and...

Final Fight

Like many others at the end of a life of violence, the would-be demiurge Thanos (Josh Brolin) has retired to the country. His new planet looks like upcountry Maui. Dissolving half of all life was a tough job, but now he's hung up his armor to rust, a scarecrow in his vegetable garden. Thanos is boiling himself a meal...

Weed Workers Unite?

Sounds like we need an ICE raid in the cannabis industry ("Look for the Union . . . Edible," March 19) —Hoapres via sanjoseinside.com This is clearly work for slave labor, undocumented Democrats that don't pay taxes. —M.T.Roach via sanjoseinside.com Renewables Reaction There needs to be some skepticism regarding the number of jobs created by wind and solar installations ("Full Tilt," February 26; see also this...
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