Law & Auditor

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The uncertain fate of a Sonoma County policy-accountability office will be a part of the discussion at the Board of Supervisors meeting on Dec. 4.

There, Jerry Threet, the current director of the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO), will present his fiscal year 2017–18 annual report to the supervisors—as well as proposed new language that would modify the existing ordinance and enhance the IOLERO’s working interactions with the sheriff’s office.

The IOLERO was created in the aftermath of the fatal 2013 shooting of teenager Andy Lopez by the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO). Now, just three years into its rollout, the IOLERO is under fire from an SCSO that would just as soon eliminate the office altogether.

Threet is leaving his $160,000 post at the end of the year, citing health concerns. His annual report, released in September, was met with stiff pushback from the SCSO, which called for the elimination of the IOLERO in a public response to Threet’s report.

The SCSO has called for the IOLERO to be replaced by an on-contract auditor who would not be a part of the county bureaucracy and could, say criminal-justice activists who contacted the Bohemian, signal a watered-down version of police accountability.

The IOLERO was created as a county office to provide for a rolling review of police investigations into claims of officer misconduct. The office is also empowered to field complaints from Sonoma County citizens, to audit investigations that spring from complaints made to the SCSO, and to provide a measure of community outreach via a citizen-led community advisory council.

Threet notes at several junctures in his report that trust and cooperation between the IOLERO and SCSO started to break down in the aftermath of the devastating 2017 wildfires, which occurred as the election battle for a new sheriff was getting rolling. Sheriff-elect Mark Essick takes office next month.

The two-person IOLERO office has a nearly $500,000 annual budget and, in its latest report, spent some time reporting, for example, on the investigation into a controversial “yard-counseling” incident at the Sonoma County Main Adult Detention Facility.

The videotaped yard-counseling interactions between corrections officers and inmates ended up costing Sonoma County $1.7 in settlement fees that sprang from a class-action lawsuit against the county and sheriff’s office. When the settlement was announced earlier this year, Sheriff Rob Giordano announced that the agency had ended the practice of yard-counseling disruptive inmates.

Essick said in a recent interview with the Bohemian that the yard-counseling ban would remain under his leadership. Less clear is how he plans to address the chasm of trust that’s apparently sprung up between the IOLERO and SCSO.

Giordano will represent the SCSO at the Tuesday meeting before the supervisors, four of five of whom have already voted, in closed session, in favor of replacing Threet next year with a new IOLERO top lawyer.

David Rabbitt is the lone supervisor on record opposed to the IOLERO’s continuation. Giordano is also leaving his post at the end of this year, after having been named interim sheriff following the resignation of Steve Freitas.

The timing, and the alacrity of the SCSO’s response to Threet’s second annual report, comes as Essick is poised to take over the top-cop job in Sonoma County in January.

The response reads, in part, “Generally, the Sheriff’s Office believes there is a fundamental flaw in the design of the current IOLERO office. At its core, the perceived success of IOLERO depends, at least in part, on the perceived failure or shortcomings of the Sheriff’s Office. The IOLERO Director dedicated a large portion of the report on his perceived, personal and political, issues with the Sheriff’s Office and the audit process.”

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The SCSO says in its response to Threet that it fully supports an audit of its policing practices, but that the supervisors ought to do away with the IOLERO and hire outside auditors on a rolling, non-permanent, contract basis that’s pegged to specific investigations. To Threet and criminal-justice reformers, that’s just another way of saying that the police-accountability protocols in Sonoma County would be watered down under the contract-auditor model. The sheriff’s office doesn’t see it that way:

“The Sheriff’s Office feels a more productive model to accomplish this is to hire a truly neutral, independent, and unbiased auditor for a specific, limited period of time. If there is no expectation of employment beyond a specific period of time, there is no pressure or inherent need to justify IOLERO. This would greatly reduce the chances of either intentional or unintentional bias developing in the auditor. It would also afford the Sheriff’s Office the opportunity to get input from a variety of perspectives outside of the county. The Sheriff’s Office looks forward to continuing to work with the Board of Supervisors to fine tune the auditor model.”

Threet says the SCSO’s call to eliminate the IOLERO and replace it with a contracted auditor was news to him when he read the report. “It’s the first I heard of it, in [Giordano’s] response.”

Essick says that despite taking the reins as elected sheriff in a month, “we still have a sitting sheriff and [Giordano] is the one who is going to be answering, speaking for the SCSO on the report.”

In a phone call with the Bohemian, Essick declined to offer a view on the future of the IOLERO. Giordano’s still his boss, he says. “I could say something that would undermine him. We’re really close to me taking over, but his name is still on the front door. I don’t want to do something to jeopardize the relationship with him.”

No doubt he’s in a bit of a sensitive spot. The unpopular sheriff who was in charge when the IOLERO was created is no longer with the department—and the popular sheriff who is pushing to shut down the IOLERO will be leaving in a month.

Meanwhile, a federal civil lawsuit around the Lopez shooting by an SCSO deputy who remains on the force drags on.

Essick was publically and initially opposed to the creation of the IOLERO as it was being discussed after the Lopez shooting, but expressed support for the office through the course of a robust campaign season that saw the first contested sheriff’s race in the county in nearly three decades.

Word from Giordano, who endorsed Essick, is that it’s premature to discuss what he’ll be saying to the supervisors on Dec. 4. He encouraged the public and media to attend. Police-reform activists will likely turn out in force.

Essick says he’s taking a wait-and-see approach before weighing in on Threet’s proposed changes to the IOLERO ordinance—which generally call for enhanced access to the police agency. The ordinance isn’t on the agenda and isn’t coming up for a vote this week.

“If and when the board decides to take up that discussion and talk about [the ordinance modifications], I’m sure there will be plenty of robust public discussion on it then, and when I get a chance to see what they’re really looking at,” Essick says, “I’d be happy to weigh in—but that could be weeks or a couple months away.”

The Big Idea

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In our Marin-based sister publication this week, the Pacific Sun (Pacificsun.com), there’s a playful story that’s based off of Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom’s ongoing indecisiveness when it comes to telling the world where he and his family will be living when he takes office next month.

Will it be Sacramento or Kentfield? The consensus speculation among media types around the state is that Newsom and his family are staying put: He has a really nice house in tony Kentfield in Marin County, and four children under the age of 10 to think about.

I came up with a few thoughts about why Newsom ought to stay put in Marin, some more goofy than others, but one serious reason has to do with Newsom’s history of being an out-front champion for hopeless ideas that suddenly become the law of the land, or at least part of the land—i.e., gay marriage and cannabis legalization, both of which Newsom has been a flat-out national leader in advancing.

And lots of reporters have been asking of Newsom since election day: Hey, what’s the next Big Idea?

Here’s one: Why doesn’t Newsom break ranks with Gov. Jerry Brown’s equivocating death-penalty posture and declare his opposition to capital punishment in California—and intention to end it? The state under Brown (who opposes the death penalty in principle) has fumbled around the grotesque ethics of cooking up a single-drug protocol that doesn’t fly in the face of constitutional bans on cruel and unusual punishment. It has wasted millions of dollars on a failed execution protocol that has left more than seven-hundred people on death row, with no sign that anyone’s going to be executed anytime soon. Suicide and old age will kill you before the state does. Two of the condemned died last week, as the Los Angeles Times reported—and as it added its voice to the clamor for an end to capital punishment in California (the paper called on Newsom and Brown to work together in Brown’s last days to abolish the death penalty).

For Newsom, the notorious San Quentin State Prison is practically right down the street from Kentfield. He has a chance to go big out the gate, with or without buy-in from the departing Brown. Barack Obama made headlines—and history—as the first U.S. president to visit a federal prison while he was in office. So when was the last time a sitting California governor visited death row? As far as I can tell, the answer is never.

Tom Gogola is the News and Features editor of the ‘North Bay Bohemian’ and ‘Pacific Sun.’

Open Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Letters to the Editor: Novemer 28, 2018

New New Deal

In the last two years, we’ve watched wildfires sweep through our state and devastate communities. The smoke alone has become a national health issue. We must acknowledge the relationship between these massive fires and climate change. For our health and our safety, Californians must demand legislation, at all levels of government, that eliminates our structurally engrained dependence on fossil fuels and carbon emissions. Fortunately, an opportunity has presented itself at the national level via Representative-elect Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The purpose of this letter is to spur readers to learn about her Green New Deal proposal and contact elected officials to demand change.

I support Rep. Ocasio-Cortez’s resolution to create a House Select Committee for a Green New Deal in Congress because its scope matches the urgency of the task at hand. United Nations climate scientists tell us we have just 12 years to move our country off fossil fuels, to avoid catastrophic climate disaster. We need a Green New Deal to create millions of green jobs, move our country off fossil fuels, and protect working people of all backgrounds. Climate change impacts every part of our lives, and we should demand that our representatives support each other to deliver solutions that recognize it.

Santa Rosa

Face It: We’re Screwed

The current state of our country presents a challenging opportunity to integrate an autocratic president and a democratic citizenry. No problem for dictatorship countries where dissidence is forbidden; dissidents are imprisoned, tortured and/or murdered, and the only recourse “the people” have is to violently rebel. No problem for truly democratic countries where dissidence is allowed and dissenters are able to voice their dissatisfaction and disagreement in peaceful protest marches and demonstrations. In our current autocratic democracy, the president “deals” with opponents through fear-inducing and fear-based sanctions, tariffs, border walls, firings, censure, criticism, judgment, blame, threats, untruths and unilateral decisions and behaviors that only create a false “oneness” through separatist and exclusionary one-sidedness—rather than achieve a true unifying relationship between parties. Yet we, “the American people,” may have some hope of unitedness through real legislative representation, governmental checks and balances, and a nonpartisan investigation of the presidency. That all may mitigate the rising and deplorable occurrences of civil rights violations, hate crimes, gun violence and mass murders.

Santa Rosa

Dept. of
Corrections

In last week’s news story, “Paradise Glossed,” we errantly reported that PG&E had been found liable for the 2017 Tubbs fire. PG&E has been found liable for 11 of the 16 wildfires fires that broke out in California in late 2017, but no determination has yet been made as to the cause of the Tubbs fire. We regret the error.

High Tides…

Here’s a question for budding chemists in the land of milk and marijuana: What do you get when you mix water and THC extracted from weed? Answer? You get cannabis-infused water, of course.

Carbonate the water and now you’ve got a cannabis spritzer. A cannabis cocktail. A bud-based bevie.

Now there’s a local company, Occidental Power, creating THC-infused water that will be on shelves in the New Year. The company uses Russian River tap water that’s filtered before the cannabis is added. Then comes the fizz.

Next year, the folks at Occidental Power plan to buy from local growers, but right now, they’re using their own organic cannabis that they grow outdoors. Only the choicest flowers go into the cocktail. The extracted psychoactive component is added to the water and becomes Mountjoy Sparking Water, which will be available in local dispensaries starting in January 2019, in a childproof, 16-ounce plastic bottle.

The beverage will come in several flavors, including blackberry, lemon, lime, peach and natural—which offers a mix of herbs from the Sonoma County Herb Exchange in Sebastopol. Occidental Power won’t say exactly what herbs go into the mix. The company doesn’t want to give away its secret formula.

Alex Mountjoy is a familiar face in Occidental in Sonoma County. He’ll soon be famous all over town for his cocktail. “For a long time, I wanted a cannabis beverage,” he says. “I developed it as much for myself as for the market.

“I know this might sound clichéd, but our cannabis beverage is a thinking person’s tool that helps balance your life,” he adds. “It certainly balances my life. It’s good for cooking, sleeping and working; it increases productivity.”

Mountjoy and his wife and business partner, Jenny, are no strangers to manufacturing and marketing. For years, they sold clocks, mirrors and picture frames all over the United States. Their factories were located in the East Bay. In addition to the cannabis cocktail, they have a body-care line. Right now none of those products contain cannabis product, but they will in the near future.

They also offer bottles of Mountjoy Sparking Water infused with CBD. Sip the CBD product to help with anxiety and without any psychoactive effects. It’s shipped around the country and also available in local supermarkets.

Miso Challenge

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October 2018 was a sad month for sushi fans around the globe. Tsukiji Market in Tokyo—source of the world’s freshest fish—closed after 83 years of continuous operation. Tsukiji was so famous that, no matter where you were in the world, if you ever paid more than $8 for a single piece of sushi, you knew exactly where the fish came from.

On an unseasonably cold, rainy morning in the summer of 2014, I navigated Tsukiji’s narrow alleys full of styrofoam crates, wholesaler stalls and frantic fishmongers who blared their horns as they sped by at breakneck speed on electric carts carrying the day’s catch.

Using the map a friendly police officer had handed me at the market’s entrance, I found rows upon rows of sushi restaurants near the harbor. After waiting in line at one establishment for over an hour, I took a seat at the sushi bar and ordered raw salmon over rice. That deceptively simple dish had a flavor I’ve been chasing ever since.

So when Sushi Kosho in Sebastopol opened last month, I wondered if chef Jake Rand’s menu would be worthy of Tsukiji. Also, could the restaurant compete against Hana and other popular Sonoma County Japanese restaurants? Sushi Kosho’s initial reviews looked promising, and I made a lunch reservation.

Walking into the restaurant on a quiet afternoon, I recognized that the restaurant’s designer had blended modern fine-dining with touches that suggested northern Japan: dark hardwoods that evoke a feeling of warmth even in the coldest Japanese winters. As I took a seat, chef Rand was preparing a sashimi plate while sous chefs chopped radishes, eggplant and other vegetables for the donburi rice bowls.

I ordered the sushi lunch ($26) and a glass of Minakata Junmai Ginjo sake ($9). The sake—its taste evoking hints of blueberry and banana—arrived in a wine glass. A bit untraditional, but it paired well with the miso soup. For those unfamiliar with Japanese restaurants, you can learn everything you need to know by trying the miso soup. In my experience, if the miso is good, everything else should be, too. And let me tell you, the miso soup at Sushi Kosho is excellent. The balance of onions, mushrooms and miso paste makes for a satisfying broth, something that should only become more delectable as the temperature drops in Sonoma County over the next few weeks.

I ordered another sake to go with a lunch that featured seven pieces of nigiri and six tuna rolls. Sushi Kosho uses red-wine vinegar to flavor its sushi rice, chef Rand explained, which lent it a color that suggested brown rice, though there was no discernible difference in taste. The meal, regardless, was excellent. Each piece of fish melted on my tongue, the rolls’ nori crunched, and the flavors indeed brought back memories of Japan. My only critique: the rice could have been a tad warmer.

As is the case at most Sonoma County sushi outposts, the price point is on the high side and renders Sushi Kosho a place best reserved for special occasions (especially for a freelancer on a budget). Yet the price is just right when it comes to satisfying that sushi craving and experiencing a bit of Tsukiji in Sebastopol.

Sushi Kosho, 6750 McKinley Ave., Sebastopol. 707.827.6373.

Merry Twistmas

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Once upon a time, way back in the summer of 2003, Bohemian contributor David Templeton and producer Dan Zastrow were having a conversation about a strange Christmas story that David had written.

“You know what would be cool?” David said. “Maybe someday finding some interesting people to gather onstage and read a bunch of twisted Christmas stories, and maybe do it as a benefit.” And Dan said, “You know, we really can do that.” And David said, “Really?” And Dan said, “Really!”

And in December of that year, the first ever Twisted Christmas Live! was unveiled.

Performers such as musician Charlie Musselwhite, bluesman Roy Rogers, comedian Johnny Steele, radio’s Steve Jaxon, actress Diane Amos (best known as the Pine-Sol lady in commercials) and dozens of others would regale local audiences over the years with the most twisted Christmas tales imaginable while supporting local food banks. Audiences, at first confused by musicians not playing music and comedians not telling jokes, soon took to the format and it became a sold-out event for years.

After their 2012 “End of the World Show,” Templeton and Zastrow decided to commit their time and energy to other projects, so the final curtain was drawn on Twisted Christmas Live! and Sonoma County Christmases were never the same again.

But like the Grinch returning presents to the Whos in Whoville, Templeton is bringing Twisted Christmas Live! back to the area, this time as a benefit for the Spreckels Theatre Company’s Performing Arts and Youth Theater Programs.

Some of the old crew will return, like comedians Will and Debi Durst and the Reduced Shakespeare Company’s Reed Martin. Newcomers include goth comedian Oliver Graves (America’s Got Talent) and veteran film, television and stage actor Charles Siebert, who spent two years playing Scrooge in 6th Street Playhouse’s Christmas Carol.

Audiences will see these and other performers presenting seven weird, funny, off-the-wall Christmas stories, including a rhyming version of Die Hard, a reading of “The Night Before Christmas” done as a bingo game, an original ghost story by Healdsburg’s Irène Hodes, plus a satirical musical tribute to the music of Disney’s Frozen, some outrageous short films by local filmmaker John Harden and an appearance by the North Bay Zombie Caroling Choir.

Templeton hopes people who want something a little different in their holiday entertainment will still come out. “It’s pretty much for everybody,” he says, “who likes to laugh and gasp and go, ‘Oooooh, I really wasn’t expecting that!'”

Life Saver

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Folk sensation Mary Gauthier is in the business of telling stories. Usually, they are her own, and for over 20 years, Gauthier has plumbed the depths of her soul with introspective and somber tunes about her struggles with childhood abandonment, drugs and other issues, sung with a forlorn Southern accent that regularly brings audiences to tears.

Now Gauthier is using her songwriting gifts to tell a different set of stories. Her 2018 album, Rifles & Rosary Beads, was co-written with U.S. military veterans and their families as part of SongwritingWith:Soldiers, a nonprofit program that facilitates retreats where professional songwriters and wounded veterans collaborate to create music.

“We bear witness and turn their stories into songs,” says Gauthier of SongwritingWith:Soldiers, which she has been active in for over four years.

“I reached a place where I realized these are really good songs, I think I should make a record,” she says. “I got the blessing of the organization to put these songs out in the world.”

Each of the 11 songs on Rifles & Rosary Beads delivers a gut-punch of emotion. Opening track “Soldiering On” juxtaposes a soldier’s mental state in battle and then later at home. “Bullet Holes in the Sky” uses images of color guards and tiny American flags waving in parades to expose a soldier’s loneliness in a society that cannot relate to his wartime service.

“A lot of our veterans feel invisible now; they feel unseen and they feel removed,” Gauthier says. “We call it the civilian-military divide. These songs help bridge that. It gets civilians into a place of empathy with what our veterans and their families are going through.”

About 22 veterans commit suicide every day in the United States. Gauthier hopes to shine a light on their struggles and help them heal.

“When you’ve been traumatized, as so many of our soldiers have been, what happened to you, there’s no words for,” she says. “But this is where music can come in and pick up the thread. I can play the melody and see the tears and know the melody is reflecting how they feel, and then you use metaphor to access what’s inside of them. The song becomes a reflection of their soul, and they suddenly don’t feel so alone. Somebody sees them, somebody understands.”

Wine Train Spotting

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If I hadn’t lost the long-hair look last year, I’d have got even more of a kick out of one of Trade Brewing’s few items of wall decor—that old sign that says, “Hippies use side door.”

I did, in fact, find my way to the side door from one of the backstreets of old Napa. It’s just one block off from new Napa.

Good thing, too, because I might have seen the closed sign and moved on if I’d parked by the front on busy First Street. Trade Brewing recently marked its first year open, but it’s new to me. I must have driven by a dozen times since then and missed it entirely. Sunk below street grade, wedged in a corner by the railroad tracks, Trade occupies a humble little dwelling that formerly housed a dry cleaner, and sat vacant, I’m told by the bartender, who waves me in cheerily to peruse the beer board while she sets up tables for the afternoon crowd.

The crowd is mostly locals, I’m also told, plus tourists on their way to the Oxbow Market, but none of them crowd in for the hour that I’m there. They’re missing out. Trade suds are crisp and on-style. Hatchet IPA is fruity, floral, blonde and dry; Pile Driver double IPA whispers, rather than rasps, about caramel malts and balanced hops; Ten Penny American brown ale is roasty enough with coffee aromas to almost wake me out of this beery reverie. A window-rattling toot from the Napa Valley Wine Train finishes that job.

There’s a rich, dry Irish–style stout called Eighty Acre, and a saison-style semi-sour, I believe called What the Funk, that has a boozy vibe despite being aged in Sauvignon Blanc barrels—all contract-brewed at Mare Island Brewing Co. Should the low-key concept work out, a true brew pub at another location may be considered by the owners, who also run the popular Jax Diner down the street.

Pints are $6.47, and a sample of five, five-ounce pours is a reasonable $12, presented on a heavy wooden tray. As of press time, Trade appears to be one of the few roasted shishito-free zones available to North Bay brew fans, so hurry up and grab some Goldfish crackers for free, or order a fairly straightforward (needs more sauerkraut, if there was sauerkraut) but fairly tasty New Yorker ($12), a Reuben-style panini served with a side of potato chips. There’s artisan charcuterie and cheese, and, yes, green salads, too—you know, hippie food.

Trade Brewing, 731 First St. Napa. Weekdays, 2–9pm; weekends, noon–9pm (last call, 8:45pm). 707.492.8223.

Nov. 23: Green Friday in Kenwood

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Families and nature lovers have the chance to escape Black Friday, the year’s biggest and most stressful shopping day of the year, by taking to the hills at Sugarloaf Ridge State Park with a full “Green Friday” schedule of activities. The morning starts with a docent-led family hike at 10am that offers insights into the park’s abundance of wildlife. The afternoon also includes a yoga hike at 3pm, and up at the top of the ridge, the Robert Ferguson Observatory holds its monthly Solar Viewing at 11am and Star Party at 8pm. Weather permitting. Friday, Nov. 23, 2605 Adobe Canyon Road, Kenwood. Prices vary. 707.833.5712.

Nov.23-24: Culinary Christmas in Napa

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Eat, drink and be merry as you do your shopping this season at the Holiday Marketplace at CIA Copia. Napa’s newest epicenter for fine food and wine, the Culinary Institute of America’s downtown campus will open its doors for the public to peruse artisan foods from local vendors, including K+M Chocolates, Anna’s Danish Cookies and La Saison, as well as artwork such as pottery from Amanda Wright, jewelry from Nicole Apostoli, and woven baskets and other textiles from Kathleen Heafey. Friday and Saturday, Nov. 23–24, 500 First St., Napa. 11am to 5pm both days. Free admission. 707.967.2500.

Law & Auditor

The uncertain fate of a Sonoma County policy-accountability office will be a part of the discussion at the Board of Supervisors meeting on Dec. 4. There, Jerry Threet, the current director of the Independent Office of Law Enforcement Review and Outreach (IOLERO), will present his fiscal year 2017–18 annual report to the supervisors—as well as proposed new language that would...

The Big Idea

In our Marin-based sister publication this week, the Pacific Sun (Pacificsun.com), there's a playful story that's based off of Gov.-elect Gavin Newsom's ongoing indecisiveness when it comes to telling the world where he and his family will be living when he takes office next month. Will it be Sacramento or Kentfield? The consensus speculation among media types around the state...

Letters to the Editor: Novemer 28, 2018

New New Deal In the last two years, we've watched wildfires sweep through our state and devastate communities. The smoke alone has become a national health issue. We must acknowledge the relationship between these massive fires and climate change. For our health and our safety, Californians must demand legislation, at all levels of government, that eliminates our structurally engrained dependence...

High Tides…

Here's a question for budding chemists in the land of milk and marijuana: What do you get when you mix water and THC extracted from weed? Answer? You get cannabis-infused water, of course. Carbonate the water and now you've got a cannabis spritzer. A cannabis cocktail. A bud-based bevie. Now there's a local company, Occidental Power, creating THC-infused water that will...

Miso Challenge

October 2018 was a sad month for sushi fans around the globe. Tsukiji Market in Tokyo—source of the world's freshest fish—closed after 83 years of continuous operation. Tsukiji was so famous that, no matter where you were in the world, if you ever paid more than $8 for a single piece of sushi, you knew exactly where the fish...

Merry Twistmas

Once upon a time, way back in the summer of 2003, Bohemian contributor David Templeton and producer Dan Zastrow were having a conversation about a strange Christmas story that David had written. "You know what would be cool?" David said. "Maybe someday finding some interesting people to gather onstage and read a bunch of twisted Christmas stories, and maybe do...

Life Saver

Folk sensation Mary Gauthier is in the business of telling stories. Usually, they are her own, and for over 20 years, Gauthier has plumbed the depths of her soul with introspective and somber tunes about her struggles with childhood abandonment, drugs and other issues, sung with a forlorn Southern accent that regularly brings audiences to tears. Now Gauthier is using...

Wine Train Spotting

If I hadn't lost the long-hair look last year, I'd have got even more of a kick out of one of Trade Brewing's few items of wall decor—that old sign that says, "Hippies use side door." I did, in fact, find my way to the side door from one of the backstreets of old Napa. It's just one block off...

Nov. 23: Green Friday in Kenwood

Families and nature lovers have the chance to escape Black Friday, the year’s biggest and most stressful shopping day of the year, by taking to the hills at Sugarloaf Ridge State Park with a full “Green Friday” schedule of activities. The morning starts with a docent-led family hike at 10am that offers insights into the park’s abundance of wildlife....

Nov.23-24: Culinary Christmas in Napa

Eat, drink and be merry as you do your shopping this season at the Holiday Marketplace at CIA Copia. Napa’s newest epicenter for fine food and wine, the Culinary Institute of America’s downtown campus will open its doors for the public to peruse artisan foods from local vendors, including K+M Chocolates, Anna’s Danish Cookies and La Saison, as well...
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