Jan. 15: Party Like a KOWS in Occidental

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West Sonoma County community radio station KOWS 107.3-FM is a big proponent of free speech. Maybe that’s why they’ve timed their annual fundraising show to fall on Martin Luther King Day for a party with plenty of music and fun. Songwriters Rachel Tree, Tami Gosnell and Kym Trippsmith will share the stage with lead guitar virtuoso Leesa Gomez while an extensive selection of food and drinks get the party in gear. Then, local DJs keep the good times going, as a raffle helps raise funds for KOWS. The party starts on Sunday, Jan. 15, at Barley and Hops Tavern, 3688 Bohemian Hwy., Occidental. 6:30pm. Admission by donation. 707.874.9037.

Helping Hands

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Longtime North Bay musician, teacher and father of five Jon Gonzales knows the value of community.

He sees it every month when he hosts HopMonk’s Songwriters in the Round series, which returns to the Sebastopol tavern on Wednesday, Jan. 18. And he saw it in the efforts of North Bay nonprofit organization Matrix Parent Network & Resource Center when his first son, Jasper, was born with a traumatic brain injury.

Gonzales’ musical life started when he moved to Sonoma County from his hometown of Bakersfield to attend Sonoma State University in 1993. “It’s so creative up here. It motivated me to play the guitar, start doing open mics and the like,” Gonzales says.

He graduated with a degree in English and began mixing a day job teaching with a nightlife playing upbeat folk pop songs around town. When Jasper was born in 2004, Gonzales put music on hold.

“I was really invested in my kids, raising a special needs child who was getting bigger,” Gonzales says. “But I still did a lot of music at home, just to be inwardly creative.”

After discovering the ukulele and teaming with local producer Michael Lindner, Gonzales reentered the musical community with the 2012 album

Water ‘n Whiskey and its 2015 follow-up, Hump.

The sound of his self-described “ukulele hook-folk” is hard to pin down, and Gonzales is deft at going from sunny pop jam to self-reflective ballad with ease. His next album is shaping up to be a stripped-down folk collection inspired by the artists he welcomes to the Songwriters in the Round events.

“Between teaching and the ukulele, I have a large network of people and opportunities,” Gonzales says. And he always pays it forward.

“I’ve always gone full-force to be there any time there are benefits for kids with special needs,” he says.

In that vein, Gonzales performs with his string band at the Hops & Harmonies benefit for the Matrix Parent Network on Jan. 17 at the Lagunitas Brewing Company in Petaluma. The organization assisted Gonzales and his wife by providing the help of a couple of caretakers for Jasper.

In November 2014, Jasper died unexpectedly, an event that Gonzales says froze him creatively for over a year, yet the musician regained his motivation with the help of his friends.

“I met [folk singer] Bruce Cockburn last year,” Gonzales says. “And he said in times like now, when it feels dark politically or backwards civilly, the artists are relied upon. It’s important to keep going.”

Top Crop

California’s agricultural bounty is fabled, from the endless olive and almond groves of the Central Valley to the world-class grapes of the Napa Valley. But the biggest crop in California’s agricultural cornucopia is cannabis.

According to a report last month in the Orange County Register, California’s marijuana crop is not only the most valuable agricultural product in the nation’s number one ag state, it totally blows away the competition.

Using cash farm receipt data from the state Department of Food and Agriculture for ag crops and its own estimate of in-state pot production, the Register pegs the value of California’s marijuana crop at more than the top five leading agricultural commodities combined. Here’s how it breaks down, in billions of dollars: marijuana, $23.3; milk, $6.28; almonds, $5.33; grapes, $4.95; cattle, $3.39; lettuce, $2.25.

That estimate of $23.3 billion for the pot crop is humongous, and it’s nearly three times what the industry investors the Arcview Group estimated the size of the state’s legal market would be in the near post-legalization era. So how did the Register come up with that figure?

The newspaper extrapolated from seizures of pot plants, which have averaged more than 2 million a year in the state for the past five years, and, citing the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, used the common heuristic that seizures account for only 10 to 20 percent of drugs produced. That led to an estimate of 13.2 million plants grown in the state in 2015 (with
2.6 million destroyed), based on the high-end 20 percent figure.

The report then assumed that each plant would produce one pound of pot at a market price of $1,765 a pound. Outdoor plants can produce much more than a pound, but indoor plants may only produce a few ounces, so the one-pound average figure is conservative.

The $1,765 per pound farm gate price is probably optimistic, especially for outdoor grown marijuana, which sells for less than indoor.

And maybe law enforcement in California is damned good at sniffing out pot crops and seizes a higher proportion of the crop than the rule of thumb would suggest. Still, even if the cops seized
40 percent of the crop and farmers only got $1,000 a pound, the crop would still be valued at $8 billion and still be at the top of the farm revenue heap.

That’s a phenomenon that’s not going to stop when California’s legal marijuana market goes into full effect. It’s not going to stop until people in states like Illinois and Florida and New York can grow their own. In the meantime, California pot growers are willing to take the risk if it brings the green.

Phillip Smith lives in Sebastopol and is editor of the AlterNet Drug Reporter and author of the ‘Drug War Chronicle.’

Let It Rain

The deluge of rain in recent days has been a boon to local reservoirs that have been under intense scrutiny over these past eight years of California drought. The Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA) reported Jan. 3 that Lake Sonoma was at 100.3 percent of capacity, while Lake Mendocino was at 115 percent of capacity that same day. So is the drought over, or what?

“The drought is definitely over in our neck of the woods,” says Brad Sherwood of the SCWA.

Both reservoirs are under the operational control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which monitors water levels along with the local agency and manages the reservoir levels via controlled releases of water. The capacity levels at the reservoirs delineate the line between the so-called flood control pool and the water supply pool, and once the water levels creep into the former, the Corps takes measures to release water to avoid flooding.

According to the SCWA, the Mendocino reservoir had dropped to 113.5 percent of capacity by Jan. 7, owing to a reservoir release protocol that saw two hundred cubic feet per second released from the brimming reservoir, whose flood-control trigger is around 72,000 acre-feet of water.

How much rain has fallen? Between Jan. 3 and Jan. 7, according to SCWA data, Lake Sonoma’s depth rose five inches, to 105 percent of capacity. The “water year” that begins on
Oct. 1 has seen 19 inches of rainfall in the Santa Rosa Basin through Jan. 2; the average over that time period is just under
12 inches.

Off the Streets

It’s a quiet weekday morning, and there’s
a lull in the rain at
the Palms Inn in unincorporated Santa Rosa. Roy Burress is volunteering at the converted motel’s cafe-bookstore and talks about the deaths of residents that have taken place here in recent months. He’s bearded and wears glasses and a baseball hat from the USS Theodore Roosevelt.

Burress is a Vietnam veteran and one of 114 residents at the Palms Inn, which was converted into apartments for the formerly homeless last year to much fanfare from local housing activists and Sonoma County officials. They heralded the Palms project as a key piece of the county’s push to deal with its stubborn homeless problem.

Burress rattles off the fatalities he’s aware of among residents here—seven of them, he says, including an overdose and a suicide, in 2016. He speaks of at least one former tenant who tried to better himself but gave into his pain and ended up taking his life. He remembers others who arrived at the Palms with terminal illnesses. “They were going to die.”

With a minimum of red tape and a full acknowledgement of the county’s homeless crisis, the Palms Inn opened last summer within three months of its conception as a go-to residence designed to siphon county residents off the streets and into some semblance of normalcy.

Based on the nationally renowned “housing first” model, the Palms project has found housing for a client base that is split between veterans and referrals from Catholic Charities; the latter are generally considered a more vulnerable and needy population.

But months into the Palm’s grand opening, the fatalities lend to the question of whether the Palms is set up to handle its de facto role as hospice caregiver—a role that was considered but not codified into any specific policy as the Palms was moving toward its opening last year.

According to the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office, two deaths occurred on-site at the Palms in 2016 and one was a suicide. An administrator at the facility confirms that there have been fatalities among the residents this year—the others died after being transported to a hospital—and that the Palms is geared up to spring into action when there’s a death and take care of residents who might be distressed.

“When we have been confronted with people passing away, it’s like family, like losing a family member,” says Catholic Charities’ Jennielynn Holmes. “This is a revolutionary project for Sonoma County,” she adds, highlighting its foundation in the housing first model—where all good things lead from having a roof over one’s head (see “Palms Not Bombs,” Aug. 17, 2016.)

And yet, even as it has offered transitional or long-term housing for forward-looking formerly homeless people, it’s not surprising that some residents who arrive at the Palms might soon die at the Palms, says Holmes.

“We are screening the most vulnerable people, people with severe physical and mental-health needs,” she says. “People who were terminally ill, we brought them here. Otherwise they would have died on the streets. At least they get end-of-life care here.” Some tenants receive in-home services subsidized by the state and administered by the county.

Holmes highlights findings from resident surveys this year which found that residency at the Palms had served to push back the numbers on several key arbiters that typify life on the streets, all of which saved taxpayers money. According to the survey, admittance to the emergency room and in-patient hospitalization fell by 45 percent; interactions with law enforcement dropped 77 percent; ambulance transportations fell by 56 percent; and usage of crisis service interventions such as suicide hotlines went down 98 percent.

The seven deaths, Holmes says, are “below the average of other housing first programs and we are targeting the most vulnerable homeless individuals in Sonoma County.”

The survey reveals most residents are taking advantage of the roof over their heads, even when they arrive with significant health problems. For some residents, an expected or imminent death is a part of life at the Palms. “But this is normal, and it’s important to provide this level of care to individuals,” Holmes says.

Holmes further highlights the “revolutionary” aspect of the program that helps enhance care for residents. Many signed up for Medicare and Medicaid when the program was getting off the ground last summer.

“The relationship to health and homelessness is just huge,” Holmes says as she credits the much-maligned Affordable Care Act with helping to ease the strain on homeless people turning to the emergency room for primary care. “The ACA has really allowed us to get people in medical [facilities], where before they would show up in the emergency room,” Holmes says.

“It’s been pretty huge to the people who we serve,” she adds—including those who die, who at least pass with some semblance of dignity, instead of in a Fourth Street alcove huddled against the wind and the rain.

“A person who is homeless,” Holmes says, “has no access to hospice.”

Hot and Heavy

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‘Good sex is like downhill
skiing,” says
Dr. Ruth Westheimer early on in Main Stage West’s engaging, surprise-packed solo-show Becoming Dr. Ruth. “Both require instinct, good movement and a willingness to take risks.”

That description, apparently, applies to Westheimer herself.

Throughout the unexpectedly rich script by playwright Mark
St. Germain, the true details of Dr. Ruth’s extraordinary life are revealed, strip-tease-style, one bit at a time. As the play opens, Westheimer is packing up her New York City apartment after the recent death of her third husband, Fred. In the midst of arguing on the phone with her daughter, she suddenly notices the audience.

“Hold on,” she tells the caller. “I have company.”

What follows is as loose, relaxed and occasionally bizarre as an actual living-room conversation with an eccentric friend—one who, in this case, just happens to have escaped Nazi Germany as a child, spent years as a sniper for the Israeli army and worked for Planned Parenthood in New York, all on her way to becoming America’s most unlikely advocate for positive sexuality and honest, open discussion about a subject few people actually talk about.

As Dr. Ruth, Ann Woodhead is wonderful. Though with a bit less energy and volume than the way Westheimer so delightfully comports herself on TV and radio, Woodhead skillfully captures the famous figure’s twinkly-eyed and straightforward approach to life, laughter and love, and even her clear-eyed embrace of the uglier facts of life. She simultaneously nails the parade of one-liners, and carefully modulates the heavier elements, which includes the death of Ruth’s family in the concentration camps. After she escaped to Switzerland via the international Kindertransport rescue effort, Westheimer never saw her parents again.

The direction by Elizabeth Craven is generally light-handed and purposefully simple, with clever use of projections to emphasize the moments when
Dr. Ruth shows photographs of her family. The effective set by David Lear is crammed with thoughtful visual details, though the show’s unnecessarily busy, uncredited light design is frequently baffling and distracting. That said, the light of the show, appropriately enough, is the real Westheimer, whose sheer lifelong determination and resilience is entertainingly moving, illuminating and truly inspiring.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★

Cabbage Patch

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Aas vegetables go, the cabbage is about as unsexy as it gets. It doesn’t have the voluptuous appeal of an eggplant or the fireworks of the habanero pepper,
but the humble cabbage deserves greater appreciation.

If you’re a poor Russian or Pole, cabbage (and onions, beets and potatoes) gets you through a long winter. Cabbage is easy to grow and it thrives in cold weather. It stores well in a cold basement, it’s nutritious, and it’s cheap. And cabbage is nothing if not versatile. It’s a canvas painted upon by hunger and creativity.

Slavic countries have elevated cooking the hearty vegetable to an art form. It can be steamed, boiled, stuffed, braised, pickled and fermented.

That cabbage creativity is on display at Zosia Cafe & Kitchen, an unlikely outpost of Eastern European cooking in downtown Graton. Located on a highly visible corner lot that recently housed the short-lived Bambu Tea House, Zosia (pronounced “zo-shuh”) is the work of Monika and Slawek Michalak. They’re from Poland but met in Sonoma County. Slawek was partners with Les Claypool in Claypool Cellars. Zosia’s talented chef, Ekaterina Zaitseva, is from Siberia and previously worked at Santa Rosa’s Russian-centric European Food Store.

The idea for the restaurant grew out of the popularity of the couple’s “sauerkraut parties,” which gave them the idea that an Eastern European–themed restaurant might work.

“It was a sign that people really like that stuff,” Monika says.

Orders for the Eastern European side of the menu are 70 percent of sales, says Slawek. “We were right about it.”

While cabbage is Eastern Europe’s pan-national vegetable, borscht is the dish that unites the diverse Slavic countries. The beet-centric version with a dab of sour cream is the most common form of the soup in this country, but borscht varies widely.

“You know how many versions of borscht there are?” Ekaterina says. “Every single [Russian] republic has their own version.”

Not all borscht is made with beets; Zosia’s Ukrainian version, for instance, is made with tomatoes, cabbage and vegetable broth ($7.95). The hearty Polish version, called

barszcz, is made with cabbage, sauerkraut, potatoes and pork-rib meat and a beef-pork broth ($7.95). Both are delicious, deeply satisfying soups.

Best of all is the bigos ($8.95), a brothy Polish stew made with sliced crimini mushrooms, sauerkraut and braised beef. It’s tailor-made for cold weather. You want more cabbage? The cabbage rolls ($8.95) are superb, stuffed with ground pork and rice draped in a light tomato sauce.

The kitchen makes about 500 pierogies a day to keep up with demand. The little dumplings ($9.95) are a Polish staple and filled with pork and beef, potato and housemade farmers cheese or sauerkraut and mushroom.

For now, Zosia (named after the Michalaks’ daughter) is only open for breakfast and lunch. They serve American breakfasts, hamburgers and pulled pork. A gleaming 1968 Airstream out front on will soon host a coffee and wine bar. But for me it’s all about the Eastern European side of the menu. And the cabbage.

Zosia Cafe & Kitchen, 9010 Graton Road, Graton. 707.861.9241.

Letters to the Editor: January 11, 2016

Ending Obamacare

Yes, the hospitals saved $40 million, but how much have citizens paid until they reach their ungodly deductible (“Bitter Pill,” Jan. 4)? Wanna bet it’s more than $40 million out of pocket?

Via Bohemian.com

The Republicans have controlling majorities in both the House and Senate, and have unfettered power to enact any legislation they want with a Republican in the White House. There is no scenario in which any “consequences” will accrue to the Democrats. Republicans, this is 100 percent on you. Republicans don’t need a single Democratic representative or senator’s vote. Republicans can enact good laws and reap the praise, or bad laws and take the blame. It’s all on them.

Via Bohemian.com

Nothing to
See Here

So we get it. You (the Bohemian, et al.) are upset that Hillary did not win the election. Like I said, we got it. Now how about you put on your grown-up pants and take your defeat with some pride and dignity. And most anyone with at least half a brain knows that in presidential elections it boils down to the lesser of two evils. So this time Trump turned out to be the lesser evil. So for everyone’s sake, please suck it up and let’s move on.

Santa Rosa

History Lessons

I was born in the Soviet Union. There was one brand of clothes at the store, one brand of kielbasa at the grocery and one brand of news on TV. The future seemed well-defined by the past. Expectations were few, and escapism blossomed.

After perestroika, our padlocked, quietly claustrophobic world exploded with news about both past and present. Rock music emerged from underground with vibrant colors and seemingly endless possibilities. We were learning to dream big and have our own beliefs.

Suddenly, there were things to see and hear all around. There was a new spark in people’s eyes as they were going about their days. A joy, an openness. We were witnessing the birth of a new democratic society.

Where is it all now? In less than two decades after perestroika, things took a different turn. Progressive journalism was brutally silenced. Many left, and those who stayed migrated back into the safety of their kitchens, to talk politics behind closed doors.

My hometown, a beautiful coastal village on the Crimean peninsula formerly part of Ukraine’s premium wine country, was invaded by Russia. I remember it as a dreamy place, lined with cypress alleys, dotted with antique buildings still bearing strong Mediterranean influences even after decades of Soviet uniformity.

We tend to take things for granted. Psychologists say that human brains are wired to expect constancy and stability. Our democracy needs to be nurtured and protected. Because things can change in the blink of an eye.

Sonoma

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

Holistic for All

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When she was 12 years old, Laura Polak traveled with her father, Paul Polak, to a refugee camp in Somalia. Her father is a Czech holocaust survivor and a world-renowned entrepreneur who creates for-profit solutions to help combat Third World poverty. It was the first of many trips she took with her father, and it left a deep impression that has guided her work as a chiropractor and holistic healer.

“I have my life’s purpose,” Polak says. “Service—this is my life’s work.”

She learned a lesson in the refugee camp, that no matter how well-intentioned, all charitable work must start with the members of the community being served, rather than having something bestowed upon them without their input.

With that in mind, 18 months ago Polak sought to create a holistic-medicine clinic for low-income and underserved communities in Sonoma County. While massage and chiropractics are standard for the middle- and upper-class, the services are often out of reach for the poor.

She partnered with Burbank Housing, a nonprofit affordable-housing provider that serves about 10,000 low-income families in Sonoma County, and started a pilot program to see if residents wanted the kind of services she hoped to provide: chiropractics, massage therapy, acupuncture and herbal medicine. People were indeed interested, and her services are now in great demand.

Polak holds her Community Holistic Clinic once a week in the community center at Colgan Meadows, a Burbank Housing apartment complex in western Santa Rosa; patients are welcome from throughout the county.

Though patients were slow at first to embrace Polak and her crew of volunteer practitioners—especially their acupuncture needles—appointments now book up weeks in advance.

“Finally people are starting to bring me their babies,” Polak says.

Every Friday, Colgan Meadows’ community center is transformed into a pop-up clinic of sorts. The kitchen is given over to acupuncture treatment, and a row of four beds is set up in the meeting room for chiropractic patients. The main hall, which hosts birthday parties and other tenant events on weekends, is where the check-in table and herbal medicine provider sets up shop. Given the close proximity the healers work in, it’s easy for them to cross-refer each other’s patients. Those with more serious conditions that require a primary-care physician are directed elsewhere.

The clinic only serves those who earn $30,000 or less. Most patients are Latino. Nearly
60 percent earn between $16,000 and $30,000 a year; 25 percent make $16,000 or less, well below national poverty levels.

“I’ve always believed in public health,” says Giron Levenbach, an acupuncturist who volunteers at the clinic. “Natural health can be kind of elitist, but I prefer to treat people who need it most.”

He founded a free clinic in South Africa that treated victims of civil wars from the Congo and Zimbabwe suffering from PTSD. At the Friday clinic, he treats patients who have depression, anxiety and chronic pain.

Twenty-something Isabel Torres drives from Windsor for acupuncture and chiropractic treatments to help her with her arthritis. Before she started coming to the Friday clinic, she didn’t do anything for her pain. “I’m so thankful for them because they give of their time,” she says.

On her visit last week, Guerneville’s Pegalee Benda came out of the chiropractic room with a smile on her face and did a little jig. “You’re gonna feel better,” she said to those waiting to be seen.

“This has been one of the most valuable things that has happened to me in terms of my health in many years,” Benda said. “I walk in and I have pain and I leave and it’s tolerable.”

Benda suffers from Lyme disease and says her primary-care doctors have not been able to help her. “They don’t listen and they don’t go to the source.” Without the clinic, she couldn’t get the help she needs because of the cost.

Holistic medicine is meant to treat the whole patient on a systemic level rather than focusing on individual symptoms, as is common in Western medicine. It’s a worthy goal, but in spite of its efforts of inclusiveness, holistic care often serves a narrow clientele because of its cost. Insurance often doesn’t cover the kind of alternative therapies Polak provides at her Sebastopol clinic, Radiant Health. As a result, many of her patients are well-to-do and can afford the out-of-pocket expenses.

But just because low-income people can’t afford the services doesn’t mean they are unaware of them. For many immigrants, alternative medicine is traditional and affordable medicine in the countries they come from.

“That’s what people in poverty do,” says Arcelia Moreno, community services coordinator for Burbank Housing. It’s only when they come to the United States that these approaches become out of reach. Residents sometimes pass on their experieces to their providers, she says.

“They’ll remind them that they already know a lot about what their grandparents and ancestors used to do,” Moreno says. “That’s why what [Laura Polak] offers is such a great opportunity.”

In addition to providing the space for the clinic, Burbank Housing also offers a small amount of funding and administrative staff. The service is part of a larger recognition within the affordable-housing industry that residents need more than housing. “We noticed putting a roof over people’s heads isn’t enough,” Moreno says.

Burbank Housing also offers after-school programs, physical fitness activities, literacy classes, mental-health services and financial literacy programs sponsored by the Redwood Credit Union.

There are other low-cost clinics in the North Bay, but they have long waiting lists. In spite of the obvious need, Polak says she’s been advised to stop working at the clinic because she’s losing money, as it takes time away from her for-profit practice in Sebastopol.

“I can’t get funding, and I’m feeling a little frustrated,” she says.

Polak dreams of opening a holistic health center at the future site of Andy’s Unity Park in Santa Rosa’s Moorland neighborhood, where the need is great. She’d like to be able to raise $120,000 to pay the practitioners, whom she’s always recruiting for the clinic. (She’s especially looking for Spanish speakers.) For now, there’s a can on the check-in desk with a sliding scale of $5–$50.

But Polak is not likely to give up on the clinic.

“I have to do it,” she says. “This is what I was raised with.”

Hand Drawn

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He spent 50 years animating some the most iconic characters of the 20th century, from the Beatles to Scooby-Doo, and yet Ron Campbell still holds the same childlike fascination for animation he had growing up in Australia.

“For some reason, cartoons to a child are enormously interesting,” Campbell says. “It’s hard to quite figure out why, but they are. In fact, the joy people get looking at cartoons is a bit of a mystery to me. But anyway, people love them, and I did too. I fell in love with them.”

This month, Campbell travels to Sonoma County for a pop-up “Beatles Cartoon Art Show,” in which he shows classic work from his career in cartoons, including the Beatles’ 1960s Saturday morning series. Campbell appears at the Area Arts Gallery in Santa Rosa Monday through Wednesday, Jan. 16–18, to paint many of the famous figures he’s worked on and meet with visitors. Works of his original art will also be on sale.

Born in 1939 in Seymore, a small town in the Australian state of Victoria, Campbell remembers cartoons accompanying cowboy serials like Roy Rogers and Hopalong Cassidy at the local movie theater.

As a child, Campbell says that he initially thought of Tom & Jerry cartoons as a real cat and mouse chasing each other onscreen. “I remember my great-grandmother telling me, ‘Ronny, they’re just drawings,'” he says. “And I remember the moment. It was like a childish epiphany: You mean I can do drawings that can live? I became obsessed with the idea, really.”

Campbell never stopped drawing. He was educated at the Swinburne Art Institute in Melbourne, just as television came to Australia. Suddenly, there was a demand for animation in the country, for television and other commercial work. “I was right on the first wave of the first generation of animation there,” Campbell says.

After school, Campbell moved to Sydney, where he persisted in convincing the one animation studio in the city to hire him. Once he got in the door, Campbell went to work hand-drawing local projects before an American company hired his studio to work on cartoons like Beetle Bailey and Krazy Kat.

One night in 1964, Campbell got a telephone call from King Features in New York, who had sold a new Saturday morning television show based on the Beatles. They wanted him to direct the episodes. Campbell, who says he was only peripherally aware of the band at the time, asked if another insect-based cartoon was really a good idea. “Of course, he straightened me out,” Campbell laughs.

The Beatles animated series ran from 1965 to 1969, with episodes that featured Beatles songs and storylines that set the lovable lads on adventures that included Transylvanian detours, African safaris and Roman Colosseum rehearsals. The series was No. 1 in the ratings for its entire run.

That’s when Hollywood came calling. “I think because of
the tremendous success of
The Beatles that people might have mistakenly thought some of the success had to do with me,” Campbell jokes.

In 1968, Campbell was tapped to provide character animation for the film Yellow Submarine, again inspired by the Beatles. Campbell drew the pencils on much of the sequences involving the Blue Meanies and the Nowhere Man, based on the designs of psychedelic graphic designer and art director Heinz Edelmann.

When talking about his career, Campbell deflects praise by acknowledging creative talents around him, like William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, whom he worked for through the 1970s and ’80s, animating on shows like
The Flintstones, The Jetsons, Yogi Bear, Scooby-Doo and The Smurfs.

Bit Campbell’s humble nature can’t detract from the sheer volume of his work, including animating for the Emmy- and Peabody Award–winning PBS series Big Blue Marble, which ran from 1974 to 1983.

After retiring last decade, Campbell says he borrowed a page from Warner Brothers animator Chuck Jones, who took the show on the road after his retirement and sold original paintings of his most famous characters.

That’s what Campbell will be doing when he appears in Sonoma County this month. After 50 years behind the drawing board, he says the last few years of touring the country with his pop-up show have given him the chance to meet generations of fans whose lives he touched with his work.

“I finally get to meet the people who saw and enjoyed my work,” he says. “Those characters still mean so much to them, and it brings me back to that feeling I had as a kid in the movie theaters.”

Jan. 15: Party Like a KOWS in Occidental

West Sonoma County community radio station KOWS 107.3-FM is a big proponent of free speech. Maybe that’s why they’ve timed their annual fundraising show to fall on Martin Luther King Day for a party with plenty of music and fun. Songwriters Rachel Tree, Tami Gosnell and Kym Trippsmith will share the stage with lead guitar virtuoso Leesa Gomez while...

Helping Hands

Longtime North Bay musician, teacher and father of five Jon Gonzales knows the value of community. He sees it every month when he hosts HopMonk's Songwriters in the Round series, which returns to the Sebastopol tavern on Wednesday, Jan. 18. And he saw it in the efforts of North Bay nonprofit organization Matrix Parent Network & Resource Center when his...

Top Crop

California's agricultural bounty is fabled, from the endless olive and almond groves of the Central Valley to the world-class grapes of the Napa Valley. But the biggest crop in California's agricultural cornucopia is cannabis. According to a report last month in the Orange County Register, California's marijuana crop is not only the most valuable agricultural product in the nation's number...

Let It Rain

The deluge of rain in recent days has been a boon to local reservoirs that have been under intense scrutiny over these past eight years of California drought. The Sonoma County Water Agency (SCWA) reported Jan. 3 that Lake Sonoma was at 100.3 percent of capacity, while Lake Mendocino was at 115 percent of capacity that same day. So...

Off the Streets

It's a quiet weekday morning, and there's a lull in the rain at the Palms Inn in unincorporated Santa Rosa. Roy Burress is volunteering at the converted motel's cafe-bookstore and talks about the deaths of residents that have taken place here in recent months. He's bearded and wears glasses and a baseball hat from the USS Theodore Roosevelt. Burress is...

Hot and Heavy

'Good sex is like downhill skiing," says Dr. Ruth Westheimer early on in Main Stage West's engaging, surprise-packed solo-show Becoming Dr. Ruth. "Both require instinct, good movement and a willingness to take risks." That description, apparently, applies to Westheimer herself. Throughout the unexpectedly rich script by playwright Mark St. Germain, the true details of Dr. Ruth's extraordinary life are revealed, strip-tease-style,...

Cabbage Patch

Aas vegetables go, the cabbage is about as unsexy as it gets. It doesn't have the voluptuous appeal of an eggplant or the fireworks of the habanero pepper, but the humble cabbage deserves greater appreciation. If you're a poor Russian or Pole, cabbage (and onions, beets and potatoes) gets you through a long winter. Cabbage is easy to grow and...

Letters to the Editor: January 11, 2016

Ending Obamacare Yes, the hospitals saved $40 million, but how much have citizens paid until they reach their ungodly deductible ("Bitter Pill," Jan. 4)? Wanna bet it's more than $40 million out of pocket? —Sloopy Via Bohemian.com The Republicans have controlling majorities in both the House and Senate, and have unfettered power to enact any legislation they want with a Republican in the...

Holistic for All

When she was 12 years old, Laura Polak traveled with her father, Paul Polak, to a refugee camp in Somalia. Her father is a Czech holocaust survivor and a world-renowned entrepreneur who creates for-profit solutions to help combat Third World poverty. It was the first of many trips she took with her father, and it left a deep impression...

Hand Drawn

He spent 50 years animating some the most iconic characters of the 20th century, from the Beatles to Scooby-Doo, and yet Ron Campbell still holds the same childlike fascination for animation he had growing up in Australia. "For some reason, cartoons to a child are enormously interesting," Campbell says. "It's hard to quite figure out why, but they are. In...
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