Sept. 4: Tenant Tantrum in Occidental

0

We don’t need to tell you that rising property costs, gentrification and the explosion of Airbnb are making the cost of renting a home today difficult. Yet this isn’t a new phenomenon, and rent battles didn’t get any more dramatic than 1980s Manhattan, when one lady stood up to ruthless developers, and won. This week, Sonoma County resident Lois Pearlman premieres her new one-woman show, ‘Last of the Red Hot Tenants,’ about the saga of New York housing hero Jean Herman on Sunday, Sept. 4, at the Occidental Center for the Arts, 3850 Doris Murphy Court, Occidental. 4pm. $10. 707.874.9392.

Sept. 6-7: Seed Story in Santa Rosa

0

For thousands of years, native people of North, Central and South America relied on seeds to maintain a rich agricultural lifestyle. Modern times increasingly threaten the viability and availability of these native seeds, though some seeds savers are successfully housing and propagating them for future generations. The Tesuque Pueblo Seed Bank in Santa Fe, N.M., is one of the world’s largest seed sanctuaries, and one man, Bolivian-born Emigdio Ballon, is behind it. His efforts are explored in the film ‘SEED: The Untold Story,’ directed by award-winning filmmaker Taggart Siegel, who appears live with Ballon for two special screenings and Q&As Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 6–7, at Summerfield Cinemas, 551 Summerfield Road,
Santa Rosa. 7pm. $8–$10.50. 707.525.8909.

Circle the Lunch Wagons

0

With the culinary boom Napa is experiencing, it’s no surprise there’s a weekly food truck gathering. The Peter A. & Vernice H. Gasser Foundation, a local nonprofit, took the initiative and launched the daily Food Truck Corral at the South Napa Century Center on Aug. 8. Operating daily between 1pm (12:30pm on Saturdays and Tuesdays) and 9pm, the small market opened with a handful of participants.

Taco Addiction and Mercadito, two local ventures, had eaters lining up on opening day. Platanito Pupusas, a Napa catering company, is serving the delicious Salvadoran griddle cake with a variety of fillings, and Cousins Maine Lobster, based in Los Angeles, is providing lobster rolls, lobster quesadillas and other elevated fast food. Other rotating corral members include French Corner Napa Crepes, Crossroad Chicken and Marks the Spot, another Napa catering company.

“We own the land that is being developed at the site of the Food Corral,” says Terri Niles, project coordinator at the Gasser Foundation. “That particular pad will not be developed for a couple of years, so we wanted to do something fun for the community. A food truck vendor approached us last year about parking his truck on that spot, so we decided to go all out and make it into a fun space for a few trucks.”

The city permit, according to Niles, only allows four trucks at a time, hence the rotating roster. “It has been well received,” says Niles. “We plan to have it there for at least the next year.”

Food Truck Corral, South Napa Century Center, Gasser Drive, Napa.

Frankenhoodie

Morgan is a heinously overproduced student film complete with actors who are too good for it and a twist ending you’d guess even if director Luke Scott weren’t the offspring of Blade Runner‘s Ridley Scott. A generous person could call Morgan a prequel to Blade Runner. It’s about the creation of genetically altered replicants created by the Evil Corporation.

The praiseworthy actor Kate Mara gives her first boring performance as a “risk management” specialist from Evil Co. Power-coiffed and business-suited, Mara imitates Lindsay Crouse’s own numbness as she drives up to a remote forest lab in her Mercedes. While driving, she takes an info-dumping call from her boss (Brian Cox): “We don’t want another Helsinki . . . Preserve the asset.”

The “L9 Asset” is Morgan (Anya Taylor-Joy from The Witch), a depressed, grayish girloid in a hoodie being studied by the scientists who engineered her. Morgan has just all but gouged out the eye of one of the researchers (Jennifer Jason Leigh, recovering from the assault, plays it stoned from heavy pain medication). Despite this security breach, the scientists conduct themselves slackly, coupling up, drinking in the evening and not giving Morgan the healthy distance the creature deserves.

The cold Chinese physician (Michelle Yeoh) who runs the project floats over her co-workers, keeping to herself the details of the Helsinki fiasco. Strangest of all this medical pack is Rose Leslie’s Amy, who can’t stop gaping at Morgan. We’re not sure why.

It isn’t until a shrink (Paul Giamatti) arrives that the trouble really begins. Giamatti’s snideness gives some juice to this desiccated thriller. Too bad his only dramatic function here is to be the peasant who waves the torch in Frankenstein’s face. With a cast of characters determined to always put themselves in unnecessary danger—they keep doing what we yell at them not to do—and with brutal fight scenes to balance the mawkishness, Morgan seems created for the Svengoolie of the 2030s to mock.

‘Morgan’ is playing at Sonoma 9 Cinemas, 200 Siesta Way, Sonoma. 707.935.1234.

Pipe Dreams

‘Dude, how can you watch baseball with this strife all around us?” my buddy Reggie asks me.

“Hey,” I reply, “I’m working on the issues between innings, OK? You know that California will pass a legalization-of-marijuana law on the November ballot, right? Just give all the voting adults three months of free weed, under one condition: They must either turn in their weapons or commit to community service.”

“Hell if that’s ever gonna happen,” he flashes back at me.

The TV’s volume is a bit too high as I sit down and grab the remote, lowering the game’s broadcast to a whisper. I proceed to explain the plan, which came to me in a dream on the night of the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s peace march through Chicago. Under my plan, police stations all across California will become hubs for community rebuilding. Each gun turned in by the public is matched by the police force relinquishing a weapon. Any time a citizen feels threatened by his government or wants to go out hunting, he has 24/7 access to claim his firearm from storage for personal use.

Those choosing instead to commit to community service are in charge of organizing monthly neighborhood potlucks, supporting the homeless, environmental enhancements and forming volunteer rosters for local organizations that need the most help. Murals are painted outside the police stations. Boys & Girls Clubs become staffed with dads, grandparents, uncles and mentors, as people will do anything to receive their free three-month supply.

As a further incentive, those turning in a weapon are rewarded with a grant toward college tuition. Each handgun equals a free semester of community college; assault weapons give you a four-year education, all expenses paid: room, board, books, tuition. Where does the funding come from? The tax revenues created from the legal sales of marijuana will cover the costs for those too poor to attend college.

Reggie grabs the remote and turns off the TV. Ringing from the speakers of a neighbor’s house, we hear Bob Marley’s plaintive plea:

“One love, one heart . . . / Let’s get together and feel all right.”

“You got a name for this plan, Einstein?” he asks.

“DOPE: Departmental Operations for People’s Education. Do the trial run in Vallejo first,” I reply, reloading the pipe with Humboldt Gold.

Cliff Zyskowski is a state-licensed psychiatric technician who lives in Sonoma.

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.

Does the DEA Matter?

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s refusal to decontrol marijuana has raised the hackles of doctors, patient-advocacy groups, cannabis entrepreneurs and potheads almost everywhere. Under the agency’s recent directive, marijuana remains an illegal, controlled substance, like heroin and LSD, that “officially” has no medical value. But unlike most federal regulations, the DEA move will have little to no effect on state-level marijuana politics.

Since Colorado and Washington state green-lighted recreational marijuana in 2012, the DEA has gotten swamped by a tidal wave of legalization campaigns across the country for recreational and medical marijuana. Most states have moved fast, first to allow doctors and patients who suffer from diseases like cancer and conditions like chronic pain to be able to use marijuana without the omnipresent threat of arrest and prosecution. But states, especially ones that already have medical marijuana, have also picked up the pace toward complete legalization for a simpler reason: beaucoup tax dollars.

To date, 25 states and the District of Columbia have legalized or decriminalized marijuana. There is a plethora of ballot initiatives on tap for voters to weigh in on this November. Initiatives in Arizona, California, Maine, Massachusetts and Nevada would legalize possession of specific amounts of marijuana and cultivation of a certain number of plants. (The Massachusetts question also proposes to tax it like alcohol.) Arkansas, Florida, Montana and North Dakota will consider legalizing or expanding access to medical marijuana. Several other states are awaiting the outcome of conflicts over access to the ballot for marijuana initiatives.

Taxpayers may nix other tax increases, but they embrace sin taxes on marijuana. Though marijuana sales in states new to the industry can be slow going, recreational marijuana tax revenues can run into the hundreds of millions of dollars. Colorado has made an airtight case for marijuana revenues. The state takes in a 2.9 percent retail and medical marijuana sales tax, but more importantly, it takes in a 10 percent retail marijuana special sales tax and a 15 percent marijuana excise tax, as well as application and license fees for both retail and medical marijuana. In June, Colorado took in nearly $16.8 million in taxes and
other fees compared to nearly $10.8 million in 2015, a whopping 55 percent increase.

In 2014, Colorado recreational marijuana businesses tallied nearly $700 million in sales, while the state took in $76 million in taxes. Last year was even better: Colorado took in $135 million in fee and tax revenues on nearly $1 billion in sales. The good citizens of the Centennial State even rejected a $66 million tax refund plan; instead, the monies stayed in state coffers and went to school construction, law enforcement and substance-abuse programs, and other budget line items.

Future recreational marijuana revenues are a major selling point in the states that have marijuana ballot questions. Nevada would slap marijuana sales with a
15 percent excise tax on top of the state’s 10 percent sales tax; projected tax annual revenues are nearly $465 million.

Overall, the DEA directive will have little impact on the booming industry. Meanwhile, a recent Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision may make medical marijuana dispensary owners breathe a little easier. The court ruled last week that the U.S. Department of Justice cannot prosecute people who comply with their state laws on medical marijuana sales.

The DEA decision did relax regulations on using marijuana plants in medical research (a sticking point that has long frustrated the medical community), which will allow scientists to cultivate plants in DEA-approved facilities. Medical-marijuana use may be flourishing, but doctors and other medical professionals have had to forge ahead without the rigorous research and clinical protocols that usually accompany new drug regimes, which can take years.

Currently, there is only one DEA-approved medical research facility in the country, at the University of Mississippi. But researchers have a long list of issues with accessing the Ole Miss cannabis, including finding that the university cannot offer enough varieties of the plant, which complicates testing. Some researchers have even complained that the university’s marijuana was inferior and did not compare favorably to products that can be obtained in states where marijuana is legal—nor are they convinced that the DEA plans to make life easier for researchers to set up their own facilities.

There are also more dollars for states in the economic development opportunities to be had in research and development. After Ohio’s Republican governor John Kasich signed medical marijuana legislation into law in June, officials in Johnstown, a small town north of Columbus, gave the go-ahead for more marijuana businesses to set up shop.

The community already has one marijuana business (a manufacturer of equipment that uses a carbon dioxide separation process to separate oils from marijuana and other types of plants), now headquartered at a nearly empty office park. The owner of that firm, Apeks Supercritical, has visions of a $500 million medical marijuana research and development campus. Johnstown may even corner the R&D market, since other Ohio communities are not keen on marijuana dispensaries. (At the other end of spectrum, even behemoths like Microsoft want in.)

State officials can work around Uncle Sam, since many Americans have come to believe that pot has important medical benefits and is not as dangerous as a drug like heroin. That means that the DEA is now confronted with a paradox: There is new and entirely appropriate alarm about the opiate-abuse crisis nationwide. However, the agency has obliterated the old canard that marijuana was a “gateway” drug to hard drugs. It makes no sense for the DEA, other federal agencies, and state and local law enforcement to continue enforcing existing restrictions on pot as they grapple with a far more serious opioid epidemic.

States are the laboratories of democracy, so it is no surprise that the federal government has failed to keep up with regulating the pot industry. But this November, the feds could fall even further behind. As more states legalize marijuana, the DEA will have to think hard about how the agency continues to prosecute its war on a drug that is a medical and fiscal lifesaver in most of the 50 states.

To his great credit, President Obama has made headway on Cuba normalization, relief for Dreamer kids and entente with Iran. But this issue continues to demand more federal law enforcement attention than it should. Perhaps his successor will finally leash the DEA and get real on marijuana.

This article originally appeared in the ‘American Prospect.’

[page]

CANNABIS NUMBERS THAT MATTER THAT AREN’T 420

71 As of our publication date this week, Aug. 31, the number of days left until election day, when all will be decided and California will either go legal, or it won’t

62 Percent of Californians who support legalization

4 The number of Pinocchios that were recently awarded to anti–Proposition 64 organizers by Politifact when they claimed that legalization of cannabis would be the end of the ban on televised cigarette advertisements and the beginning of prime-time pot ads directed at children

$2.7 billion The estimated current value of California’s annual marijuana harvest, according to a recent Politico article about how the booze industry is poised to swoop in on cannabis dollars

$15 billion The estimated value of California’s annual marijuana harvest, should legalization come to pass, according to Politico

25 The number of states that have legalized marijuana, medically, recreationally, or both

4 The number of states that have legalized recreational marijuana: Colorado, Oregon, Washington, Alaska

$9.25 The proposed cultivation tax in Proposition 64 as it relates to the price of an ounce of buds

$2.75 The proposed cultivation tax in Proposition 64 as it relates to the price of an ounce of leaves

1 Number of U.S. capitals that have legalized cannabis (there is only one, and it’s Washington, D.C.)

1 Number of times first daughter Malia Obama has been caught smoking pot (that we know of)

4 Number of statewide groups that have come out in opposition to Proposition 64, according to Ballotpedia: the California Hospital Association, the California Growers Association, the California Teamsters Union

and the California Correctional Supervisor’s Association

$11,453,469.31 According to Ballotpedia, the amount of money that’s been raised by supporters of Proposition 64 as of Aug. 16

$2,303,965 The amount of money that Sean Parker has poured into making Proposition 64 a reality

$10,000 The amount of money spent by the California Police Chiefs Association in opposition to Proposition 64, according to Ballotpedia

$10,000 According to Yahoo, the amount of money that rapper Wiz Khalifa says he spends on pot every month

3 Approximate number of pounds of high-grade marijuana you could buy with $10,000

365,880 The number of signatures that were required to get Proposition 64 on the ballot this year

600,000 The number of signatures that were collected to get Proposition 64 on the ballot this year

60 Number of attempted cannabis initiatives across the country in 2016

9 Number of states, including California, that have major cannabis initiatives on their ballot this year

2,100 Number of YouTube views of Bill Clinton’s infamous line that “I didn’t inhale” in 1992

1 Number of dislikes on YouTube video of Clinton lying about how he didn’t inhale

2 Number of positions Hillary Clinton has held on descheduling cannabis; stay tuned for more

1 Number of times Snoop Dogg says he toked up in the White House

0 Number of times Hillary Clinton will invite Snoop Dogg to the White House

—Tom Gogola

Error Free

0

The issue of high ticket prices, and their arguable effect on the erosion of audiences for live theater, is rarely discussed openly within the North Bay theater community.

When the average theater show costs $28, it’s no wonder audiences look for other entertainment options that deliver more bang for the buck. Well, for maximum theatrical bang, there is no better bargain right now than Curtain Theatre’s joyously lowbrow, energetically slapstick production of William Shakespeare’s Comedy of Errors. Not only is it good, it’s free.

Yes, a hat is passed after the show, but this ludicrously over-the-top, energetic, crowd-pleasing and hilarious show still offers the best all-around value for anyone seeking a bit of afternoon entertainment.

Staged outdoors in Mill Valley’s redwood-shaded Old Mill Park, director Carl Jordan takes what is possibly Shakespeare’s crudest comedy and sets it in the 1920s, adding a live band and atmospheric tunes of the era, ingeniously mining the story for every possible pratfall, fart joke, rubber-chicken slap and unexpectedly crude gesture hibernating somewhere in the gleefully bawdy text. The cast—who should be awarded a prize for most miles logged in a single onstage performance—attack this opportunity for outrageousness with an energy that astounds as often as it delights, even if Shakespeare’s ingenious language occasionally gets a bit muddied in the process.

In the city of Ephesus, established as a colorfully dangerous place by Steve Coleman’s brilliant storybook set and Amanda Morando’s sexy jazz-era performance of Coolio’s “Gangster’s Paradise,” Antipholus of Syracuse (Adam Niemann) and his servant, Dromio (Heather Cherry), suddenly arrive, unaware that as children they were each separated from identical twins bearing their same names. The other Antipholus and Dromio (Skylar Collins and Nick Christenson) now live in Ephesus.

Confusion ensues as one set of twins is mistaken for the other, leading the resident Antipholus to accidentally alienate his wife (Melissa Claire) and think his sister-in-law (Heather Gordon) has fallen in love with her. Additional bits about gangsters, the twins’ father facing execution and a frustrated goldsmith (Alexis Christenson, her hilariously snorty laugh a true thing of beauty) bring value-added laughs to this first-rate example of how to give more while charging less.

Rating (out of 5): ★★★★½

Music on the Water

0

Over the last 64 years, the Sausalito Art Festival has welcomed thousands of fine artists and hundreds of chart-topping musicians to the waterfront setting of Marinship Park. This year is no different, as Labor Day weekend’s biggest party boasts over 200 artists and wall-to-wall musical entertainment on two stages.

Saturday, Sept. 3, kicks off the festival with Blues Hall of Famer Charlie Musselwhite setting the pace with his blazing blues harmonica. Following him is gospel group the Blind Boys of Alabama, still featuring founding member Jimmy Carter and Clarence Fountain, friends since the 1930s. Psycho-swing band the Squirrel Nut Zippers (pictured) and Marin neo-soul outfit Monophonics round out the day.

Sunday, Sept. 4, is all about the ever-popular tribute band, as Super Diamond (Neil Diamond), Zepparella (Led Zeppelin), Unauthorized Rolling Stones and Stayin’ Alive (Bee Gees) play classic rock, pop and disco hits.

On Monday, Sept. 5, the festival hosts blues and rock legends Edgar Winter, Todd Rundgren and the Zombies on the main stage. Throughout the weekend, local musicians and bands like One Grass Two Grass, Deborah Winters Group and the Dixie Giants also appear and show off the North Bay’s own pool of talent.

The Sausalito Art Festival happens
Sept. 3–5 at Marinship Park, Sausalito. Saturday–Sunday, 10am to 7pm; Monday, 10am to 5pm. $20 and up; kids under 12 are free. sausalitoartfestival.org./p>

True Fidelity

0

A new Napa or Sonoma-based wine label will surprise no one these days, and yet wine country keeps reinventing itself in an effort to keep consumers interested. One avenue for innovation is the aperitif, a strong player on the up-and-coming mixology scene and an increasingly popular member of the home bar.

Aperitif wines, vermouth and amaro are slowly on the rise, with names like Sonoma Aperitif out of Penngrove and Portworks of Petaluma crafting a local niche that caters to a younger, adventurous crowd. This summer, a new brand is aiming at the millennial market and trying to take the lead.

LoFi Aperitifs, based in Napa, is a joint venture by industry giant Gallo and Quaker City Mercantile, a Philadelphia branding and consulting agency specializing in spirits, with clients like Guinness, Milagro Tequila and Hendrick’s Gin. The unlikely union is perhaps the perfect example of conceptual shifts in the industry, from traditional to start-up-oriented.

“Gallo reached out to Quaker City Mercantile because of the company’s track record helping to create innovative brands,” says Claire Sprouse, LoFi’s spokesperson

who has spent the last two years working closely with all parties involved. “They wanted to use this experience and resources to tap into a brand-new category: American-made aperitifs.”

Fittingly, it was Napa, rather than Philadelphia or Gallo’s Central Valley headquarters, that was chosen as the manufacturing spot. “Napa obviously has a reputation for being a great wine-producing region of the world,” Sprouse says, “and thus the perfect setting to kick off the American aperitif category.”

Bottled at William Hill Estate Winery with Central Coast grapes, LoFi’s current lineup includes dry and sweet vermouth and an Amaro made with bitter gentian root. All three share a stylish, modern label.

While the sweet vermouth is crisp, slightly spicy and perfectly drinkable on its own, the dry vermouth and the deeply colored amaro are team players. Following the advice on the website, I mixed the amaro with sparkly Prosecco and a splash of bitters and a memorable cocktail ensued. The dry vermouth, with a delicate anise note coming through, is a good base for a martini, which turns out crisp and refreshing. The product sells for about $25.

“One main idea behind the brand was to demystify the aperitif categories, to make it approachable to anyone who is interested in trying something new,” Sprouse says, “which is why we list all of our ingredients on the front of the bottle—no secret recipes that need to be decoded.”

LoFi’s name aims to convey a simple, approachable message. “It refers to using whole ingredients and quality wine, as opposed to highly industrialized processes,” Sprouse says.

Positioned as cocktail ingredients and products to experiment with, “Aperitifs are definitely trending,” Sprouse says. “In the ’90s, there was a resurgence in the classic cocktail movement as the pendulum swung back away from cloying and fake flavorings and overly sweet ‘club drinks.’ Now that [aperitifs] are here to stay, bartenders are looking toward lower ABV cocktails and imbibing in general.”

LoFi Aperitifs are available at Bottlebarn, 3331 Industrial Ave.,
Santa Rosa. 707.528.1161.

Debriefer: August 31, 2016

0

BIG GREEN

Debriefer got word the other day of a pretty big wheel coming to town on Sept. 16. Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune will give a talk at the Glaser Center at 547 Mendocino Avenue in Santa Rosa. It seems like a good time to get a heavyweight environmentalist in town to motivate the gaggles of green-oriented activists in and around Sonoma County. Teri Shore at the Greenbelt Alliance says Brune will give a 7pm talk on a range of issues—climate change, the post–fossil fuel economy, protecting wildlands, and voting—as she noted that Sonoma County, despite its reputation as a full-bore wild country of environmental superiority, could always stand for some improvements.

On the one hand, Shore says that “we’re the only county with a regional climate-protection agency,” while also noting that the same agency was just sued over its well-intentioned climate-protection plan, which was enacted in 2008 but has failed to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by a county-set standard of 25 percent. The lawsuit was filed by the eco-warriors at California River Watch, who say the county agency has totally blown it when it comes to underrepresenting GHG emissions from car-driving tourists and the wine economy, both of which, let’s face it, will get a big boost if and when cannabis goes legal. But that’s a story for another day.

HOMELESS ALONE

Homelessness can take many forms but the essential fact of it is that you’re homeless. This newspaper heard from several people, homeless among them, regarding our Aug. 17 story “Palms Not Bombs” about a local success story at the Palms Inn in Santa Rosa, which has found permanent homes for over a hundred formerly homeless people, more than half of them veterans.

That inspirational tale prompted a phone call from Marie Douglas, a 59-year-old woman who has lived in her car—or was living in it, until it broke down—and who has bounced around from San Francisco to San Rafael to Sonoma County and then to Mendocino County since 2014. Douglas called to share her story last week, and told us that she was headed to Santa Rosa from Mendo to pay a debt and would be taking a bus to Cloverdale and would figure it out from there.

Douglas described herself as a gay, older African-American woman who has been in and out of college for decades and never been arrested, she says, as she tries to put together a career in horticulture. She’s interested in permaculture and eco-villages and medical cannabis and cheerfully says she has “lived in a tent, in an orchard, yadda yadda yadda.”

There’s some great Shambhala wisdom that Debriefer holds close to heart that says: Never give up on anyone or anything, and Douglas struck Debriefer as the living proof of that wisdom as she tries to improve her present circumstances. Good luck, Marie.

Sept. 4: Tenant Tantrum in Occidental

We don’t need to tell you that rising property costs, gentrification and the explosion of Airbnb are making the cost of renting a home today difficult. Yet this isn’t a new phenomenon, and rent battles didn’t get any more dramatic than 1980s Manhattan, when one lady stood up to ruthless developers, and won. This week, Sonoma County resident Lois...

Sept. 6-7: Seed Story in Santa Rosa

For thousands of years, native people of North, Central and South America relied on seeds to maintain a rich agricultural lifestyle. Modern times increasingly threaten the viability and availability of these native seeds, though some seeds savers are successfully housing and propagating them for future generations. The Tesuque Pueblo Seed Bank in Santa Fe, N.M., is one of the...

Circle the Lunch Wagons

With the culinary boom Napa is experiencing, it's no surprise there's a weekly food truck gathering. The Peter A. & Vernice H. Gasser Foundation, a local nonprofit, took the initiative and launched the daily Food Truck Corral at the South Napa Century Center on Aug. 8. Operating daily between 1pm (12:30pm on Saturdays and Tuesdays) and 9pm, the small...

Frankenhoodie

Morgan is a heinously overproduced student film complete with actors who are too good for it and a twist ending you'd guess even if director Luke Scott weren't the offspring of Blade Runner's Ridley Scott. A generous person could call Morgan a prequel to Blade Runner. It's about the creation of genetically altered replicants created by the Evil Corporation. The...

Pipe Dreams

'Dude, how can you watch baseball with this strife all around us?" my buddy Reggie asks me. "Hey," I reply, "I'm working on the issues between innings, OK? You know that California will pass a legalization-of-marijuana law on the November ballot, right? Just give all the voting adults three months of free weed, under one condition: They must either turn...

Does the DEA Matter?

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's refusal to decontrol marijuana has raised the hackles of doctors, patient-advocacy groups, cannabis entrepreneurs and potheads almost everywhere. Under the agency's recent directive, marijuana remains an illegal, controlled substance, like heroin and LSD, that "officially" has no medical value. But unlike most federal regulations, the DEA move will have little to no effect on...

Error Free

The issue of high ticket prices, and their arguable effect on the erosion of audiences for live theater, is rarely discussed openly within the North Bay theater community. When the average theater show costs $28, it's no wonder audiences look for other entertainment options that deliver more bang for the buck. Well, for maximum theatrical bang, there is no better...

Music on the Water

Over the last 64 years, the Sausalito Art Festival has welcomed thousands of fine artists and hundreds of chart-topping musicians to the waterfront setting of Marinship Park. This year is no different, as Labor Day weekend's biggest party boasts over 200 artists and wall-to-wall musical entertainment on two stages. Saturday, Sept. 3, kicks off the festival with Blues Hall of...

True Fidelity

A new Napa or Sonoma-based wine label will surprise no one these days, and yet wine country keeps reinventing itself in an effort to keep consumers interested. One avenue for innovation is the aperitif, a strong player on the up-and-coming mixology scene and an increasingly popular member of the home bar. Aperitif wines, vermouth and amaro are slowly on the...

Debriefer: August 31, 2016

BIG GREEN Debriefer got word the other day of a pretty big wheel coming to town on Sept. 16. Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune will give a talk at the Glaser Center at 547 Mendocino Avenue in Santa Rosa. It seems like a good time to get a heavyweight environmentalist in town to motivate the gaggles of green-oriented activists...
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow