Bitter Pill

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‘This bill is being shoved down the throats of the American public” was a well-traveled Republican refrain around the Affordable Care Act as it wended its way through the legislative process back in 2009, and a favorite rhetorical talking point of former House Speaker John Boehner.

Now the Republican majority promises to repeal Obamacare as the first order of business for the 115th Congress. And it appears that they aren’t proposing any sort of replacement for it, a move that will likely cause pain in California and across the country.

The Republican plan is to “repeal and delay,” but nobody knows if a GOP omnibus health bill is in the offing that would replace some of the popular aspects of Obamacare, which include a ban on denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions and a ban on annual caps on coverage.

“What we don’t know yet is, when will it take effect?” says U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman. “Will there be a two-year cliff or a four-year cliff?”

The GOP plan also includes a promise of extortion if Democrats don’t go along. House majority leader Kevin McCarthy says that if Democrats don’t participate in post-Obamacare, then they’re responsible for whatever consequences ensue.

The Sonoma County chapter of Organizing for Action, the post-Obama, activist-outreach organization, has been busy protesting McCarthy’s office and that of fellow California GOP Rep. Darrell Issa, neither of whom support the idea of healthcare as a basic human right, but who represent districts with significant buy-in to the ACA.

“When they know that their district is going to push back on them, it might give them pause,” says Sonoma-based OFA organizer Linda Hemenway. “We’re trying to educate the public about what’s going on, and our basic premise is that you can’t repeal it without a replacement that has been presented to Congress and explained to the American public, instead of this fantasy replacement that the American public supposedly supports. We’re on the defensive, we’re under attack and we’re going to say, ‘Do you really want these rights and benefits taken away from you?’”

Obamacare has generally been a benefit to California and to the North Bay. The state embraced the Medicaid expansion that went along with the healthcare overhaul, and was one of the first states out of the gate to set up a state-run exchange, Covered California. Thanks to Obamacare, the state halved its uninsured population, and the reforms have trickled down to hospitals, which are seeing fewer people in their emergency rooms—amid a greater, holistic appreciation for the benefits of preventative care. The Sutter Health system has experienced big savings in its hospitals located throughout California, including one in Sonoma County. The company reported that it spent $52 million in uncompensated “charity care” in 2015, compared to $91 million in 2014.

The North Bay has embraced the Obamacare benefits and mandates, and stands to lose if the ACA is repealed. The Sonoma County Economic Development Board published a report in 2016 that highlighted benefits brought to Sonoma County citizens under the law, especially given the county’s aging population and composition of its labor force. Many lower-income immigrants qualified for the Medi-Cal expansion.

“Healthcare is contributing to the economy’s vitality,” the report noted.

The potential post-ACA risk for a place like California, which enthusiastically embraced Obamacare and a Medicaid expansion, is that it has the most to lose under a Republican repeal-and-delay plan.

The Urban Institute estimates that up to 30 million Americans will lose insurance if the Affordable Care Act is repealed, and even if the Republican Party decides that the politics are against them and starts cherry-picking popular aspects of the law, it’s unclear how they’ll keep the ban on denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions without, as Huffman says, “wading into risk pools and market forces.”

Previous GOP repeal bills haven’t addressed those issues. The Republican position on Obamacare has also helped to drive down enthusiasm among younger people to sign up, a key piece of the bill’s success in driving down the cost curve over time.

The previous GOP push to undo Obamacare has been pretty simple: repeal it and send the bill to Obama who dutifully vetoes it. Now that the GOP has total power to eliminate it without a replacement, there are signs that there are limits to “shove it down your throat” politics. Even as the Republicans vow to disable the law, Americans continue to flock to the ACA-created health exchanges to buy an insurance product suitable to their budget. “Will [Republicans] be smarter,” says Huffman, “or just set up some distant cliff and count on everyone to come together before the cliff takes effect? We’ll see.”

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Whatever happens, Huffman says, congressional Dems will try to hold the line. “Obviously, we will fight that,” he says. “We will focus our efforts on the effects it will have on Medicaid and on Medicare, because the ACA actually stabilizes [Medicare] and provides funding to seniors.”

The latest plan from House Speaker Paul Ryan is to reform Medicare, a legacy of the LBJ-era Great Society programs.

One of the strangest things about Obamacare, as it has been received by Americans, is that, while there is wide support for many of its benefits, the law itself remains unpopular, and one of the reasons has to do with a basic question of nomenclature. A 2014 CNBC poll found that while 46 percent of Americans were opposed to “Obamacare,” only 37 percent opposed the Affordable Care Act. Part of the explanation for this disconnect is the rhetorical violence that has met the bill since its inception in 2009. Democrats have not adequately addressed the rhetorical divide.

“The sales pitch by the Republicans was much more effective than the sales pitch on our side,” Hemenway says.

And yet nobody seems to remember that, as part of his sales pitch for the bill, President Obama put the ACA framework into the hands of pragmatic Maine Republican Susan Collins and said, “You write it.”

But Collins joined every Republican in voting against the bill, even as liberals screamed betrayal that Obama hadn’t implemented a single-payer system that would have destroyed the employer-based healthcare system. “It was a step forward, even if it wasn’t a big enough step forward,” Hemenway says.

And so now it’s time for a big step backward, and the latest news from Collins is she isn’t so sure it’s such a great idea to dismantle the ACA.

The other infamous line from the ACA’s inception was minority leader Nancy Pelosi’s observation that Congress had to pass the bill to know what was in it. That comment takes on a new urgency in light of the pledge to repeal and maybe replace some of it.

The Affordable Care Act is more than 2,000 pages long and part of the reason for that is lawmakers from around the country were able to include health reforms targeted at the particulars of their district, even when they opposed the bill as a whole. As they did with the first Obama economic stimulus package, Republicans rejected the bill, but not before making sure their constituents were appeased in some way.

That fact leapt into the media last week in a well-traveled news story on CNN from the heart of coal country, where residents who had, in the main, voted for Donald Trump now wondered about those parts of Obamacare that dealt with the effects of black lung disease on coal workers and their families.

A standard Republican talking point on the ACA at the time was that it was too much, too fast and that a better legislative strategy would have been—and will be—to pass each of its component parts as a separate bill.

If the Republicans make good on their plan to repeal and delay replacement, that will give lawmakers like the Kentucky senator Mitch McConnell time to write up a targeted bill for his constituents.

In California, repeal means that the state would have to pick up the slack and account for a Medicaid expansion that has helped the state halve its uninsured population from
6.8 million pre-ACA to under 3 million now. There’s been buy-in across the state and the region. Marin County recently reported that about one-fifth of its 250,000 residents have in some way been touched by Obamacare, either through the Medi-Cal expansion or through Covered California.

Napa State Sen. Bill Dodd says Sacramento Democrats are ready to take up the fight in the likely event of repeal-and-delay.

“I’m an ardent supporter of Covered California,” he says. “The idea of people not getting insurance at all, forcing families into poverty or, worse yet, forcing them to suffer, is not my idea of a prudent 2016 or 2017 health policy.”

Dodd is a former Republican who readily admits that while the ACA is not perfect, the needed reform is not repeal. “While I’d be the first to admit that the cost of Obamacare is not what we’d all have liked to have seen the markets move to, they are what they are and I’m hoping that the next presidential administration will be a little more pragmatic and look at Obamacare through a lens of not political but practical,” Dodd says as he promises a forceful pushback to the Republican’s push to repeal and delay the ACA.

“You are going to see the Democratic Party in the Legislature defending the people who are on Obamacare,” he adds. “The Republicans could have gotten involved in this system instead of trying to kill it.”

Family Ties

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The Ronstadt clan traces their roots in Tucson back five generations, and each one of them has been a musical family. Everyone of a certain generation knows the name Linda Ronstadt, but she’s not the only singer and songwriter carrying on the family tradition.

Formed in 2009 by Linda’s brother, Michael J., and now fronted by his sons Michael G. and Petie, Ronstadt Generations blend almost 200 years of Southwestern musical folk heritage to create a lush, sun-drenched and multi-genre repertoire. The band performs twice in the North Bay this week, hitting up the HopMonk taverns in Sebastopol and Novato on Jan. 6 and 7 respectively.

Only 13 months apart, Michael G. and Petie grew up with music ingrained in family activities and gatherings, though they also got to see the professional side of that life early on.

“When we were young, my aunt [Linda] was doing mariachi records,” Petie says, “and my dad was singing with her, so we got to travel to studios and be a part of that. Looking back on it, it was impactful in how we came up as musicians—it really left a big imprint on my life.”

The brothers formally got into music through school bands. Michael G. chose the cello, “because he could sit down to play it,” jokes Petie. “And he’s taken the cello to other levels. In my opinion, he plays the cello like no one else. He’s a great improvisational player, a great folk player and a great classical player.”

Petie started on violin before moving to upright bass and guitar. “I just try to expand my musical library of instruments,” he says, noting that he also dabbles with the banjo and tuba.

“Whatever palette of colors we can paint with,” he says, “the broader the palette makes for a more interesting band.”

After a few years of playing as a trio on the road, Michael J. and sons evolved the band into a six-piece ensemble by recruiting fellow Tucson musicians Alex Flores (tenor sax and vocals), Sam Eagon (upright and electric bass) and Aaron Emery (drums and percussion), and expanding the band’s moniker to Ronstadt Generations y los Tucsonenses.

Michael J. Ronstadt died last year, but his sons are committed to keeping the family tradition going. “We all put a lot of heart into it,” Petie says. “I think he would want to see it live on.”

Top 10 Films of 2016

The problem of looking back at the year in film is that it involves looking at the year 2016, and who wants to do that?

Captain America: Civil War is an unnecessary sequel with one fight scene too many. But the directors, the Russo brothers, caught the national sense of division and of blowback begetting blowback. If liberal snowflakes are threatening to get out of the U.S. now, what does it say that even the Cap decided to head for the hills?

Strange that with all the efforts to retrieve the magic of the studio-era film—La La Land, Rules Don’t Apply, Café Society and Hail, Caesar!—the most original pastiche, The Witch, channeled a silent film from 1922, the Swedish classic Häxan, aka Witchcraft Throughout the Ages. The Witch‘s Georges de la Tour lighting and the ingenious payoff worked its magic.

While it was made for TV, the eight-hour O.J.: Made in America took a long look at this hero’s plummet and the way he allowed himself to be used as a palliative against America’s racism during the white backlash of the 1960s.

Zootopia, Loving and, perhaps the best film of the year, Moonlight did justice to our reeling times in three different approaches to the subject of dangerous liaisons. Fences was a haunting film that showed how post-traumatic slave syndrome destroys a tough, ingenious man.

Hunt for the Wilderpeople seems like a movie that will find its niche during repeated viewings; it’s the one film you can recommend to anyone, even during times of schism.

The kinky and beautifully framed Handmaiden describes the cost of snobbery. And Hell and High Water‘s splashy, sagebrush-rebellion populism is less key to its quality than the way it treats—with wit and fierce excitement—the lives of outlaws.

As for the worst of the year, why search for a more dispiriting movie than Alice Through the Looking Glass? It cost a fortune, it rubbished a great book, and it had the last of Alan Rickman in it, as if to remind us of one more loss in a year of heavy losses.

Missing Link?

Terpenes are the essential oils in cannabis, and are responsible for its unique aromatics, as well as some psychoactive effects. Strains like Cherry AK, Sour Diesel and Pineapple aren’t just names; they also refer to the smells of the strain emitted by the terpene content.

There are over 120 identified cannabis terpenes. One in particular, myrcene, is reputedly responsible for the effects normally associated with indica vs. sativa strains. The more myrcene in your strain, the more likely you will experience the “couch-lock” effect associated with indica-dominant strains. The absence of myrcene will give you a soaring or sativa-like effect. These effects, including medical efficacy, are influenced not only by the cannabinoid profile (THC, CBD, etc.), but by the combination of the cannabinoids and terpenes.

Science hasn’t focused enought on terpenes. A Google Scholar search of “THC” produces more than 1,000,000 articles; a search of “THC” and “terpenes” produces 15,000 articles. So only 1.5 percent of the scientific articles concerning THC mention terpenes, and presumably even fewer of them have looked at the role of terpenes in the individual studies. Given that scientists pride themselves on doing experiments that can be reproduced, the failure to mention terpene content casts a massive shadow over past cannabis research.

Another look at Google Scholar yields the following: “THC” and “cancer” shows 78,000 results, while “THC,” “cancer” and “terpenes” comes up with only 3,000 results. Why is this important? There is a small body of research out there that says the addition of a certain class of terpenes known as sesquiterpene lactones combined with THC/CBD has greater efficacy in fighting cancer than THC alone. (Note to breeders and cultivators: look for strains that have a CBD to THC ratio of one to one, with a strong sesquiterpene lactone profile. One mother plant could make the world a better place.)

The role of terpene content in treating epilepsy shows the same research pattern. Less than 4 percent of the scientific articles mention terpenes. Does the terpene profile make a big difference in treating epilepsy with cannabis-based therapies? Maybe, maybe not. The fact that the science is largely silent on the subject is troubling for parents trying to figure out how to help children suffering from seizures.

Is the addition of sesquiterpenes really better at fighting cancer? It’s possible, but some classes of sesquiterpenes have produced toxic side effects. We need more research. Terpenes matter. Go back to the lab, scientists, and get busy.

Michael Hayes works for CBD-Guild. Contact him at mh*******@*****st.net.

The Fine Print

Napa’s Bill Dodd says that when he introduced his first bill (SB 33) as a freshly minted state senator early this past month, bankers and businessmen approached him in Sacramento and wondered, what the heck is this former Republican up to?

Dodd is also a former business owner who sat on the board of the Napa Community Bank. He says his bill sprang from the recent controversy at Wells Fargo—and from his own experience as a victim of identity theft. He’s aiming squarely at so-called forced arbitration clauses in contracts that bar consumers from suing lenders in court when there are charges of fraud or identity theft.

The Wells Fargo scandal involved employees at the California-based bank who were caught opening some 2 million bank accounts for existing Wells Fargo customers without their knowledge or consent, and then passing along millions of dollars in fees and charges to the unwitting customers. When customers got wise to the scam, they sued, but Wells Fargo successfully argued that the controversy should be settled through arbitration and not the courts. This “forced arbitration” clause is a standard part of lending contracts designed to protect lenders against expensive lawsuits played out in the courts.

The clause is just the sort of fine-print exercise in bank favoritism that has been scrubbed by multiple Obama-era consumer-protection reforms that pushed back against fees and hidden charges in contracts—where, as is often is the case, says Dodd, “people don’t know what they are signing.”

His bill dovetails with other work he has done on identity theft and consumer-fraud issues while serving as an assemblyman, and also with federal-level efforts to reform the arbitration-clause backstop for banks and lenders through the besieged Consumer Fraud Protection Bureau (CFPB). Last October, the CFPB announced its intention to scrub forced-arbitration language from lending contracts.

“I am not a fan of the clauses,” says Dodd. “In the end, they favor whoever is contracting out for the arbitrator, for obvious reasons. My bill essentially says that if a bank or financial institution [has] either defrauded or perpetuated consumer fraud on a customer . . . the bank would lose the ability to automatically go to the arbitration clause, and the employee or victim could have their claim heard in a court of law.”

Wells Fargo argued that because the defrauded customers had legitimate accounts with the bank, the arbitration clause in the customers’ contracts kicked in when charges of fraud emerged. Dodd says that a Wells Fargo whistleblower discovered the scam but “that person lost in arbitration.”

Dodd says that members of the banking industry have approached him and said, “We can’t believe you are doing this,” as they highlight court costs associated with out-of-contract lawsuits. Dodd’s identity-theft case ended favorably for him and for the bank that had let it happen, but the arbiter, he says, dropped all court and legal fees associated with the case.

Now, he says, when he’s approached by bankers, “I say to them, have you ever seen a time when you or your employee has committed fraud on customers or employees?” Their answer is typically no, to which Dodd responds that they then shouldn’t object to a bill that would adjudicate fraud in court instead of through arbitration.

“I am gong to work on a bill that will make an arbitration system that is more fair,” says Dodd, “and if there’s a solution to arbitration that was equally fair to business and the consumer, I’m all in.” Until then, he says, he’s putting the emphasis on protecting consumers instead of the banks’ bottom line.

“I really do believe that the arbitration system favors the employers, favors the companies,” he says.

Dodd’s bill comes amid intense discussion over the fate of the CFPB, an agency spearheaded
by progressive firebrand
Sen. Elizabeth Warren. A similar attempt to enact Dodd’s proposed arbitration language at CFPB has met strong opposition from Republicans, many of whom
are hell-bent on destroying the agency.

In a recent interview with the Bohemian, Kevin Stein, deputy director of the consumer-rights nonprofit the California Reinvestment Coalition, said potential rollbacks at the CFPB were a “major concern, and an area where we will fight to protect the agency and the rules and access it gives to consumers to complain about unfair practices.”

Dodd says he’s not totally conversant in all the efforts undertaken at the CFPB, but he’s generally a fan of consumer protections, even as he echoes concerns that the agency’s purportedly big-foot approach to regulating big banks and lenders has also put the screws to community lenders.

Senate Bill 33 is the first and only bill that Dodd has introduced in his capacity as chair of the State Senate’s Banking and Finance Committee. The bill has gotten the support of state consumer-rights groups such as the Consumer Federation of California.

Dodd says he’s eager to work as a champion for consumer protections that are fair to consumers and lenders alike. “This is my first foray into this area,” he says as he highlights that the arbitration-reform issue has been editorialized in newspapers ranging from the Boston Herald to the New York Times, and that California Rep. Brad Sherman recently co-sponsored a similar bill in Washington.

But Dodd says he didn’t sponsor the bill to get the positive press or to align with the CFPB.

“I’m doing this on my own,” he says.

Black and White

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Where did the light go? Needing the year to turn, you yearn in the dark for our Festival of Lights.

Dead of winter is upon you. Moonlessness. You find yourself losing yourself pitch-black without a search light, search warrant, search party. No reading light, no nook. No flashlight, not even a firefly.

Then, astonishment—the candle! Hope flickers: a great miracle happened here! Finally, promise of sunrise, when baby blue meets princess pink, and lemon chiffon morning bursts through.

Splendor! Day breaks, breaks your fractured heart open. Listen: you can hear it. The thunder crack of dawn splits open that relentless night.

Joy again! Light glitters, sparkles, twinkles, bedazzles. Let there be light, and there was light, a genesis. One random morning, you startle yourself singing in the shower.

But night, that guillotine, can fall again. It will.

Dark behind your velvet eyelids, dark inside your vacant cluttered skull, dark inside your body where only one person gets to live.

Unable to write, absolutely nothing to say, that blinking cursor on that blank page, that poised pen writing nothing. Wordlessness.

It has no name; throw images at it. You, the bulls-eye of the charging black rhino. You, the most wanted on your own black list. You, the boot-black groveling at your own scuffed feet. Divorced from yourself, with no custody of your whimpering inner child. A blackout of the spirit, total outage of spiritual power.

Yet: this human experience truly is black and it is white. Dappled, striped, speckled. Zebras, yin and yang, piano keys, black and white saddle shoes, steaming deer droppings in the snow, your little black dress with white polka-dots, penguins, skunks, black-and-white cows standing drenched in the rain, black-faced white sheep huddling soaked, New York black-and-white cookies. And these ink-black words on this previously white page!

Rita S. Losch is a poet who lives in Santa Rosa.

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: January 4, 2016

Doublespeak?

The late Winsor activist Bill Patterson once told me that politicians these days are trying to get us to believe that black is white and white is black. Nowhere is this more true than on our local board of supervisors. Lynda Hopkins talks about progressivism (“Redwood Empire Fights Back,” Dec. 21) as though she herself demonstrates progressive characteristics. Before we make up our minds on that one, let us talk about money in politics.

Hopkins was quoted in the Press Democrat saying, “I think that the whole idea that money buys influence is a false argument.” Another female Democrat by the name of Hillary Clinton was asked on Meet the Press if she thought Goldman Sachs expected anything in return for the $675,000 she was paid by them for giving three speeches. Her reply was “Absolutely not.”

On the other side of the coin you have David McCuan, political science professor at Sonoma State University. He states quite simply, “Money is influential.” Donald Trump was quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying, “As a businessman and very substantial donor to very important people, when you give, they do whatever the hell you want them to do.” At a rally in Iowa last year Trump said, “When I call, they kiss my ass, OK?” Anybody who does not have their head completely buried in the sand knows that on this issue Trump and McCuan are the truth tellers and Hillary and Hopkins are the ones blowing smoke. If telling the truth constitutes a tenet of progressivism, then Hopkins doesn’t quite fit the bill.

How could there be anything progressive about buying your way into office on the backs of the growth machine? Keep in mind here that the growth machine is directly responsible for a large percentage of our environmental problems. Follow the money, people. Contemplate the conundrum of a politician with two degrees in environmental science accepting campaign donations from four of the most environmentally destructive forces in the history of Sonoma County. That would be realtors, developers, the wine industry and the Sonoma County Farm Bureau.

So here we have a politician rallying against Trump who is sponsored by a bunch of Donald Trump wannabees. Looks like you were right, Bill! If this demonstrates what neo-liberals are going to look like from now on, then maybe Hopkins could best be described as a “neo-progressive.”

Santa Rosa

Face the Music

Thank you, Tom Gogola, for your “U.S. Blues” article (Dec. 21) and this one that starts with Jimi (“Trumpets,” Dec. 28). Yes, black lives matter to art and music in America! Thank God!

Via Bohemian.com

Methinks you are confusing the death of the Democratic Party with the death of democracy (“Trumpets,” Dec. 28). Democracy is alive and well, thank you very much. So sorry that your idea of what democracy is depends on which side wins the election.

Via Boehmian.com

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

Naked Beauty

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Julianne Skai Arbor has always loved trees. Growing up in the flat and treeless Midwest, she says she was born with an affection for trees that was just waiting to take root.

When she moved to the Bay Area for graduate art school in 1993 and experienced California’s grand wild places, Arbor’s inner yearning blossomed and she became TreeGirl, her arboreal alter ego.

For 20 years, Arbor has been traveling the globe, encountering majestic trees and photographing nude self-portraits among them. These stunning images are accompanied by revealing personal essays and more in her new book, TreeGirl: Intimate Encounters with Wild Nature.

Arbor releases the book with a launch party that includes a gallery showing, a reading, live music and food and refreshment made exclusively from trees on Jan. 15 at Occidental Center for the Arts.

Arbor’s first transformative experience with trees was on a post-college, three-month walkabout in Australia where she saw two small trees that seemed to be dancing together.

“I wasn’t on anything,” she jokes, “but I saw these trees and was overcome with this need to be part of them, to be with them. I was traveling with a friend. I took my clothes off, handed him a camera, intertwined with the trees and said, ‘Take my picture.'”

That was the beginning. Arbor says in that moment she found her art form, her spiritual practice and her joy. She followed up that first trip by studying the many impressive species of trees in Northern California, from the redwood and sequoia to the oak and bristlecone pine.

“We’re so fortunate to have some of the most amazing trees in the world right here,” says Arbor, who has lived in Sonoma County for 16 years.

Arbor, who is also a certified naturalist and conservation educator, soon started seeking out the biggest, most unusual trees in the world, such as the African baobab pictured on the cover of the new book, a seven-trunked, 2,000-year-old tree known as the “Seven Sisters” by locals in Botswana.

The decision to photograph herself nude with the trees was inspired by artist Georgia O’Keeffe and the nude photography she did with Alfred Stieglitz in the 1920s. “It gave me a place to feel comfortable in my body,” says Arbor.

Arbor says that TreeGirl is her way of showing that there is no separation between human beings and nature. “The message of the book is that we are nature, and we forget that in our modern world,” she says. “I want to remind people about our ancient bond with the wild and invite them to reconnect with it.”

BottleRock’s 2017 Lineup Is Here

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The 5th annual BottleRock Napa Valley festival, set for May 26 through 28, 2017, has unveiled its full lineup, including headlining artists Foo Fighters, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, and Maroon 5.
The three-day event, which also boasts wine, food, beer and more, will feature over 80 bands and musicians performing this year, and the full lineup is below. Festival passes go on sale at 10AM PST tomorrow, Wednesday, Jan 4, 2017 at BottleRockNapaValley.com and eventbrite.com.
ec27205b-9aac-41c0-a55a-547807a4d630

Dec. 29: Countdown to Terror in Santa Rosa

0

Seems like every holiday has a slasher film to go with it, from bloody Valentines to black Christmases. While New Year’s Eve typically doesn’t get much attention from horror filmmakers, the Roxy’s CULT film series has dug up two films to ring in the new year. First up, the series screens Terror Train, in which a masked killer stalks Jamie Lee Curtis aboard a train during a New Year’s Eve costume party. That’s followed by New Year’s Evil in which a killer (somehow) strikes at the stroke of midnight in each time zone across the country during a fatal New Year’s. Thursday, Dec. 29, at Roxy 14 Cinemas, 85 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $10. 707.525.8909.

Bitter Pill

'This bill is being shoved down the throats of the American public" was a well-traveled Republican refrain around the Affordable Care Act as it wended its way through the legislative process back in 2009, and a favorite rhetorical talking point of former House Speaker John Boehner. Now the Republican majority promises to repeal Obamacare as the first order of business...

Family Ties

The Ronstadt clan traces their roots in Tucson back five generations, and each one of them has been a musical family. Everyone of a certain generation knows the name Linda Ronstadt, but she's not the only singer and songwriter carrying on the family tradition. Formed in 2009 by Linda's brother, Michael J., and now fronted by his sons Michael G....

Top 10 Films of 2016

The problem of looking back at the year in film is that it involves looking at the year 2016, and who wants to do that? Captain America: Civil War is an unnecessary sequel with one fight scene too many. But the directors, the Russo brothers, caught the national sense of division and of blowback begetting blowback. If liberal snowflakes are...

Missing Link?

Terpenes are the essential oils in cannabis, and are responsible for its unique aromatics, as well as some psychoactive effects. Strains like Cherry AK, Sour Diesel and Pineapple aren't just names; they also refer to the smells of the strain emitted by the terpene content. There are over 120 identified cannabis terpenes. One in particular, myrcene, is reputedly responsible for...

The Fine Print

Napa's Bill Dodd says that when he introduced his first bill (SB 33) as a freshly minted state senator early this past month, bankers and businessmen approached him in Sacramento and wondered, what the heck is this former Republican up to? Dodd is also a former business owner who sat on the board of the Napa Community Bank. He says...

Black and White

Where did the light go? Needing the year to turn, you yearn in the dark for our Festival of Lights. Dead of winter is upon you. Moonlessness. You find yourself losing yourself pitch-black without a search light, search warrant, search party. No reading light, no nook. No flashlight, not even a firefly. Then, astonishment—the candle! Hope flickers: a great miracle happened...

Letters to the Editor: January 4, 2016

Doublespeak? The late Winsor activist Bill Patterson once told me that politicians these days are trying to get us to believe that black is white and white is black. Nowhere is this more true than on our local board of supervisors. Lynda Hopkins talks about progressivism ("Redwood Empire Fights Back," Dec. 21) as though she herself demonstrates progressive characteristics. Before...

Naked Beauty

Julianne Skai Arbor has always loved trees. Growing up in the flat and treeless Midwest, she says she was born with an affection for trees that was just waiting to take root. When she moved to the Bay Area for graduate art school in 1993 and experienced California's grand wild places, Arbor's inner yearning blossomed and she became TreeGirl, her...

BottleRock’s 2017 Lineup Is Here

The 5th annual BottleRock Napa Valley festival, set for May 26 through 28, 2017, has unveiled its full lineup, including headlining artists Foo Fighters, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, and Maroon 5. The three-day event, which also boasts wine, food, beer and more, will feature over 80 bands and musicians performing this year, and the full lineup is below. Festival passes go on sale...

Dec. 29: Countdown to Terror in Santa Rosa

Seems like every holiday has a slasher film to go with it, from bloody Valentines to black Christmases. While New Year’s Eve typically doesn’t get much attention from horror filmmakers, the Roxy’s CULT film series has dug up two films to ring in the new year. First up, the series screens Terror Train, in which a masked killer stalks...
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