Letters to the Editor: November 2, 2016

Bravo, David

As a produced, award-winning playwright, I have written to the Bohemian several times to three of its editors over the years with basically the same high praise for its theater reviewer David Templeton. How lucky we (and you) are to have him as our one and only theater critic of note in all of Sonoma County. There was a time when the Press Democrat’s Dan Taylor did yeoman service giving us his take on local theater, but then we found ourselves in the depths of the long recession. Theater reviews hit the skids at the PD, and even though the economy has bounced back, Taylor’s reviews have not.

So thank you once again to the Bohemian and a standing ovation to David Templeton for his welcome reviews and for his excellent article on nonprofit theater. We’d be lost without you.

Petaluma

The Real Deal

Lynda Hopkins will bring a new perspective and energy to county government. She holds a college and master’s degree with studies in communications and land-use planning. Her experiences as a journalist, organization leader and small farmer have put her in touch with local issues. And if you have a chance to meet her, you’ll be impressed with her sincere interest in bringing people together to address the issues that affect our community.

She is clear-thinking and understands the responsibilities of government. Most importantly, she really does care about the lives and aspirations of our fellow neighbors and about the protection of our natural resources.

While the baby boomer generation tends to get trapped in the ideological divide between “us and them,” Lynda speaks for a new generation of leadership that is willing to take on the tough decisions with open-minded practicality and a vision of working together. Lynda is the real deal

Monte Rio

Big-Time Money

Follow the money. Lynda Hopkins’ lackeys/handlers have been inundating my mailbox with hit piece after hit piece against Noreen Evans. We have Eric “Never met a trough I couldn’t insert my snout in” Koenigshofer, minion for big wine bucks and development, leading the effort for said big wine and development to insert their toady, Lynda Hopkins, as an advocate for their interests. Mr. Koenigshofer, as everyone recalls, left his job as a Sonoma County supervisor with impeccable environmental credentials. Since then, he has lobbied for Sonoma County Waste Management and was chief lobbyist for the Preservation Ranch debacle. So much for environmental cred. We’ve got big time outside Sonoma County money pouring in to defeat Evans. Why? You might well ask.

Occidental

Dept. of Corrections

Due to an editing error in “Tending the Fire” (Open Mic, Oct. 26), the site where Andy Lopez was killed was misidentified. It was in Moorland, not Roseland. The Bohemian regrets the error.

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

Yes on Proposition 57

About four years ago, I was working at Sonoma State University when a colleague invited me to come with her to be part of a class she was teaching at San Quentin State Prison.

After a lot of clanging doors and ID and body checks, we were led inside the upper yard, where there are chapels and classrooms. I nervously went into one of the classrooms and set up chairs. Soon, some of the inmates filed in dressed in blue denim with a large “D.O.C.” stenciled on their clothes. The men were very friendly and really seemed to be grateful we were there. These prisoners were interested, engaged and eager to learn. I was impressed. I could feel my stereotypes about prisoners vaporizing and another reality based on common humanity forming in their place. I wanted to come back.

I eventually chose to volunteer with the restorative justice program run through the prison’s Catholic chapel. The stories I have heard have given me the incredible opportunity to connect in a very human and personal way with people most would consider outcasts. These guys screwed up big-time, but have had 15, 20 or 30-plus years to consider what they have done and work out as best they can a path toward acceptance and redemption.

Given the circumstances that most have come from and the debt they have paid, I am not one to judge them. I have met some of the most spiritually advanced people I know in these groups, and I am constantly amazed how they can maintain their spirit and attitude after so many years behind bars. I have learned so much, and I’m humbled by their experiences.

Of this I am sure: many of the men I have met could be far more useful to their communities and society by doing their work
and using their talents on the outside than on the inside. If Proposition 57 passes, perhaps some of them will get their chance and some juveniles will not have to be incarcerated in adult prisons.

Bruce Berkowitz is co-chair of the Congregation Shomrei Torah social action committee.

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.

Proposition 64

I didn’t give much thought to Proposition 64 until the Sonoma County Growers Alliance (SCGA) came out against it. Yes, you read that right: the local growers are against Proposition 64.

Prior to that, I was part of the Beavis and Butthead electoral demographic—blithely ignorant, oversimplifying the issue. Pot good. Vote for pot. Huh henk. Subsequently I’ve done a little research.

Without being overly cynical, the problem with Proposition 64 is that it’s eerily similar to many past propositions where moneyed interests create legislation designed to enhance their already substantial wealth in the name of public interest. The rich get richer and the rest of us are marginalized. From the SCGA website: “The proponents openly state that small farmers will not survive the impacts of Proposition 64.” The Press Democrat has also shared that concern.

The arguments against Proposition 64 put forth by the SCGA (www.scgalliance.com/news/scga-no-on-64/) are well-reasoned. I would suspect that after reading those comments most thinking Californians would vote against it. However, to paraphrase Adlai Stevenson, “That’s not enough, we need a majority.” If only Adlai were running for president. Sigh.

I do see one compelling reason to vote for Proposition 64, which is the possible reversal of thousands of felony convictions through retroactive application of the law. This means that if you are in jail now or were in jail and whatever you did would have been legal (or, at worst, a misdemeanor) under Proposition 64, you can petition for release or expungement of your felony conviction. Thousands of Californians are going to have their lives and voting rights restored. Note: This does not mean violent offenders will be released from jail. It only means that nonviolent industry pioneers are exonerated.

It is this last issue that has become my personal tipping point. The idea that friends of mine can get their lives restored has turned me from one of the thinking Californians that should be voting against Proposition 64 to someone who most likely will vote for it. My vote will be an emotional one rather than a rational one.

Proposition 64 is imperfect. Some of the provisions make about as much sense as my mother arguing with my GPS guidance system. “She’s a snotty bitch. I don’t like her attitude.” “Good to know, Mom.” (Note to self: Check on mom’s medications.) That said, I believe it’s time to look to the future. Proposition 64 is going to pass. Public opinion is too strong to stop it. It’s time to begin the process of adaptation. “Hey Google, what does it mean now that Proposition 64 has passed?”

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

Watch the Music Video for Rags’ “Love II”

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkMW9vLHUF4[/youtube]
Santa Rosa singer and songwriter Charlie Davenport is the man behind indie-folk outfit Rags. In contrast to his earlier full band setup, Davenport goes solo on Rags’ new album, Tilted Shrine, performing and singing a collection of introspective acoustic numbers alone, often in a single take, and straight to tape.
Reportedly, Davenport wrote much of the album out in the wilds of Salt Point State Park, along the coast north of Fort Ross. And that’s the scene where the music video for Titled Shrine’s first single, “Love II,” takes place. Directed and edited by Jim Agius and Timmy Lohdi, the video recreates the trek that Davenport would embark upon and reflects the song’s wistful and patient sound. You can get Tilted Shrine here.

Free Tex Watson? Nah. A Note on Capital Crime and Culture

Charles Watson sounds a lot cooler when you put the “Tex” in the middle of it, but that’s how people remember the horribly notorious Charles Manson-ite, Charles “Tex” Watson, who was in the headline scroll of the L.A. Times this week when his parole was denied by the California Department of Corrections, for the fifteenth time.

Watson was convicted in the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders and was sentenced to death (along with Manson himself) at the end of 1971. California ended capital punishment in 1972 which meant Watson’s sentence was commuted to life with the very remote chance of parole. In his case and for all intents and purposes, that is likely a zero chance of parole, given the notoriously evil bent of Watson and the Manson Family’s 1969 murder spree. Thirty-five years after being incarcerated for his participation in the seven murders, Watson has become an ordained minister with his own church, and a college graduate with a business degree. He got married and had three kids. All while in prison. After this latest parole denial, Watson won’t go before the board again until 2021, when he’ll be 75 years old.

Seeing Watson in the headlines reminded me of how edge-culture purveyors of Generation X, myself include and deplorably so, were kind of fascinated by Manson. As a young lad just out of college in the early nineties I bought the Manson album, Lie, that had all those earnest, scratchy, weird-folkie songs on them. There was also the Manson connection to the Beach Boys’ Dennis Wilson, very intriguing. And I bought the Dec. 1969, Life Magazine with Manson on the cover at some little shop in eastern Vermont, roundabout 1990—The Love and Terror Cult! I’m kind of ashamed I did nowadays, but recently I pulled “Garbage Dump” off the Youtube at the office and the officemates thought it was kind of catchy. It’s Manson. He gave “The Sixties” a bad rap for the generation that followed and Watson was an arguably even bigger psycho, if actions speak louder than forehead swastikas and bizarre interviews with Geraldo Rivera.

I went to San Quentin early this year and while I did not spot Charles Manson, I can readily report that there is no fair shortage of psycho killers among the 700-plus men on the three tiers of death row. But there are also redeemable men, and there may even be men who are not guilty of the crime that put them there. This is not an unusual occurrence.

This year Californians will vote on whether to end the death penalty outright (Proposition 62) or quicken the appeals process to speed up—to kickstart—the executions (Proposition 66—or, The Number of the Beast, Minus 6). In our upcoming issue we’re endorsing a bunch of things and one of them is Proposition 62, the repeal initiative that would commute all the current capital sentences to life-without-parole. So that, for example, someone like Tex Watson doesn’t waste taxpayer time and money with 15 fruitless attempts to be a free man again, after already having been found guilty for crimes For Which There is No Parole But God.

Forget that. And forget Prop 66, which contains some downright creepy language that’s nevertheless totally unsuitable for Halloween: Proposition 66, if enacted, “Exempts prison officials from existing regulation process for developing execution method.” The condemned are hereby instructed to check all apples for razorblades.

Required Halloween Viewing: Found Footage 3D

Looking for a frightfully good time this Halloween weekend? You can’t miss the North Bay premiere of the 2016 horror flick, “Found Footage 3D.” A new, exciting entry into the genre of found footage films a la “The Blair Witch Project,” this film is already winning many festival awards and garnering rave reviews, being called scary, funny and emotional.

“Found Footage 3D” tells the story of a group of filmmakers who set out to make the first ever 3D found footage horror movie, but instead find themselves in a found footage horror film when the evil entity from their movie escapes into their behind-the-scenes footage.

On Saturday, Oct 29, Hot 101.7 partners up with the Roxy Stadium 14’s Cult Film Series to screen the film just in time for Halloween. Hot 101.7 DJ and horror film fanatic Eloy will host the event. Be one of the first people to see the film and get in the scary spirit of the weekend. Click here to get tickets and click here to watch the trailer.

Pony Hunt Plays the Last Record Store

PonyHunt.Oct29.LastRecordStore
photo by Sam Doores

Oakland singer-songwriter Jessie Antonick is an emotionally resonant artist, and her output under the moniker Pony Hunt reflects her personal journey with creative flair and nostalgic sweetness.
Pony Hunt’s debut album, Heart Creak, plays like a long lost jukebox of ’50s and ’60s pop imbued with forlorn heartsick and soulful sounds. Released this month, Heart Creak is already receiving rave reviews.
Hear for yourself when Pony Hunt performs an album release show on Saturday, Oct 29, at the Last Record Store, 1899 Mendocino Ave, Santa Rosa. 2pm. Free.

Hopes and Fears of a Vote for Hillary

As these things go, people generally have either a good faith or bad faith view of government and public life. You either think public officials are basically decent people trying their darnedest to enact good public policy on behalf of the people, or you think they’re all a bunch of cynical crooks who manipulate a rigged system to selfish ends and cast votes based on the imperative of political self-survival. Foolish me, I tend to take the good-faith view of public officials, up to and including Hillary Clinton, which may not be the greatest trait for a journalist, but does help in the department of how to be a better human.

I’ll be both proud and wary to cast my vote for Clinton in a couple of weeks (is it over yet)? Proud because she has earned it and because I have high hopes that she will deliver, that she will extend and improve on the best of the Obama years, bring peace and justice where such things are absent, both here and abroad. Yes, she can. Let’s hope she does.

But I’m wary because of the Iraq war vote Clinton cast in the Senate, and the bad jingoism, the Cheney-like parroting of the Saddam-Qaeda link that went along with the 2002 vote. So I’m taking a deliberate but reluctant journey around that moral road-block and voting for Clinton anyway, despite a vote that reeked of bad faith. She has owned up to the colossal error of that vote and while I remain skeptical about Clinton I’m not cynical about her. My hopes are tempered by fears that range along a line of seriousness and gravity:

1. I fear that Hillary will start WWIII or some hapless proxy version thereof, that she will accelerate chaos with overly robust responses to faraway disasters, and she will be subsequently drowned in the Sea of Man as it rises to the electoral challenge in 2020. I hope she will have learned the lesson of that indefensible Iraq War vote and earn the Nobel Peace Prize that was prematurely given to Obama, through a foreign policy that emphasizes peace through restraint—with strength on the horizon as needed, and humanitarian boots on the ground.

2. I fear that in her zeal to “jump-start the economy” that she will capitulate to the lords of capital while failing to “save the middle class” and destroy the best of Obamacare in the process of cutting bad deals with Republicans in the service of a false bipartisanship of surface civility. I hope she gets along with reasonable Republicans and that there is some sort of genuine public rapprochement among moderates, and whoever else wants to come along, that delivers results and not just fleeting moments of happy-pants posturing on TV. Along the way I hope she enacts the best of the Bernie platform along with a Clinton Fixit on Obamacare that improves it, and its standing, with The People.

3. I fear that given the ample history and current obsession with emails, that she and her administration will become embroiled in scandals of such a distracting nature that “wag the dog” will look like “swing the DINO” by the time she turns outer Raqqa into a sheet of glass, to use the Cruzian construct. So I’ll vote for Hillary but with a zero tolerance policy for Clintonian shenanigans, and especially after eight years of no-whack Barack leading the way with cool dignity. I don’t expect Clinton to reach for Obama levels of coolness, but I do expect Tim Kaine to give her the Replacements’ Pleased to Meet Me for Christmas, and for her to enjoy it.

And on that cheerful note, I hope the Obamas invite the Clintons for Christmas and an early move-in to the White House, to ease the transition, and so that they can have The Talk with Bill one morning, in their bathrobes over coffee and cakes and Michelle with the stern-friendliest face of all. The ankle bracelet is presented, wrapped in a blue bow. “You were a mediocre commander-in-chief who talked a big game but squandered your presidency with the drama. Don’t blow it for her, Bubba.”

Yes, he can. Let’s hope he doesn’t.

Oct. 27: Scream Queen in Santa Rosa

0

My favorite part about Halloween is bingeing on all the best and bloodiest horror movies out there. Aficionados of the genre like me are undoubtedly fans of actress and scream queen Barbara Crampton, who made her mark in the shocking H. P. Lovecraft–inspired ’80s film Re-Animator and stars in modern indie gems like You’re Next and We Are Still Here. This week, the CULT Film Series hosts Crampton to screen and discuss her craziest movie ever, From Beyond, another Lovecraftian joyride featuring interdimensional shape-shifting monsters. The screening also includes a costume contest and celebrates the horror on Thursday, Oct. 27, at Roxy 14 Cinemas, 85 Santa Rosa Ave., Santa Rosa. 7pm. $10. 707.525.8909.

Oct. 28: From the Ashes in Cotati

0

Last June, a fire broke out in Fulton at the house neighboring the Fulton Pentecostal Church where the popular reggae and world-beat band Midnight Sun Massive has rehearsed twice a week for years. The fire engulfed the band’s trailer and destroyed all of their equipment—instruments, amps, even their PA system. Since then, they’ve been playing on borrowed gear, but they need a massive amount of help to replace their lost items. This weekend, Redwood Cafe and BaggaJo Productions are teaming up to present a fundraiser concert for Midnight Sun Massive, who play along with Honey B & the Cultivation on Friday, Oct. 28, at the Redwood Cafe, 8240 Old Redwood Hwy., Cotati. 8pm. $5. 707.795.7868.

Letters to the Editor: November 2, 2016

Bravo, David As a produced, award-winning playwright, I have written to the Bohemian several times to three of its editors over the years with basically the same high praise for its theater reviewer David Templeton. How lucky we (and you) are to have him as our one and only theater critic of note in all of Sonoma County. There was...

Yes on Proposition 57

About four years ago, I was working at Sonoma State University when a colleague invited me to come with her to be part of a class she was teaching at San Quentin State Prison. After a lot of clanging doors and ID and body checks, we were led inside the upper yard, where there are chapels and classrooms. I nervously...

Proposition 64

I didn't give much thought to Proposition 64 until the Sonoma County Growers Alliance (SCGA) came out against it. Yes, you read that right: the local growers are against Proposition 64. Prior to that, I was part of the Beavis and Butthead electoral demographic—blithely ignorant, oversimplifying the issue. Pot good. Vote for pot. Huh henk. Subsequently I've done a little...

Watch the Music Video for Rags’ “Love II”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkMW9vLHUF4 Santa Rosa singer and songwriter Charlie Davenport is the man behind indie-folk outfit Rags. In contrast to his earlier full band setup, Davenport goes solo on Rags' new album, Tilted Shrine, performing and singing a collection of introspective acoustic numbers alone, often in a single take, and straight to tape. Reportedly, Davenport wrote much of the album out in the wilds...

Free Tex Watson? Nah. A Note on Capital Crime and Culture

Charles Watson sounds a lot cooler when you put the “Tex” in the middle of it, but that’s how people remember the horribly notorious Charles Manson-ite, Charles "Tex" Watson, who was in the headline scroll of the L.A. Times this week when his parole was denied by the California Department of Corrections, for the fifteenth time. Watson was convicted...

Required Halloween Viewing: Found Footage 3D

Acclaimed new horror film debuts in the North Bay just in time for All Hallow's Eve weekend.

Pony Hunt Plays the Last Record Store

Oakland singer-songwriter Jessie Antonick is an emotionally resonant artist, and her output under the moniker Pony Hunt reflects her personal journey with creative flair and nostalgic sweetness. Pony Hunt's debut album, Heart Creak, plays like a long lost jukebox of '50s and '60s pop imbued with forlorn heartsick and soulful sounds. Released this month, Heart Creak is already receiving rave reviews. Hear for...

Hopes and Fears of a Vote for Hillary

As these things go, people generally have either a good faith or bad faith view of government and public life. You either think public officials are basically decent people trying their darnedest to enact good public policy on behalf of the people, or you think they're all a bunch of cynical crooks who manipulate a rigged system...

Oct. 27: Scream Queen in Santa Rosa

My favorite part about Halloween is bingeing on all the best and bloodiest horror movies out there. Aficionados of the genre like me are undoubtedly fans of actress and scream queen Barbara Crampton, who made her mark in the shocking H. P. Lovecraft–inspired ’80s film Re-Animator and stars in modern indie gems like You’re Next and We Are Still...

Oct. 28: From the Ashes in Cotati

Last June, a fire broke out in Fulton at the house neighboring the Fulton Pentecostal Church where the popular reggae and world-beat band Midnight Sun Massive has rehearsed twice a week for years. The fire engulfed the band’s trailer and destroyed all of their equipment—instruments, amps, even their PA system. Since then, they’ve been playing on borrowed gear, but...
11,084FansLike
4,606FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow