Cross Culture

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A fearless and funny voice in the counterculture scene since the early 1990s, David Cross wears every comedy hat in the business. Before he was a television show creator, actor and author, Cross was a standup comic who went against the grain of popular culture and helped breathe life into a new comedy scene that is bitingly irreverent.

Coming up in the New York scene alongside Janeane Garofalo and Louis CK, Cross first broke into TV writing for The Ben Stiller Show in 1992, where he met another smart comedy writer, Bob Odenkirk (Better Call Saul). The two created the highly original and uproarious Mr. Show for HBO in 1995. From there, Cross’s career took off, leading to work on other TV comedy classics like Arrested Development, film roles and award-winning comedy albums.

Cross is constantly in creation mode, creating and starring in the comedy series The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret, which returns for a new season this month on IFC. Last year, he teamed again with Odenkirk for the Netflix sketch comedy series W/ Bob & David.

Now, Cross is back in his element, on the stage again for his current tongue-in-cheek standup tour, Making America Great Again! He appears on Sunday, Jan. 31, at the Wells Fargo Center for the Arts, 50 Mark West Springs Road, Santa Rosa. 7:30pm. $35. 707.546.3600.

Take It Easy

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I still remember the iconic cover of the first Eagles album I purchased. A small, black silhouette of a feathered bird with the word “Eagle” imprinted on it, flying off into the sunset somewhere over the desert. After hearing their first single, “Take It Easy,” I had a feeling this group was destined for a good flight and a solid landing wherever it went.

I’m not a musician, but growing up on ’50s and ’60s music, I knew the blended sounds created by Glenn Frey, Don Henley and company would reach a large audience that was ready to move on to another sound, a sound that reflected a softer, more thoughtful combination of melodies and lyrics. After the tumultuous ’60s, that first album, which included “Witchy Woman” and “Peaceful, Easy Feeling” along with “Take It Easy,” was enough to make me see what these guys would follow up with. They did not disappoint.

Their offerings over less than a decade reflected the Zeitgeist of a culture seemingly turned inward and preoccupied with itself. The lyrics were at once more poignant and more acerbic—a moral plea for truth and love, and acute observations of the material excesses rotting society’s foundations. Of course, the pressures of being in a group of creative souls attempting to stay a course true to each individual took its toll. We all know where that usually leads: breakup.

In spite of disbanding 20 years ago, the Eagles have shown the power of their music since they debuted in 1971, 45 year ago. Though I no longer own that round piece of black vinyl purchased for plus-decades ago, I can use my new technology to recapture those days of my youth.

So thanks, Glenn. You took us to the limit, gave us the best of your love and a peaceful, easy feeling to boot. Take it easy, buddy.

E. G. Singer takes it easy 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.

Jazzed Up

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Napa’s historic downtown opera house has seen a lot of changes in the past few years. First, national venue and restaurant chain City Winery took residence in 2013 and gave the space a much-needed facelift, though City Winery’s tenure was cut short last year when they opted out of a 10-year lease eight years early.

That departure left the Napa Valley Opera House’s future unclear, yet now it appears the nearly 140-year-old building may be revived, as the world-famous Blue Note Jazz Club plans to take over the venue, located at 1030 Main Street, as its newest location.

“We are in final negotiations, and both sides are confident that we will close this deal in the next few weeks,” says opera house board chair Bob Almeida. “We knew that Blue Note had been looking in Napa for years, so when City Winery approached us about terminating their lease, we decided to pursue Blue Note, and things moved ahead rapidly.”

Founded in New York City in 1981, Blue Note Jazz Club is now an international chain of venues sporting the full spectrum of American roots music, with locations in Tokyo, Milan and, most recently, Hawaii. Considered a musical institution, Blue Note offers world-class performers in intimate spaces, allowing audiences a close-up experience with their favorite artists.

“We thought the vision that Blue Note is bringing is really the best for Napa and the best for the opera house, which we look at as a real community treasure,” says Almeida.

Almeida describes Blue Note’s impending plans in Napa as turning the City Winery model on its ear. The first floor, previously a restaurant only, will be transformed into Blue Note’s primary, seven-night-a-week venue and supper club, a cozy 150-seat space that will feature equal doses of nationally touring acts and regional favorites.

The upstairs Margrit Mondavi Theatre will remain open as well, and will host larger concerts, though Blue Note is opening the space to other local promoters and organizers such as Latitude 38 (BottleRock Napa Valley), the Napa Valley Film Festival and the Transcendence Theatre Company. Almeida says that spreading the events around through other producers will help the space become a destination for music fans of all tastes.

Right now, Almeida says, the lawyers are finalizing the lease details, and he expects Blue Note to take over the space by the end of February and begin routing its top-touring musicians to Napa soon after.

“The quality of the artists that we are going to get in here is going to be pretty amazing,” Almeida says.

Letters to the Editor: January 27, 2016

Smile for the Camera

So great to see things like Studio Space Santa Rosa (“Picturesque,” Jan. 20) popping up in Sonoma County. Loving their efforts to support the arts and culture that make S.R. so special.

Via Facebook

Losing Her Religion

Denise Dubois lost “her fear” by totally losing her own identity and joining “the other” (“Learn and Lose the Fear,” Jan. 20). How nice and progressive.

Via Facebook

Bernin’

Some pundits call it strategy, but Elizabeth Warren may be having a crisis of conscience. Behold—the greatest evidence of the “progressive” impotence of a Democratic Party still caressing the special interest of preserving its establishment’s status quo. Exciting times nonetheless. Give em hell, ol’ Bern!

Cotati

Less Is More

Regarding “Into the Woods” at Spreckels (“Encore,” Jan. 13) and Mr. Templeton’s remark that “some of the effects may leave you underwhelmed”: Bravo to Kim Bromley’s sense of staging! The first thing I said to my two daughters after the lights came up was how wonderfully minimal the staging was. To me, that’s the mark of really good theater. You want overwhelming effects? How about how well the actors are miked at Spreckels. By the way, do the performers have to sign waivers at Spreckels? No footlights, nothing between them and that gaping entryway to the underworld, the Spreckels orchestra pit. Talk about a deep theater critique, each performance has an element of Cirque du Soleil daredevilism!

Rohnert Park

Eco-Eating

It was interesting to read that there is a new “-atarian” in town, the climatarian. 
(“The Climate Menu,” Jan. 13). The growing awareness of the impact of our food choices on the planet is encouraging, but this article only takes us half way across the road of climate disaster.

While it’s true that beef and dairy contribute significantly to climate change, when compared to plant foods, pork and chicken are extremely harmful as well. If everyone in the country skipped one serving of chicken per week, the carbon dioxide savings would be the equivalent of taking more than half a million cars off our roads. Don’t just switch from beef to pork or chicken; get the slaughterhouse out of your kitchen and choose a carbon-friendly, compassionate vegan diet.

Penngrove

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

Prudent Moves

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Emphasizing that the next recession might be right around the corner, Gov. Jerry Brown released his $170 billion 2016–17 budget on Jan. 7 with an emphasis on putting a little something aside—$2 billion—for the state’s rainy-day fund. He emphasized prudence and discipline yet again during his 2016 State of the State address last week.

It’s hard to not hover over the idea of a “rainy-day fund” in a state that’s been dealing with a drought for the past four years, and Brown’s budget has a number of drought-beating, water-security items embedded within it, including an update of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan, with $3.6 million earmarked to flow the WaterFix Delta conveyance plan into the broader Delta Plan.

Translated into English, that means that, yes, Brown is pushing ahead with his plan to build two large water tunnels to ensure the flow of fresh water from the Sacramento River southward. The water-security part of the plan has been cleaved from habitat restoration efforts underway in the Delta. The broader effort is now undertaken as the so-called 4A option, which state and federal authorities proposed last April. Now the state Natural Resources Agency is lead agency on the habitat-restoration part of the deal, under the EcoRestore plan, while WaterFix builds the tunnels and associated other infrastructure to hedge against future droughts and their crippling impacts on Big Ag.

The Bay Delta Conservation Plan is just one of a number of budget nuggets released by Brown that are of interest to the North Bay. Here are some of the highlights:

Criminal Justice Reform Brown’s budget summary notably highlights an item for the Sonoma County Main Adult Detention Center that would send $1.5 million in 2016–17 (on top of $500,000 in 2015–16) to provide the county lockup with 10 “jail-based competency treatment beds,” through a contract with the Department of State Hospitals. There are 148 such beds already in use around the state; they are used to help rehabilitate inmates so they are competent to stand trial. The push for competency beds comes as Sonoma County moves forward on plans to build a new facility dedicated to special-needs prisoners after securing $40 million in state money in 2015.

Brown’s budget also responds to two recent lawsuits brought against the state that address broader issues around criminal-justice reform. Under his plan, the state will spend $9.3 million to comply with the ruling in Sassman v. Brown, “which requires the state to expand the existing female Alternative Custody Program to males.” Under this program, inmates serve out the last year or two of their terms in home detention or a residential facility.

This bill could prove a boon for private providers of electronic monitoring services, given the expanded pool of inmates. “It is unclear how many males will ultimately qualify for an alternative placement,” Brown notes in his budget summary. “Consequently, future budget adjustments may be necessary to capture the full impact of this program expansion.”

The state also reached an agreement last year in Ashker v. Brown that hit on the overuse of solitary confinement in prison. The agreement, notes Brown, moves the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation “away from a system of indeterminate terms for segregated housing to a system that focuses on determinate terms for behavior-based violations.” The state would save $28 million by shutting down some solitary-confinement units, and Brown pledges to spend $5.8 million “for additional investigative staff to monitor gang activity in prisons as the new segregated housing policy changes are implemented.”

Fire Protection Brown is offering some $300 million to deal with damage from last year’s big fires in Lake and Calaveras counties, but the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, CalFire, is hampered in its fire-stopping efforts because of its fleet of 12 Vietnam-era, military-surplus helicopters, which are aging and not up to the task, CalFire says. Brown offers an unspecified figure for the replacement of the choppers and says he is waiting on a procurement plan which should be unveiled this spring, just in time for fire season.

In-Home Supportive Services Sonoma County went through a big fight last year over raising the wages for In-Home Supportive Service providers, as wage agitators failed to convince the board of supervisors to increase their wage to $15 an hour. Those workers currently make $11.65 an hour in Sonoma County, and $13 an hour in Marin County.

Brown says it would be nice, but fiscally foolish, to push for a statewide $15 minimum wage (it’s $10 an hour as of Jan. 1) for all workers, but in the meantime, Brown and the Legislature have to deal with a federal Department of Labor ruling from last year that said IHSS workers are entitled to overtime payment, travel time between clients and wait time related to doctor visits.

Brown also proposed to lift a 7 percent reduction in service hours slapped on IHSS workers around the time of the Great Recession, which he says will cost the state $236 million in 2016–17. The overtime ruling could cost nearly $1 billion a year starting in 2016–17; about half of that would come from the state’s general fund.

“These regulations will lead to over $440 million annually in additional state costs,” notes Brown. The federal overtime rules are anticipated to be implemented in February.

Medical Marijuana Last year Brown signed off on the Medical Marijuana Regulation and Safety Act, a statewide regulatory framework that will oversee the “licensing and enforcement of the cultivation, manufacture, transportation, storage, and distribution of medical marijuana.” Brown is asking for $25 million and 126 new state positions, spread across numerous agencies—Fish and Wildlife, Public Health, Food and Agriculture and the State Water Resources Control Board, among others—to ensure a steady and just roll-out of the new medical cannabis regime.

Sonoma Development Center The feds have pushed the state Department of Public Health to shut down the three so-called state development centers, located in Porterville, Fairview and Glen Ellen. Brown notes that the state entered into a settlement agreement with the Sonoma Development Center that will keep federal funds flowing there through this July or next, “depending on the state’s continued compliance with the agreement.”

The agreement is that the center will close by 2018. Brown would send $24.5 million to the center “to assist in the development of community resources for placement of current developmental center residents.” Another $18 million is earmarked for the three centers to deal with, among other issues, workers’ compensation claims, and to relocate residents and their personal belongings, a big worry for families of some of the long-term residents at the Sonoma County facility.

Slurp’s Up

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We are lingering over oysters and salads at Saltwater in Inverness and wondering in the aftermath of lunch about all the what-to-do-next ideas at our disposal: the options out here in West Marin are limitless.

Check out the shipwreck in Tomales Bay? Plunge into deep Inverness, the upper reaches of
Pt. Reyes National Seashore, way out at the Tule Elk Preserve? Grab the dogs and head to remote Kehoe Beach for a romp? Pop in at the Vedanta Society retreat for some spiritual soul-scrubbing?

Decisions, decisions. But meanwhile, it’s a pitch-perfect Sunday afternoon in West Marin, a sunny, late January weekend spent dancing between the
El Niño raindrops, and Saltwater is brimming with full tables of revelers, solo diners and couples at the short bar. It’s a weekend for regrouping after the recent big rains: clean the deck, sweep the leaves, get ready for the next barrage of blustery rain and wind. It’s coming.

For now, a cool, clear respite. And Saltwater presents itself as the perfect complement: clean, crisp and wholly competent in its execution and flavorful designs, offering exposed white rafters and an overall vibe of well-appointed casual. Today it feels like a meet-and-greet zone for the workers, artisans and imp-souls who call this part of the world home, who work in and around Inverness and who head to Saltwater for a weekend kickback of chitchat over lunch.

It is practically a given that you are going to order oysters, and Saltwater offers a $40 “raw deal” that features a dozen swimming in their liquor, from various ports of call: Hog Island Sweetwaters, Chelsea Gems from Washington state and Island Creeks all the way from Duxbury Bay, Mass. (no relation to the nearby reef).

Saltwater also offers a trio of cooked-oyster options, and Sunday being Sunday, the day of bacon (and rest), we go for the Devils Oyster barbecue sauce, bacon from Devil’s Gulch Ranch, parsley and butter. The spicy, juicy bivalves are first to emerge from the kitchen of chef Matthew Elias, with the platter of raw jewels to follow. We’re keeping it light today, with two accompanying salads to cleanse the palate and seal the health-lunch deal. The County Line chicory salad ($16) is dotted with sunflower seeds and feta, while the Coke Farm beet salad ($17) is a frizzy heap of mustard frills, chunks of Rogue River blue cheese and toasted pistachios. Sections of juicy, firm beets lurk below the mustard frills, slathered with a patina of the honey-mustard dressing that zings-up the salad without being overly cloying about it.

The lunch menu also features a trio of pizzas ($18–$19) and a couple of homey sandwiches ($17)—bacon with green tomato aioli, roasted radicchio, brioche and pickles, and a grilled cheese on sustaining slabs of Parkside levain.

It’s immediately clear that Saltwater is as much a part of the community out here as, say, Perry’s Deli. At least for today, we’re not seeing the hordes of cyclists who zip through nearby Pt. Reyes Station on any given weekend in their ultra-chic get-ups, hogging the line at the Bovine Bakery. Saltwater instead comes off as a total see-and-be-seen neighborhood place, loaded down with locals enjoying a micro-staycation over oysters and/or a serving of that Double 8 Dairy buffalo-milk gelato.

The pizzas are tempting but for another day—if only they delivered the smoked-cheddar and merguez pie!—and, speaking of community, the restaurant is just now trying to raise funds to replace its 30-year-old pizza oven. Saltwater’s been going strong for almost four years as a neighborhood joint, and owner Luc Chamberland put out a recent call to regulars to help pay for the new oven. He hooked up with the restaurant investment group EquityEats; check out the plan at equityeats.com.

The conversation has run a few avenues this afternoon: the awesomeness of actual, hand-held maps, the mineral content of the various oysters splayed before us and the absence of a righteous hot tub emporium in these parts. Sorely needed.

The hot tub conundrum notwithstanding, there are a million staycation options to think about. Mt. Vision has 1,282 feet of nearby elevation to conquer, a pleasantly mellow adventure. Heart’s Desire Beach, on Tomales Bay—that’s a little ways up the Sir Francis Drake Boulevard from here. The Bolinas Ridge Trail beckons across Highway 1, and back in the
Pt. Reyes National Seashore, the trails are epic, legion, endless and probably kind of muddy right about now: Estero Trail, Meadow Trail, Horse Trail, Bucklin Trail, Fire Lane Trail, Woodward Valley Trail . . .

The Saltwater menu choices are thankfully not nearly as overwhelming as the what-to-do staycation options. A decision is reached as the salad plates are hustled away: it is time for a nap.

Saltwater, 12781 Sir Francis Drake Blvd., Inverness. 415.669.1244

Jack London Book Club Announces 2016 Dates & Titles

Literary critic Alfred Kazin once said, “the greatest story Jack London ever wrote was the story he lived.” Throughout 2016, Jack London State Park is heeding those words for their year-long celebration of the author and adventurer who called Sonoma County home with their “Discover Your Call of the Wild” event series that boasts musical performances, tours, lectures and more happening in accordance with the centennial anniversary of London’s death. 

The event series also includes the Jack London Book Club, who will meet four times over the next 12 months and discuss four of London’s most enduring novels. Led by two Jack London scholars, professor Susan Nuernberg, Ph.D. and Sonoma County poet laureate Iris Jamahl Dunkle, Ph.D., the group aims to celebrate London’s life and legacy by reading his popular works of fiction.

On March 5, the group commences with a discussion of London’s signature novel, Call of the WIld. On June 4, The Sea-Wolf is examined. In the fall, on October 7, the group talks through White Fang. And finally, on December 3, London’s The Valley of the Moon is given an in-depth look. 

Admission to these book club meetings is free, but space is limited to 20 participants, so sign up early to reserve your spot. For more information and to register, visit jacklondonpark.com.

Altered Highway Sign Brings Joy to All that Behold it

Here’s a roadwork sign in Bolinas. Isn’t that cool? Here’s the story: The ocean-hugging road called Terrace has been closed to cars for the past month as work crews shored up the town’s famous “surfer’s overlook,” with the help of some local fundraising from, among others, the founder of Farmville.  Work was scheduled to have been completed on 1/22. Right around the deadline, which is to say, over the weekend, some enterprising person changed the message to one I think we can all agree is not a bad idea. Something worthwhile to pursue in a world gone mad… Meanwhile, work continues on the surfer’s overlook, the deadline having been left in the dust and replaced with a simpler message.

Jake Ward Pens Open Letter to AFC Vandals

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Last night, at the otherwise awesome Ty Segall show in Santa Rosa, someone decided to tag the brick bathroom walls at the Arlene Francis Center with spray paint. It was a destructive and costly act, and one that local promoter and concert booker Jake Ward took offense to. Here, Ward writes and rants on why this vandalism is harmful not only to the venue, but to the Santa Rosa music scene overall. It’s a real and powerful wake-up call, and one that is worth reading in its entirety.

Well this is frustrating. Last night somebody vandalized the restroom of the Arlene Francis Center. I’m not even gonna address what they wrote, but I will say a couple things.
One, this is why we can’t have nice things. We live in a town where people complain about a lack of venues for cool music and art happenings, and yet when one of our few beloved local institutions for hosting events opens its doors to hosting an all ages rock show, someone goes out of their way to disrespect the space. How can we complain about the scene when we have no respect for it?
Two, this is brick. Brick is extremely porous. Spray paint on old brick does not come off easily. The only full time operators at AFC are in their 60s. Are they expected to clean this off? There’s also no surplus funds at this space to buy special cleaning products. This was super rude *and* destructive.
Three, this is not a punk venue, this is a non profit community center. The morning after the show this happened at, the classroom was rented out for a weekly event called Mini Music where parents bring their toddlers to learn to sing. There are all sorts of important political, educational, and arts activities happening at this space. Who really thought this was a place that deserved to be vandalized like this?

Listen to Become the Villain’s New Single, “Slip Away”

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Sonoma County songwriter Neem Wood mixes together shimmering electronics, soulful guitars and heartfelt lyrics for a compelling, emotional blend of indie rock and pop under the name Become the Villain.
Wood has a new album due to be released this weekend with a show at HopMonk in Sebastopol, and he has a preview of his latest work in the form a new single, “Slip Away,” that’s available to listen to right now.
Stylistically and sonically sophisticated, “Slip Away” features Wood’s soaring vocals and dark percussions with strong pop hooks and a cathartic chorus. Click on the track below; and catch Become the Villain tomorrow, Saturday Jan 23 at HopMonk, with other local luminaries Lungs and Limbs, Horses Heaven and Charley Peach. Details are here.

Cross Culture

A fearless and funny voice in the counterculture scene since the early 1990s, David Cross wears every comedy hat in the business. Before he was a television show creator, actor and author, Cross was a standup comic who went against the grain of popular culture and helped breathe life into a new comedy scene that is bitingly irreverent. Coming up...

Take It Easy

I still remember the iconic cover of the first Eagles album I purchased. A small, black silhouette of a feathered bird with the word "Eagle" imprinted on it, flying off into the sunset somewhere over the desert. After hearing their first single, "Take It Easy," I had a feeling this group was destined for a good flight and a...

Jazzed Up

Napa's historic downtown opera house has seen a lot of changes in the past few years. First, national venue and restaurant chain City Winery took residence in 2013 and gave the space a much-needed facelift, though City Winery's tenure was cut short last year when they opted out of a 10-year lease eight years early. That departure left the Napa...

Letters to the Editor: January 27, 2016

Smile for the Camera So great to see things like Studio Space Santa Rosa ("Picturesque," Jan. 20) popping up in Sonoma County. Loving their efforts to support the arts and culture that make S.R. so special. —Erin Rose Opperman Via Facebook Losing Her Religion Denise Dubois lost "her fear" by totally losing her own identity and joining "the other" ("Learn and Lose the Fear,"...

Prudent Moves

Emphasizing that the next recession might be right around the corner, Gov. Jerry Brown released his $170 billion 2016–17 budget on Jan. 7 with an emphasis on putting a little something aside—$2 billion—for the state's rainy-day fund. He emphasized prudence and discipline yet again during his 2016 State of the State address last week. It's hard to not hover over...

Slurp’s Up

We are lingering over oysters and salads at Saltwater in Inverness and wondering in the aftermath of lunch about all the what-to-do-next ideas at our disposal: the options out here in West Marin are limitless. Check out the shipwreck in Tomales Bay? Plunge into deep Inverness, the upper reaches of Pt. Reyes National Seashore, way out at the Tule Elk...

Jack London Book Club Announces 2016 Dates & Titles

Ongoing discussion group is part of Jack London State Park's year-long "Discover Your Call of the Wild" event series.

Altered Highway Sign Brings Joy to All that Behold it

Here's a roadwork sign in Bolinas. Isn't that cool? Here's the story: The ocean-hugging road called Terrace has been closed to cars for the past month as work crews shored up the town's famous "surfer's overlook," with the help of some local fundraising from, among others, the founder of Farmville.  Work was scheduled to have been completed on 1/22....

Jake Ward Pens Open Letter to AFC Vandals

Last night, at the otherwise awesome Ty Segall show in Santa Rosa, someone decided to tag the brick bathroom walls at the Arlene Francis Center with spray paint. It was a destructive and costly act, and one that local promoter and concert booker Jake Ward took offense to. Here, Ward writes and rants on why this vandalism is harmful...

Listen to Become the Villain’s New Single, “Slip Away”

Sonoma County songwriter Neem Wood mixes together shimmering electronics, soulful guitars and heartfelt lyrics for a compelling, emotional blend of indie rock and pop under the name Become the Villain. Wood has a new album due to be released this weekend with a show at HopMonk in Sebastopol, and he has a preview of his latest work in the form a new...
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