KOWS Almost Home

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We recently wrote about radio station KOWS and its move to a classroom at the United Methodist Church in Sebastopol (“Coming Home”, Oct. 28).

The lease has been signed, and KOWS moved on to resolve another key piece of its relocation plan: a Sebastopol-based station antenna, now that the community radio station is leaving Occidental, where it utilized space for its current antenna up a hill outside of town on the Coleman Valley Road.

Station representatives appeared before the Sebastopol City Council to see if KOWS could lease city-owned land at the Pleasant Hill Reservoir and put a new antenna there. The council approved the plan Nov. 3.

“It was a unanimous decision by the council to go forward with our proposal into the permitting stage,” says station programmer Arnold Levine. But the radio station had to assure the council that it wouldn’t let anyone else’s antennae onto the mast—a concern, says Levine, because of a previous and failed attempt by a cell-phone service provider to use the tower.

“It was not something we had considered,” Levine says, “as it would cost us more to beef up the mast and the foundation, which we can barely afford now. We assured them it was just for us.”

The KOWS crew is now asking for a set of three fee waivers from Sebastopol so it can fast-track the permitting process to set up the antenna, and make sure the new setup is aligned with Federal Communication Commission (FCC) requirements. “All the costs for the new mast, antenna, transmitter shed, wiring and cabling will be paid by KOWS,” Levine says, and adds that the station will also boost its signal from 25 to 35–50 watts.
—Tom Gogola

Unrestricted Art

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Abstract painter and conceptual portrait artist Tyler Steele earned a degree in industrial design from the Los Angeles’ OTIS College of Art and Design, and works with metropolitan environments to achieve a gritty realism with fantasy-like elements. A gallery artist at Petaluma’s Prince Gallery, Steele emerges with a solo show opening Nov. 14.

Steele has titled the new exhibit “Hidebound,” which could reference the fur and leather his portrait subject are clad in, seemingly lost in a wild, perhaps post-apocalyptic world—one that requires lots of warm clothing and rusty bandoliers, evidently. Or could the artist be riffing on the word’s other meaning: narrow-minded, confined to tradition? Are these lone, mysterious figures the result of a world decimated by conservative thinking?

Decide for yourself, when “Hidebound” opens in conjunction with Petaluma’s Second Saturday Art Walk. “Hidebound” runs through Dec. 6, with a reception
on Saturday, Nov. 14, at Prince Gallery,
122 American Alley, Petaluma. 6pm.
Free and open to the public. 707.889.0371.

Letters to the Editor: Nov. 11, 2015

Vote Yes and No

I moved to Sonoma County in 1977 to attend Sonoma State University. Driving north on 101 on a Sunday, there were just a few other cars on the road. I recall the prune and apple orchards, the primroses covering the fences in quiet, rural neighborhoods. My adult life has been lived here, and I care deeply for the land and the progressive lifestyle. I have also enjoyed the wine country lifestyle. My daughter and friends work in the wine industry, but now I am in a moral quandary. In your Sept. 2 issue (“Coho vs. Pinot”), I read that in April of 2008, winegrape growers diverted 30 percent of the Russian River’s flow in Mendocino county alone and 25,782 steelhead trout died—fish that are our bounty, that feed animals and people, that are an essential part of the food chain. Is every glass of wine I drink a death sentence for something?

I vote no to a wine event center in Sebastopol. I vote no to wine event centers on coastal Highway 1. I vote no to using water for frost prevention. I vote yes to a county mandate that wineries must use sustainable practices.

Cotati

Here’s to Sarcasm

Props to one John Hudson (Letters, Nov. 4) who, like the many who came before, reminded me it is the letters to the Bohemian which make me want to rise and shine each morning and keep on going in this ridiculous thing called life. Here’s to you, Johnny Boy, for keeping a sharp eye out for the rest of us, although I was under the impression that it was the act of fornicating that accounted for the growth of our population. But perhaps it is I who is the misinformed one. Oh, well.

Sonoma

You’re Out

If corporations are considered people and many people are in jail for life under “three strikes” legislation, then why aren’t corporations that have committed multiple crimes not subject to the same “three strikes” laws? They seem to be “people” only when it’s convenient for them, as in the Citizens United decision, which allows corporations to give huge amounts of money to candidates because the Supreme Court has declared that “money giving” is the right of free speech. Now it’s one dollar, one vote, and no longer one person, one vote.

It’s similar to those who oppose big government unless it serves to restrict abortions, amass/use weaponry or provide money for bailouts.

Sebastopol

Lock Him Up

Enough! Why is only state law, rather than local regulations, mentioned (“Busted Again,” Nov. 4)? Here in Sonoma County, we are limited to a total of 30 plants per prescription, not to exceed 100 square feet of canopy. State law is irrelevant to this discussion.

As someone who has been in this industry since long before Proposition 215, from what I know of the current state of the industry, I hope Joe Munson gets a felony conviction and is banned from the industry for good. I’m tired of the greedy cloaking themselves as do-gooders.

Via Bohemian.com

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

Having a Blast

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Electric sofas, stilt walkers and nighttime marching bands are a taste of what’s to come at the 11th annual Santa Rosa Winterblast. The event, in Santa Rosa’s SOFA district near Juilliard Park, is really a big block party—with a parade of rolling sofas thrown in. Best of all, it’s free and family-friendly.

Atlas Coffee owner James Podchernikoff is back for his third year as lead organizer of Winterblast. What’s he looking forward to? Big puppets on parade. Teachers from Sonoma Academy and Roseland University Prep are creating massive street puppets, some of which will require several people to operate. Winterblast is very much a collaborative effort.

“Over the years, the event organizing has been tossed around by whoever arrives to volunteer,” says SOFA artist and designer Michele Bottaro. “SOFA is a group of creative friends who have shops or studios and help to pitch in to make the event happen.”

Gallery 300, Chroma Gallery, Backstreet Gallery, the Free Art Friday group and the Imaginists will all display artwork in the deceptively extensive one-block radius surrounded by South A Street, Sonoma Avenue and Santa Rosa Avenue. Many galleries connect to each other, enabling patrons to walk through a labyrinthine collection of mixed media.

To go along with the SOFA acronym, parade-goers are invited to decorate their own sofas, add wheels and bring them no later than 5:45pm for the parades at 6pm and 8pm. Fire dancers from Aries Fire Arts Collective take to the streets at 7pm, the “Winter Queen of Faeries” drops in to grant wishes and the “whiskey-drome” will feature daredevil bikers riding near-vertical walls on wooden slats, like the inside of a barrel.

Jessica Rasmussen, one of the artists showcasing work in the Imaginists space, plans to display art made out of found objects and papier-mâché. She is also part of the Free Art Friday group, which is celebrating its first Winterblast inside Criminal Baking Company and Undercover Noshery. They are expecting 20 to 30 artists.

As for music, the FogDub band will play dub and horn tracks in the courtyard of Atlas Coffee. At a different corner of the festival, the Bad Apple String Band will play Americana and bluegrass for free behind Chroma Gallery from 6pm to 9pm. Meanwhile, roving entertainers JD Limelight, Krysta Hodson and Frosty the Snowman will be there to dance, play accordion and perform around the festivities. Jeremiah’s Photo Corner will offer tintype photography to document the good times.

For something to eat, look for the Seed on the Go vegan truck, Canevari’s Deli ravioli, Parkside Cafe and Criminal Baking Co.

Between the light-up sofas, costumes and fire poi-swingers, it will be hard to miss this little section of Santa Rosa spirit.


Winterblast takes place on Saturday, Nov 14, 312 South A St, Santa Rosa. 5pm. Free.

Rhythm and Words

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The Last Poets are rightly called the godfathers of hip-hop. Formed in Harlem in the late 1960s, the group was the first to join percussion with politically charged poetry, inspiring a generation to use their voices and words as tools of social justice.

This weekend, the Last Poets appear in a daylong event that includes a spoken-word workshop and performance at the Phoenix Theater in Petaluma as a benefit for local radio station KWTF.

Founding member Abiodun Oyewole got into poetry when Martin Luther King Jr. was killed. “When Dr. King was killed, I really kind of lost my mind,” he says by phone. “I felt it was such an insult to black people.”

Oyewole’s friend and fellow poet David Nelson made mention of starting a group of poets to act as a unifying force of expression for African Americans. “We all have the same foot on our necks, and we need to unify to get that foot off,” says Oyewole.

A month after King’s death, the Last Poets made their debut, on May 19, 1968 (Malcolm X’s birthday), at Marcus Garvey Park in East Harlem.

The drums came early. “When we first performed, there was a drummer dismantling as we were coming onstage. I motioned to him and said, ‘Stay,'” Oyewole remembers. “I felt having some rhythm, some percussion in the background would enhance what we were doing.”

It worked. The Last Poets brought in a conga player and performed extensively around New York and the East Coast. When they released their self-titled debut album in 1970, it sold a million copies by word of mouth.

“It told me that we had the pulse of the people, that they appreciated what we had to say,” says Oyewole.

A decade later, the foundation laid by the Last Poets blossomed with the advent of hip-hop. “I’ve spoken with KRS-One, I’ve spoken with Kool Herc,” says Oyewole. “They tell me that back in the day the only thing they listened to was the Last Poets. We were definitely the prototype; they just took it to another place.”

For their appearance in Petaluma, the Last Poets will lead a “Collective Feeling” workshop, screen the documentary film,

The Last Poets: Made in Amerikkka, host a youth poetry showcase and perform works of their own.

A new album due next year proves that the Last Poets’ legacy is still being written. “I just hope I can continue, because this is the greatest thing I think I can really achieve,” says Oyewole.

The Last Poets appear Nov. 14, at the Phoenix Theater, 201 Washington St., Petaluma. Workshop, 1:30pm; Youth Showcase, 6:30pm. film, 3:55pm; performance, 9pm. $10–$20. 707.762.3565.

Rossi’s Gets an Upgrade

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Ari Weiswasser, chef and co-owner of the Glen Ellen Star, was tapped to retool the menu at Sonoma’s classic roadside eatery and dancehall, Rossi’s 1906. He calls the concept “Texas barbecue in a California context.”

Some of the new appetizers on the menu include brown-butter corn muffins, crispy pig ears with nacho cheese, and chicken-fat fries with malt vinegar, salt and lemon. One of the signature BBQ-meets-California dishes is brisket and barbecued oysters. The new menu debuted Nov. 1.

Weiswasser remains chef and owner at the Glen Ellen Star.

Max Young, Rossi’s new owner, spent a year and half restoring the building while aiming to keep its charm intact. Young, who owns McNally’s Irish Pub in Oakland and the HiFi Lounge, Bamboo Hut and Mr. Smith’s in San Francisco, hopes the new Rossi’s will be part of Sonoma’s westside revitalization.

Rossi’s 1906 is at 401 Grove St.,
Sonoma. 707.343.0044. rossis1906.com.
—Stett Holbrook

The Nuclears Party Down in Forestville Tonight

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Brooklyn punk rockers The Nuclears are a power pack of long hair, leather jackets, cool shades and good times. Their blistering throwback punk riffs and blazing guitar solos make them an instant hit at clubs around their native New York City, and tonight the the Nuclears are cranking up the amps at the Forestville Club as part of a national tour.
The group’s last album,  2014 album, This is How We Party, gives Andrew WK a run for his money, with a blend of positive vibes and great songs that flash back to the Ramones and Stooges while keeping things fresh and fun in the here and now.
Hopefully, the Forestville Club has plenty of Rolling Rock beer stocked for the show tonight, when the five party animals that make up the Nuclears get loud and rowdy, 6250 Front St, Forestville. 8pm. $5.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BId86m-TCj4[/youtube]

Love Lake County Hosts Benefit Concert Tomorrow

G&BErikCastro
Girls & Boys

In the wake of the devastating Valley Fire that wreaked havoc on Lake, Napa and even parts of Sonoma County two months ago, community support has remained strong. One such support group is Love Lake County, who have helped organize relief efforts and events since September.
This weekend, Love Lake County hosts their next rocking charity event, with a gaggle of local acts taking the stage at the Arlene Francis Center in Santa Rosa to show support and gather funds for victims of the fire.
Santa Rosa rock band Girls & Boys will be bringing their energetic, power-packed music to the show. Currently  finishing their sophomore album, Girls & Boys have been touring California the past year opening for Elvis Costello, Allen Stone, Goo Goo Dolls and Nicki Bluhm & the Gramblers. 
The Corner Store Kids will also be on hand, offering their lo-fi funk and jazz jams to get the dance floor grooving. Finally, soul funk outfit Marshall House Project are going to rock the night away with their uplifting sounds.
All proceeds go to Valley Fire victims, so get out and show Lake County some love tomorrow, Nov 7, at Arlene Francis Center. 99 Sixth St, Santa Rosa. Doors at 6pm, music at 8pm. $10-$20.

O+ Festival Takes Over Petaluma This Weekend

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Rainbow Girls

Mixing music and art with wellness, the O+ (O Positive) Festival hits downtown Petaluma this weekend with spirited concerts, art exhibits and community togetherness. The idea behind this fest, which also takes place annually in Kingston, New York and Chicago, Illinois, is that participating artists, musicians and volunteers exchange their contributions in return for wellness services from art-loving doctors, dentists and other practitioners.
Run by local Petaluma business and gallery owners, the O+ Festival kicks off on Friday, Nov 6, with a concert by Bay Area garage jazz band Invisible Cinema, happening at the Prince Gallery. It continues through Saturday with live art and all-day shows taking place around Putnam Plaza in downtown Petaluma. Slated to perform this year are local favorites like Lauren Ashley Brown, Royal Jelly Jive and Rainbow Girls.
Festival goers will need to have a O+ wristband to enter the Kick-Off Party and concerts at The Big Easy. Outdoor events in Putnam Plaza and American Alley are free and open to the public. This year, wristbands will be complimentary but with a suggested $10 donation.
For more information, click on the festival’s website here.

Election Day Takeaway: The Huffington Post is Dumb

My take on these off-year election results and what they mean is not what this political writer over at the Huffington Post declared last night. The idea that disparate ballot measures and elections across the country adds up to a conservative bounce-back and repudiation of progressivism is a sad, lazy and wrongheaded conclusion to draw.

Let’s take a look at the examples of this alleged conservative trouncing and why liberal pundits ought to to rethink these quickie conclusions about What It All Means before sharing them with the world. 

Unfortunately for the Huffington Post, Election Day 2015 might not mean anything, or not much, anyway—an unimaginable concept to the website, which reflexively gins up “who’s up/who’s down” set piece reports after every Election Day and then goes hunting, when necessary, for evidence to back up the dramatic declaration that, in this case, It’s All Gone Bad.

But this year, the evidence of a conservative comeback is paper-thin and most of the conservative victories can instead be described more fairly as weak push-backs to progressive-driven campaigns and victories that have dominated domestic politics this year.     

1. Ohioans defeat cannabis legalization initiative. Ohioans defeated a cannabis legalization initiative that would have created a pot monopoly in the Buckeye by giving all the bud business to a few select capitalists. If anything, this is a victory for the progressive value that says a proper legalization effort must emerge from the grass-roots and must strive to be inclusive. The Ohio vote is only a victory for conservatives if conservatism has suddenly rejected its previous embrace of a Koch-driven descent into the American oligarchical moment. 

2. Houston rejects LGBT protections. Houston is a state in Texas, yet Texas is only nominally a part of America anymore. Yes, it’s bad news that one city in the most militantly anti-American state in the country didn’t extend civil rights protections to variously gendered and identified people—but the battle over Prop 1 only served to highlight that many Texas Republicans simply cannot deal with the mystery that presently lies between Caitlyn Jenner’s legs. Whatever’s down there, it makes them angry, and so the battle for LGBT rights in Houston devolved into a ridiculous scrum over transgendered dudes using the ladies’ loo. As the debate over LGBT rights is debased by conservatives into a series of indignant potty jokes, progressives should be able to do better than weep openly on the pages of the Huffington Post about it, given that 2015 is, among other things, the “transgender tipping point” year. It was right there on the cover of Time, for crying out loud.

3. Kentucky elects Tea Party Governor. Kentucky’s one of the few red states that expanded its healthcare coverage to the lesser and uninsured by accepting Obamacare and the Medicaid dollars that went along with it. The state created its own state exchange, known as Kynect, which has been reported to be quite a success story. But now there are 400,000 Kentuckians in the crosshairs who might lose their insurance if the new governor, some weirdo named Bevin, follows through on his implied promise to kill the poor. If he does, conservatives can at last take a victory lap and celebrate that their inhumanely aggressive hatred of Obamacare has finally yielded a few scalps. That’s not a victory for conservatives, but it is a victory if you happen to be a sociopath or a fascist, or both. 

4. Virginia GOP holds state-Senate majority and defies Democratic heavyweight Gov. Terry McCauliffe in the process.  This one’s a real stretch—it stretches right into 2016 presidential politics. The idea here is that it’s a conservative “victory” that the GOP held on to a slight advantage in the state Senate because it will make it difficult for McCauliffe to enact progressive legislation. Which will in turn make it difficult for McCauliffe to effectively shill for Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton in 2016. This is a huge win for online slingers of speculative journalism, and no one else.   

5. Portland, Maine pushes back against Fight For $15. Just as 2015 is the Transgender Tipping Point, it’s also the year that saw a big push, oftentimes successful, to get state and local government to kick their minimum wages up to a point where it’s actually a living wage. There have been numerous such initiatives across the country that have gained traction with policymakers this year—big movement in big cities like San Francisco, New York and Seattle. At best, Portland can lay claim to a small victory in the fight against the Fight for $15, which was orchestrated by business leaders there. Yet the Portland City Council had already voted in September to raise the minimum wage from $7.50 to $10.10. That’s called a small victory, aka progress.  

5. San Francisco rejects AirBnB regulations. Now wait a minute. How come none of these smarty-pants political analysts have declared a conservative victory in San Francisco, where voters—with the help of an estimated $6-$8 million AirBnB push—defeated a measure that would have put the popular home-share site under the watchful eye of communist regulators by the Bay. Conservatives tend to hate regulations, not to mention San Francisco, and love it when the capitalism gets all unfettered in the name of servicing the leisure class. AirBnB’s victory is also a victory for conservatives, but given the hipster aura that surrounds AirBnB and the sharing economy generally, it’s no surprise that the SF-based HuffPost blew it on that one, too. 

KOWS Almost Home

We recently wrote about radio station KOWS and its move to a classroom at the United Methodist Church in Sebastopol ("Coming Home", Oct. 28). The lease has been signed, and KOWS moved on to resolve another key piece of its relocation plan: a Sebastopol-based station antenna, now that the community radio station is leaving Occidental, where it utilized space for...

Unrestricted Art

Abstract painter and conceptual portrait artist Tyler Steele earned a degree in industrial design from the Los Angeles' OTIS College of Art and Design, and works with metropolitan environments to achieve a gritty realism with fantasy-like elements. A gallery artist at Petaluma's Prince Gallery, Steele emerges with a solo show opening Nov. 14. Steele has titled the new exhibit "Hidebound,"...

Letters to the Editor: Nov. 11, 2015

Vote Yes and No I moved to Sonoma County in 1977 to attend Sonoma State University. Driving north on 101 on a Sunday, there were just a few other cars on the road. I recall the prune and apple orchards, the primroses covering the fences in quiet, rural neighborhoods. My adult life has been lived here, and I care deeply...

Having a Blast

Electric sofas, stilt walkers and nighttime marching bands are a taste of what's to come at the 11th annual Santa Rosa Winterblast. The event, in Santa Rosa's SOFA district near Juilliard Park, is really a big block party—with a parade of rolling sofas thrown in. Best of all, it's free and family-friendly. Atlas Coffee owner James Podchernikoff is back for...

Rhythm and Words

The Last Poets are rightly called the godfathers of hip-hop. Formed in Harlem in the late 1960s, the group was the first to join percussion with politically charged poetry, inspiring a generation to use their voices and words as tools of social justice. This weekend, the Last Poets appear in a daylong event that includes a spoken-word workshop and performance...

Rossi’s Gets an Upgrade

Ari Weiswasser, chef and co-owner of the Glen Ellen Star, was tapped to retool the menu at Sonoma's classic roadside eatery and dancehall, Rossi's 1906. He calls the concept "Texas barbecue in a California context." Some of the new appetizers on the menu include brown-butter corn muffins, crispy pig ears with nacho cheese, and chicken-fat fries with malt vinegar, salt...

The Nuclears Party Down in Forestville Tonight

Brooklyn punk rockers The Nuclears are a power pack of long hair, leather jackets, cool shades and good times. Their blistering throwback punk riffs and blazing guitar solos make them an instant hit at clubs around their native New York City, and tonight the the Nuclears are cranking up the amps at the Forestville Club as part of a...

Love Lake County Hosts Benefit Concert Tomorrow

In the wake of the devastating Valley Fire that wreaked havoc on Lake, Napa and even parts of Sonoma County two months ago, community support has remained strong. One such support group is Love Lake County, who have helped organize relief efforts and events since September. This weekend, Love Lake County hosts their next rocking charity event, with a gaggle...

O+ Festival Takes Over Petaluma This Weekend

Mixing music and art with wellness, the O+ (O Positive) Festival hits downtown Petaluma this weekend with spirited concerts, art exhibits and community togetherness. The idea behind this fest, which also takes place annually in Kingston, New York and Chicago, Illinois, is that participating artists, musicians and volunteers exchange their contributions in return for wellness services from art-loving doctors, dentists and...

Election Day Takeaway: The Huffington Post is Dumb

My take on these off-year election results and what they mean is not what this political writer over at the Huffington Post declared last night. The idea that disparate ballot measures and elections across the country adds up to a conservative bounce-back and repudiation of progressivism is a sad, lazy and wrongheaded conclusion to draw. Let's take a...
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