Fire It Up

0

There are plenty of options for seeing some brilliant fireworks around the North Bay this week, with fairgrounds and fields lighting up in the explosive tradition of Independence Day. But there’s more to July 4 than sparklers and rockets, and several venues are offering live music to celebrate the summer’s biggest holiday.

The grandest spectacle for the Fourth happens on the lawn at the Green Music Center in Rohnert Park. Folk singer and social activist Judy Collins appears live in concert accompanied by the Santa Rosa Symphony. Collins is renowned for her eclectic style and inspirational body of work, which has spanned 50 albums over as many years.

Her renditions of others’ work, as well as her own tender and bold songwriting, reflects her zeal for anti-war activism and championing mental health. A fireworks display follows the performance.

Out in Kenwood, Sugarloaf Ridge State Park celebrates with music and hiking when the weekly Funky Friday series coincides with the holiday this week. The Cork Pullers stage a lively set of vocally driven acoustic jams in the waning twilight. Then there’s a hike up the mountain to a vista point that boasts views of several different fireworks displays from around the Bay Area. The hike begins at 7pm and requires a separate ticket, but the picturesque setting for the concert is a spectacle all its own.

Further down the road, Murphy’s Irish Pub in Sonoma is hosting its daylong All American Music Festival. Dan Martin & the Noma Rocksteady Band, Frankie Boots & the County Line and the Jami Jamison Band will play an array or folk, rock and world music throughout the afternoon.

Down in Marin County, it’s all about the barbecue, with several options to enjoy music and messy food the way the founding fathers intended. Out in Nicasio, the rhythms of the Zydeco Flames blaze on the lawn at Rancho Nicasio. In San Rafael, Phil Lesh jams with friends at Terrapin Crossroads. Jackie Greene, Jason Crosby, Ross James, Alex Koford and Jordan Levine will all be on hand jamming through the afternoon with a barbecue meal included.

Out in Napa County, the premiere spot for a sight of the fireworks has to be the patio at Silo’s, which is situated directly across the river from the display. Cocktails and the music of Revolver, the ’60s cover band acclaimed for polished performances and playing the deep cuts, are the perfect appetizer for the festivities.

Knockout

0

Melding traditional bluegrass, classical folk structures and progressive acoustic melodies, Brooklyn’s Punch Brothers are an enticing quintet.

Lead man Chris Thile is a singer, guitarist and mandolin player best known for his work with Nickel Creek. Punch Brothers, which also features Gabe Witcher (fiddle), Noam Pikelny (banjo), Chris Eldridge (guitar) and Paul Kowert (bass), have developed a keen acoustic sound that is redefining folk music for a new generation, and can be heard most recently all over the acclaimed soundtrack to Inside Llewyn Davis.

This summer, the band takes a break from recording their still-untitled upcoming album and pick up where they left off on their relentless tour schedule. They debut a slew of new material when they play the Lincoln Theater in Yountville on July 5. Folk singer Willie Watson, formerly of Old Crow Medicine Show, opens the night with his timeless acoustic renditions. It should prove to be an evening of multifaceted talents and freewheeling music.

Punch Brothers play on Saturday, July 5, at the Lincoln Theater, 100 California Drive, Yountville. 7pm. $25–$75. 707.226.8742.

Facebook’s ‘Social Experiment’ is, Literally, Bad News

facebook_experiment.jpg

There’s an adage that’s particularly relevant in today’s world of “free” technology: If you aren’t paying for a product, you are the product.” And nothing highlights this better than a recent study by Facebook that manipulated users’ news feeds to show mostly bad news.

The study with Cornell and UCSF was published June 17, and revealed that Facebook alterned nearly 700,000 users’ news feeds to see how they respond to a deluge of negativity. The study was authored by members of Facebook’s core data science team, UCSF’s Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education and Cornell’s Communication and Information Science department.

The meat of the study can be found in these excerpts:
For people who had positive content reduced in their News Feed, a larger percentage of words in people’s status updates were negative and a smaller percentage were positive.

[jump]

Two things to take away from this: Facebook took away positive content in news feeds. Ever wonder why all you hear about is bad news? It’s not just your imagination. It’s actually being manipulated to achieve that result. Secondly, the less positivity users saw, the less they spread. Bad news breeds bad moods.

When negativity was reduced, the opposite pattern occurred.

Ok, that’s pretty self explanatory, but still very telling—take away the bad news and people talk about more positive things.

These results suggest that the emotions expressed by friends, via online social networks, influence our own moods…

How many times have you experienced anger, sadness, happiness, nervousness or any other emotion based on something from Facebook? I don’t think this concept needed a scientific paper to prove, but, hey, here it is.

…constituting, to our knowledge, the first experimental evidence for massive-scale emotional contagion via social networks.

The word “contagion” here is a leading word to the idea of things “going viral” online. It’s not just videos, photos, websites or products that go viral, real human emotions do, too.

This is a telling study, and will undoubtedly be used in some new-age guru’s next self-awareness book, but it’s also a little creepy and invasive for those who trusted the Palo Alto company to provide social interaction on their own terms, not the company’s. It’s also dangerous—when entire revolutions are built around social media, as was the case with the Arab Spring, what if the social media companies push certain attitudes by selective processing? What if negative posts with the phrase “Muslim Brotherhood” were deleted from just 5 percent of all posts in a given region?

Of course, Facebook wouldn’t do that. But what if the U.S. Government asked them to perform another “social experiment?” It’s a slippery slope.

No Decision on Gelhaus Was Scheduled Today, Despite Rumor

Teens show support for Andy Lopez at a protest at the Sonoma County Sheriffs office earlier this year.

  • Nicolas Grizzle
  • Teens show support for Andy Lopez at a protest at the Sonoma County Sheriff’s office earlier this year.

A rumor that a decision on the fate of Sheriff’s deputy Erick Gelhaus is imminent is false, says Terry Menshek, media coordinator of the Sonoma County District Attorney’s office.

Widespread emails and internet chatter said a press conference was scheduled for today at noon that would say whether charges would be filed against the deputy, who shot and killed 13-year-old Andy Lopez on October 22 last year when the boy’s toy AK-47 rifle was mistaken for a real gun. “I’ve gotten a dozen calls, there was a rumor going around. It even got as far as Los Angeles,” says Menshek. “There was never one scheduled,” adding that this is the second time such a rumor has been started.

A timetable has not been set for an announcement on the case. “It’s still under investigation,” she says.

Santa Rosa City Manager Kathy Millison sent an email Thursday to Santa Rosa City Council members and staff members about community outreach regarding the DA’s announcement. The email details actions the city has taken in preparation of demonstrations surround the announcement and gives talking points to highlight when addressing the incident.

In the email, Millison says, “We don’t know when that may occur and we’ll learn of it at the same time as everyone in the community learns of it.” But in a handout sent as an attachment to that email, one of the assigned roles of the internal action plan is for the city manager to “email talking points to council as soon as decision is released.”

Jonathon Melrod, an attorney working with the Justice For Andy Lopez group, says a press conference was scheduled for noon today by the DA’s office, but cancelled at the last minute. He says he doesn’t know what the subject of the press conference was supposed to be, but that it likely had to do with a decision on Gelhaus. “The whole thing is bizarre to me,” he says.

Protocol in officer-involved shootings is to make an announcement regarding charges 90 days after the incident, which in this case happened on October 22. Critics say District Attorney Jill Ravitch was waiting until after the June 3 election, which she won by a wide margin. “She can’t keep waiting,” says Melrod.

[jump]

Gelhaus returned to work, albeit at a desk job, in December. The Santa Rosa Police Department, which is investigating the incident, issued its report to the DA’s office in January.

City Hall is closed today and the Santa Rosa Police Department did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment.

The talking points Millison gave include empathy, safety and information about the SRPD’s role in the investigation. “We encourage demonstrators to express their emotions while staying safe,” says the handout.

Santa Rosa City Councilman Gary Wysocky says he doesn’t know when an announcement will be made. “I won’t get advance notice,” he says via email. “I do not know who requested the talking points for the council.”

DFW Skeptical of Record Coho Salmon Migration

coho.jpg

The coho salmon run in Marin County is bafflingly high this year. In a drought-stricken season with water being diverted from fish habitats to agriculture, this year’s estimate of nearly 20,000 juvenile salmon made up the largest migration from Lagunitas Creek since the annual exodus started being recorded in 2006, according to estimates by the Marin Municipal Water District.

“We are a little bit skeptical,” says George Neillands, biologist with the Department of Fish and wildlife, “because it’s an estimate.” He said the low water flow could throw off the count because fewer fish can avoid the trap, since there’s less room to swim around them. “We take it with a grain of salt until we can really evaluate and review it,” he says.

[jump]

Coho are born in freshwater rivers, living for over a year before swimming to sea. This year’s late rains trapped the young salmon in small tributaries until after the larger fish, who had returned to spawn, finished their business and returned to the sea. Normally the creek can’t hold more than about 11,000 fish, and the smaller ones are chased away and washed out to sea.

Despite that, the number of redds (egg clusters) was down from the 20-year average. Only 206 were counted in the Lagunitas watershed, far less than the 250 average. That has to do with the drought, says Neillands, but also to do with fish survival from years prior.

If the count is accurate, it means there might be a stronger returning class in future years. But the average fish size is down, says Neillands. “That equates in the ocean to probably not as good survival,” he says. “In the ocean, size matters a lot for fish survival.”

But even still, the endangered coho aren’t out of the woods yet. This year’s forecast El Niño storms could wreak havoc on the fish, but the strength of the weather phenomenon is tough to predict. With warmer water comes tropical species from the south and less food for the salmon. “It’s a different strata of fish species out there, and it doesn’t support as much food for them,” says Neillands.

June 28: Preservation Hall Jazz Band at Robert Mondavi Winery

0

pres_hall.jpg

Returning for its 45th year, the Summer Concert Series at the Robert Mondavi Winery kicks off an eclectic season with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. The New Orleans institution is playing selections from their 2013 album That’s It!—the band’s first album of all-original material in their 50 years of existence. The storied ensemble has collaborated with artists from unexpected genres, and their sound continues to flourish in the New Orleans scene and beyond. The Preservation Hall Jazz Band performs and is followed by fireworks this Saturday, June 28, at the Robert Mondavi Winery, 7801 St. Helena Hwy., Oakville. 7pm. $55—$85. 707.968.2203.

June 27: Charged Particles at Belvedere-Tiburon Library

0

charged_particles.jpg

Educator and musician Jon Krosnick moved from the Midwest to California after landing a job on the faculty at Stanford. Professionally, the social psychologist couldn’t be more satisfied, yet the move meant the drummer had to reform his acclaimed jazz trio, Charged Particles. Now with an updated ensemble and an exciting brand of jazz, Charged Particles are celebrating summer vacation with a series of library concerts throughout the North Bay, beginning this Friday, June 27, at the Belvedere-Tiburon Library (1501 Tiburon Blvd., Tiburon; 11am) and Saturday, June 28, at the Healdsburg Library (139 Piper St., Healdsburg; 2pm).

June 27: OneManGreenBand at Forestville Club

0

jacob_green.jpg

Multi-instrumentalist Jacob Green has made a name for himself in the North Bay with his foot-stomping, homegrown blues under the moniker OneManGreenBand. This week, the Milwaukee-born musician, now living in rural Villa Grande on the Russian River, emerges from the woods to debut the second offering in his trilogy when he brings his guitar, banjo, mandolin, mouth harp and copies of his new album, Roots Revival Volume 2: In Time to the Forestville Club on Friday, June 27. 6250 Front St., Forestville. 9pm. $5—$10. 707.887.2594.

June 26: Spanish Gold at Sweetwater Music Hall

0

spanish_gold.jpg

Heady and groovy, Spanish Gold are the real deal. The band comprises My Morning Jacket drummer Patrick Hallahan and guitarists Adrian Quesada (Grupo Fantasma) and Dante Schwebel (Hacienda), and the new venture draws together the three musicians’ muscular rock chops and pop sensibilities. Their debut album, South of Nowhere, is a genre-bender in the best sense. Spanish Gold make their way to the North Bay when they play Thursday, June 26, at Sweetwater Music Hall. 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. 9pm. $12—$15. 415.388.1100.

Bust to Boom

0

North Bay county leaders are encouraged, cautiously optimistic and reasonably excited about Gov. Jerry Brown’s $155 billion budget for 2014–15.

And make no mistake, nobody’s complaining about $100 million in partial payback to counties for unfunded state mandates included in the budget, approved earlier this month.

But though Napa County is happy with its share of transportation dollars, Sonoma County still can’t fix its roads under an unyielding state gas-tax formula; Medi-Cal reimbursement rates in Marin County have disappointed local leaders; and everyone’s missing redevelopment agency funds, which Brown ended in 2011.

The governor’s $1.6 billion rainy-day fund was met with praise from Marin County supervisor Kathrin Sears. “Overall, it’s refreshing to be talking about potential investments and paying down debt, as opposed to the large state deficits we all experienced with the economic downturn,” she said in a statement. Sears was appointed by Brown to the 3rd District seat in 2011; she won it the following year.

The Marin County board president echoes others in support of “a down-payment on nearly $900 million owed to local governments for unfunded mandates” which would send up to $750,000 to Marin County.

“With 30 percent of county revenues coming from the state to implement programs on its behalf, avoiding the ‘boom and bust’ budget cycles of the past should bring more certainty to local budgets,” Sears wrote.

Sears highlighted the budget’s 5 percent increase to CalWORKs welfare grants; $7 million for the Golden Gate Bridge suicide barrier; and “new funding of
$264 million that expands preschool for children from poor families.”

Sears said she had hoped the budget would increase Medi-Cal rates to doctors. As is, it’s difficult for doctors to agree to care for Medi-Cal patients in expensive areas, she said.

Napa County Supervisor Michael Luce is “generally encouraged” with Brown’s “back-to-basics budget that takes care of the physical needs of the people in our communities.”

Along with the state’s partial payback to counties, “there’s more money being repaid than we had expected,” Luce say. “There’s lots of emphasis on infrastructure, jails and water-system improvements, more money for roads, and a good use of cap and trade.”

Still, the state is continuously missing out on “glaring opportunities” to develop affordable housing, he says.

There’s no more money from the state for a worker-proximity housing program that helped low- and moderate-income residents with loans for purchases made 10 to 15 miles from where they worked.

“Affordable housing funding disappeared with redevelopment,” Luce says.

Sonoma County supervisor David Rabbitt emphasizes schools, roads—and Facebook—in his assessment of the Brown budget.

The plan offers “school-specific items that don’t reflect the county budget per se, but we’re all in the same boat in terms of making sure that education is moving in the right direction,” Rabbitt says.

Sonoma County just passed a $1.5 billion budget, put $8 million in a reserve fund and earmarked another $8 million for roads.

The county can’t fix its roads fast enough because of high asphalt prices and a 19-year-old state gas-tax formula, says Rabbitt.

Sonoma gets slighted on the tax because of its population-to-road-miles ratio, about a half-million people to 1,382 miles of road. Santa Clara County, by comparison, “has half the roads, with more than double the population,” says Rabbitt.

Rabbitt notes that $250 million in cap-and-trade revenue earmarked for transportation is “going right to the high-speed rail project. That’s in the budget. It means less money available for local roads.”

Rabbitt is keen on the county’s share of an $11.9 billion water bond, and highlights a $10 million wildfire-prevention grant, which will prove useful “once the fire season kicks into high gear—this is about really being prepared.”

Rabbitt is pushing the state to provide more assistance to those low-paying supportive healthcare jobs, the “thousands of workers who take care of invalid folks [and] who don’t make a lot of money,” Rabbitt says.

The supervisor notes that Facebook helped put the state in the black thanks to its capital-gains payments to California. The social-media giant paid $1 billion in taxes in 2013, and capital gains taxes to the state are estimated at over $2.5 billion over the next five years.

State legislative auditor Mac Taylor recently described the state’s response to stock-market volatility and the boom-and-bust effect on capital gains taxes: “You have to have very strong reserve, and it’s important to not over-commit to spending programs.”

Fire It Up

There are plenty of options for seeing some brilliant fireworks around the North Bay this week, with fairgrounds and fields lighting up in the explosive tradition of Independence Day. But there's more to July 4 than sparklers and rockets, and several venues are offering live music to celebrate the summer's biggest holiday. The grandest spectacle for the Fourth happens on...

Knockout

Melding traditional bluegrass, classical folk structures and progressive acoustic melodies, Brooklyn's Punch Brothers are an enticing quintet. Lead man Chris Thile is a singer, guitarist and mandolin player best known for his work with Nickel Creek. Punch Brothers, which also features Gabe Witcher (fiddle), Noam Pikelny (banjo), Chris Eldridge (guitar) and Paul Kowert (bass), have developed a keen acoustic sound...

Facebook’s ‘Social Experiment’ is, Literally, Bad News

Negative emotions go viral thanks to selective processing on news feeds

No Decision on Gelhaus Was Scheduled Today, Despite Rumor

DA's office says no press conference was scheduled, decision still forthcoming

DFW Skeptical of Record Coho Salmon Migration

Drought seems to have helped juvenile fish, but also may have affected methods used to count them

June 28: Preservation Hall Jazz Band at Robert Mondavi Winery

Returning for its 45th year, the Summer Concert Series at the Robert Mondavi Winery kicks off an eclectic season with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. The New Orleans institution is playing selections from their 2013 album That’s It!—the band’s first album of all-original material in their 50 years of existence. The storied ensemble has collaborated with artists from unexpected...

June 27: Charged Particles at Belvedere-Tiburon Library

Educator and musician Jon Krosnick moved from the Midwest to California after landing a job on the faculty at Stanford. Professionally, the social psychologist couldn’t be more satisfied, yet the move meant the drummer had to reform his acclaimed jazz trio, Charged Particles. Now with an updated ensemble and an exciting brand of jazz, Charged Particles are...

June 27: OneManGreenBand at Forestville Club

Multi-instrumentalist Jacob Green has made a name for himself in the North Bay with his foot-stomping, homegrown blues under the moniker OneManGreenBand. This week, the Milwaukee-born musician, now living in rural Villa Grande on the Russian River, emerges from the woods to debut the second offering in his trilogy when he brings his guitar, banjo, mandolin, mouth harp and...

June 26: Spanish Gold at Sweetwater Music Hall

Heady and groovy, Spanish Gold are the real deal. The band comprises My Morning Jacket drummer Patrick Hallahan and guitarists Adrian Quesada (Grupo Fantasma) and Dante Schwebel (Hacienda), and the new venture draws together the three musicians’ muscular rock chops and pop sensibilities. Their debut album, South of Nowhere, is a genre-bender in the best sense. Spanish Gold make...

Bust to Boom

North Bay county leaders are encouraged, cautiously optimistic and reasonably excited about Gov. Jerry Brown's $155 billion budget for 2014–15. And make no mistake, nobody's complaining about $100 million in partial payback to counties for unfunded state mandates included in the budget, approved earlier this month. But though Napa County is happy with its share of transportation dollars, Sonoma County still...
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow