Down by J-Law

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Four years ago, when the film Winter’s Bone was released, I interviewed Jennifer Lawrence, now dead certain to win the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her most recent role in American Hustle. Interview sessions, particularly for a small movie that needs the push, are brutal for young actors. It’s unlikely you’ll come up with something they haven’t heard before. I heard Simon Pegg once gave an interviewer a $20 bill for asking an original question. I didn’t get that $20.

Somehow it was decided that director Debra Granik and “J-Law” would be interviewed as a team, which is highly unusual. Even the nicest actors would agree that Brando was right when he said “an actor is someone who, if you ain’t talking about them, they ain’t listening.” The truth was that I didn’t have a lot of questions for Lawrence. Her role in Winter’s Bone was star-making—and that film is seriously recommended to Breaking Bad fans—but having limited space, I just gave up and blurbed like anyone else: “This is one of the best performances of the year.”

Lawrence’s Ree Dolly was a clear, steel-true character, a heroine of few words. So I only asked small questions regarding Lawrence’s favorite scenes (she said stunts were tough for her) and her personal origins. Lawrence was from Louisville, so she knew the Missouri terrain, but the locations were sometimes deep in the country. “At first,” she said, “you want to just stand back and observe; I watched for a long time and waited to integrate myself a little bit. Everybody was nice and welcoming.”

I suspect the publicists teamed Granik and Lawrence to protect
J. Law’s youthful shyness and innocence. Which made it slightly amusing for me to later see her on Conan talking about butt plugs.

I didn’t recognize Lawrence as a Shirley MacLaine–caliber firecracker, though other stars come to mind when watching Lawrence act—Shelly Winters, for instance, when she was playing young, crazy and doomed parts, before she grew bravado and girth and started naming names. There’s also something in Lawrence of the sweet-faced, dreamy, illogical ’70s sprite, like Barbara Harris in Hitchcock’s Family Plot.

No one will inherit Nostradamus’ turban for noting that Lawrence’s fierceness and spirit will transcend the role of “Kindness Everteen” (as film critic J. Hoberman put it)—people will get sick of the Hunger Games long before they get sick of her.

Maybe we should be thanking David O. Russell, director of both American Hustle and 2012’s Silver Lining Playbook, which also co-starred Lawrence, for liberating the young actress. In Playbook, he encouraged her to go lewd (“It was hot,” she growls, reminiscing about a sexual encounter), and let her go mad in American Hustle, where she plays a bipolar housewife who plants a big Bugs Bunny kiss on Amy Adams. Russell was ingenious to toss the script and just let Lawrence spin her remarkable wheels.

A Dab o’ Crab

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The bib, the lemon, the fork, the stringy sea-flesh of unusual texture—ah, yes, it’s still crab season here along the coast. And though crab feeds come and go, largely advertised via plywood placards on the outskirts of small rural towns, this week’s feed at Lagunitas benefits Cinnabar Theater.

Indeed, the theater with the steep loping driveway doesn’t just open its mouth and sing—it also open its mouth and eats. The Cinnabar’s Chili Cook-Off is the stuff of legend, and their Taste of Petaluma event gets more popular by the year. So it’s no doubt they’re gonna open the curtain on a fine second-annual crab feed. Salad, bread and desserts round out the menu, with Lagunitas on the sudsy stuff.

Bring your own crab implements and support the arts on Tuesday, Jan. 28, at Lagunitas. 1280 N. McDowell Blvd., Petaluma. 5:30–8:30pm. $55. 707.763.8920.

A Better Discipline

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Zac Good first got a taste for stealing in middle school. A self-described screwed-up and troubled child, the Santa Rosa teen started smoking, getting in fights and engaging in competitions for who could steal the most from local stores, just for the hell of it.

“We were jerks to everyone,” admits the 18-year-old Santa Rosa High School student. “It gave us something to do that wasn’t sitting around being bored. I was always acting out.”

He got away with the petty theft and violence for a while—until his junior year, when two administrators suddenly pulled him out of sixth-period culinary class. They’d received a report that he was carrying a knife. Not just any knife, mind you; Good was carrying a four-and-a-half-inch switchblade (along with a second knife and a pack of cigarettes), a zero-tolerance violation that merited expulsion from his Northeast Santa Rosa high school.

He spent three days in juvenile hall and faced a possible misdemeanor charge for having a switchblade longer than two inches. After his release, he received a letter in the mail from an organization called Restorative Resources, asking him if he’d be willing to undertake a 12-week program—also called an accountability circle—in life skills like empathy, compassion, anger management and decision-making. If he completed the program successfully, he could circumvent the juvenile justice court system. Good agreed to give it a try.

“The program covered stuff I knew but didn’t take seriously,” says the thin, dark-haired teen, wearing jeans and a black hoodie, a silver class ring glinting on his hand. Halfway through the circle, in group work with other teens that had gotten into trouble, his mindset began to shift. He started thinking of his little brother, who was 10 at the time.

“I began thinking about how my decisions would affect my brother, and it was really embarrassing for me,” he says. Then he started considering his parents, his teachers and his friends, and how any decision he made, bad or good, affected not only those people but also everyone they interacted with. He wrote letters acknowledging the pain that he caused his parents, his brother, the teacher in his culinary class, the arresting officer, the school administrators that caught him and even his girlfriend at the time. He says writing the letters helped him process the importance of making amends for his actions.

“It’s this wake-up call that sticks with you,” Good explains. “By the end of the program, you realize that your action was entirely your fault. Responsibility is the first lesson.”

Good graduated from the Restorative Resources program in December 2012, and started to turn his life around. He stopped smoking and stealing. He went back to high school (a different one) where his GPA rose from 1.7 to 3.8. He got his driver’s license and found an after-school job. He earned the rank of Eagle Scout, which he calls “his proudest achievement in life.”

Whereas Good hadn’t given any thought to the future before, he now plans to attend the culinary program at Santa Rosa Junior College before earning a business degree—all part of his plan to eventually open a ’50s-style soda fountain similar to one his family once owned in San Jose.

“Before, I didn’t care about the future,” Good says, “and now I’m thinking about how I can go out and be in the world.”

Restorative justice has gained much ground in the United States, especially as data increasingly shows that the zero-tolerance approach favored since Columbine is not only ineffective but discriminatory toward minority and disabled students. A new joint report issued by the U.S. departments of Justice and Education, based on data collected by the Civil Rights Data Collection, explicitly states that black and Latino students in U.S. schools have been more heavily disciplined than their peers. The report provides a set of guiding principles that would move districts away from zero tolerance and into a “wide range of strategies to reduce misbehavior and maintain a safe learning environment, including conflict resolution and restorative practices.”

Restorative justice programs in the United States have grown exponentially since 2005, according to Thalia González, a professor at Occidental College and expert in restorative practices. Rather than handing out blanket punishments to offenders, the practice requires them to take responsibility for their actions and to make amends—think of a circle instead of a straight line out the door. Unlike punitive tactics, restorative justice emphasizes reparation, accountability and the web of relationships that make up a school and greater community, with the ultimate goal of preventing a reccurrence of the behavior in the future.

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Karym Sanchez, 23, manages the Accountability Circle Program at Restorative Resources in Santa Rosa. He has also chaired the North Bay Organizing Project’s education task force since 2012, which has been vocal and active in support of bringing restorative justice to Santa Rosa City Schools. At the Restorative Resources office, located in a modest office suite near the Empire College campus, Sanchez speaks with a maturity beyond his years about how his own background as an at-risk, troubled youth who was able to turn his life around—something that he credits to concerned teachers and exposure to social justice thinkers like Howard Zinn—informs his work with youth aged 12 to 17 in the accountability circles.

“True justice has to come from a place of love,” Sanchez says. “If it comes from a place of vengeance, there’s no true healing. There’s very little you get out of asking for vengeance. I truly believe it has to come from a place of love, especially for youth, who pick up these subtle messages. When you tell them, ‘Get out of here, we don’t want you in our schools anymore,’ the youth think, ‘These schools hate me, my teachers hate me, everybody’s out to get me.’ But when you remind them, ‘No, we love you and we need you here,’ it speaks volumes.”

The 12-week program ends with a talking circle, or conference, that brings together the offender, community volunteers and those affected by the crime, who together come up with a list of amends. These can take the form of letters, speaking to younger kids about their actions or attending enrichment activities that help them get involved in something outside of themselves.

Restorative justice has been used in the criminal justice system for years, and school districts in Portland, Oakland, Chicago and Denver have already started implementing the process as a way to completely restructure a flawed and often discriminatory discipline system.

It’s a challenge that the Santa Rosa City School District is taking seriously.

That’s good news, considering the bleak district discipline statistics released last year. In 2011, the district suspended 4,587 students, a number exceeded by only three other large districts in California. More disconcerting, a disproportionate number of the students facing disciplinary action were nonwhite. Out of 256 students expelled in 2011, 127 were Latino, 56 white, 18 black, 14 Native American and 41 multiple-race. The suspensions and expulsions translate not only to hundreds of thousands of lost state funding as students miss days of school, it can lead to even more serious repercussions for individual youth as they get funneled into what’s often called the “school-to-prison pipeline.”

“From the moment I arrived, the [Santa Rosa City Schools] Board was clear in their belief that there needed to be a fresh look at student behavior and family and community engagement in schools, including but not limited to discipline practices,” explains Santa Rosa City Schools superintendent Socorro Shiels via email.

On Sept. 10, before an audience of about a hundred people at a rousing education forum organized by the North Bay Organizing Project, Shiels spoke out in favor of restorative justice. On the heels of her blessing, the Santa Rosa City Schools Board approved funding for a $125,000 pilot restorative justice program in mid-September, to be implemented immediately at Cook Middle School and Elsie Allen High School.

So far, it seems to be working better than anyone could have imagined.

‘Far and away, the results have been greater than anybody anticipated,” says Santa Rosa City Schools Board of Education president Bill Carle. At a board meeting last November, the data for Cook Middle School showed 82 suspensions between Aug. 14 and Nov. 1 for the 2012–2013 school year, in comparison to only 27 suspensions for the same time period in 2013–2014. That’s a
67 percent reduction. At Elsie Allen, the numbers were down
60 percent.

Carle says that normally the board will see 30 to 40 suspensions or expulsions by the first winter session in early December. At the time of our conversation in late 2013, the board had yet to see one disciplinary case come before them, and “that has absolutely never happened,” says Carle.

Not only are kids remaining in school and in class, but the savings in average daily attendance (ADA) California state funding in this same period of time has reached $139, 357, according to the same data presented to the school board. The number is a combination of daily ADA and staff savings—for example, the savings when a vice principal doesn’t have to take two or three hours out of a day, at $58 per hour, to prepare for and attend disciplinary hearings.

But, Carle says, beyond the savings potential (and that’s money that can then be invested in vibrant school programs and materials instead of discipline issues), he’s impressed by the life skills being taught to kids that “generally [aren’t] in the curriculum,” as well as the development of a sense of community that wasn’t there before.

“The students are looking at, ‘What are the consequences of my actions, and what affect do they have on other people?'” he explains. “I think it has such an emotional long-term value. Intuitively, we are learning that kids will stay in school longer, and there will be a certain level of personal growth that’s helpful as well.”

Carle does point out that more serious disciplinary cases, such as the incident at Elsie Allen where a student stabbed a teacher with a mechanical pencil, would still go the traditional disciplinary route.

Rob Halverson is research and program development manager with the Sonoma County Probation Department. He and deputy chief probation officer David Koch worked on restorative justice in Multnomah County in Oregon, in the Parkrose School District and then Portland Public Schools, for 10 years before coming to Sonoma County. (Koch spoke in favor of a restorative justice pilot program at a Santa Rosa City school board meeting last spring.) Halverson recalls his time working with the Parkrose School District in Oregon, how the administration was able to avoid 200 missed days of school—a figure that translates directly into budget savings—due to the implementation of restorative practices.

“It’s a strategy that gains seat time for kids in school,” Halverson tells me. “It keeps them connected and keeps them on track.”

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If anyone has a sense of the negative repercussions of suspensions and expulsions on youth, it’s the probation department. Halverson says that he and Koch are “really interested in interrupting the school-to-prison pipeline.”

“When kids disconnect from school, that’s a risk factor that stacks up against them in a number of ways,” he explains. “Some of those kids end up involved in the justice system.” A restorative approach provides not only an alternative to exclusionary discipline, but also a prevention strategy for keeping kids connected to school while developing a crime-free path to adulthood and out of the justice system, adds Halverson. “If you have a few experiences with being suspended or expelled, your chances of graduating are far less, and that’s not good for people developing on a successful trajectory.”

For Sam Blechel, 17, this theory has proven to be on point.

‘It sounds kind of bad,” the Santa Rosa High School junior tells me during a conversation at a local coffee shop, “but if I’d never stolen shoes from Sears, I would not be active in the community today.” As he talks, Blechel leans forward urgently, half-stumbling to find the right words to capture the effect restorative justice has had on his life.

Blechel’s story could have ended much differently, possibly even with a stint in juvenile hall and probation time. A sophomore at the time, he was caught by store security with a pair of shoes in his backpack, stolen for a friend, he says. A few days later, he received a letter from Restorative Resources. At first, he didn’t see the point. Why couldn’t he just do some kind of one-day class, something quick that he could knock out, forget about and go back to the way things were?

“At the beginning, I thought it was kind of stupid because they were a bunch of life skills that I already knew about,” explains Blechel, tugging at the sleeve of a long-sleeved red shirt worn with faded jeans and black Converse, “but after a while, it really helped me to find myself, to become part of the community, to become more in sync.”

“Before, I would see someone walking down the street, and they would be a stranger to me,” he says. “Now when I see someone walking down the street, I see them as a neighbor. They’re just like me. It helped introduce me to community in a civil and appropriate way.”

Blechel, who says that last year he’d spend his afternoons zoning out in front of the television, filling out worksheets and biding time until the next school day, has since developed into an impassioned community organizer. He’s the cofounder and president of Students United for Restorative Justice, a small group of engaged students with the ambitious goal of transforming the entire school community. In a well-edited video posted on their active Facebook page, members of the group explain their desire to challenge and change the disciplinary status quo at Santa Rosa High School and beyond.

He admits to recently being stressed-out as he tries to rally his peers and administrators at his school to embrace the idea of restorative justice.

“It would really hurt me not to see it go anywhere,” he adds.

Still, he’s buoyed by the outcome of a recent meeting with his school principal, which ended with the approval of a restorative justice presentation to the school faculty. At the same time, he worries that teachers will feel that the program “takes power” away from their ability to discipline students.

Fortunately for Blechel and Students for Restorative Justice, the positive results of the pilot program at Cook and Elsie Allen point to the possibility of district-wide implementation of restorative practices. Superintendent Shiels affirms the possibility by email.

“Based on the evidence we have now, about how this has informed discipline decisions at both sites, we feel strongly that this will be a district-wide practice,” she writes. The next step will be to provide support for the legion of volunteers, not to mention the comprehensive training in reparative practices for teachers and administrators needed to make it all happen.

It’s a shift that could put Santa Rosa on the map for educational innovation, says Zach Whelan, deputy director at Restorative Resources.

“What Santa Rosa is doing is pretty remarkable,” he says. “People are blown away at how the schools have really taken this on. When people see the transformation that’s happened, this will be one of the beacons in the coming years.”

For Zac Good, the lessons learned through restorative justice have been life-altering, and he wants all youth to have access to the tools that helped make such great changes.

“The current system doesn’t work, it’s flawed,” Good says. “It works in some cases, but for the majority of kids, it doesn’t. Kids that get in trouble get mad at other people, and they do it again. It’s a rabbit hole, and they fall deeper and deeper in.”

Good says the point is to catch kids like him early on, to help them see themselves as part of a community, while offering a sense of self-worth. “It’s not punishment. It’s about fixing the problem,” he says.

Letters to the Editor: January 22, 2014

Let Them
Have Dreams

When Social Advocates for Youth’s proposal for a Dream Center met with some neighborhood opposition (“Dreams On Hold,” Nov. 20), they had a unique response: they opened the doors of their existing residential facility, Tamayo Village, to all who had questions or concerns about their ability to manage such a project.

A series of free, open dinners at Tamayo Village were set up by volunteers, and all were welcomed The evening I attended, I heard powerful poetry from a phenomenal young man, and stories from other youth that broke my heart. I witnessed the bonds of support these young adults formed with each other, and met dedicated volunteers who were committed to empowering them to make healthy choices. I also heard from a Bennett Valley neighbor who had previously opposed the Dream Center, but left with her opinion transformed.

I encourage everyone to check out SAY’s ‘frequently asked questions’ page on their Dream Center web page. It will likely clear up confusion over misleading statistics disseminated by those opposed to this project.

My hope is that our community will come together to help create an effective, supportive, responsible and safe Dream Center for all who need it.

Santa Rosa

Disrupting the Ecosystem

Thanks for the informative cover story by Alastair Bland on the proposal by Fish and Wildlife Service to apply poison to our local Farallon Islands (“Mice Capades,” Jan. 8). A follow-up would be useful, to further disclose the nasty multigeneration side effects of the kinds of very controversial poison compounds being proposed for broadcast here.

The inhumane slow death by which this broad-spectrum poison kills the targeted species is well established. The dirty little secret behind this plan is that in spite of generally ineffective efforts to scare nontarget animals away, a range of predators higher up the food chain will inevitably feed on the dying mice and on the persistent poison pellets and also die, in a phenomenon dismissively called “bykill.” This controversial brodifacoum poison, in particular, can also damage future generations of exposed nontarget animals that fail to succumb, thereby likely interfering with the ongoing biological viability of important wildlife populations within the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary.

However well-intended poisoning on this scale here may be—and however financially profitable for certain groups—this is unfortunately the wrong precedent to set for management of our national ocean treasures, not only on the California coast, but throughout the U.S. Marine Sanctuary system. Target the mice, not the whole ecosystem.

Vice-chair, Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary Advisory Council, Bodega Bay

We’re the GOP

The war in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, the war on drugs—each of them ill-conceived, unwinnable and not only a failure but counterproductive, a tragic misuse of good money and good lives. Yet the party chiefly responsible for launching all three of these disasters, the party that now wants to cut back on food stamps and unemployment benefits, is happy to go on throwing
$2 billion-plus a week down the war hole. And who profits by this? No mystery there.

Sebastopol

CeCe’s
Imprisonment

CeCe McDonald’s plight is evidence again that our criminal justice system must be reformed. Most people would find it unthinkable that a woman would be imprisoned in a jail for men. As our report “Injustice at Every Turn” shows, trans-women of color such as CeCe face shocking levels of physical violence and discrimination by the police, the courts and the prison system. The truth is CeCe McDonald shouldn’t have spent any time behind bars in the face of racist, homophobic and transphobic slurs and the physical attack on her. Her story should be a wake-up call for our nation.

Deputy executive director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force

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

Beringer Vineyards

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I can’t imagine what Mrs. Beringer might have thought about the scene unfolding today in her ladies’ sitting room.

Decorated with floral motifs in its stained glass windows, the ladies’ sitting room of the Rhine House is open to any member of the general public who wanders in—wine tasters, use side door. The atmosphere is loosey–goosey. While my companion first overshoots then undershoots the spittoon in a game attempt to practice the essential skill of tasting and spitting, a young woman points out to us above the general din how she swirled her wine too enthusiastically and stained her pink tights. From a menu that was splotched with spills long before we arrived, we order a sample of a wine that costs more than did two acres of Napa Valley land when Jacob and Frederick Beringer purchased it in 1875.

This is my first visit to the Rhine House. I’d long wondered about it. The mansion was built in a winningly Germanic late-19th-century architectural style for Frederick Beringer, who had his brother’s modest cottage moved to a less choice spot down the hill for the purpose. Jacob did all the advance work, first securing a job in Charles Krug’s cellar; Frederick was the finance guy. What else is new? Down to their trendy long beards, the Beringer bros look less like fusty pioneers of an antique era and more like the kind of moneyed Eurobrats—calling their vineyard venture “Los Hermanos”—who might fit smoothly into the Napa scene in 2014.

That this California historic landmark is a nicely landscaped, largely unsupervised playground that can swallow hordes of drop-in tourists with ease, I’m not surprised. But my expectation that the Rhine House represented a genteel escape from the crowd was off the mark. Staff in these cramped quarters are hard-bitten but accommodating, like veterans of a rollicking good dive bar. The tasting menu is incongruously themed to “Rock Stars,” detailed with song snippets from the Rolling Stones and the Cars.

The 2012 Private Reserve Chardonnay ($44) is fruity, buttery, standard stuff; the 2011 Quantum ($65), a soft, plush Bordeaux-styled blend. But the 2010 Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon ($160) is surely the key pour here. With dusty framboise aromas and a raspberry-infused finish, this is the kind of refined, top-tier wine that’s unremarkable precisely because it’s so seamlessly integrated. More memorable, the 2007 Nightingale ($40 for 375ml) is a fairly convincing Sauternes-style wine, rich in treacly mandarin orange and candied walnut flavor. If the ghosts of old Beringers are still about, instead of worrying about their parlor, they’re surely retired from care in a cask of this wine, murmuring, “Let it be.”

Beringer Vineyards, 2000 Main St., St. Helena. Daily, 10am–5pm; (June–October, 10am–6pm). Tasting fee $20–$25; tours available. 707.963.8989.

She’s on It

On a recent Friday afternoon, San Francisco’s most sought-after female reggae DJ puts the finishing touches on three separate sets for three totally different parties around the Bay. Selecta Green B will hold down the Island Reggae party at S.F.’s Elbo Room in a few hours, Saturday she shares the booth at Embrace the Bass in Oakland, and Sunday is a strictly African and roots reggae club night in San Jose.

Between releasing 18 full-length mixtapes under her label Hot Gyal Promotion and co-selecting for Coo-Yah! Ladeez reggae sound system, DJ Green B guest-appears at dancehall parties up and down the West Coast, all while serving as regular contributor to SiriusXM’s the Joint. The legitimacy is there—but she is a rarity on the scene.

Reggae sound systems are by tradition male-dominated, and even to this day women are hesitant to step up to the tables. Of course, there are ladies rocking the decks in other genres, like Pam the Funkstress, who recently killed it a few Mondays back with the best mashup of classic ’90s hip-hop Hopmonk has ever heard.

The fact that the North Bay’s biggest reggae night, Monday Night Edutainment (running 14 years strong this June), keeps top female selectors in rotation shows how much respect they garner. And the esteem is mutual. “I’ve been listening to Jacques’ mixtapes for years,” says Green B of party founder Jacques Powell-Wilson. “At lot of the artists he grew up with are the people who influenced my love for reggae music.”

Some people say dancehall music hit its club peak a few years ago. More often than not, venue owners have been turning to EDM (a rash catch-all term for the current electronic dance music craze) to fill clubs on weekends. “Bass music has taken over,” says Green B, whose own Coo-Yah! Ladeez’s Wednesday nights was shuttered as S.F. venues switched over. Even here in the North Bay, the biggest nightclubs have EDM DJs on constant rotation.

Consequently, reggae DJs are pulling samples from every subgenre of EDM, from dubstep to trap and tacking them onto island riddims and dancehall tunes. The result is a whole new sound experience. On any given Monday night, DJ Jacques will likely throw down a deep dubstep whomp, turning roots into a bass music mutation. And to be at the forefront of the hype, DJs like Green B are following suit, mixing and mashing digital beats into their own sets.

“Jacques takes his sound system out for a stroll,” says Green B. “It’s definitely one of my favorite parties to play at.”

Catch Selecta Green B at Monday Night Edutainment on Monday, Jan. 27, at Hopmonk Tavern. 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. 9pm. $10. Ladies free before 11pm. 707.829.7300.

Jan. 25: Howard Vlieger at the Sebastopol Grange

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Politicians love to talk about the plight of the “American farmer,” but what they’re usually referring to are factory-farming corporations. Third-generation Iowa farmer Howard Vlieger has spent years studying the problems small farmers experience as a result of Big Ag’s insistence on GMO crops. No West County hippie, Vlieger is a conservative Christian Republican; he’s simply vehemently opposed to GMOs, and speaks about their destructive nature on Saturday, Jan. 25, at the Sebastopol Grange (6000 Sebastopol Ave., Sebastopol; 10am), Sunday, Jan. 26 at the Windsor Grange (9161 Starr Road, Windsor; 2pm) and the Seed Bank (199 Petaluma Blvd. N., Petaluma; 7pm). For more, see LabelGMOs.org.

Jan. 24: Tim Flannery at Sweetwater Music Hall

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Whenever I’m blue in the off-season, I cue up the video of Angel Pagan, in May 2013, hitting a walk-off, inside-the-park home run in the 10th inning to beat the Rockies. The glory of Pagan’s achievement, however, must be shared by third-base coach Tim Flannery, who had the chutzpah to send Pagan to home plate as the throw came in from center field. Flannery has made plenty of similarly confident moves, a trait he brings to his side career in music. A devout Deadhead with a new solo album, The Wayward Wind, the Giants coach plays his own original songs on acoustic guitar on Friday, Jan. 24, at Sweetwater Music Hall. 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley. 8pm. $22—$24. 415.388.1100.

Jan. 23: San Francisco Symphony at the Green Music Center

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The Green Music Center is usually home to the Santa Rosa Symphony, but this week sees two visiting outfits. On Thursday, Jan. 23, the San Francisco Symphony rolls into the space with violinist Alexander Barantschik, who’ll perform Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in D Minor and conduct works by Mozart, Britten and Piazzolla. On Saturday, Jan. 25, Harry Bicket conducts the English Concert in Handel’s opera Theodora, featuring Sarah Connolly, Andrew Kennedy and others (7:30pm; $40—$85). Green Music Center, 1801 E. Cotati Ave., Rohnert Park. 866.955.6040.

Jan. 22: Olivia Laing at Book Passage

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Ernest Hemingway. F. Scott Fitzgerald. Tennessee Williams, John Berryman, John Cheever. Raymond friggin’ Carver. What do these authors have in common? (“They were all overrated white males” is not the answer we’re looking for.) They all ordered booze by the boatful, and in her new book The Trip to Echo Spring: On Writers and Drinking, author Olivia Laing explores why. Having grown up in an alcoholic family herself, Laing removes the romance from drinking to reveal just how destructive the famous men’s habits became; she appears Wednesday, Jan. 22, at Book Passage. 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. 7pm. Free. 415.927.0960.

Down by J-Law

Four years ago, when the film Winter's Bone was released, I interviewed Jennifer Lawrence, now dead certain to win the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her most recent role in American Hustle. Interview sessions, particularly for a small movie that needs the push, are brutal for young actors. It's unlikely you'll come up with something they haven't heard...

A Dab o’ Crab

The bib, the lemon, the fork, the stringy sea-flesh of unusual texture—ah, yes, it's still crab season here along the coast. And though crab feeds come and go, largely advertised via plywood placards on the outskirts of small rural towns, this week's feed at Lagunitas benefits Cinnabar Theater. Indeed, the theater with the steep loping driveway doesn't just open its...

A Better Discipline

Zac Good first got a taste for stealing in middle school. A self-described screwed-up and troubled child, the Santa Rosa teen started smoking, getting in fights and engaging in competitions for who could steal the most from local stores, just for the hell of it. "We were jerks to everyone," admits the 18-year-old Santa Rosa High School student. "It gave...

Letters to the Editor: January 22, 2014

Let Them Have Dreams When Social Advocates for Youth's proposal for a Dream Center met with some neighborhood opposition ("Dreams On Hold," Nov. 20), they had a unique response: they opened the doors of their existing residential facility, Tamayo Village, to all who had questions or concerns about their ability to manage such a project. A series of free, open dinners...

Beringer Vineyards

I can't imagine what Mrs. Beringer might have thought about the scene unfolding today in her ladies' sitting room. Decorated with floral motifs in its stained glass windows, the ladies' sitting room of the Rhine House is open to any member of the general public who wanders in—wine tasters, use side door. The atmosphere is loosey–goosey. While my companion...

She’s on It

On a recent Friday afternoon, San Francisco's most sought-after female reggae DJ puts the finishing touches on three separate sets for three totally different parties around the Bay. Selecta Green B will hold down the Island Reggae party at S.F.'s Elbo Room in a few hours, Saturday she shares the booth at Embrace the Bass in Oakland, and Sunday...

Jan. 25: Howard Vlieger at the Sebastopol Grange

Politicians love to talk about the plight of the “American farmer,” but what they’re usually referring to are factory-farming corporations. Third-generation Iowa farmer Howard Vlieger has spent years studying the problems small farmers experience as a result of Big Ag’s insistence on GMO crops. No West County hippie, Vlieger is a conservative Christian Republican; he’s simply vehemently opposed to...

Jan. 24: Tim Flannery at Sweetwater Music Hall

Whenever I’m blue in the off-season, I cue up the video of Angel Pagan, in May 2013, hitting a walk-off, inside-the-park home run in the 10th inning to beat the Rockies. The glory of Pagan’s achievement, however, must be shared by third-base coach Tim Flannery, who had the chutzpah to send Pagan to home plate as the throw came...

Jan. 23: San Francisco Symphony at the Green Music Center

The Green Music Center is usually home to the Santa Rosa Symphony, but this week sees two visiting outfits. On Thursday, Jan. 23, the San Francisco Symphony rolls into the space with violinist Alexander Barantschik, who’ll perform Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in D Minor and conduct works by Mozart, Britten and Piazzolla. On Saturday, Jan. 25, Harry Bicket conducts the...

Jan. 22: Olivia Laing at Book Passage

Ernest Hemingway. F. Scott Fitzgerald. Tennessee Williams, John Berryman, John Cheever. Raymond friggin’ Carver. What do these authors have in common? (“They were all overrated white males” is not the answer we’re looking for.) They all ordered booze by the boatful, and in her new book The Trip to Echo Spring: On Writers and Drinking, author Olivia Laing explores...
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