June 12: Adam Lashinsky at Book Passage

0

images.jpg

Recently, my total idiot of an editor soaked his iPhone in the ocean. He did the whole shebang with the bag of rice, then rinsed it, dabbed it with alcohol, threw it in rice again—and it worked! This allowed him to be thankful for all the hard work that Apple puts into its—whoops! Scratch that. I meant to say the hard work that poor workers in China put into iPhones. Anyway, the company actually does important things, too, according to Adam Lashinsky, author of Inside Apple: How America’s Most Admired—and Secretive—Company Really Works. His book explains the systems and strategies used by Steve Jobs that allowed Apple to accumulate a cult following to their products. Lashinsky reads on Wednesday, June 12, at Book Passage. 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera. Free. 6pm. 415.927.0960.

June 14: White Trash Summer Bash at Hopmonk Tavern

0

index.jpg

Hey, Cletus! Get yer beat-up truck ready for a wild ride wit’ lots of boobies and beer! I know ya’ll been waitin’ for the White Trash Summer Bash, so dress in yer nice ol’ cutoffs and tuxedo T-shirt and c’mon down—there ain’t gonna be no hog tyin’ going on, dagnabbit, but there are other buck-wild contests, like biggest hair, best mullet, an’ you know I’m’a enter the men-only wet T-shirt contest! Ya’ll comprende how crazy them ladies will go for our sexy farmer tans! Then’s the rootin’-tootin’ good times with some perrty ladies, like the iCandy Burlesque Dancers, and dancin’ wit’ DJs Will Magid and Malarkey. Ya’ll better not miss it on Friday, June 14, at Hopmonk Tavern. 230 Petaluma Ave., Sebastopol. $10—$15. 8pm. 707.829.7300.

Pick Me!

0

As if we North Bay residents didn’t already have too many entertainment opportunities every weekend, local theaters are making it even harder to decide what to do with our spare time. This weekend, four different theater companies open four new shows. Rather than choose one to preview, I invited all four to send a note telling me what their show has to offer that is unique and/or outrageous enough to deserve theatergoers’ much-divided attention.

“Well, we make it rain, live onstage, for one thing!” writes Laurie Glodowski, director of Singin’ in the Rain (June 14–July 7) at Sixth Street Playhouse, featuring Nick Chuba, Denise Elia-Yen and Trevor Hoffmann as Don, Kathy and Cosmo. The production, based on the beloved movie musical, features some of the best songs ever written, performed by a first-rate orchestra, and some pretty sensational tap-dancing. “And,” Glodowski adds, “our Cosmo really can do that running-up-the-wall thing!”

At the Cloverdale Performing Arts Center, where the company is hard at work on Tennessee Williams’ Night of the Iguana (June 14–23), director Jim dePriest admits that the appeal of the new production is at least partly educational.

“The local high school students and their teacher loved the idea of seeing this work by one of our greatest playwrights,” he says. DePriest also suggests that audiences will be impressed with the technical and visual detail of the play, about lost souls seeking a second chance at a run-down hotel in Mexico in the 1940s. “Scenically,” dePriest says, “we are producing the script with as much realism as possible.”

With Eugene Ionesco’s Exit the King, running June 13–30 at Main Stage West, director Beth Craven gives the strength of her show’s performances as the chief reason to check out the rarely performed end-of-the-world absurdist romp. It is, she writes, “a master acting vehicle for its main character, King Berenger, played to the hilt by playwright and solo performer Fred Curchack. It is one of the few plays that Fred admits he’s always wanted to perform in. This will be a highly memorable moment in our regional theater.”

The cast is also a big part of the appeal of Martin McDonagh’s Lonesome West (June 13–30), presented at the Sonoma Community Center by Narrow Way Stage Company.

“The story centers around Valene and Coleman, two Irish brothers,” says director Chris Ginesi, “and we’ve cast Nick Christenson, our artistic director, and Jon Christenson, Nick’s brother in real life. Jon is bringing a fire from deep within him, and the explosive back-and-forth between him and Nick is absolutely riveting.”

Cooking the Books

0

A couple of interesting cookbooks by local authors have been released recently, and both are well worth picking up. Vinaigrettes and Other Dressings, by Michelle Anna Jordan, takes on the deceptively difficult task of making one’s own salad-topping potions. (If I’m going to eat a salad, it better have a damn good dressing; I don’t want any of that squeeze-bottle crap.) Especially tempting is a dressing called Mina’s Tears, an absinthe, honeydew and cucumber dressing.

Snacks, by Marcy Smothers (yes, Tommy’s wife), offers a peek into a cooking enthusiast’s—not a professional’s—thoughts on food. What makes this work is the rapport immediately established with the reader. Smothers, who once hosted a cooking talk show on KSRO, is a home cook, and she correctly assumes the reader is, too. The result is a practical book of tips and easy recipes that don’t talk down to home cooks but do bring fun tidbits and trivia. “What can a camel teach you about grilled cheese?” asks one of the chapters. The answer is a type of mnemonic device; camels live in the desert, and grilled cheese should be kept dry, with butter spread on the bread instead of melted in the pan. See? Cooking is fun.

Jordan appears on Saturday, June 15, at the Petaluma Library (100 Fairgrounds Drive, Petaluma; 11am; free; 707.763.9801) while Smothers appears Wednesday, June 12, at Copperfield’s Books (775 Village Court, Santa Rosa; 7pm; free; 707.578.8938).

The Big Night

0

Get Ready: the 2013 North Bay Music Awards and 24-Hour Band Contest goes down on Saturday, July 13, at the Arlene Francis Center in Santa Rosa!

After the crazy packed success of last year’s party—see here for photos and video—how could we not do it again? Of course, you’re a part of it too. See below for voting, and save the date: July 13!

————————————-

Finalist voting is now live: Click here to vote.

The preliminary votes are in! You’ve selected the five top artists in each category, and finalist voting is now live for the 2013 NorBays!. Click here to see the finalists—and to vote!.

————————————-

Live music will be provided by bands assembled totally at random just 24 hours before in the 24-Hour Band Contest.

Here’s how it works: over 30 musicians have signed up for the 24-Hour Band Contest. On Friday, we’ll meet and pick names at random, assembling bands made up of complete strangers. The bands will then have 24 hours to write two original songs and learn one cover song, and return to perform the next night at the NorBays!

Signups are now closed for the 24-Hour Band Contest.

————————————-

24-Hour Band Performances!
Winners announced!
Gold Records awarded!
Art show presented by Heaven Sent Losers!
Beer and wine!
Funk and soul 45s with DJ Noah D!
Live art by Julia Davis and Jared Powell!
Get your photo taken!
A grey cat impersonating Mel Torme!
It’s all happening at the 2013 NorBays!

Saturday, July 13, at the Arlene Francis Center. 99 Sixth St., Santa Rosa. 8pm. $5. All Ages!

Sponsored in part by:

Big Ideas

0

TED talks can be fascinating. Lectures on subjects ranging from neuroscience breakthroughs and motivation techniques to new musical languages dot the top 40 most-viewed talks, with the top one being watched over 16 million times.

These conferences have inspired independently organized events, known as TEDx conferences, in smaller venues. The theme for this year’s TEDx Sonoma County is “More?” It features mostly locals—notably the cyclist Levi Leipheimer.

Richard Heinberg, our cover star this week, will speak, as will James H. Carrott, author of a book on steampunk culture. The list of 15 speakers also includes a high school humanities teacher, the founder of a company that builds houses of less than 100-square feet, a humanitarian philanthropist, a KPFA gospel radio show host, a former instructor at Top Gun Flight School, the recently appointed assistant director of human services of Sonoma County and other diverse personalities.

But it will be most interesting to see what Leipheimer, the former Tour de France and Tour of California winner who was banned for the sport for six months and subsequently kicked off his racing team after admitting to doping and ratting out his former pal Lance Armstrong, has in store for his talk on the subject “More?” (the theme specifically includes a question mark).

TEDx takes place Saturday, June 15, at Jackson Theater at Sonoma Country Day School. 4400 Day School Place, Santa Rosa. 1pm. $40. 707.284.3200.

Old Sport

0

Jack London failed miserably as a father. He abandoned his first wife, Bessie, and their two daughters, Joan and Becky, but as a writer, farmer and adventurer, he’s been a father figure for generations. This Father’s Day, Richard Stull—better known as “Doc Stull”—a professor of kinesiology at Humboldt State University, holds forth on London as a consummate sportsman at Jack London State Park.

A boxer, horseman, fencer and brilliant sports reporter, London aimed to win every contest that called to him. “He was a profoundly competitive human being,” Doc Stull tells me. “He was in competition with himself, but he was also a genius at life with a genuine Dionysian spirit.”

For Stoll, what’s essential isn’t whether you win or lose, but how you play the game. At House of Happy Walls—which London’s second wife, Charmian, built, and which serves now as a museum—Stull will talk about sports rivalries, frenzied fans and the allure of the professional athlete. “I’m not an expert on London, just a fan,” Stull adds. “But I identify with him thoroughly.”

Richard Stull lectures on “It’s How You Play the Game: Jack London’s Timeless Themes in Sport” on Sunday, June 16, at House of Happy Walls, Jack London State Park. 2400 London Ranch Road, Glen Ellen. 5pm. $10, includes parking fee. 707.938.5216.

Surveillance State

0

In Washington, where the state of war and the surveillance state are one and the same, top officials have begun to call for Edward Snowden’s head. After nearly 12 years of the “war on terror,” Snowden’s moral action of whistleblowing is a tremendous challenge to the established order of intensifying secrecy and dominant power that equates safe governance with Orwellian surveillance.

How can we truly express our appreciation? A first step is to thank Snowden—publicly and emphatically—by signing the “Thank NSA Whistleblower Edward Snowden” petition, easily found online. But as Snowden faces extradition and vengeful prosecution from the U.S. government, active support will be vital in the weeks, months and years ahead.

“I’m not going to hide,” he told the Washington Post on Sunday. “Allowing the U.S. government to intimidate its people with threats of retaliation for revealing wrongdoing is contrary to the public interest.”

When a Post reporter asked whether his revelations would change anything, Snowden replied: “I think they already have. Everyone everywhere now understands how bad things have gotten—and they’re talking about it. They have the power to decide for themselves whether they are willing to sacrifice their privacy to the surveillance state.”

And, when the Post asked about threats to “national security,” Snowden offered an assessment light years ahead of mainstream media’s conventional wisdom. “We managed to survive greater threats in our history,” he said, “than a few disorganized terrorist groups and rogue states without resorting to these sorts of programs. It is not that I do not value intelligence, but that I oppose . . . omniscient, automatic, mass surveillance.”

He continued: “That seems to me a greater threat to the institutions of free society than missed intelligence reports, and unworthy of the costs.”

With his actions and words, Edward Snowden has given aid and comfort to grassroots efforts for democracy. What we do with his brave gift will be our choice.

Norman Solomon is co-founder of RootsAction.org and founding director of the Institute for Public Accuracy. His books include ‘War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.’

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.

Dig This Douglas

0

Wanna make it big in the music biz? Get a vest, some wool pants, old shoes and some kind of stringed instrument, sing about something nostalgic, and—boom! Get ready for a television appearance on a late-night talk show!

All jest aside, for all the success the Americana genre has garnered recently, Jerry Douglas should be honored with a statue outside every general store in every small town in America. Douglas has been playing his dobro guitar on solo albums since 1979, and has 13 Grammy awards to his credit, including Album of the Year for 2001’s O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack. He’s written songs for Mumford and Sons, and is an amazing producer and musician whose songs go deeper than most of those currently filling hipster iPod playlists.

Douglas has played with Alison Kraus and Union Station since 1999, visiting Sonoma County with the group last year at the inaugural opening weekend of the Green Music Center at Sonoma State University. It was one of the most enchanting performances I’ve ever witnessed, and Douglas’ solo songs were a highlight of the evening. He held the audience and the rest of the world in the palm of his hand without having to say a word.

Jerry Douglas plays with Peter Rowan’s Big Twang Theory on Saturday, June 15, at the Uptown Theatre. 1350 Third St., Napa. 8pm. $35. 707.259.0123.

Jericho Canyon Vineyard

0

The minute I start to describe Jericho Canyon, I know what some readers are going to say: “Oh boy, here we go.” Boutique Cab from celebrity winemaker Michel Rolland and some Napa Valley folks who used to jet to Hawaii for the other half of the year? That’s what I thought also, when their press agent suggested I check them out. And that’s pretty much what founder Dale Bleecher thought to himself, too, when friends suggested that his family stay at their house in the island paradise.

Like many who once shunned Hawaii, says Bleecher—a one-time logger and tree planter who at long last made his way to college and a one-time career in finance—he had preconceived notions involving tourist hordes. But his family liked the island life so much that the Bleecher daughters stayed on for high school, while mother Marla Bleecher taught at a local school. So what about Napa? Long story short, another “Oh boy, here we go” moment, culminating in the purchase of a cattle ranch on Old Lawley Toll Road where, yes, old man Lawley used to collect toll from carriages. But he also provided refreshment in a bar inside his barn.

The barn’s still standing, refreshments now being served in a handsome new redwood winery. Dale Bleecher’s son Nick, who, when we was a young sprout, liked to sleep under the vines while his older sisters did their mandatory summer work in the vineyards (his family likes to tease him about it today) eventually woke up from his nap and earned a winemaking degree from UC Davis. Nick and high school sweetheart Tara Katrina Hole, who tagged along when the family returned to Calistoga, run the hospitality angle—which includes an ATV tour up and down the steep vineyard terraces—with the unaffected enthusiasm of young folks who’ve lucked into a dream job.

The Polaris cup holders are perfectly sized for a glass of 2011 Sauvignon Blanc ($30). Lychee fruit, melon, a nice middle—this is not a swirl-and-spit situation, so down it does. Likewise, the 2009 Jericho Creek Cabernet Sauvignon ($55). With a dusting of anise and leather, but plush, black cherry fruit, this and the 2009 Jericho Estate ($90) are not your overblown “mountain Cab” monsters, they’re fun to drink, and have some class.

The wine, the landscape, the buzzards lazily gliding on thermals: it’s a coffee-table-book-perfect scene. But much of the vineyard is under contract, custom crush helps to pay the bills in the winery, and visitors roll in almost daily. This little corner of paradise is a real place, too, so it’s back to work for the Bleechers.

Jericho Canyon Vineyard, 3322 Old Lawley Toll Road, Calistoga. Tour and tasting by appointment only, $30. 707.942.9665.

June 12: Adam Lashinsky at Book Passage

Recently, my total idiot of an editor soaked his iPhone in the ocean. He did the whole shebang with the bag of rice, then rinsed it, dabbed it with alcohol, threw it in rice again—and it worked! This allowed him to be thankful for all the hard work that Apple puts into its—whoops! Scratch that. I meant to say...

June 14: White Trash Summer Bash at Hopmonk Tavern

Hey, Cletus! Get yer beat-up truck ready for a wild ride wit’ lots of boobies and beer! I know ya’ll been waitin’ for the White Trash Summer Bash, so dress in yer nice ol’ cutoffs and tuxedo T-shirt and c’mon down—there ain’t gonna be no hog tyin’ going on, dagnabbit, but there are other buck-wild contests, like biggest hair,...

Pick Me!

Four local plays justify their existence

Cooking the Books

A couple of interesting cookbooks by local authors have been released recently, and both are well worth picking up. Vinaigrettes and Other Dressings, by Michelle Anna Jordan, takes on the deceptively difficult task of making one's own salad-topping potions. (If I'm going to eat a salad, it better have a damn good dressing; I don't want any of that...

The Big Night

Announcing the 2013 NorBays and 24-Hour Band Contest! Vote and sign up here.

Big Ideas

TED talks can be fascinating. Lectures on subjects ranging from neuroscience breakthroughs and motivation techniques to new musical languages dot the top 40 most-viewed talks, with the top one being watched over 16 million times. These conferences have inspired independently organized events, known as TEDx conferences, in smaller venues. The theme for this year's TEDx Sonoma County is "More?" It...

Old Sport

Jack London failed miserably as a father. He abandoned his first wife, Bessie, and their two daughters, Joan and Becky, but as a writer, farmer and adventurer, he's been a father figure for generations. This Father's Day, Richard Stull—better known as "Doc Stull"—a professor of kinesiology at Humboldt State University, holds forth on London as a consummate sportsman at...

Surveillance State

Historic challenge to support Edward Snowden

Dig This Douglas

Down-home dobro as Jerry Douglas plays Napa

Jericho Canyon Vineyard

Where aloha means 'have a glass of Cabernet!'
11,084FansLike
4,446FollowersFollow
6,928FollowersFollow