S 2013 09 26

Page 1

Secret

barbecue see Dish, page 27

the Dog

that saved California see News, page 9

What’s your guilty eating

pleasure? see Streetalk, page 5

Obamacare arrives in Sacramento this week. Here’s everything you need to know. by D anie l We int rau b

everything

page

art

17

in october see Artober, inside

sacramento’s news & entertainment weekly

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Volume 25, issue 24

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thursday, september 26, 2013


buck lewis

yoga instructor Radiant Yoga

strike a pose, we’re here lululemon athletica roseville galleria - now open lululemon athletica sacramento arden fair - opening friday, september 27

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September 26, 2013 | vol. 25, issue 24

11

Skip the self-diagnosis It’s become a joke in my household. Strange tingling in the arm? Per WebMD, it’s most certainly cancer. Sharp pain in the lower back? Take your pick, WebMD suggests, between ovarian, kidney or spinal cancer. Splitting headache? WebMD insists—insists!—it’s brain cancer. You’d think I’d know better. Stop clicking the mouse and just call the doctor already. And eventually I do, because I’m one of the lucky ones with employer-subsidized coverage. I have many friends, however— some students and artists, some unemployed—who too often find themselves weighing a trip to the doctor against such self-diagnosis. I wasn’t always so fortunate. There was a time when I cobbled together a living via part-time jobs and didn’t qualify for coverage. Rather, I paid nearly $500 a month for the privilege of being added to my husband’s policy. I was still lucky, actually. My husband’s plan was comprehensive with low copays, and his employer added me without combing through my health-care records for disqualifying pre-existing conditions. Come October 1, however, such a plan would likely cost me much less because that’s when, under the Affordable Care Act, Covered California will start selling subsidized insurance policies to millions previously ineligible for employer coverage. Between copays and package options, tax benefits and penalties, cheaper coverage isn’t necessarily any less confusing, however. The choices we make about our health care have as much to do with knowledge and resources as they do with money. This week’s Feature Story, “What the health?!?” by Daniel Weintraub (page 17), explains ACA’s impact on millions of Californians— and also decodes some of its more obtuse details. Because when it comes to serious health-care choices, WebMD should not be a part of the process.

05 07 09 13 17 22 25 27 31 32 34 36 51

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Copyright © UC Regents, Davis campus, 2013. Allll Righ Rig igh gh hts Rese erved.

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“Chocolate-chip cookies with chocolate-chip ice cream, with caramel sauce and fudge.”

Asked at 20th and K streets:

What is your guilty eating pleasure?

Tomie Rosenberg

teacher

It’s terrible. It’s Cheetos. The regular, old-fashioned ones. And I only allow [myself to eat them] when I’m driving long distance. It’s the thing that motivates me to drive a long distance. I just shove them in.

BEFORE

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NEWS

Jason Wunschel

Angela Ripley

bon vivant at large

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health and safety specialist

I would say chocolate-chip cookies with chocolate-chip ice cream, with caramel sauce and fudge on top. Is that too obvious? When you have had a really bad day, that would probably be it. The chocolate with the chocolate and the chocolate and the caramel. And I’m really into salted-caramel anything right now.

F E AT U R E

STORY

Chocolate pudding with crunched-up Oreos in it. Like, as many Oreos as you can comfortably crunch into it. I usually dump it into a bowl so I can fit more Oreos in it.

Mariko Pitts

Tony Mora

public-relations specialist

Almond Roca. At, like, 11:30 at night. It’s an alone thing, sometimes. [I love] the crunch. You sink your teeth in, and you get that toffee. Pretty delicious.

|    A R T S & C U L T U R E

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Dorothy Ripley

diamond dealer

I was a chef for three years. Sometimes, I can get classic with just steak. I’m a meat lover. I like prime rib or cowboy steak. Something meaty.

AFTER

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staff coordinator

I would have to go with chips. Like, tortilla chips smothered in cheese, onions, sour cream. That’s [for] a bad day—comfort food.

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SN&R

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PRESENTED BY

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Email your letters to sactoletters@newsreview.com.

Invest in prison reform Re “Sick of prison talk” by Danielle Ratkowski (SN&R Letters, September 19): Danielle Ratkowski’s rant on prison screams for response. She suggests that people not look to the government for personal answers to their problems. She simultaneously suggests that schools are the place where children should learn these values. Last time I checked, the schools were part of the government—hello! She also says she’s used welfare. I presume welfare provided her with a “hand up” when she needed it. Yet she would deny prisoners similar assistance when they need it? She says she has relatives in the system (prison or jail, I assume). Does she have no understandletter of ing or empathy for the week the lack of rehab offered to people incarcerated? Does she not believe that someone is sentenced in order to pay their debt to society, and at the end of that sentence, the debt is repaid?

Judgment must end at some point, and what we have in place now is endless judgment. Felons are automatically screened out for most employment, so what are they to do? You can say you don’t care, but don’t come whining to me about people on welfare and food stamps, or who are homeless and committing crimes. Your judgment is creating this by eliminating them from decent work! Most ex-cons would choose never to go back to prison if they were afforded a chance to earn a decent living. But for many, they don’t know any way to do that outside of crime. Ask the California system leadership: Juvenile justice is focused on rehab, while adult is focused on punishment. Our state needs to decide if it likes paying for the revolving door in the prisons or if it can climb down from its self-righteous pedestal long enough to offer alternatives. You want less homelessness? You want less crime? You want lower taxes related to law enforcement? Fund rehab, training, mentoring, internships, etc., and you will find that 90 percent of the “criminals” will reform and become good neighbors and community members. Ben Bannister

Wo o d l a nd

Need government funding to survive

online buzz

Re “Sick of prison talk” by Danielle Ratkowski (SN&R Letters, September 19): The pain and sorrow that saturate Danielle Ratkowski’s cri de coeur are plain evidence of the morally hazardous fallout radiating from our class-war society and overpressurized prison system. I get the feeling she’s gotten stuck cleaning up some toxic messes that weren’t hers. But cause and effect are easily confused. There’s no denying that thinking twice is a good way to stay out of trouble—like out of Iraq. And not thinking has many causes, such as lack of education from a young age. I am wondering: How young are the kids who need to know “it isn’t someone else’s responsibility to take care of them”? The truth is that we all rely on government funding to survive. I’d be toast without my public education in California’s formerly not-underfunded school system. And there are many other basic things for which we rely on government, like water and other utilities, roads, public health, and so forth. Muriel Strand Sacramento

On pOpular chain retailers such as BevMO! and WhOle FOOds Market cOMing tO MidtOWn: BevMo wants to “preserve” The Beat building? Good- then I assume they’ll sell records there instead of booze! Jesse Skeen

v ia Fa c e b o o k It’d be nice for those of us who don’t have cars and can’t get to the current [Whole Foods Market]. If you’re stuck taking [Regional Transit] and happen to work a regular 9-5, there is no way to get there AND be able to shop and get back home. On weekends, there’s no RT access at all. And it’s not just for folks to be able to shop there, but to work there, too. Kimberly A. Morales

v ia Fa c e b o o k Just what Midtown needs; another overpriced market! Joey Cline

@SacNewsReview

v ia Fa c e b o o k I see WF as complementing CoOp, especially 4 ppl who live closer 2 Safwy than CoOp & want better choices than Safwy provides. @barker_tamara

Facebook.com/ SacNewsReview

@SacNewsReview

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Shaq, the lobbyist See NEWS

10

Council can’t take criticism See NEWS

11

Breaking Bad in America See ESSAY

14

The dog that saved California Hustling ballot   measures, soothing political stresses,  finessing negotiations—the state’s   affable first dog is  changing Sacramento’s  Capitol culture The final weeks of the legislative session are high-stakes, long-hour grinds. The building by brims with lobbyists, staffers and media. Nick Miller It’s a stressful, possibly hellish time—but then an elongated, beamish canine named ni ck am@ newsr evie w.c om Sutter Brown might bounce into the room. When Gov. Jerry Brown and first lady Anne Gust’s Pembroke Welsh corgi recently entered a Democratic state senator’s office, for instance, staffers elicited yelps of delight unlike anything I’d ever seen in the building. They grasped for their smartphones, and Sutter made a run for food scraps underneath desks. In no time, everyone was taking photos. “Can I pick him up?” a woman inquired. A selfie with Sutter is currency among politicos. A small crowd quickly formed in the office’s lobby. Sutter barked—corgis are herders—and attempted to roust the gathering. This prompted a half-dozen more staffers to poke their heads in the front door. “Is that Sutter?” So goes the celebrity of California’s first dog, a veritable Justin Bieber-like phenomena. But with teeth: Recent nationalmedia stories argue that the dog, who turned 10 this week, is the a big part of the secret to the governor’s success. That Sutter’s disarming charm and surrogate prowess make for an administrative spokesperson unequaled. BuzzFeed recently christened Sutter a “Force in California Politics.” The New Republic published a feature titled “Meet the Corgi Who Helped California Raise Taxes.” Which is true. Sort of. “I had this kind of random idea to take him out on the road for [Proposition] 30,” explains Jennifer Fearing, the Sacramentobased California senior state director of the Humane Society of the United States. Fearing had dog-sat Sutter often, and even escorted him to Los Angeles once for a spay-neuter advocacy event. So last fall, when she wanted the governor’s taxincrease measure to pass, both personally B E F O R E   |   N E W S   |   F E AT U R E

Sutter Brown turned 10 this week.

and for her organization, she suggested bringing Sutter into the spotlight. “I’ve got one trick: Me and that corgi on the road,” she told Brown’s staff. It worked. Thirty stops in 30 days at Democratic phone-bank offices throughout California. If people made an hour worth of calls, they got their picture taken with Sutter. “It was a total hit,” Fearing says. Sutter even met with the Los Angeles Times editorial board. The mayor of Chico gave the corgi a key to the city.

President Barack Obama’s Portuguese “Everybody in the Capitol has a water dogs, Bo and Sunny, do the crush, an absolute crush, on Sutter,” media rounds infrequently. Gov. George says Fearing, who co-authored Dogs at Deukmejian owned three beagles, but none Work: A Practical Guide to Creating were a formidable presence inside the Dog-Friendly Workplaces, which chamCapitol’s “horseshoe,” a.k.a. the nickname pions the value of pets at the office. She for the governor’s executive wing. hopes to hold a “Bring Your Dog to the “Whenever the governor and Anne Capitol” day next year. are in Sacto, Sutter is there, too. He’s a Sutter’s magnetism cannot be underfixture,” says Fearing. Insiders say he’s stated. When the governor’s sister and known for rummaging through garbage original Sutter owner, Kathleen Brown, cans for eats, and that no trash bin is safe. returned to reside in the state last month, And that, of Jerry and Anne, he’s more of fears that the dog might leave Sacramento a “mama’s boy.” Some media members caused near-panic. Reporters quickly “Everybody in the even told SN&R of their surprise when contacted Kathleen for comment, to which bumping into the low-riding, chestnutshe assured she would not “disintermediCapitol has a crush, and-white tuxedoed dog in the governor’s ate” Sutter from the governor’s care. an absolute crush, offices, calling it “surreal.” Others say Others commented how reporters, on Sutter.” Sutter helps the governor with diplomacy often poised to bombard the governor and and negotiation. staff with tough questions, will “melt” Jennifer Fearing “[Brown] can be very cerebral, very when Sutter appears. Media members California senior state director, philosophical about policy and the direcretweeting Sutter’s Twitter posts is a Humane Society of the United States tion where he wants to take the state,” common practice (no one knows who (and regular Sutter Brown dog sitter) explains Roger Salazar, a local political manages the dog’s online presence, and consultant. “I think what Sutter Brown the governor’s office declined to speak Prop. 30’s unanticipated victory revitaldoes, it warms him up a bit. It shows that with SN&R for this story). ized Brown’s governorship. Was Sutter he’s got that warm side.” Ben Adler, statehouse bureau chief with partly to thank? “It would be a ... stretch to Salazar is no stranger to political pets. Capital Public Radio, says that while reportsuggest that Sutter was responsible for Prop During a stint at the Clinton White House, ers are human and “everyone loves dogs,” 30’s passage,” Marc Tracy wrote in the he witnessed how the president and first Sutter’s presence “adds another dimension” New Republic. “But Sutter actually did fit lady’s cat changed the culture. “Socks did to the challenges of reporting on Brown. uncannily into the overall strategy.” sort of the same thing for Hillary Clinton” “I’ve definitely seen him used politiCanine as political asset is at once as Sutter does for the governor, he says. cally,” Adler says. an old-dog and new trick. President The corgi is also an ambassador. On a recent afternoon walk in Capitol Franklin D. Roosevelt used his Scottish One anonymous source told SN&R that Park, SN&R joined Sutter and Fearing to terrier, Fala, in a campaign speech to they bumped into staffers and Sutter witness firsthand the dog’s political charm. describe how Republicans were “not in the elevator earlier this month. The Near the west steps, a group of lobbyists content” simply attacking his family and, group was taking the pooch to visit approach Sutter, cackling with joy as they moreover, were targeting his dog. But another senator, because their boss reach down to rub his scruff. The dog flips Fala never had more than 10,000 likes on was “kind of depressed” and “wanted onto his back, begging for a belly rub. Facebook, or 5,000-plus Twitter followto spend some time with Sutter as Everyone laughs. ers like Sutter. therapy.” And then the photo op begins, again. Ω S T O R Y   |    A R T S & C U L T U R E     |    A F T E R   |    09.26.13     |   SN&R     |   9


Shaq’s got your back? Needing the governor to sign a sweetheart arena bill, Kings owner Vivek Ranadivé rolls out Sacramento’s least-favorite 7-footer

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Shaquille O’Neal’s not just the latest whale in the Sacramento Kings’ ownership aquarium: The NBA legend was in town by Nick Miller this past Monday wining, dining—and lobbying—Gov. Jerry Brown. ni c k a m @ What might normally be considne w s re v i e w . c o m ered harmless elbow-rubbing became contentious: The governor is mulling whether to ink a special Kings bill that would fast-track construction of the team’s new downtown arena.

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Shaquille O’Neal lifts the governor’s wife, Anne Gust, during dinner at Zocalo this Monday night (because her husband won’t sign Senate Bill 743?).

After announcing him as a new minority owner of the basketball team, O’Neal, along with Kings majority owner Vivek Ranadivé and co-owner Mark Mastrov (with whom the NBA star has opened 24 Hour Fitness franchises) met with Brown at the Capitol on Monday afternoon. Later that evening, the trio joined new Kings front-office member Chris Mullin and Brown’s wife, first lady Anne Gust, and others at Zocalo, a popular Mexican restaurant in Midtown. Kings center DeMarcus Cousins also was in attendance. By the end of the night, a photo of O’Neal bench-pressing Brown’s wife above his head was making the rounds on Twitter. Too many margaritas, maybe? Or perhaps it was strictly business: The Kings bill on the governor’s desk, Senate Bill 743, could make or break the arena’s construction. Foremost, the bill—ushered through the Capitol by Senate

President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg—would speed up judicial review of any challenges to the arena’s environmental-impact report. Say then, if a group files a suit against the certification of the EIR, both the superior and appeals courts would have only 270 days to resolve any legal challenges, a significant fasttrack. (Sure, the courts have told the Legislature that it cannot mandate such expeditious proceedings, but the bill includes such language all the same.) Equally important is that the bill provides injunctive relief for arena construction. This means that, unless there is a serious risk to public health or American Indian artifacts are unearthed, work on the arena will not be interrupted by any environmental suits or challenges. This timeline is important: A signature-gathering effort to put an initiative on the June 2014 ballot challenging the arena’s public subsidy will probably succeed. If it does, the Kings hope to complete the arena’s environmental-impact report and commence construction before any vote; experts say the EIR might be completed as early as late spring. The special Kings bill also permits the city of Sacramento to engage eminent-domain proceedings against the owners of the Downtown Plaza Macy’s property, a New York-based real-estate firm. These owners have so far turned down the Kings’ offers for the Downtown Plaza Macy’s Mens & Home Store property. City council gave the green light to use eminent domain this past summer. The Steinberg bill also streamlines judicial review of all CEQA suits. When Ranadivé introduced O’Neal as a minority owner this week, turns out he was killing two birds with one stone: O’Neal provided the star power in a private meeting with the governor, and the all-star would hopefully be the key to developing one of the league’s most-promising young talents, Cousins, into an NBA superstar. Mentoring troublemaker talents like Cousins is typical for retired NBA talents such as O’Neal. But lobbying the governor himself is unconventional—and contentious. After the dinner, O’Neal told local media members that he would be in Sacramento often. Ω


Stamp of disapproval

BEATS

Republicans pass deep cuts to CalFresh food assistance House Republicans approved nearly $40 billion in cuts to the food-stamps program last Thursday evening in a tight 217-210 by vote. Fifteen Republicans defected Alan Pyke to vote no on the measure, which is projected to kick millions of people off of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimates Thursday’s cuts will bump at least 4 million—and up to 6 million—people out of the program, and even the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates 3.8 million would lose benefits next year with an additional 2.8 million losing them each year on average over the decade.

The food-stamps program provides $133 per month in assistance on average and is already scheduled for a significant cut in November as a federal-stimulus provision expires. Constraining eligibility for CalFresh in Sacramento will mean some hungry people get hungrier: Nearly half of the country’s 50 million individuals who suffer from hunger have pretax incomes high enough to make them ineligible for SNAP without categorical eligibility, according to Feeding America, and nearly a third earn more than 185 percent of the federal poverty level income.

PHOTO ILLUTSTAION BY BRIAN BRENEMAN

SNAP is one of the three most effective anti-poverty programs the government has, keeping 4 million people out of poverty last year alone. The cuts Republicans propose are likely to create greater costs down the road than what they save the government in the near term. The House and Senate must now reconcile their positions on foodstamp cuts, which the top agricultural policymaker in the Senate has warned will be very difficult on the shortened timeline House leaders have created by waiting until mid-September to act on food assistance. (The House passed the portion that relates more directly to agriculture in July.) The Senate’s farm bill included a $4 billion cut to SNAP, meaning that cuts in some amount are likely should the two chambers manage to strike a deal. The House bill includes both a more extreme version of the Senate’s changes to the application process for food stamps and work requirements provisions that doomed the original House farm bill last time. Prior to this summer, nutrition programs had always been wrapped up with agricultural programs in the farm bill. House leaders effectively doomed the decades-long marriage of agriculture and nutrition policy in June, however, when they endorsed an amendment attaching work requirements to SNAP. The amendment killed Democratic support and also failed to secure enough Republican votes for final passage of the farm bill. The House cuts amount to about Rather than try to recraft a farm Here in Sacramento, cuts to food 5 percent of the projected 10-year bill that could win majority support, stamps could impact more than cost of SNAP, which currently Speaker John Boehner and Majority 250,000 individuals. serves one in seven Americans as Leader Eric Cantor opted to split the The Nutrition Reform and Work the jobs crisis brought on by the nutrition and agricultural portions into Opportunity Act passed Thursday financial crisis continues. separate legislation. seeks to pare back food-stamp particiSen. Debbie Stabenow, a pation by changing eligibility requireDemocrat who chairs the Committee ments in a few different ways. In Here in Sacramento, on Agriculture in the upper chamber, addition to adding work requirements has warned that the House’s split modeled on the reforms that helped cuts to food stamps approach to the farm bill threatens to cripple the efficacy of welfare, the undermine the whole of American Republican bill ends something called would impact food policy. “categorical eligibility,” whereby more than 250,000 Conservatives argue that tighter people enrolled in other low-income individuals. restrictions are necessary due to safety-net benefits can skip much fraud and waste in food stamps, but of the bureaucracy and paperwork Enrollment in SNAP tracks with food-stamp audits routinely show that involved in applying for food stamps. the program wastes less money and is Proponents say categorical eligibil- the health of the economy, as safetynet programs are designed to do, but less vulnerable to fraud than the crop ity reduces administrative costs in the Republicans have repeatedly insisted insurance system those same conserprogram, but Republicans argue that that there is something untoward about vatives reauthorized in July. it makes federal anti-hunger spending the rapid expansion of the food-stamp Currently, one in seven families— too generous. rolls in the worst economy the country totaling 49 million people, 8 million has seen in about eight decades. of whom are children—face food insecurity. Ω   N E W S   |   F E A T U R E S T O R Y   |    A R T S & C U L T U R E     |    A F T E R

House Republicans recently passed a $40 billion cut to food stamps, which would leave millions of Americans without dinner on their plates.

This story originally appeared on the website ThinkProgress.

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Jury snooty Not everyone handles criticism well. Addressing the Sacramento County grand jury’s findings that the city council failed to educate voters about three local ballot measures last year, officials struck a tetchy tone in a response approved Tuesday. In June, the grand jury said Mayor Kevin Johnson and his staff missed the deadline to file a ballot argument in opposition to a half-cent sales-tax hike called Measure U, depriving voters the opportunity to weigh both sides of the argument. Sixty-four percent of voters adopted the initiative last November. An initiative to review the city’s charter got walloped by an even wider margin. The city has implemented timeline reminders to prevent future one-sided ballot arguments, but was less receptive to the investigative body’s other recommendations. The jury also found that some council members farmed out their ballot-argument-writing duties, and that the city clerk’s office suggested submitting certain arguments just before deadline to delay access by the media and opponents. “Not sure if this matters. Let me know,” the staffer’s email read. Making sure council members who are tasked with authoring ballot arguments actually do so “requires further analysis,” the city says in its response. So too does a recommendation that elected officials don’t write arguments for and against measures they supported placing on the ballot. “There is nothing in state law that disallows this practice,” says the written response prepared by Johnson’s office, city attorney James C. Sanchez and city clerk Shirley Concolino. A council committee was supposed to author the response, but a staff report says Councilmen Darrell Fong and Kevin McCarty declined the mayor’s appointments to it. (Raheem F. Hosseini)

Commission of none An informational report given Tuesday crystallized how stymied Sacramento’s racial-profiling commission is and how unwilling the city council has been to help. This was the first quarterly update the commission has made since 2011. That’s because the commission can’t actually discuss racial profiling due to its outdated scope, written in 2004. As a result, the commission has suffered high turnover, with appointees frustrated that they were seated to a donothing board. Due to a lack of agenda items or a quorum, the commission didn’t meet again until January of this year. Which is basically all the report says. The police department still collects demographic data on most of its traffic stops, but the commission isn’t allowed to examine it. The commission would need a single council member to sponsor an update to the commission’s scope to change all this, but has been unable to find one since issuing a 2008 report that showed troubling racial bias in police stops. (RFH)

Cost of a King This past Tuesday, the Sacramento City Council was set to approve a 5 percent surcharge on all events at the venue formerly known as Arco Arena. The bump in ticket prices will go toward paying off the 1997 loan the city issued to the Kings. Average ticket cost for an NBA game in Sacramento is $43.32. So, if the Kings sold out every regular season home game next year, the surcharge would contribute a little more than $1.5 million to pay down the loan. The Kings, however, had the league’s worst attendance record last year under the Maloof ownership at 79.4 percent capacity. (Nick Miller)

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Sharing is good Sacramento’s bike-share program wheeled  forward last week with a fundraiser downtown.  The Sacramento Area Council of Governments  plans to vote on the bike-share program in  December, and then could ride in 2015.

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Scorekeeper gives  a thumbs-up to the  groups behind the  Midtown “parklet” patios  and gardens last Friday  on 20th Street near the  MARRS building. The  city is expected to hear  a report on “parklets”  next month.

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License to deport California’s new driver’s license bill includes very troubling trade-offs for immigrants While Pete Wilson was governor of California 20 years ago, he squeezed anti-immigrant feelings for every drop of political juice he could get. He pushed Proposition 187, denying health care and education and other services to those who immigrated here illegally, and rode its popularity to a second term. The measure was ultimately struck down in the courts, and the real immigrantARvIn bashing action moved on to other states by CoSmo G like Arizona. cosmog@ n ewsrev iew.c om But some of the nastiness from the Wilson era proved to be awfully longlived. In 1993, the year before Prop. 187, Wilson signed another new law making it illegal for anyone without a Social Security number to get a California driver’s license. Effectively making it illegal for immigrants to drive a car to work or to school or to the grocery store or to a doctor’s appointment. And so, for the last two decades, the everyday chores of many people have been fraught with danger of arrest and confiscation of their vehicles. And though the law was meant to punish one group, we all the pay the costs of having more unlicensed drivers on the road.

The law includes language saying law enforcement can’t use the new driver’s licenses to investigate citizenship status. But it seems naive to think it won’t do just that. Democratic lawmakers, immigrant-rights and labor groups have been trying to get rid of the wrongheaded law ever since. And this year, they succeeded, though with some very troubling trade-offs. When, Assemblyman Luis A. Alejo, a Democrat from Watsonville, introduced his Assembly Bill 60 in the spring, the legislation was pretty straightforward. The new bill allowed anyone to get a license without a Social Security number if they had several other pieces of identification, including things like a consular ID and a birth certificate. That would have given California a license scheme similar to the states of New Mexico and Washington. We could finally say adios to this noxious remainder of Wilson’s legacy, and everybody could go back about their business. Alas, that’s not good enough for the Department of Homeland Security, which has been trying awfully hard to make states comply with the national Real ID Act. Passed in 2005—following the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission—Real ID requires proof of

BEFORE

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citizenship for state-issued licenses, and entry of license information into a national database, among other provisions. After negotiations with the governor’s office, Alejo included amendments requiring a “recognizable feature” on the front flagging the drivers undocumented status, along with a statement on the back saying the license couldn’t be used as an ID for any federal purpose. The language was so vague that it could have allowed another Wilson to come along and stamp “UNDOCUMENTED” in big red letters on the new licenses. “It would have been a license to deport,” said Ronald Coleman, with the California Immigrant Policy Center. Under pressure from immigrant-rights and labor groups, Alejo specified that the licenses should be more subtle, with markings, such as “DP” for “driving privilege” or “DL” for full licenses. More tasteful, yes, but how is it any less of a scarlet letter? The bill makes it illegal to discriminate against someone with a DP license—even while the markings are an obvious invitation to discriminate. Applicants will also be required to sign an affidavit, “attesting that he or she is both ineligible for a social security account number and unable to submit satisfactory proof that his or her presence in the United States is authorized.” The law includes language saying law enforcement can’t use the licenses to investigate citizenship status. But it seems naive to think it won’t do just that. “We are worried about the feds coming in and asking to see who signed an affidavit,” said Coleman. And imagine an immigrant with a California driver’s license who travels to work in Arizona, where the letters “DP” would give police all the reasonable suspicion they need to do an immigration check. And what’s the hurry to comply with Real ID? Most states haven’t, and they keep balking at its costs and at the notion of a national ID. Montana’s former Gov. Brian Schweitzer rejected it, saying, “Montana will not agree to share its citizens’ personal and private information through a national database.” The bill won’t take effect until January 1, 2015. So undocumented immigrants still can’t apply for licenses for more than a year. Why did California need to rush to comply with the Real ID Act, when it’s not clear DHS is going to be able to enforce it? And would the federal government really make good on threats to bar Californians from entering federal buildings or flying on airplanes? “No, we don’t believe the [Transportation Security Administration] is going to tell California that all of their driver’s licenses are invalid for travel,” said Coleman. It’s good that Californians can get back on the road and leave this ugly anti-immigrant chapter behind. But there may be trouble on the road ahead for anyone driving with a DP license. Ω

STORY

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ARTS&CULTURE

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It’s Artober. As every Sacramento art lover knows, October is a glorious month. The summer vacations are over, the new fall art shows have launched. The October weather gods usually skip the 100-degree days and aren’t quite ready to unleash rain, so we can still enjoy outdoor events. While there are great things to do in the other 11 months, October is special. It has Artober. In this week’s SN&R, you will find a road map to local art adventures, music, theater, festivals, exhibits and more. Take a look at the supplement and start planning your month. l ne Ae nK VO by Jeff One wonderful free event is the sixth annual SacWorldFest (in Old Sacramento on Saturday, j e ffv @n e wsr e v ie w.c o m October 5, from 6 to 8 p.m.; through Sunday, October 6, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.). Combining national and local acts on multiple stages, the outdoor festival is a delightful smorgasbord of international talent, such as Grammy Award-nominated West African soloist Youssoupha Sidibe and youth performers thrilled to be onstage. This year’s Saturday event will focus on Native American art. The Sunday lineup includes music from around the world, with a hip-hop dance-off competition at 4:15 p.m. There is something for everyone, and it’s an easy and enjoyable way to experience Sacramento’s tremendous diversity. I should mention that I am on the board Sacramento art of this event, so I have seen the hard work and dedication groups have created that has gone into putting on a wonderful, vibrant the festival. I am not on the board of art, music and any of the Sacramento theater but my wife theater scene for companies, and I are longtime B Street us to enjoy. Theatre season subscribers. In addition, we try to go to any local show that gets an exploding Shakespeare positive review in this paper. These shows have brought so much joy to our lives! In the last two weeks, we saw Other Desert Cities at B Street and Check out Artober, Clybourne Park at Capital Stage. Both were excellent. a guide to art, There is something incredible about live theater, espemusic, theater, cially in small venues where you feel like you are in a tiny dance and more, inside this issue room with the actors. Oh, wait—you are in a tiny room with of SN&R, and the actors. This interaction makes the play more real. look out for the I encourage you to experience local art, music, theater SacWorldFest and festivals during Artober. Sacramento art groups have insert in next week’s paper. done their job. They have created a wonderful, vibrant art, music and theater scene for us to enjoy. There are free events like Second Saturday. There are great museums like Jeff vonKaenel the Crocker and the California State Railroad Museum. is the president, There is the Sacramento Zoo. There is live music at Ace CEO and majority owner of of Spades, Harlow’s Restaurant & Nightclub, and dozens the News & Review of other venues throughout the region. And you can see newspapers in big shows at the Community Center Theater, Sleep Train Sacramento, Arena, the Crest Theatre, the Mondavi Center in Davis and Chico and Reno. Harris Center for the Arts in Folsom. The point is, just go. You’ll be supporting local artists and performers, and you will have a wonderful time. Ω


This Modern World

by tom tomorrow

Breaking ’s American empire business Breaking Bad ’s Walter White, Jesse Pinkman and their Walt decides to cook meth to make enough blue meth have a lot to say about the end of money for his family before cancer kills him. by our red, white and blue American dream. He’ll do anything to give his children a chance Nick Miller Heading into the AMC drama’s at the American dream. ni c kam@ final episode this Sunday night, former Fifty-some-odd episodes later, and he’s newsreview.c om schoolteacher-turned-drug lord Walt has lost gone numb to the societal impacts of floodeverything. His fortune is nearly gone. His ing the streets with his poison. Spoilers family hates him. Lung cancer forebodes an It’s an insensitivity America can relate for Breaking Bad are imminent last breath. It’s a dark denouement, to. We love our safe neighborhoods and revealed in this essay. filled with enough bleak character resolutions cheap gasoline. And not only do we have You know the drill. and sinister humor to zero problem brushing off make Sophocles look inequality, brazen imperialism This is why like Nora Ephron. and climate change to sustain Things weren’t this lifestyle—we feel entitled Walt will end up always so grim. For to do so. Walt, prosperity was This is the worst kind of dead on Sunday. contagious. He even egotism, according to Bad: famously told Jesse that Having the arrogance that he wasn’t cooking meth just to make more you’re doing something for the greater good millions. “I’m in the empire business,” he when, really, you’re rotten. growled. This is why Walt will end up dead on Now, his empire is in death-rattle mode. Sunday. Cue the message: The writers of Breaking Which, surprisingly, might distress a lot of Bad—a postmodern Western set in the final viewers, as so many people—at least accordfrontier flats of Albuquerque, New Mexico— ing to the hundreds of thousands of comments are using the most acclaimed TV show in on Reddit’s Bad forums—remain in Walter America to tell America that it sucks. White’s corner. And I guess that makes sense, Consider the show’s prevailing complicathe whole cheering for bad-guy Walt thing— tion, and how it mirrors the moral dilemmas despite his social amorality and stoic cruelty. an underemployed victim of this recession If Walt loses, then it’s an American already faces. In the show’s premiere episode, dream denied. Ω BEFORE

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Health care is here As the Affordable Care Act moves closer into implementation this October, it’s worth remembering that “Obamacare” has already saved American consumers more than $1.2 billion simply by limiting the amount that insurance companies can charge for administrative services. That’s it. Right off the top. It’s not a perfect system. No system is—even the gold-standard universal single-payer system that we hold as an ideal. Given how entrenched insurance companies have become in our health-care system, though, this is undoubtedly the fastest way to get health care to people who have been excluded from services because they couldn’t afford insurance. Already, we’re seeing results: young people who can stay on their parents’ insurance until they can afford their own, and people with pre-existing conditions able to purchase health insurance. But Covered California will spend the next three months enrolling a large number of uninsured Californians into programs. Even those who have health insurance through their employer will benefit in the long run, as having more insured people reduces the number of uninsured patients that must be paid for out of public funds. Visit the Covered California website at www.coveredca.com. Find out what’s available. Take advantage of it. It’s taken a great deal of work, but access to health insurance is finally available to everyone. Ω

Lawmaker highlights

While some were upset about the news that sleep-deprived legislative aides pitched pennies into the crown on the Capitol’s statue of Queen Isabella during the last-minute push to wrap up the session—it could damage the marble and is discouraged—there was some good news in the slew of laws sent forward to the governor. First, the bill allowing driver’s licenses for immigrants living here without legal permission—long overdue—is finally in good shape to become law. It’s more than a bit naive to think that immigrants in carcentric California aren’t going to drive. Making licensure available regardless of immigration status is a common-sense measure that will improve the safety of the roadways by allowing these drivers access to the same training and licensing as the rest of us. Raising the minimum wage was also a move in the right direction. While it still lags behind a living wage, there’s no doubt that those workers at the bottom of the pay scale need a break. Too many still think this only affects teenagers, but obviously, those people haven’t been to a fast-food joint lately, where workers come in all ages and certainly work hard. Adding more to their checks will have a ripple effect throughout the economy, given that almost the entire paycheck of minimum-wage workers is spent locally. Along those same lines, the domestic worker’s bill of rights is also good news. The people who care for our children, our elders and our homes ought to have the same protection under the law. We urge the governor to sign this bill. Ω   |    A R T S & C U L T U R E     |    A F T E R   |    09.26.13     |   SN&R

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T

o Kim Belshé sometimes it seems as if she has been trying to overhaul California’s healthcare system for most of her life. Next year, she might finally see those efforts succeed. As a young Harvard University graduate, Belshé worked for former Gov. Pete Wilson in the 1990s, and the pair tried to instill an ethos of prevention into the state’s sprawling, taxpayer-supported healthcare programs. Spend a little more up front to keep people healthy, they reasoned, and the state could save billions down the road. That tack was unusual for a Republican, and Wilson had some success with it. But it was never enough to fundamentally transform such a massive system. Fifteen years later, Belshé helped lead an even more ambitious reform for another Republican governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Modeled after a Massachusetts plan signed into law by Gov. Mitt Romney, Schwarzenegger’s proposal would have required everyone to have insurance, required employers to provide it, and slapped strict new regulations on insurance companies. The bill passed the state Assembly but died in the Senate amid personal and partisan backbiting. Now, Belshé is near the helm of another huge undertaking as a member of the California board that will implement much of the Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama’s top-to-bottom transformation of the nation’s health-insurance system. In October, that agency, known as Covered California, will begin selling subsidized insurance policies to millions of Californians who don’t get affordable coverage through their employer. And the success or the failure of the initiative might well rise or fall on a question that Belshé has been pursuing for a decade: Can the government, working with community groups and civic institutions, instill a “culture of coverage” in society so that everyone expects to have health insurance and buys it, even if they are young, healthy and figure that they probably won’t need the coverage? “In my mind, the ‘culture of coverage’ reflects this guiding principle of shared responsibility,” Belshé said, “this idea that in order to make meaningful progress, it requires something of all of us.” That sums up the central idea at the heart of “Obamacare,” as the law is widely known. Everyone will be required to buy insurance, and if they can’t afford it, they will get tax credits to make it cheaper or will be eligible for free care from the state. Large employers will be required to offer affordable coverage to their full-time employees, or else pay a fine. Taxpayers will pay more to finance the subsidies for those who can’t afford coverage. And insurance companies will have to play by a new set of rules that will control almost everything they do. “The Affordable Care Act is transformative,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, a statewide health-care consumer advocacy group. “It’s the biggest thing Congress has ever done in health care.” It is also arguably the most controversial thing Congress has done in any area of public policy in at least a generation.

Obamacare arrives in Sacramento this week. Here’s everything you need to know. b y D anie l We inT rau b Daniel Weintraub is editor of the California Health Report. Callie Shanafelt, Leslie Griffy, Lynn Graebner and Leah Bartos of the California Health Report also contributed to this article.

“WhaT The healTh?!?” continued on page 18

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AU G U S T

Tea party activists protest Congress members over Obamacare. Sarah Palin introduces the term “death panels.”

2009

NOVEMBER 7

House of Representatives passes its health-reform bill, 220-215.

2009

DECEMBER 24 U.S. Senate passes Obamacare 60-39. But Massuchusetts elects Scott Brown to the Senate in January, forcing the House to ditch its own reform bill and pass the Senate's. Both houses of Congress pass a reconciliation bill in March 2010.

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President Obama announces plan to tackle health-care reform.

2009

I

Critics coin term “Obamacare” during Barack Obama's presidential campaign.

2009

FEBRUARY

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HEALTH-CARE REFORM:

And the plans will be classified into four categories—platinum, gold, silver and bronze— depending on how much of the cost of care is covered by the insurance company. “Consumers will be able to make apples-toapples decisions that they have not been able to make in the past,” said Peter Lee, executive director of Covered California. “We are changing the focus of health insurance from being a shell game, hiding from consumers what’s covered and not covered … to providing the best care possible to [help consumers] stay healthy and get care when they need it.” The platinum plans will have the highest monthly premiums, and they will cover 90 percent of the cost of a consumer’s care. The cheapest plans will be bronze, but they will cover only 60 percent of the cost of a person’s care. Within each category, all the plan details

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But there will be challenges. The biggest might be finding enough doctors to care for all the new patients, since many physicians refuse to take Medi-Cal patients because the reimbursement is so low. “In the short term, I would not be surprised if people have trouble getting to health care, a physician or another provider,” said Assemblyman Richard Pan, a Democrat from Sacramento and a practicing pediatrician. “There will probably be backups and waits and so forth.” But Pan said he thinks the backlogs will clear once the surge of new patients settles in and people get treatment for problems they have been neglecting because they could not afford to pay for care.

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The Affordable Care Act is arguably the most controversial thing Congress has done in any area of public policy in at least a generation.

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While the ACA is sprawling and, at times, maddeningly complex, it is easier to understand if you think of it as doing three basic things: It will expand free public health insurance to more than a million low-income Californians, mostly childless adults, who until now have had little or no access to health care. It will offer subsidized coverage to those who can’t get affordable policies elsewhere in a new, simplified online marketplace designed to allow consumers to compare coverage on an apples-toapples basis with no hidden trap doors. It will completely change the way insurance companies operate. Instead of spending their time and resources weeding out risky customers, insurers will now be forced to compete on price and customer service. And while their rates won’t be regulated—yet—almost everything else they do will be, turning the industry into something almost resembling a public utility. There is much, much more, but almost everything the law does is built around one of those three goals. The Supreme Court, in its controversial decision upholding Obama’s health-care law, also ruled that states could opt out of expanding their public-health programs for the poor, which was a key part. Many states with Republican governors have since decided not to expand those programs, even though the federal government is promising to pay most of the cost. But California’s Legislature and two governors—first Schwarzenegger and now Jerry Brown—have embraced the law with enthusiasm and implemented it aggressively. That’s given California a head start that many other states have lacked. A big example was the early creation of a new public program run by the counties for lowincome people who did not qualify for Medi-Cal. This change provided coverage to more than 700,000 people, and now, most of them—and many more—will be rolled into the Medi-Cal program beginning on January 1, 2014. By the time the change is fully implemented, California could have 9 million people in Medi-Cal, or nearly one in every four residents of the state.

Beginning January 1, nearly every Californian will be required to have health insurance, or else pay a penalty on their taxes. But many of those who do not get insurance at work and are not eligible for Medi-Cal will be able to get subsidies from the federal government to make their coverage more affordable. The subsidies, in the form of tax credits paid in advance on the consumer’s behalf directly to an insurance company, will be available through Covered California. This new online marketplace managed by the state has contracted with 13 health insurers to offer coverage in 19 regions around the state. Every plan will offer the same 10 essential benefits: coverage that will be, in most cases, more comprehensive than is generally available today.

will be identical. The insurance companies will compete by trying to offer better networks of doctors and hospitals and better service. A crucial change: Consumers will be able to choose any of these plans regardless of their health history. They can’t be denied coverage or charged more if they have been sick. Rates will vary based on geography to reflect the cost of care in different parts of the state. And older people will have to pay more than younger people, though they cannot be charged more than three times as much for the same plan. Today, it is common for older people to pay five times more than younger people, if they can get coverage at all. As an example, a 32-year-old single person living in Sacramento County with an annual income of $30,000 a year will have choices ranging from $197 a month to $445 a month, after taking the subsidies into account. A couple in their 40s earning $50,000 would pay between $215 and $776 a month, depending on what level of reimbursement they wanted the insurance to provide. A crucial question is whether healthy people will enroll or pay the penalty, which in many cases, will be far less expensive than the monthly premiums. If too many healthy people opt out, the system will be top-heavy with sicker patients that are more expensive cases. That could force insurers to increase rates in the second year, leading even more healthy people to leave the system and starting a spiral from which the program might not be able to recover. Critics point out that the law’s provisions, by putting everyone into one big insurance pool, will increase costs on the young and the healthy, while making insurance more accessible to older people and the sick. The tax-credit subsidies available to low-income people will relieve part of that cost shift for many young, healthy people, but not for all of them. To overcome potential resistance, Covered California is planning a massive media blitz in the coming weeks to promote the new insurance exchange. The agency will spend millions while enlisting celebrities, churches, community groups and civic organizations to encourage people to enroll. The biggest target will be young adults, dubbed “young invincibles,” because of their tendency to think they won’t get sick and need health care.

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California’s advantage

the young invinCibles

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The federal government paid for the early expansion, and it will pay for 100 percent of the cost of the newly expanded Medi-Cal program for the first three years. By 2020, the state expects Californians to be receiving about $6 billion worth of additional care a year, at a cost to state taxpayers of $600 million. The expansion will open Medi-Cal’s rolls to anyone with an income below 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or about $16,000 for an individual and $32,500 for a family of four. Low-income people with no children will be eligible for free care for the first time. Thanks to the Bridge to Reform, the early adopter program run by the counties, the MediCal expansion figures to be the simplest of the various parts of the Affordable Care Act to implement here. In most counties, the infrastructure is already in place and for many patients, it will just be a matter of transferring their enrollment from one public program to another.

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“what the health?!?”

2010

MARCH 23

Obama signs the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act into law.

TIMELINE

continued on page 21

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Sactoberfest_SNR_Ad2_09-19-13-REVISED.pdf

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HEALTH IN SACRAMENTO A look at the Affordable Care Act by the numbers

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$197 low-end monthly cost for a healthy, single, 30-something Sacramentan to purchase health insurance on the exchange

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Number of Sacramentans who are uninsured but qualify for Medi-Cal

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$1.8

You don’t have to travel to Munich to experience Oktoberfest. It’s right here in your own backyard! Come experience Sactoberfest – our outdoor Oktoberfest-style festival! Compete in contests such as stein holding and yodeling, drink premium German biers, eat wursts, dance, sing and so much more!

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cost of ACA insurance coverage provisions over 10 years, according to FactCheck.org

PARTNERS:

“what the health?!?”continued on page 21 BEFORE

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high-end cost for same individual

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SSF_SNR Ad_09-19-13.pdf

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Give One Day

One Day Everyone Will Have a Place To Call Home

Give One Day Every member of our community should have a safe place to call home. Join Sacramento Steps Forward’s fight to end homelessness by giving just one day’s worth of your rent or mortgage payment and help families, children and individuals find a place to call home.

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Determine your One Day donation by dividing your monthly mortgage or rent payment by 30 days: • $1,000 monthly mortgage or rent ÷ 30 days = $33 • $2,000 monthly mortgage or rent = $66 • $3,000 monthly mortgage or rent = $100 • $4,000 monthly mortgage or rent = $133 • $5,000 monthly mortgage or rent = $166 Visit us online at SacramentoStepsForward.org for more information on the Give One Day campaign and to donate now.

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While the Affordable Care Act is supposed to provide nearly universal health coverage, 3 million to 4 million Californians will likely be left behind. Many of these will be people who have immigranted here illegally, who will be excluded by law from buying coverage in the exchange, even with their own money. Others will be people exempted from the insurance mandate because the cost of coverage exceeds 8 percent of their income, people who opt out and pay the fines, and people who are simply disconnected from civic society and aren’t reached or persuaded by the marketing campaign.

The funds will be redirected to local humanservices programs, offsetting state general-fund costs in the CalWORKs welfare program. The community clinics that undergird the health-care safety net in much of the state will also be in a bind. On the one hand, many are preparing to compete for paying patients for the first time as part of the provider networks consumers can access with insurance through Covered California. On the other hand, the clinics are likely to experience a drop in funding because they will be treating fewer uninsured patients on behalf of the counties. “These are essential institutions that need to survive and thrive in the post-reform world,” said Wright of Health Access. “We need their capacity, both for the remaining uninsured and for the newly insured. “It means that they, as well as the system as a whole, have to agree to do things in a different way,” Wright said.

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the safety net

A 32-year-old single person living in Sacramento County with an annual income of $30,000 a year will have choices ranging from $197 a month to $445 a month, after taking the subsidies into account.

One such institution adapting to the new environment, the Mendocino Coast Clinics, has been operating its nonprofit health center in Northern California for nearly 20 years. Based in Fort Bragg, the three clinics treat patients living along 50 miles of the remote California coastline. The clinics are the only provider in town offering a sliding-fee discount to qualifying patients, offering everything from primary care, pediatrics, reproductive health, dental and behavioral health care. Paula Cohen, executive director of the Mendocino Coast Clinics, says while the clinics are facing a great deal of change and uncertainty under the coming health reform, they are far from becoming obsolete. “It’s a word of caution, this is not going to be the end of any discussion for any need for safetynet providers,” Cohen said. To address that need Assemblyman V. Manuel Pérez has called for the establishment of a trust fund paid for by employers, private donors and philanthropic organizations to provide comprehensive health-insurance coverage to workers who are not covered by the ACA or the expansion of Medi-Cal. The California Department of Health Care Services would administer the fund, and nonprofit community health centers would apply to the trust for money to serve the number of uncovered workers coming to their clinic for the time those workers are employed by the employers contributing to the fund. The trust would serve employees of small businesses, agriculture, restaurants, sales and service industries, primarily people who don’t receive health insurance through their jobs and who can’t afford to buy it on their own. “The ACA is historical for us,” Pérez said. “But it doesn’t go far enough.” Sacramento’s Assemblyman Pan said he sees the Affordable Care Act as a turning point in the history of American health care. “Is it as grand a transition as some people would prefer? No,” he said. “But the insurance reforms, combined with the expansion of coverage, provide an opportunity for the health-care community to say, ‘Look, let’s see if we can do a better job taking care of people than we do now, particularly people with chronic conditions.’ “Ultimately, that is going to be the measure of success: Do we change the health-care system in a way that makes it make more sense for our population?” Ω

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Another big question for the law is how employers will react. America’s health-insurance system is built around the concept of employers providing coverage for their workers, but that custom evolved by accident. The method got its start during World War II, when wage controls forced employers to try other ways to compete for labor. One solution: They started paying for health benefits as a substitute for higher wages. Many economists and health-care experts question whether this is the smartest way to pay for health care, but the Affordable Care Act builds on the tradition by requiring employers of 50 or more full-time workers to provide coverage or pay a penalty. But just like the individual mandate, the penalties on employers will likely be less expensive than the cost of providing coverage, so some employers may opt to not offer benefits and send their workers into the health exchange. Obama waived the fines altogether for the first year of the program, which might make it even easier for companies to stop providing benefits to their employees. One major example of that trend surfaced this month: Trader Joe’s, the popular supermarket chain, told employees that the firm will no longer provide coverage to its part-time workers. Instead, it will give them a stipend of $500 a year to use toward buying coverage in the health exchange. Because most of those workers are low-income earners, they might be better off with this deal once they collect the subsidies offered by the federal government. But the change will be disruptive, and if it is repeated throughout the workforce, it could drive the cost of those subsidies far higher than the Obama administration or Congress anticipated. Meanwhile, the rule requiring insurance companies to sell to anyone regardless of their health history—and not charge them more—is

For these people, the counties will maintain a scaled-back safety net that will be the health-care provider of last resort. But because many of the people the counties have been caring for will now have insurance, the state wants to reduce the amount it has been paying the counties to care for the indigent. “On paper, you’d think there would be savings,” said David Luchini, assistant director of the Fresno County Department of Public Health. But Luchini and other county officials say it is too early to know how much those savings will amount to. And if the state pulls back too much too soon, it could leave the safety net in shreds. This year’s state budget calls for a shift of $300 million next year from the counties to the state, of the $1.3 billion the state has been supplying for this population.

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Business not as usual

just one of many major changes the ACA will make to the way the industry does business. The law has already forced insurers to phase out their caps on annual and lifetime reimbursements—limits on coverage that once forced seriously ill people to give up their benefits just when they needed them most. The companies have also had to let young adults remain on their parents’ policies until age 26, even if they were married with families of their own. That rule change has helped an estimated 400,000 young Californians get or keep insurance coverage. The new law will also set strict new rules on how insurance companies spend the money they collect from consumers. They will have to spend at least 80 percent of the premiums they collect on medical care, leaving no more than 20 percent for administration, marketing and profits. If they exceed that threshold, they will have to issue rebates to their customers. And while insurance companies’ rates won’t be regulated directly, they will have to give public notice of any rate hikes and seek to justify them with data showing why the increases are necessary. State regulators will issue a public notice declaring whether the increases are justified or not. The scrutiny is expected to pressure insurance companies to minimize their price increases. If it doesn’t work, consumer advocates have a backup plan: A measure has already qualified for California’s November 2014 ballot that would subject health-insurance rates to direct regulation by the state.

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That’s where the “culture of coverage” Belshé envisions becomes important. She and others involved in implementing the ACA hope to see a new paradigm in which everyone who comes of age just assumes they will get coverage one way or another, on their own or, if they need it, with help from the government. “For this to be successful, it requires a community norm in which insurance is valued, expected and accessible,” she said.

TIMELINE

continued from page 19

2012

2010

MARCH 24

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NEWS

JULY 22

U.S. Supreme Court upholds most of ACA's constitutionality.

House Republicans introduce bill to repeal Affordable Care Act.

BEFORE

2012

JUNE 28

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F E AT U R E

The House Republicans— and five Democrats— vote to repeal ACA for 31st time.

STORY

2013

2013

SEPTEMBER

Twenty-five states announce plans to adopt expansion of Medicaid.

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2014 JANUARY 1

OCTOBER 1

AFTER

Open enrollment for ACA health exchanges open in California.

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Most Californians required to purchase health insurance.

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The other Steve Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak on privacy, the digital divide and the real Steve Jobs by Rachel Leibrock

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pple co-founder Steve Wozniak isn’t one to mince words—whether he’s riffing on his late business partner Steve Jobs or why computers don’t necessarily improve classrooms. These days, the 63-year-old college dropout (and inventor of the first Apple computer) still receives a stipend from the company he left in 1987. His time, however, is focused largely on philanthropical, educational and entrepreneurial efforts. Wozniak, who kicks off the Sacramento Speakers Series on Tuesday, October 1, recently chatted with SN&R about Jobs, wearable technology and what, exactly, he has in common with Brad Pitt.

What can people expect from a night with Steve Wozniak? It’s to going to be [like] minispeeches with questions and very off-the-cuff answers. Generally, there is a moderator to keep the questions flowing, to [make sure the] questions are important and noteworthy. We may take some of the questions from tweets.

Some of those questions will likely revolve around Steve Jobs. You’ve already said you weren’t a fan of the Jobs biopic. Yes, and I’d get into some specifics about the ways in which it was inaccurate—from the way it presented his mannerisms to what was going on in the company. … He kept trying to have success at Apple, but he kept having failures instead: the Apple III, the Lisa, the Macintosh. He had the vision of the future, but he was too anxious and not patient enough. The film glorified him for his artistic vision above it all, and his artistic way of thinking. That’s what he had as the company runner, as the face of the company: He had the ability to execute and operate as a CEO when he returned to Apple [in 1997] and kept the company in good shape, but the movie presented him as the leader at every stage when, really, he was really the learner. And it left out [the] people like me … who were [creating and innovating]. It left all that out. Worse than that, it wasn’t interesting. OK, back to you. You once taught free computer classes to elementary schoolchildren in Los Gatos, California; was this an effort to bridge the digital divide for those who normally might not have access to such classes? I taught for eight years, [but] it wasn’t because I wanted to bridge the digital divide. I just wanted to teach. What did you learn by teaching? I learned that class size is very critical to keeping students’ attention. I learned that California is 50th in [the] nation in class size. I started thinking,

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rachell@newsreview.com

when we had elections in cities, we want to pay more for education. I spent $10,000 to mail postcards to everyone in Cupertino [where I lived] to get them to vote to [pay more taxes] for education, but it failed because it only got 50 percent of the vote, and thanks to [Proposition 13], you need a two-thirds vote. It did pass, eventually, in Los Gatos. But you didn’t start teaching because you thought students lacked access to technology? I don’t think the digital divide is that strong of an issue. People who are down and out economically—the computer doesn’t mean as much to their lives and success and where they’re at in their station in life. I’m more interested in improving education, and computers haven’t done well when it comes to that. Why do you say that? They’ve changed how we learn and what we use to learn, but we need to change the education paradigm that has everyone learning the same thing at same time and then getting tested on it at the same time. That doesn’t work; it doesn’t allow someone to go off on their own like I did. School limits you. How can we choose our own courses? In a class of 30, you can’t have students learning different things, going at different speeds. [But] if you have a teacher who cares, you cannot fail. [That teacher] can make things interesting. We need a computer that’s more like a human being and makes things interesting, not a computer that’s like a computer. That computer would need to

know you like a human: know your interests, know what makes you you. From what I understand, we’re not there yet [with technology], and we may not be there for another 30 to 40 years. And thanks to politics, we may not be there for another 200 years. What are some of the current challenges of technology from a consumer standpoint? The computer market has always been one of upgrades—we replace older stuff with more stuff. We can make much more stuff with chips of silicon than we did the year before. It’s [like] Moore’s law: We manage to make each product a little smaller, a little closer to the body. We’re on the verge of a wearable revolution. … I’m hoping that Apple is one that thinks outside the box. You’ve said you want the next smartphone to be a watch. I wear an iPod on my wrist for music. It’s simple. I want my computer there. I want my whole phone to have a little more information. So, iPhone or Android? My preference has been iPhone, since I’m Apple, but I’m interested in Google Glass. Google Glass seems like a lot of fun, but I’m afraid that people—it’s like Bluetooth: You show it off for a while, and it’s the coolest thing, but then after a period of time, it’s not really a critical piece of your life. [But] I think it’s going to be worth watching, I want one [because] you can hear it speaking to you. I want to be able to ask it questions all day

long and get an answer back in my ear. I look forward to a phone that tells me who someone is based on what I’m near. I have that same affliction that Brad Pitt has in that I don’t recognize faces of people I’ve met before. What’s your take on companies such as Google and Facebook that constantly raise privacy concerns— or the users who willingly give up privacy in exchange for the product or service? Everybody is willing to give up some privacy. I’m used to having a camera follow me 24-seven. I don’t care about my privacy—but I fight for others’ privacy. No company that comes out [with a product or service] will absolutely guarantee privacy [or] to not use data outside of our own needs. … I decided a long time ago, when I was 20, I was going to be very open with the world—it keeps you from doing bad things, so I’m the wrong person to ask [about privacy], because I’m just too open. But let me say this, if I send you a letter or have a phone call with you, I have a reasonable expectation that it should be kept between you and I. That’s very wrong, [to have] constantly changing levels of encryption, creating back doors [that make it easier for others to access information]. This is very sad. It’s making people think that the technology is winning. The technology is controlling us, but the humans should always win. Ω See Steve Wozniak on Tuesday, October 1, at the Community Center Theater at 1301 L Street. Tickets are available with a Sacramento Speakers Series subscription only for $210-$450. More information is at www.sacramentospeakers.com.


27

Yelp this, hipsters See DISH

Narcissism vs. grief See ASK JOEY

31

34

James Gandolfini’s goodbye See FILM

Bloody good See 15 MINUTES

51

SCENE& HEARD

“We need a computer that’s more like a human being and makes things interesting, not a computer that’s like a computer.”

Photo courtesy of steve Wozniak

Steve Wozniak

Here’s the beef Carnivores flocked en masse to Raley Field on the night of September 18, hungry for the meaty offerings of 15 Sacramento restaurants, all competing for the title of best burger at the 2013 Sacramento Burger Battle. A vegetarian’s nightmare, the air smelled of backyard barbecues as chefs cooked enough dead-cow flesh to feed a small army. Ticket holders moseyed from tent to tent, nabbing quartered burgers topped with the likes of blue cheese, pickled peppers, pork belly and crispy onion strings, and then stuffed them, one by one, into their gaping mouths, eager to pass judgment. Americans have such a special relationship with the hamburger. For years, ground beef sandwiched between two sides of a soft bun with lettuce, tomato, pickles and onion has been a standby comfort food that even the most committed health nut sometimes can’t resist. Tailgate parties and barbecues have long showcased burgers as the central entree, easy to cook and easy to eat. Even when health experts started to naysay America’s favorite meat pocket, claiming that red meat contributes to high cholesterol and heart disease, people got creative, skirting the health issues by experimenting with chicken, turkey and salmon patties. We even found ways to include the vegetarians with black-bean burgers and tofu patties. We would never abandon the burger! But tonight was about the beef. And the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America, the recipient for the event’s proceeds, of course. But mostly the beef. Throughout the evening, some chefs got creative, producing finger-licking burgers bursting with flavor. Others kept it simple, letting the tenderness of the meat speak for itself. Some stood out as I made my rounds. De Vere’s Irish Pub slid out a burger slathered with a bacon-bourbon barbecue sauce on a pretzel bun that was messy and tasty. Formoli’s kept it simple with a perfectly cooked patty on a soft bun with a type of balsamic reduction that complemented the meat. Bacon and Butter made a breakfast burger, using pork belly as a topping and sandwiching all the meat between two buttermilk biscuits. All that was missing was the over-easy egg, oozing yolk with that first bite. Roaming meat-munchers guzzled beer and wine out of small mason jars. Representatives from breweries such as Lagunitas Brewing Company, Crispin Cider and Ruhstaller poured libations freely, easing those burgers down as stomachs filled. There were many laughs as well. Folks posed in photo booths, and a live band set the mood with its bluesy overtones as people swayed to the music, unable to do much more after chowing down on the smorgasbord. After deliberation by the judges, which included local chefs Randall Selland and Patrick Mulvaney, Ettore’s European Bakery and Restaurant took home the coveted championship belt with its tangy concoction served on a house-made jalapeño-cheddar-scallion bun. West Sacramento’s Broderick Roadhouse was voted people’s favorite with a messy face-stuffer, topped with smoked cheddar, barbecue sauce and pickled peppers. They did not provide Wet-naps. As the last stragglers made their way up the stadium stairs, stuffed to the hilt, the cool night air seemed to take the residual smells of grilled meat up and away along with the fading remains of summer. Well, until next year, anyway, when those grills fire up and Sacramento chefs once again compete for the title of reigning burger champ. I wonder if McDonald’s will be there. —Jessica Rine

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For the week of September 26

autumnal m o u r a

utumn in Sacramento: It’s probably the name of a local  painting or two, maybe a song, or even a short story.  Now that it’s arrived, let’s enjoy it—because it’s one of  the nicest seasons and most beautiful times of the year  here. We’ve got falling leaves, temperatures that usually  range between 50 and 80 degrees, and natch, plenty of  happenings that go along with the changing season. Check out  the following three events this week that SN&R believes, in a  way, capture the essence of the season. Beer might taste sweeter in the summer, but in autumn  come Oktoberfest lagers, and all sorts of spiced ales (including pumpkin-flavored ones). Total Wine & More (locations in  Sacramento, Folsom and Roseville) hosts its Autumn Brewfest,  featuring a beer class that will help you get familiar with newly  released seasonal brews. It happens on Thursday, September  26, from 6:30 to 8 p.m., and tickets cost $15. Visit www.total  wine.com for more details. The Seafarer’s Pirates & Pumpkins Festival on Saturday,  September 28, is basically for people who already want to

start the Halloween party season early. This family friendly  celebration pairing the seemingly disparate worlds of gourds  and sea plundering will feature live music (by Skip Henderson,  John Blakemore, the Mad Maggies and the Black Irish Band),  cannon battles, kids’ activities, belly dancers, a pumpkin patch  and lots of people dressed as pirates (costumes are recommended). Gates open at 11 a.m. at the Rio Ramaza Marina, RV &  Event Park, (10000 Garden Highway), and the party ends well  after dark. Admission costs $7, and food and drink are extra.  Visit www.louisianasue.com for more information. Cool Patch Pumpkins (6585 Milk Farm Road in Dixon) is now  open for fall. It houses a huge corn maze (through November  5), and also offers a pumpkin patch, food, hay rides, a “kid  zone” and scarecrow contests. To add a bit of awesome,  sometime during the last week of opening, the patch hoists   a huge pumpkin with a crane and smashes a car with it.   Billy Corgan would be proud. Call (530) 304-0163 or visit   www.coolpatchpumpkins.com for more information.

—Jonathan Mendick

wEEkLy PIckS

KVMR Celtic Festival & Marketplace Friday, September 27, through Sunday, September 29 Although it features headliners such as Molly’s  Revenge, Manran and Bridge Crossing, this festival  is about more than just music.  FESTIVAL It’ll also feature dancing, animals, and dozens of food, drink and clothing vendors. Head to Grass Valley for a craic time, boyo.  $10-$50 per day, or $16-$65 for a Saturday and  Sunday pass, camping costs extra; Nevada County  Fairgrounds, 11228 McCourtney Road in Grass  Valley; www.kvmrcelticfestival.com.

—Jonathan Mendick

Brews and Balls Festival Saturday, September 28 A morning of ball-related sports like kickball,  dodgeball and cornhole, followed by three hours of  drinking as much beer as you can (or until they run  out)—has there ever been a more Roseville-esque  event? Hotel specials are available for  BEER those planning to go, er, balls to the wall  on those kegs. $30, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Placer  County Fairgrounds, 800 All America City Boulevard  in Roseville; http://radiisports.com/brewsnballs.

—Deena Drewis

World Rabies Day Saturday, September 28 Titling an event “World Rabies Day” rather than  “World Rabies Prevention Day” seems like a bit of  a marketing misstep, but the intentions are good:  Attendees can get their animal companPETS ions free rabies vaccinations, pet licenses  and microchips. Do this favor for Fido—no one wants  things to end like Old Yeller. Free, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,  various locations, http://svvma.com.

—Deena Drewis

Sacramento Reptile Show Saturday, September 28, through Sunday, September 29 Visit scaled friends at the Sacramento Reptile Show.  Just don’t get too close to a 10-foot alligator or one  of the 45 venomous species of snakes. The show is  ANIMALS designed to spur a “passion for  reptiles,” according to its website,  and you can also take home a pet. $8-$18; 10 a.m. to  5 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the  Sacramento Convention Center, 1400 J Street;   (916) 691-7387; www.upsaclereptiles.com.

—Jonathan Mendick

Sasha Abramsky Sunday, September 29 UC Davis professor, freelance journalist and author  Sasha Abramsky will sign copies of and talk about his  latest book, The American Way of  LITERARy Poverty: How the Other Half Still  Lives (Nation Books, $26.99). He’s a great writer, with  an even better English accent. Oh, and full disclosure:  He’s also an SN&R contributor. Free, 2 p.m. at the  Avid Reader at Tower, 1600 Broadway; (916) 441-4400;  www.avidreadertower.com.

—Jonathan Mendick BEFORE

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3 f i r e s

s p e c i a l

patiO BBQ! every thursday | featuring tri-tip sandwiches!

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1501 L St, Sac | 916.443.0500 | www.3FiresLounge.com

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Monday through Friday free Old Soul Coffee with your breakfast! bacon&butter | 1119 21st street | sacramento, california 958116 monday through sunday 8:00am to 2:00pm | 916 346 4445


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Up your foodie cred

great food

3N1 Barbecue 907 Rivera Drive, (916) 519-0560, www.facebook.com/3N1BBQ Some foodies like to hit up the fine-dining restaurants, some like the ethnic spots, and some like the gut-busting, Guy Fieri-type cafes. by Becky Grunewald And then there are those who are the far-flung adventurers. The more obscure and hard-to-find the restaurant is, the better. A cafe inside some other type of business, like a weird market or a church? Check. Strange clash of cultures (say, Nigerian pizza or Salvadorian pho)? Awesome. No Yelp review? Best of all. I have a friend who is obsessed with this Rating: type of food hunting, and he clues me in to HH 1/2 good places. I would argue he takes it too far—he often seems to rate the restaurant Dinner for one: higher if he’s the first among his friends $10 - $15 to find it. So, we sometimes have to agree to disagree. Just because everyone knows that Lalo’s Restaurant is the best Mexican eatery, including some 180 Yelpers, doesn’t mean that it’s not true. I asked him for his latest find, and he told me about 3N1 Barbecue, a place that hits all the requisite requirements: limited hours (Friday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.); weird, barely Googable name; no H Yelp reviews; and located in the back of a flaweD convenience store deep in Del Paso Heights. HH I followed my GPS to a strip mall, has momeNts which was occupied with an air-dancer guy HHH advertising 3N1 and three dudes sitting in appealiNg the parking lot next to a smoker. A sign read “lamb,” which activated my HHHH authoRitative out-of-the-ordinary-dish alarm. The convenience market is so multicultural that it sells HHHHH epic two types of canned corned mutton (popular with Indian-Americans), canned menudo, and many big bags of rice and exotic flours. It even has rib-tip tacos in a meeting of soul and Mexican food. All my food-hunter senses were tingling at this point. The menu here is limited, so it was easy to try almost everything. The four meats Still hungry? offered are pulled pork, chicken, ribs and hot search sN&R’s links (no lamb on this day, despite the sign). “Dining Directory” Recently, I found myself bitterly disapto find local restaurants by name pointed by some dry, tough ribs at a popular or by type of food. downtown barbecue spot, but these ribs sushi, mexican, indian, erased that memory with a good mix of fat italian—discover it all in the “Dining” and pull-apart meat falling off the bone. The section at chicken, however, is chopped, mixed, both www.news dark and white meat—it would have been review.com. more fun to get in there and eat the pieces with my hands. It was only lightly smoky and somewhat dry. I think pulled pork is overrated, but maybe I haven’t had enough good pulled pork. This pile of pulled pig was unpleasantly wet but did retain a strong pork flavor. The hot links were peppy and snappy. All

JaPaNeSe KoreaN Seafood terIYaKI

of the meats were definitely better with the tangy, spicy barbecue sauce. The side of chili tasted suspiciously like it came from a can—not accusin’, just sayin’. The potato salad had nice, firm russets; delicately diced celery; and old-school pickle relish, but the supersweet mayo killed it for me. The greens had a deep, nicely bitter flavor and no meat—none needed. I didn’t try the sandwiches because I could see the commercially made, overly soft rolls on the shelf. Why would you want those getting between you and your barbecue? A slice of 7Up cake that came from a Ziploc bag on the counter tasted reminiscent of pound cake and proved a good way to end the meal.

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The greens had a deep, nicely bitter flavor and no meat—none needed.

{*Midtown location only} Gift Certificates & Catering

[PHONE] 916.706.1286 [FAX] 916.706.2359 [TO GO] 916.706.1331 1 4 2 0 6 5 T H S T R E E T # 1 0 0 , S AC 916.400.4829

The guy at the counter seemed a little down and said that the restaurant has been open eight months and has, so far, experienced “good days and bad days.” I hope it has more good days in the future, and I’d also like to up my foodie cred by pointing out that I reviewed it first. Ω

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Italian

Conventional jealousy It’s time to be jealous of the Bay Area again—this time for hosting two vegan conventions in the same week. First, there’s the World Veg Festival at the San Francisco County Fair Building (1199 Ninth Avenue) in Golden Gate Park on Saturday, September 28, through Sunday, September 29. Admire the envyinspiring schedule at www.sfvs.org/ wvd (an ayurvedic vegan-recipe demo!). Next, is the East Bay’s Plant-Powered Health & Fitness Expo, which SN&R would like to imagine will be chock-full of ripped vegans sippin’ kale smoothies. So, despite its name, it might look like a meat market on the inside. There’s only one way to find out: It’s on Saturday, October 5, at Kaiser Center in Oakland (300 Lakeside Drive). Details are at www.purplepass.com/#1985.

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—Shoka

Since 1964

a tra d i t i o n of G re a t Fo o d

840 Harbor Blvd | 916.371.6395 | vinceswestsac.com HaPPY HoUr Monday-Friday 3:30pm to 5:30pm BEFORE

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Downtown Grange Restaurant & Bar You

Where to eat?

Here are a few recent reviews and regional recommendations by Becky Grunewald, Ann Martin Rolke, Garrett McCord and Jonathan Mendick, updated regularly. Check out www.newsreview.com for more dining advice.

won’t find any “challenging”  dishes on this menu—just  delicious local and seasonal  food such as the Green Curry  & Pumpkin Soup, which has a  Southeast Asian flair. A spinach  salad features ingredients that  could be considered boring  elsewhere: blue-cheese dressing, bacon, onion. But here,  the sharply cheesy buttermilk  dressing and the woodsy  pine nuts make it a salad to  remember. Grange’s brunch  puts other local offerings to  shame. The home fries are like  marvelously crispy Spanish  patatas bravas. A grilled-hamand-Gruyere sandwich is just  buttery enough, and an eggwhite frittata is more than a  bone thrown to the cholesterolchallenged; it’s a worthy dish   in its own right. American.   926 J St., (916) 492-4450. Dinner  for one: $40-$60. HHHH B.G.

Midtown Capital Dime Sacramento foodies can finally eat chef Noah  Zonca’s food without having to  cough up rent money. The menu  is split up into “Dime plates,”  “rabbit food,” sandwiches and  “plates.” The dime plates and  rabbit food both go for $10. This,  and the idea that every dish is  supposed to be a “perfect 10” is  the idea behind the restaurant’s  name. One simple dish, the  clams chorizo, is something  you’d stab your mother with  a seafood fork over, should  she attempt to pluck one of its

delightful bivalves from your  plate. Here, seared chorizo  is drowned in white wine and  garlic, creating a silky palominocolored broth in which the  teeniest clams ever are cooked.  The kalua-pork slider is also a  thing of beauty, with flavorful  pulled pork tender as a bruise.  The fries are fried in rice oil with  their skins on—which always  means more flavor. Delicate,  crisp and fantastic to munch  on. American. 1801 L St., Ste. 50;  (916) 443-1010. Dinner for one:  $15-$25. HHH1/2 G.M.

Hook & Ladder Manufacturing Co. The restaurant, by the same  owners as Midtown’s The  Golden Bear, sports a firefighting theme (a ladder on the  ceiling duct work, shiny silver  wallpaper with a rat-andhydrant motif, et al) and a bar  setup that encourages patrons  to talk to each other. An interesting wine list includes entries  from Spain and Israel; there are  also draft cocktails and numerous beers on tap. The brunch  menu is heavy on the eggs,  prepared in lots of ways. One  option is the Croque Madame,  a ham-and-Gruyere sandwich  usually battered with egg. This  one had a fried egg and béchamel, with a generous smear of  mustard inside. The mountain  of potato hash alongside tasted  flavorful and not too greasy.  Another highlight includes an  excellent smoked-eggplant  baba ganoush, which is smoky  and garlicky and served with  warm flatbread wedges and   oil-cured olives. American. 1630 S St., (916) 442-4885. Dinner  for one: $20-$40. HHH1⁄2 A.M.R.

LowBrau This place specializes in  beer and bratwursts. Both are  done smashingly. The sausage  is wrapped in a tight, snappy  skin like a gimp suit, which gets  nicely charred by the chefs.  Within it lies a beguilingly spicy  and juicy piece of meat. Get it  with a pretzel roll for a truly  exciting experience. There are  vegan options, too: The Italian,  an eggplant-based brat, has  a surprisingly sausagelike  texture that no self-respecting  carnivore will turn it down for  lack of flavor. Toppings include  sauerkraut, a “Bier Cheese”  sauce and caramelized onions.  The idea behind Duck Fat Fries  is a glorious one, yet somehow  still falls short. You just expect  something more when you see  the words “duck fat.” The beer  selection is epic. If you’re lost  and confused, the staff will help  guide you to the right brew via  questionings and encouraged  tastings. German. 1050 20th St.,   (916) 706-2636. Dinner for   one: $10-$15. HHHH G.M.

The Rind This is a fromage fanatic’s  delight with a menu that changes frequently. A chalkboard by  the bar lists the daily suggested  trios for cheese boards, but  order the Diving Board to  choose your own combo. Each  arrives with six crisp toasts  and two sides, like dried fruit  and honey. The rations are  small, but reasonable for two  people. Buy any of the cheeses  by the pound. Ask for the list at  the bar. There are also many  grilled-cheese sandwich choices  and several versions of mac  ’n’ cheese, including Not Your  Mom’s Mac with Parmesan,

Gruyere and cheddar. It’s silky  smooth, without any excess oil.  A richer version includes blue  cheese and prosciutto for overthe-top indulgence. American.  1801 L St., Ste. 40; (916) 441-7463.  Dinner for one: $10-$15.   HHHH A.M.R.

East Sac Español Italian Restaurant This  confusingly monikered restaurant is an old-timey Italian  joint. Order à la carte or “dinner” style from a list of daily  specials (chicken cacciatore, for  example) and a short children’s  menu. There are many pasta  sauce options and styles, and  also some meaty standards,  such as chicken Parmesan,  veal cutlets Milanese, and fried  chicken “à la Luigi” with garlic.  Try the pork-chop plate, which  features two large, tender,  pan-fried chops served with  applesauce and perfectly al  dente fresh vegetables. The real  revelation here, however, is the  marinara sauce. Made on-site,  it’s a fresh, chunky blend of  ripe tomatoes and herbs. Every  entree comes with a plate of  nicely cooked pasta bathed in  this ambrosial sauce. A dish  of ravioli is OK on its own, but  topped with the house-made  marinara, it invites plate licking.  Italian. 5723 Folsom Blvd.,   (916) 457-1936. Dinner for one:  $15-$20. HHH A.M.R.

Istanbul Bistro Turkish chef Murat  Bozkurt and brother Ekrem  co-own this paean to their  homeland, with Ekrem usually at  the front of the house, infusing

the space with cheer. Turkish  cuisine features aspects of  Greek, Moroccan and Middle  Eastern flavors. The appetizer  combo plate offers an impressive sampling. Acili ezme is a  chopped, slightly spicy mixture  of tomatoes, cucumber and  walnuts that’s delicious paired  with accompanying flatbread  wedges. For entrees, try the  borani, a lamb stew with garbanzos, carrots, potatoes and  currants. The meat is very tender, while the veggies arrived  nicely al dente. Also good is the  chicken shish plate (souvlaki),  which features two skewers of  marinated grilled chicken that’s  moist and succulent. There are  also quite a few choices for  vegetarians, including flatbread  topped like pizza, with spinach  and feta or mozzarella and   egg. Turkish. 3260 B J St.,   (916) 449-8810. Dinner for one:  $15-$20. HHH1⁄2 A.M.R.

around you and give you a hug.  Cultural diversity aside, one   of Blue Moon’s best dishes is   the braised pig ear with soy  sauce and peanuts. Asian.   5000 Freeport Blvd., Ste. A;   (916) 706-2995. Dinner for one:  $10-$20. HHH J.M.

Arden/ Carmichael Taqueria Garibaldi One of this

South Sac Blue Moon Cafe and Karaoke In  Sac, most people equate Hong  Kong-style cuisine with dim sum,  but this restaurant, which also  features private karaoke rooms,  serves up tasty, familiar food by  way of rice plates, sandwiches,  noodle bowls, soups and stirfries. A few random Japanese  (ramen, fried udon), French  (sweet or savory crepes),  Russian (borscht), Korean (beef  and kimchi hot pot) and Italian  (various pastas) foods add to  the feeling that whatever your  cultural background, you’ll   find a comfort dish from your  childhood to wrap its arms

restaurant’s biggest pulls is its  choice of meats. The chorizo is  red, crispy and greasy in all the  best ways. The lengua (tongue)  is soft and dreamily reminiscent  of only the most ethereal bits  of beef. The fish is fine and flaky  and the cabeza and pork are  herculean in flavor options worthy of note, too. Tacos are small  and served on two tiny tortillas  (flour or corn, your call) with a  bit of house salsa that has all  the kick of a pissed off Girl Scout  who’s just tall enough to nail you  right under the kneecap. Or, feel  free to customize, too, courtesy  of the fully loaded salsa bar.  Mexican. 1841 Howe Ave.,   (916) 924-0108. Dinner for one:  $8-$10. HHH G.M.

Land Park/ Curtis Park Burgess Brothers’ Burgers This  burger joint’s motto is  “Committed to Service,” and  that’s evidenced in its outstanding customer service. The food  is also exceptional. There are  plenty of burgers on the menu— all smoked before they’re grilled.  The one-third pound Tactical

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Fair Oaks Mighty Tavern Part tavern, part restaurant, this spot offers good food highlighting local ingredients. There’s both a bar menu and a regular dinner menu. The burger, from the dinner menu, arrives perfectly cooked (a little pink on the inside), but the fries aren’t particularly inventive. The best dish here is the scallops, which—sitting atop a bed of pancetta, leeks, corn and tomato beurre blanc—achieves a nice balance of salty, sweet and creamy that makes it worth every penny of the $23 price tag. Want to order from the happyhour menu? Try the steamed mussels, which arrive piled high with a handful of french fries, lemons and bacon. This is fancier than normal pub food, and the garlic-and-white wine sauce it’s cooked in make it perfect for dipping the fries and any spare bread. American. 9634 Fair Oaks Blvd. in Fair Oaks, (916) 241-9444. Dinner for one: $10-$25. HHHH J.M.

Roseville

plate arrives with four types of toppings, two of each: goat cheese, avocado, caramelized onion and tomato. They don’t suck, but they aren’t great. A rib-eye steak with a basil-andtomato compound butter is served cooked to perfection. But the chocolate soufflé is like having a hot date and then finding out he’s a terrible kisser: greatly disappointing. In the end, a little refinery needs to happen to make the food at Back unique enough for the average Sacramento diner to find it worth the trip. Still, the wine selection is strong, and pairing recommendations are practical. American. 25075 Blue Ravine Rd., Ste. 150 in Folsom; (916) 986-9100. Dinner for one: $25-$50. HHH1/2 G.M.

La Huaca This Peruvian eatery offers an experience decidedly upscale in every way: décor, art, lighting, presentation, price and—most importantly—taste. Peru’s national dish is ceviche, seafood cured in lime, salt and chili, and it’s a must-have starter. Try the mixto version, which features fish, shrimp, octopus and calamari, or sample the spicier ceviche de aji amarillo—both are exceptionally piquant and hearty. Entree recommendations include the arroz chaufa, a dish that resulted from the Chinese immigrants’ influence on Peruvian cuisine. Here, it’s served with shrimp and crispy fried pork. The lomo saltado oozes with an incredibly smoky flavor—apparently, the result of cooking the beef in pisco, a type of brandy popular in Peru. The star of the arroz con pato isn’t the duck or the rice, but rather a house-made salsa criolla, consisting of pickled onion and cilantro. Whatever you order, La Huaca’s attention to detail makes it the ideal place to be introduced to the complexities found in this regional cuisine. Peruvian. 9213 Sierra College Blvd., Ste. 140 in Roseville; (916) 771-2558. Dinner for one: $20-$40. HHHH1/2 J.M.

goodness. This is the kind of tofu that could almost make one give up meat. Chinese. 199 Blue Ravine Rd., Ste. 100 in Folsom; (916) 351-9278. Dinner for one: $10-$15. HHHH A.M.R.

Davis The Hotdogger This is not your typical schlong shack. All the hot dogs are sourced from Fairfield’s Schwarz Fine Sausage and use American beef. The rolls are baked daily from Davis’ Village Bakery. No matter what mood you’re in, there’s a mustard to match it. Feeling jaunty? The garlic-andonion mustard is for you! Customers can customize their dogs, or choose from preset options, like the Louisiana Hot Link: fire-engine red and sure to send lava coursing through your tender insides. The Gut Bomb! is an accurate name for a hot link buried in spicy salsa and peppers, house-made chili, cheese, diced onions, and tomatoes. For the vegetarian who gets dragged to a meat joint, there is also a tofu dog. Served on a sprouted-wheat roll, the “sausage” is juicy, with plenty of meaty flavor that takes well to pickles and pineapple mustard. The staff members manning this tiny, 163-square feet restaurant are fun, knowledgeable and can crack jokes about anything. American. 129 E Street, Suite A-1 in Davis; (530) 753-6291. Dinner for one: $5-$10. HHHH G.M.

Lotus 8 The menu here is orga-

Folsom Back Wine Bar & Bistro Back has nuzzled itself into a comfortable niche with an eclectic wine selection and—albeit unfocused—menu that draws an upscale crowd. The bruschetta

IllustratIon by Mark stIvers

Blue Burger is served with blue cheese, tomato, lettuce and fried onions. With a generous slathering of the “Patrol” sauce, it’s full of flavor but not too smoky. Don’t miss the barbecue, though. The pulled-pork sandwich is nicely smoked and shredded, piled on a garlic roll. There are also kid-sized sliders and the Code 4 vegetarian burger, made with a portobello mushroom. Barbecue. 2114 Sutterville Rd., (916) 209-0277. Dinner for one: $5-$10. HHH1⁄2 A.M.R.

nized with sections such as “Our Most Popular Dishes,” “If You’re Feeling Adventurous” and the “Chef’s Special” tasting list, which offers dishes less familiar to American diners. Worthy options include the fried-milk appetizer, which is made of sweetened milk that’s been battered and fried and tastes like pillows of the lightest cheesecake. Pair it with the sweet-and-sour sauce, or top it with powdered sugar for a dessert. The salted egg with pumpkin arrives as lightly battered, fried half-moons topped with hard-boiled egg. With classic sweet and salty complements, the flavor is even better with a drizzle of hot chili sauce. The fried tofu with salt and pepper is exceptional. Cubes of fried, silky tofu taste like custardy

Comida y cantos Perhaps it’s because of the abundance of Latin-American restaurants in the area, but it seems like there are times when nothing’s more comforting than eating paella while listening to flamenco. Or noshing on a cubano sandwich while hearing Afro-Cuban jazz. Or pairing some fish tacos with mariachi music. Luckily, there’s the Latin Food & Music Festival on Sunday, September 29, to bring authentic Latino food, music and dance together. Organized by the Sacramento Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and happening from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Southside Park (2115 Sixth Street), the lineup includes Mexican folk dance from Instituto Mazatlan Bellas Artes de Sacramento and Peruvian dance from Club Perú de Sacramento; music by Pepe y su Orquesta and Conjunto Alegre; and food vendors representing some of the more-than-20 Latino countries in the Spanish- and Portuguesespeaking world. For more information and updates on the diverse food and music lineup, visit http://latinfoodandmusicfestival.com. —Jonathan Mendick

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aquapedia This summer, Sacramento’s Water Education Foundation rolled out Aquapedia, the coolest site ever for  people who are interested  ENVIRONMENT in water. Want to know  more about aquifers, the New Melones Dam or nitrate  contamination? Self-education is easy now: Just click  on one of those topics or search for others, such as  fracking, water recycling and watershed. Built to help  users better understand the state’s complex water  issues, this interactive site offers a glossary of terms,  timelines, maps, agency directories, videos, topic overviews and links to other sources. www.aquapedia.com.  —Trina L. Drotar

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“Nutritionism”—a term popularized by writer Michael  Pollan, but originated by the author of this book,   Gyorgy Scrinis—defines the assumption that the value  of food comes from the nutrients in it, and that the  only purpose of eating is to fuel our bodies. Since most  of us can’t tell what nutrients are in which foods, we  rely on experts to tell us what foods are “good” and  “bad.” And here our troubles begin, because food science works by experimentation. The concepts of “superfoods,” “toxic foods” and the morass that makes  up “processed foods with added nutrients”  BOOK are some of the oddities with which people  have had to contend. Nutritionism: The Science and  Politics of Dietary Advice (Columbia University Press,  $32.95) is a surprisingly clear and readable overview of  food and diet. While not as simple as Pollan’s advisement to “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants,” it  nonetheless provides background for the argument. —Kel Munger

Saddle up happy ride Biking is usually touted as a wonderful, healthy activity—and with good reason. Cyclists get good exercise  and reduce their carbon footprint in the process.  Plus, it’s just a fun way to get around. It  SEX can’t be possible to make bicycling even  better, can it? The British erotic store Sexshop365  apparently thought so and, accordingly, devised its  appropriately named vibrating Happy Seat ($44.89  plus shipping). Yes, it’s essentially a vibrator for a  bike seat. So, exercise, save the planet and get happy  while doing it. Safety issues aside, it’s a sure thing.  www.sexshop365.co.uk. —Aaron Carnes

In 1982, the California condor population was down to only 22 birds— on the entire planet. By 1987, the  species, the largest land bird in  North America, was considered  extinct in the wild.  In the years since, the bird’s  slowly been reintroduced into the  wild in parts of California, northern  Arizona and southern Utah. Now,  a new documentary, The Condor’s  Shadow, examines the endangered  FILM species’s enduring plight.  Filmed in Southern California, the film chronicles one bird  in particular—a condor named Pitahsi—and the efforts of biologists,  zookeepers and scientists to save  him and the rest of the population.  With breathtaking imagery—gorgeous canyons, desert  landscapes and vibrant blue  skies—the documentary follows  the raptors’ flight path to recovery. Happily, it also includes some  squealworthy shots of baby condors. Because there’s nothing like  pictures of wee chicks to warm  even the coldest of hearts. The Condor’s Shadow will  screen on Saturday, September  28, at UC Davis’ Sciences Lab  Building Lecture Hall, room 123.  The screening is a benefit for the  California Raptor Center, part of  the UC Davis School of Veterinary  Medicine. In addition, there will be  a post-screening question-andanswer session with filmmaker  Jeff McLoughlin as well as Joseph  Brandt, one of the biologists   featured in the documentary.   A special wine-and-cheese reception and raffle starts at 4 p.m.  and costs $50 (which includes  admission to the film; tickets must  be purchased in advance). Admission to the film and subsequent  question-and-answer session   is $10. 1 Shields Avenue,   www.thecondorsshadow.com.  —Rachel Leibrock


State of denial My sister-in-law moved my brother to Wisconsin, then moved my mom there. At the time, my mom and I were grieving my sister’s death from cancer. I was in no state to object. I visited once to help Mom move into assisted living. She was withdrawn and 30 pounds heavier. By my second visit, Mom was in a nursing home, unable to walk. She had no short-term memory, partly due to taking by Joey ga eight medications. My dad rcia visited my mom (my parents are divorced but friendly), a skj oey @ ne wsreview.c om while my sister-in-law was at yoga. She had a fit that he didn’t wait for the scheduled family Joey day. My dad got drunk and argued with her. She broadcast that fight is reading on Facebook. I was sympathetic, Willa Cather’s My Ántonia. because Dad is difficult. But then I unloaded years of resentment at her for taking my brother and mom away. I don’t know how to make peace without letting her have her way. No one stands up to her narcissism. Both my parents are narcissistic, so my brother has been trained since birth to put up with it. Please help. Narcissism is so common in the United States that a controversy erupted in 2011 about whether it belongs in the diagnostic manual used by our mental-health professionals. That said, from the description you provided, your sister-in-law is not a narcissist. Like most Americans, she may sometimes exude narcissistic attitudes or behaviors. But a true narcissist is rooted in grandiose fantasies of greatness while seriously miscalculating his or her abilities and potential. Narcissists also long for approval and automatically expect their superiority will be noticed and reflected back by others. When it is not, a narcissist often resorts to aggressive actions calculated to ensure the Got a problem? outcome they desire. Write, email or leave What I noticed, as I read your a message for Joey at story, is deep, unhealed grief. You the News & Review. are still mourning the loss of your Give your name, sister and have added to that pain telephone number (for verification by pretending that your brother has purposes only) abandoned you. Here’s how to heal: and question—all Accept that you are not a victim; correspondence you are simply living a human will be kept strictly confidential. life. After all, this is our work—to lovingly accompany ourselves, and Write Joey, 1124 Del Paso Blvd., others, so that we all become stronSacramento, CA 95815; ger and wiser as life progresses. You call (916) 498-1234, must also stop seeing your brother ext. 3206; as the victim of his wife. They are or email askjoey@ partners. She didn’t take him away newsreview.com. from you or your family. He chose to move. It’s not your responsibility BEFORE

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to determine whether he did so because he wanted to or because he wanted to please her. Either way, it’s the same: He made a choice. Why are you competing for him against your sister-in-law? At some point, you must trust your brother to take care of himself. You must also trust your sister-in-law and brother to care for your mother. Anger often fuels poor decisions, like your sister-in-law trying to shame your dad on Facebook. Or like you taking her side in that drama. I think you shimmied over to her team because you yearn for her approval. But ultimately, you are, once again, strategizing to form alliances against an imagined enemy. This behavior might have been a necessary defense mechanism in a tumultuous childhood. You’re an adult now, or should be. Let go.

You must stop seeing your brother as the victim of his wife. They are partners. She didn’t take him away from you or your family.

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Where is your mother in all of this? Aging. It’s possible that even if your mom lived close to you, she would be struggling with her health. There are authorities you can contact if you truly believe she is being overmedicated. But that’s not the issue, this is: You need to grieve your mother’s inability to mother you or herself. She is changing, and her weakening body may reflect the decline that your sister endured as she battled cancer. That is understandably painful to witness. A grief counselor can help. Ω

Meditation of the Week “Most immigrants arrive with excellent health, but within one generation  of living in the United States, their  health declines,” said Sacramento  County health officer Dr. Olivia  Kasirye at a recent Sierra Health  Foundation event about suburban  poverty. Do you know how to truly  care for yourself?

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My Name Is Asher Lev Chaim Potok’s 1972 novel My Name Is Asher Lev is a fascinating story of a Hasidic Jewish boy in the 1950s whose emerging need to express by Patti Roberts himself artistically bumps into his faith-based fundamentalist family and community. Though he strives to be the son his religiously active father Aryeh and mother Rivkeh want him to be, Asher’s inner need to develop his art through the secular world creates fractions and tensions. Playwright Aaron Posner’s adaptation of Potok’s book, which became an off-Broadway hit last year, takes the same premise of a misunderstood artistic boy aching to break out of his social and religious confinements. For the most part, it’s still a compelling universal look at an artist’s struggle to have a unique voice, but it falls short in sharing the complexity of the situations.

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The set is a handsome one, with the clever backdrop of Torah ark doors that remain closed until the suspenseful unveil. The play is one worth visiting, though the book still delivers heftier and more complex issues. Ω

4After Juliet

PhOTO COurTeSy OF B STreeT TheATre STAFF

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Divine distress

My Name Is Asher Lev, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday; 8 p.m. Saturday; select performances 2 p.m. Thursday and 1 p.m. Sunday; $25-$35. B3 Stage at B Street Theatre, 2727 B Street; (916) 443-5300; www.bstreet theatre.org. Through October 19.

Though the play is meant to show Asher’s struggles with his unbending parents and with his closed community, they all come across as surprisingly supportive and understanding. The book was better able to capture Asher’s confusion and struggles, while the play and the current B Street Theatre production at times make Asher come across as obstinate rather than artistically conflicted. However, the story is still captivating—an adult Asher looking back at his younger self living in an insular world while intrigued by the surrounding modern society. Max Rosenak adeptly portrays both the man and the child: In the first act he is both the narrator as well as the boy, from 6 years old through his teens, while the second half he is emerging as a developing artist. Joel Polis plays a variety of roles, mainly the father, but also an artist mentor and other male characters, breathing life and sympathy into his roles. Julie Voshell plays the mother, as well as other female characters; she does a good job, but is hampered by the less-defined roles.

Tragedies tend to feed feuds, not end them; grief sends reverberations through the lives it touches and makes people cry for vengeance. This is the theme of Sharman Macdonald’s After Juliet, which suggests that the prince’s enforced truce at the end of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet is a tenuous one at best. City Theatre’s production of After Juliet, directed by Lori Ann DeLappe-Grondin, invokes a semi-apocalyptic steampunk feel, with goggles and wonderfully detailed costumes designed by Theresa Vann-Stribling and Lenore Justman, and a geared metalwork set, provided by Kevin Miller of Miller Design & Assembly. It’s a dark, postindustrial setting for an equally dark, violent and rusty rage. Romeo and Juliet lie recently entombed, while elsewhere in the city those who aided their plan—the nurse, a Capulet servant, the friar and the apothecary—are on trial for their part in the disruption to the prince’s prized civic order. Capulet and Montague weapons have been collected and the truce is being enforced, but law cannot control emotion as the youth of the two families try to cope with what has happened. Rosaline (Julianna Camille Hess), Juliet’s cousin and the abandoned focus of Romeo’s first passion, seeks vengeance. Meanwhile, Benvolio (Anthony M. Person), Romeo’s cousin, has fallen in love with her. Other youths from the warring clans—notably Lorenzo (Maggie Trevor), a Capulet; and Valentine (Nathan Cline), the dead Mercutio’s brother—chafe under the enforced truce and look for ways to spur the fight anew. While Macdonald’s blank verse eschews Shakespearean flourish, it can be a bit hard to follow. It’s the earnest performances and glorious staging which make this epilogue a worthy examination of the aftermath of tragedy. —Kel Munger

After Juliet, 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday; 2 p.m. matinee on Saturday, October 12; $10-$15. City Theatre in the Art Court Theatre at Sacramento City College, 3835 Freeport Boulevard; (916) 558-2228; www.citytheatre.net. Through October 13.


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Bruce Norris’ Pulitzer Prize and Tony Awardwinning satire on racism, real estate, fear, loss and words gets a brave and intelligent production by Capital Stage. Michael Stevenson directs an outstanding ensemble cast (each actor plays two or three roles) in a provocative play with its two acts set 50 years apart. You’ll never laugh more at something that makes you question your own feelings and motivations.

W 7pm; Th, F, Sa 8pm; Su 2pm. Through 10/6. $26-$36. Capital

Stage, 2215 J St.; (916) 995-5464; www.capstage.org. J.C.

Edward Albee’s The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? is a postmodern takedown of the classical Greek tragedy, where deep, dark drama lies beneath seemingly everyday dynamics. Martin (Jes Gonzales) and Stevie (Lee Marie Kelly) are a long-married, seemingly content couple, playfully sparring with familiar banter. Until Stevie learns that Martin’s been having an affair with a goat. The reveal begins a theater of the absurd that keeps us amused in the first half. The humor is a bit sardonic, and through both the dialogue and the remarkable performances and chemistry, Resurrection Theatre makes the improbable plausible. F, Sa 8pm. Through 10/5. $15-$20. Resurrection Theatre at California Stage, 1725 25th St.; (916) 223-9568; www.resurrectiontheatre.com. P.R.

1 FOUL

2 FAIR

3

4

Zoot Suit

Teatro Espejo injects exuberant dancing, colorful period costumes, family drama and political posturing into this retelling of the story of more than 20 Chicano young men and boys who were wrongfully convicted of murder in 1942 Los Angeles, a trial that launched the Zoot Suit Riots. Manuel J. Pickett directs, with excellent performances by Jose Perales and Ruben Oriol-Rivera as the leads. Th, F, Sa 8pm; Su 2pm. Through 9/29. $20. Teatro Espejo at The Colonial Theatre, 3522 Stockton Blvd.; (916) 456-7099; http://zoot suit.bpt.me. K.M.

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5 SUBLIME–DON’T MISS

Short reviews by Jim Carnes, Kel Munger and Patti Roberts.

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The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?

Self-righteous Brooke Wyeth (Dana Brooke), carts her tell-all memoir to her parents’ home in Palm Springs, hoping for a blessing from them, but gets a blasting instead. The play combines conflicting family dynamics with blunt sarcastic humor, which puts some fun in dysfunctional. Talented cast, including Brooke and Joan Grant, who create caustic chemistry as mother and daughter. Th, F, 8pm; Sa 5 & 9pm; Su 2pm. Through 9/29. $25-$35. B Street Theatre, 2711 B St.; (916) 443-5300; www.bstreettheatre.org. P.R.

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Hang on to your hat for these energetic performances of Broadway classics.

exp. 09/30/13

Broadway bash Sacramento’s musical revue company Best of Broadway is celebrating its 40th anniversary with a show titled Celebration. The production, closing out the Fair Oaks Theatre Festival season, opened earlier this month and will close with a trio of performances this weekend. It’s produced and directed by Best of Broadway founder David L. MacDonald, with music direction by Erik Daniells (who spent the summer providing outstanding musical direction for the Sacramento Music Circus), and choreography by Sam Williams, Tonya Kageta and Kat Bahry. The last three Celebration shows feature special guest Dina Morishita—who played Kim in the national touring production of Miss Saigon, Eponine in the touring version of Les Misérables and Princess Jasmine in Disney’s Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular. Rounding out the cast are 150 local performers. Friday, Saturday and Sunday, at 7:30 p.m.; $15-$20. Fair Oaks Theatre Festival at the Veterans Memorial Amphitheatre, 7991 California Avenue in Fair Oaks; (916) 296-6311; www.bestofbroadway.org.

916.442.3927

—Jonathan Mendick

Conveniently located at the corner of 8th & P

jon at han m @ n ew s r ev i ew . c o m

BEFORE

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F E AT U R E

I www.capitalac.com

STORY

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Love, naturally Enough Said It has become second nature for a struggling film actor to reinvigorate his or her career by starring in a television show. Charlie Sheen and Zooey by Daniel Barnes Deschanel are obvious recent examples, and there but for the grace of quick cancellations go Robin Williams and Anna Faris in their miserable-looking new network sitcoms. However, it is much less rare, and therefore more precious, for the star of a long-running TV show to find new life on the big screen. Once an actor becomes indelibly identified with a TV character whose story unfolds over dozens (or hundreds) of hours, finding a role in a 90-minute movie that can surmount those massive audience preconceptions is nearly impossible.

4

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James Gandolfini starred opposite Julia Louis-Dreyfus in one of his last film appearances.

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4 Very Good

Winners will be notified on Monday, September 30. Rated R. Theatre is overbooked to ensure a full house. Passes received through this promotion do not guarantee admission and must be surrendered upon demand. Seating is on a first come, first served basis EXCEPT FOR MEMBERS OF THE REVIEWING PRESS. No one will be admitted without a ticket or after the screening begins. All federal, state and local regulations apply. A recipient of tickets assumes any and all risks related to use of ticket and accepts any restrictions required by ticket provider. 20th Century Fox, Sacramento News & Review, Allied-THA, Gofobo.com and their affiliates accept no responsibility or liability in connection with any loss or accident incurred in connection with use of a prize. Tickets cannot be exchanged, transferred or redeemed for cash, in whole or in part. We are not responsible if, for any reason, winner is unable to use his/her ticket in whole or in part. Not responsible for lost, delayed or misdirected entries. All federal and local taxes are the responsibility of the winner. Void where prohibited by law. No purchase necessary. Participating sponsors their employees and family members and their agencies are not eligible. NO PHONE CALLS!

TH IN THEATERS OCTOBER 4 WWW.RUNNERRUNNERMOVIE.COM 34   |   SN&R   |   09.26.13

SACRAMENTO NEWS AND REVIEW

5 excellent

Take Bryan Cranston—this Sunday night wraps up arguably the single greatest performance in 21st-century media, but no matter what, he will always be Walter White. I’m rooting for the guy, but it’s hard to imagine his post-Breaking Bad movie career amounting to much more than a Kyle Chandler-esque pile of dads and bureaucrats. Against all odds, writer-director Nicole Holofcener’s witty and observant Enough Said successfully reinvents a couple of successful TV stars who never quite connected on the big screen. Seinfeld ensemble member Julia LouisDreyfus plays Eva, a divorcée massage therapist whose only daughter is about to depart for college. In one of his final roles, The Sopranos legend James Gandolfini co-stars as Albert, also divorced, unmarried and facing an empty nest for the first time. As the film opens, Eva and Albert meet and begin a tentative courtship. Neither person made any serious attempt to find love after divorce, instead focusing on their children, so they are both entering new territory. There’s an awkward but electric tension between them, stuck somewhere between the thrill of romantic discovery and the fear that it’s not worth the trouble. Of course, it’s bittersweet watching the recently deceased Gandolfini on screen again (the film is lovingly dedicated to him with

the discreet end credit), especially when he’s so good in a role that is the polar opposite of Tony Soprano. With his salt-and-pepper beard, shy smile, and juvenile bad habits, Gandolfini’s Albert is an overgrown teddy bear, predisposed to heartbreak and selfdeprecation rather than violent outbursts. As wonderful as Gandolfini is here, Louis-Dreyfus is a revelation as the motherly yet self-denying Eva. In her first four films, Holofcener employed Catherine Keener as her muse, but after their strong first two collaborations Walking and Talking and Lovely and Amazing, the partnership seemed to stale with the less inspired Friends With Money and Please Give. Keener is also in Enough Said, and she’s good in the smaller part of Eva’s client and confidante, but Louis-Dreyfus brings an undeniable spark to the lead role. Louis-Dreyfus is authentic in the scenes with her emotionally distant daughter, and charmingly clumsy in her scenes with Gandolfini. Louis-Dreyfus and Gandolfini have genuine chemistry, and their self-effacing flirtation and stumbling sexual exploration ground the film in reality without sacrificing the humor. Louis-Dreyfus also gets the opportunity to show off her physical comedy skills, as in a running joke about Eva dragging her massive massage table up a flight of stairs while her oblivious client sips coffee. The thrill of a Holofcener joint is always in the writing, especially the intelligent dialogue and the cutting humor that inspires as many winces as guffaws.

As wonderful as James Gandolfini is here, Julia Louis-Dreyfus is a revelation as the motherly yet self-denying Eva. While Enough Said delivers in those departments, the script eventually forces Eva into a silly deception that would have been more at home in Holofcener’s own TV work (she has directed episodes of Parks and Recreation and Sex in the City, among others). It only gets dumber the longer Eva has to keep up the ruse, and it’s not clear why Holofcener chose to bury the conflict in sitcom artifice. This is where Enough Said should have crumbled to pieces, but our investment in the characters is strong enough to withstand the shakiness of the plot. At the center of that investment are the exceptional Louis-Dreyfus and Gandolfini, their performances offering proof of the infinite possibilities of reinvention, even beyond this mortal coil. Ω


by daniel barnes & JiM lane

2

Austenland

2 5 0 8 L A N D PA R K D R I V E L A N D PA R K & B R O A D WAY F R E E PA R K I N G A D J A C E N T T O T H E AT R E

Austenland is the movie equivalent of a beach read, a digestible distraction that demands little effort and puts forth even less. It’s a film that should only be watched while engaging in a secondary activity, like folding laundry or untangling Christmas lights. An undeniably adorable Keri Russell stars as Jane, a movie-messy bachelorette obsessed with all things Jane Austen, especially the aloof and sensitive Mr. Darcy from Pride and Prejudice. After getting dumped by the latest in a series of disinterested boyfriends, Jane cashes in her life savings for a vacation to Austenland, an all-inclusive resort where guests and staff roleplay as Austen-esque characters in full costume. The adult theme-park conceit of Austenland is a lot like that of Westworld, except with corsets instead of cowboy boots, human actors instead of robots, and only brain cells getting brutally murdered. D.B.

1

“WICKED-SMART.”

- David Edelstein, NEW YORK MAGAZINE

DON JON STARTS FRI., 9/27 FRI-TUES: 11:05AM, 1:15, 3:25, 5:35, 7:45, 10:00PM

SALINGER

Baggage Claim

4

A flight attendant (Paula Patton), pushing 30 and growing desperate, is determined to find a date for her younger sister’s wedding, so she flies around the country looking up all her exes—only to remember why it didn’t work out with them in the first place. This laughless rom-com opens lamely and gets worse as it goes along. Nothing about it rings true—not the contrived premise (has writer-director David E. Talbert even been in an airport in the last 12 years?), nor the string of false endings, nor (least of all) the overdone head-wag-fingerpoint acting by everybody, as if they’re playing to a whooping sitcom studio audience. J.L.

4

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2

3

3

The Family

3

Prisoners

3

There is a very serious moral question posed by Prisoners—can movie audiences abide the studio-sponsored torture of Hugh Jackman doing a decaffeinated riff on Sean Penn’s yowling-at-the-heavens bit from

BEFORE

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NEWS

Riddick

Rush

Writer Peter Morgan and director Ron Howard recount the 1970s rivalry in Formula One auto racing between Britain’s James Hunt (Chris Hemsworth) and Austrian Niki Lauda (Daniel Brühl), including Lauda’s horrific near-fatal crash at the 1976 German Grand Prix and his return to the circuit only six weeks later. Morgan’s talent for dramatizing recent history (The Queen, Frost/Nixon) remains unimpaired, the race scenes are harrowingly exciting, and Howard gets fine performances from all, especially Brühl in a showcase breakout role. Threatening to undo all these virtues is a soundtrack (including Hans Zimmer’s bombastic music) that’s about 6 trillion decibels too loud: The movie is wonderful to look at but actually physically painful to listen to. Memo to Howard: Volume is not the same thing as intensity. J.L.

The affable In a World … is the first feature written and directed by actress Lake Bell, who also stars as a voice-over artist struggling to break into an industry dominated by men, including her legendary father. Although In a World … won Bell a screenwriting award at the Sundance Film Festival, what’s more compelling is how well this low-key comedy exhibits her charms as an actress. Heretofore stuck in character roles, Bell proves that she is a viable and appealing lead, salty and sullen, yet utterly likable. Still, the film’s unsteady tone and meandering narrative are telltale signs of a first-time filmmaker’s learning curve, and the stakes in the third-act payoff are excessively low. D.B.

2

Don Jon

Vin Diesel is back as the formidable interplanetary fugitive first seen in Pitch Black (2000) and The Chronicles of Riddick (2004). This time, he’s been left for dead on a sun-blazed world inhabited by predatory monsters; he finds his way to a deserted outpost and broadcasts his presence into space, planning to steal a ship and escape when bounty hunters show up to capture him. Writer-director David Twohy plops us down in the middle of his story and leaves us hanging at the end, waiting for Episode 4. In between, the movie is a harsh, gritty pleasure, straightforward and tautly suspenseful, and showcasing Twohy’s knack for portraying truly alien worlds. Jordi Mollà, Matt Nable and Katee Sackhoff play three of the bounty hunters, and there’s a cameo by Karl Urban as Riddick’s nemesis from Chronicles. J.L.

In a World ...

Salinger

Director Shane Salerno examines the life of J.D. Salinger, whose novel The Catcher in the Rye made him the Leo Tolstoy of angry

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FEATURE

“AN EXCEPTIONAL FILM.” - Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE

Enough SHORT Said TERM 12 STARTS FRI., 9/27 FRI-TUES: 11:00AM, 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, 7:35, 9:45PM

WED/THUR: 10:55AM, 1:00, 3:15, 7:45, 9:55PM FRI-TUES: 3:45, 5:40PM

Blue Jasmine WED/THUR: 1:05, 3:10, 5:20, 7:35, 9:45PM FRI-TUES: 7:50, 9:55PM

“CLEVER ROM-COM.”

AUSTENLAND - John DeFore, HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

ENDS THU., 9/19

WED/THUR: 11:00AM, 5:30PM

F O R A D V A N C E T I C K E T S C A L L FA N D A N G O @ 1 - 8 0 0 - F A N D A N G O # 2 7 2 1

Mystic River for 153 minutes? Jackman plays Keller Dover (seriously!), a handyman and closet survivalist whose daughter is kidnapped along with his neighbors’ girl. The manhunt immediately leads to Alex Jones (Paul Dano), a mentally handicapped man who is exonerated for lack of evidence. Keller still suspects that Alex was involved in the abduction, so he takes the interrogation into his own hands, resorting to beautifully shot torture in order to recover his daughter. Director Denis Villeneuve made the Foreign Language Film Oscar nominee Incendies, but his American debut Prisoners just reheats the heavy-handed, high-gloss revenge porn of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and the aforementioned Mystic River. D.B.

A former mafioso (Robert De Niro), his wife (Michelle Pfeiffer) and their teenage children (Dianna Agron, John D’Leo) are ensconced in the witness-protection program in a small French village, but their inability to keep a low profile exasperates their FBI minder (Tommy Lee Jones). Writer-director Luc Besson may be off the wall much of the time, but at least he’s never boring. Here, working with co-writer Michael Caleo from a novel by Tonino Benacquista, he concocts not a movie about gangsters, but a movie about gangster movies—as witness the three stars recycling performances they’ve given before (De Niro, several times). It’s fun to watch them (and Agron and D’Leo) go through the deadpan motions of Besson and Caleo’s black-comedy script—as long as we don’t take it any more seriously than they do. J.L.

3

WED/THUR: 11:05AM, 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:35PM FRI-TUES: 10:45AM, 1:10PM

ARE YOU A HEALTHY WOMAN AGE 20-28?

In an effort to prove that he can do literally anything better than you, Joseph Gordon-Levitt writes, directs and stars in the nimble antiromantic comedy Don Jon. His sex-obsessed Don is both a Long Island party hound and a strict Catholic devotee, and he brings a ritualistic asceticism to every aspect of his life, from his home-cleaning habits to his many meaningless carnal encounters. Even after Don finds a dream girlfriend (Scarlett Johansson), his most satisfying relationship is with his pornography folder. Don’s lifestyle of self-obsession is fetishized in a manner almost worthy of American Gigolo, but a broader and less engaging tone is employed in the scenes with his sitcomlike family. Still, it’s hard to believe that a film about the toxicity of sexual dehumanization could be this sweet, and that makes Don Jon more than a mere résumé stuffer. D.B.

The improvement of Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 over its 2009 animated antecedent is easy to explain—the concept of food-as-animals presents more potential for visual imagination than the concept of foodas-weather. It doesn’t even matter that it’s no longer technically cloudy, and that the chance of meatballs is next to none. As the film opens, aspiring scientist Flint Lockwood has stopped the food storm that threatened his island town of Swallow Falls. Soon enough, his rogue invention starts transforming the leftovers into a cradle of life, creating new species of “food-imals” like snarling taco-diles and screeching shrimpanzees (the invisible hand of natural selection apparently has a thing for puns). Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2 doesn’t stray too far from the mold, but the screen practically spills over with visual marvels, and there’s a kid-friendly self-awareness to the humor. D.B.

- Todd McCarthy, HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

WOODY ALLEN’S

“ASTONISHING.”

- Tina Jordan, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

“Hey, ladies …”

“A WINNING COMIC ROMANCE.”

STORY

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adolescence and sent him into an allegedly reclusive life in New England. I say “allegedly” because Salerno argues convincingly that Salinger wasn’t so much a recluse as simply not a publicity hound or professional celebrity (think Truman Capote). The subject is fascinating, of course, but at 120 minutes, the movie is about half-an-hour too long: Salerno pads things out with repetition (one 1940s portrait of Salinger seems to pop up every five minutes), and with borderline-banal comments from several talking heads (John Cusack, Edward Norton, Martin Sheen, etc.) who certainly never knew the writer and have nothing much to add—they seem to be here only because they’re famous. J.L.

4

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Short Term 12

E-CIGARETTE SELECTION

Sacramento native Brie Larson gives one of the best performances of the year in Short Term 12, an affecting drama from writer-director Dustin Cretton. Larson plays Grace, the empathetic supervisor at a short-term housing facility for troubled youth. The Short Term 12 facility is not technically a detention center, so Grace and her co-workers have to be part big brother/sister, part dormitory resident adviser and part prison guard. Although Grace is fair and level-headed in a job with nebulous boundaries, her own troubled childhood still defines her messy personal life, including an unplanned pregnancy that she may not carry to term. Short Term 12 is based on Cretton’s own experiences working at a similar facility, and although that causes him to compassionately offer oversimplified solutions to his characters’ realistic problems, it also results in some very raw and honest performances. D.B.

3

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A recovering sex addict (Mark Ruffalo) re-enters the dating scene, unsure when to tell his new girlfriend (Gwyneth Paltrow) about his past; his Narcotics Anonymous sponsor (Tim Robbins) confronts his own wayward son (Patrick Fugit), who may still be a junkie; and finally, a sex-addicted doctor (Josh Gad) tries to BS his way through recovery. Writerdirector Stuart Blumberg casts his nets a little too wide, and can’t quite finesse all the shifts in tone from drama to comedy and back again. Still, there’s much good stuff here, even if the picture leaves us with the feeling that it should be a lot more satisfying than it is. Performances are strong, although the storyline involving Gad and Alecia “Pink” Moore (as yet another sex addict) is more interesting than the other two and maybe should have played the center ring. J.L.

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Need Assistance with Applying for or Appealing Veterans Disability Benefits & Compensation?

What a girl wants Singer-songwriter Xochitl may write cute,   but she’s serious about her craft, dog and   boyfriend’s video-game obsession

Contact: (916) 480-9200 Law Office of Steven H. Berniker, APC Veteran Advisor – Sgt Major (Ret) Daniel J. Morales Location: 2424 Arden Way, Suite 360 Sacramento, CA 95825

Veterans Assistance is our #1 Priority

“On the batterfield, the military pledges to leave no soldier behind. As a Nation, let it be our pledge that when they return home, we leave no Veteran behind.” – Dan Lipinski

Xochitl was 18 when she decided it was time to finally dip her feet into songwriting. She’d been playing music since she was 6, and her ear for by Aaron Carnes notes was already so good she could sit down at just about any instrument (although she preferred guitar for its portability) and play just about any song she heard on the radio. In that first batch she wrote, there was one called “The Chico Song.” It took her all of five minutes to write, but the response from others, she says, was huge.

Photo By Steven Chea

Since that initial rush of songs, Xochitl, now 21, slowed down and crafted many more, mixing elements of folk, jazz, blues and pop. Some of them are cute and funny, like those early ones, but many are more serious and heartfelt. “[Songwriting] is my only form of expression. It’s the one thing I’m good at. So when I feel all these emotions take control, I just write them down, and I’m like, ‘Oh, I can make a song out of this,’” Xochitl said. It also makes for good communication, she says. “I wish I could carry my guitar, so when people [ask], ‘What do you think about this?’ I can play a little song,” she said. “I don’t know how to use my words in real life. I’m a very socially awkward hermit.” Still, Xochitl didn’t let potential stage fright or feeling ill at ease stop her from performing. Once she had several original songs ready, the singer hit the open-mic circuit and then eventually graduated to booking full sets. For a brief period, she even used a backing band. “It changed my sound completely. I’m really glad I had them. I write a lot bigger now,” Xochitl said. These days, she’s back to playing solo, working on new material and planning an October visit to the East Coast to play a few shows. Currently, she’s not quite ready to write a full-length record—though that might not be too far off in the future, she said. Instead, Xochitl is sticking to releasing singles and updating her YouTube channel with performance clips—some recorded at home.

Careful, or Xochitl might write a song about you. Then again, that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

Catch Xochitl on Friday, September 27, at 8:30 p.m. at Luna’s Café & Juice Bar, at 1414 16th Street. Cover is $5; for more info, visit www.facebook.com/ xochitlofficial.

36   |   SN&R   |   09.26.13

The track is a cute, whimsical, straightforward folk song written for her dog, Chico, with lyrics such as, “Getting kind of sleepy / You peek inside my room … Turn on the TV / You get real close to me / Watch a little Glee / And then we fall asleep.” Goofy? Perhaps—at first, Xochitl (pronounced “so-chee”) says she felt nervous sharing it. Nonetheless, it struck a chord with people because so many could relate. “Who doesn’t sing to small animals? That’s not just me. Other people do that too, as I’m totally learning,” Xochitl said. “I still feel weird, but I’m just more socially acceptable now.” “The Chico Song” wasn’t the only song that resonated with others. The singer-songwriter also penned one called “Game Over,” in which she lamented her boyfriend’s preoccupation with video games instead of her. As with the song about her dog, once Xochitl started playing it for people, she says she realized she wasn’t the only one with this dilemma. “There’s girls that come up to me after the show, and they’re like, ‘Thank you so much. That song is my world.’ I’m like, ‘Dude, you’re welcome. I feel your pain,’” she said.

“ I wish I could carry my guitar, so when people [ask], ‘What do you think about this?’ I can play a little song. I don’t know how to use my words in real life.” Xochitl She considers the video feed something of a personal challenge. “Electronics are not my thing. Finally, I was like, ‘Just do this, get a camera.’ So I have a camera, and I’m trying to tape myself everywhere,” Xochitl said. “I just want people to be able to see me, like my fans. I’m not hoping to be the next Justin Bieber.” Ω


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26THURS

27FRI

27FRI

28SAT

The Lemonheads

Dance Gavin Dance

The Neighbors

Frightened Rabbit

Harlow’s Restaurant & Nightclub, 8 p.m., $20-$25 Hello, ’90s nostalgia. It’s been 21 years since  the Lemonheads fully infiltrated mainstream  music with its cover of the Simon & Garfunkel  classic “Mrs. Robinson.” It was a good choice  for the Boston band, touching on many of its  own regular themes: sex, drugs and ennui. The  band’s lengthy catalog includes grunge-era  classics such as “My Drug Buddy,” “Alison’s  Starting to Happen” and “It’s a Shame About  Ray.” Singer-songwriter Evan Dando’s talent  for writing killer hooks didn’t survive the early  aughts, but the band returned in 2006 with a  new disc and has since been tourROCK ing with a lineup that’s included  members of the Descendents, Dinosaur Jr.   and Taking Back Sunday. 2708 J Street,   www.thelemonheads.net.

—Rachel Leibrock

Ace of Spades, 6:30 p.m., $15

Fox & Goose, 9 p.m., $5

I can’t claim to know who’s in Dance Gavin  Dance at the moment. Known for its frequent  lineup changes, the Sacramento  ROCK rock group’s only steady  members since it formed in 2005 have been  guitarist Will Swan and prolific drummer  Matt Mingus (who has also played in various  local reggae bands throughout the years).  Anyway, these two guys rock, and they’re  the soul of a high-energy sound that’s equal  parts screamo, hardcore and funk. Despite  all the lineup shifts over the years, the  band’s retained a passionate high-school and  college-age fan base, toured Europe and even  recorded with Deftones singer Chino Moreno.  DGD’s sixth album, Acceptence Speech, drops  October 7. 1417 R Street, www.facebook.com/ dancegavindance.

Ace of Spades, 6:30 p.m., $15

At first glance, the Neighbors look like an oldfashioned, authentic, mountain folk band. The  Sacramento quartet sports a guitar, banjo,  bass and violin—and its members have an  obvious sense of their instruments’ heritage.  But it’s not bluegrass they’re playing, but  more of a 1990s alternative-rock sound filtered through an old-timey Americana lens.  The juxtaposition between ’90s-rock songwriting and folk instruments  ROCK creates a weird in between  sound. The group is too loud and too driving  to be a folk band, but too intimate to be a  rock band. Even “folk-rock” doesn’t quite fit.  The group’s usage of electric guitars juxtaposed with the acoustic violin and banjo only  adds to this bizarre dichotomy. 1001 R Street,  www.facebook.com/thnghbrs.

—Jonathan Mendick

—Aaron Carnes

Ladies Night every Wednesday $1 Shots and Shells for ladies

38   |   SN&R   |   09.26.13

Zi n f

NR

SU

d el

an

1949 Zinfandel Drive Rancho Cordova, CA 916.468.8189 7pm - 1am every day

I SE

Monday Nights $20 All you can drink shells

50

Frightened Rabbit is like your shy, scruffy  neighbor with the sparkle in his eye. Scottish  singer and guitarist Scott Hutchison’s plaintive paeans pull back the skin on pulsing  ALTERNATIVE sinew and leaking  veins. He’s falling  apart before your eyes, like on “The Modern  Leper.” He wonders if he can find peace since  he’s “Dead Now,” singing: “Can you hear the  relief / As life’s belligerent symphonies finally  cease?” Yet he leavens the self-pity in the  closing verse, glumly acknowledging, “There  is something wrong with me.” Wavering  between crafted, textured pop and prickly  propulsive rock, Frightened Rabbit’s four  albums balance woe and struggling selfawareness in a striking manner.   1417 R Street, www.frightenedrabbit.com.

—Chris Parker


28SAT

30MON

02WED

03THURS

The Knockouts

Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell

PointDexter

NorCal NoiseFest

Piatti Ristorante & Bar, 6:30 p.m., no cover Jazz guitarist and composer Arlyn Anderson  opened September with the release of his  namesake quartet’s first album, Try for  Truth, and he’ll close the month performing  with the Knockouts, a trio led by vocalist  Natalie Klempau and featuring Paul Klempau  on bass. Joining the trio for this concert  will be drummer Ty Smith. Grab a bite to  eat, something cool to drink and head to  JAZZ the patio to hear something from  the group’s repertoire, such as  the jazz standard “Pennies From Heaven,”  or pop and country songs from the band’s  eclectic playlist. Usually on guitar, Anderson  has also been known to take up the banjo on  some tunes. Reservations are recommended.  571 Pavilions Lane, www.theknockouts.com.

—Trina L. Drotar

Sacramento State University Union Serna Plaza, noon, no cover

Mondavi Center, 8 p.m., $35 I saw Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell  for the first time seated on the carpet of a  fluorescent-lit conference room in the Austin  Convention Center back in March. Despite  the drab environment, Harris’ iconic voice,  AMERICANA accompanied by Crowell  and his guitar, was  wholly transporting; one can only assume that  the well-planned acoustics of the Mondavi  Center will result is some serious sonic magic.  The duo is touring in support of Old Yellow  Moon, released in February—a good reminder  of what Americana is in the wake of all these  suspender-wearing youngsters picking banjos  and playing the washboard. 9399 Old Davis  Road in Davis, www.emmylouharris.com.

—Deena Drewis

If there’s a band that’s found the missing link  between late-1980s Sunset Strip glam-rock  bands and Coldplay, it’s Folsom’s PointDexter.  The five-piece creates amphitheater-sized altrock songs, rich with keyboards and largerthan-life classic-rock licks, but it does so with  a tongue-in-cheek swagger. The funk and  dance beats further confuse the concoction.  By just listening to these guys play, it is impossible to identify what time and space they  come from: It could be anywhere from 1982  to 2012 (though, in reality, the group formed  in 2008). Check out PointDexter  ROCK for free at the Sacramento State  University Union’s Serna Plaza for a lunchtime  concert. 6000 J Street, www.facebook.com/ pointdextermusic.

—Aaron Carnes

thurs 09/26

machine city

THURSDAY 9/26 - SATURDAY 9/28 FROM FITZDOG RADIO AND CHELSEA LATELY!

rebel radio, blacksheep one more last try the auxillary

GREG FITZSIMMONS LARRY “BUBBLES” BROWN, LAURA ROSENBERG

—Steph Rodriguez

2708 J Street Sacramento, CA 916.441.4693 www.harlows.com

RESTAURANT ss BAR BAR CLUB ss RESTAURANT COMEDY COMEDY CLUB

VOTED BEST COMEDY CLUB BY THE SACRAMENTO NEWS & REVIEW!

Naked Lounge Downtown, 8 p.m., $10 This experimental-music festival celebrates  its 17th season with more than 40 noise and  experimental bands invading several venues  over four days. The first raucous evening on  Thursday at the Naked Lounge Downtown  welcomes six acts, including Beast Nest from  Oakland, which features KDVS event consultant Sharmi Basu.  EXPERIMENTAL Basu is known  for mixing electronic effects, manipulating  a keyboard and even experimenting with  sounds, courtesy of a Nintendo DS. The weekend continues with bands from New York and  Washington, and eventually closes with longtime NoiseFest veteran Instagon (pictured),  sure to rattle the windows of Bows & Arrows.  Earplugs are a wise idea for the entire festival.  1111 H Street, www.norcalnoisefest.com.

punk // alternative // 9pM // $5

SUNDAY 9/29 FROM E!’S CHELSEA LATELY AND WRITER FOR FASHION POLICE!

fri 09/27

island of black and white

NICO SANTOS

cd release party

acoustic rock // funky reggae soulful blues // folk // 9PM

THURSDAY 10/3 - SUNDAY 10/6 ORIGINAL WINNER OF LAST COMIC STANDING!

the lemonheads

indubious

Dumb Numbers $20ADV • 7pm

Mystic Roots $10 • 8:30pm

fate under fire tidelands, wrings alternative // 8:30PM // $10

FRIDAY 10/11 - SUNDAY 10/13 FROM COMEDY CENTRAL’S INSOMNIAC!

DAVE ATTELL

sun 09/29

open Mic talent showcase

MATT DAVIS, JOHNNY TAYLOR

7PM // free

THURSDAY 10/17 - SATURDAY 10/19 AS SEEN ON CONAN!

Mon 09/30

karaoke 8PM // free

ROB DELANEY

tue 10/1

CAITLIN GILL

gset

THURSDAY 10/24 - SUNDAY 10/27 FROM E!’S CHELSEA LATELY AND AUTHOR OF KASHER IN THE RYE!

wed 10/2

red rose

MOSHE KASHER

levi moses, adika 9PM // $5

ALEX KOLL, KEVIN O’SHEA

FOLLOW US ON TWITTER!

UPcOMING sHOWs: 10/3 get lei’d with brodi nicholas

;>0;;,9 *64 7<5*/305,:(* -(*,)662 *64 73:(*

WWW.PUNCHLINESAC.COM

- September 27 -

egg

- October 2 -

everton blender

todd morgan & the emblems ol’ fashion

with the yard squad band

$7ADV • 8pm

classic rock & blues review // 8PM // free

TRINITI $15ADV • 9pm

- September 28 -

kill the precedent

Judgement Day, Our Hometown Disaster, Horseneck $10ADV • 8pm

2100 ARDEN WAY s IN THE HOWE ‘BOUT ARDEN SHOPPING CENTER

2 DRINK MINIMUM. 18 & OVER. I.D. REQUIRED.

|

F E AT U R E

STORY

- October 4 -

nicki bluhm

Oct 05 Oct 07 Oct 08 Oct 09 Oct 11 Oct 12 Oct 13 Oct 14 Oct 15 Oct 16 Oct 17 Oct 18 Oct 20 Oct 23 Oct 25 Oct 27 Oct 29 Nov 01

hARLOWSNiTECLUb hARLOWSNighTCLUb

The Easy Leaves $16ADV • 8pm

|    A R T S & C U L T U R E

|

AFTER

|    09.26.13

Lee DeWyze NOT made in USA Tour The Winery Dogs Red Fang Wonderbread 5 Steelin’ Dan Nicholas David Joe Pug Modern English Kylesa Wrings (EP Release) Earthless / Joy Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe Polecat Rusted Root Cat Stevens Tribute Lake Street Dive Mazzy Star

follow us

and the gamblers

908 K Street • sac 916.446.4361 wwwMarilynsOnK.com

CALL CLUB FOR SHOWTIMES: (916) 925-5500

Coming Soon

- September 29 -

sat 09/28

DAT PHAN

WALTER HONG, JIMMY EARLL

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE CLUB BOX OFFICE WITH NO SERVICE CHARGE. BEFORE   |   NEWS

- September 26 -

hARLOWSNighTCLUb |

SN&R

|

39


NIGHTBEAT

THURSDAY 9/26

ASSEMBLY

1000 K St., (916) 832-4751

BADLANDS

2003 K St., (916) 448-8790

Tipsy Thursdays, Top 40 deejay dancing, 9pm, call for cover

BAR 101

Karaoke, 7:30pm, no cover

101 Main St., Roseville; (916) 774-0505

Jazz, soul and hip-hop hosted by Andru Defeye, 7:30pm, call for cover

Fabulous and Gay Fridays, 9pm, call for cover

Saturday Boom, 9pm, call for cover

Friday Night Hype w/ DJs Evolve and My Cousin Vinny, and MC Skurge, 10pm

7042 Folsom Blvd., (916) 383-0133

BLUE LAMP

1400 Alhambra, (916) 455-3400

Skratchpad Sacramento, 9pm, call for cover

THE BOARDWALK

JAREA, WILLDY DIAMOND FRANK, LYN-

BOWS & ARROWS

SPIRITS OF THE RED CITY, DEAD WESTERN, SEAN HAYASHI; 7:30pm, $7

Open-mic, 7:30pm, no cover

JONN HART, 8pm, call for cover

COLE FONSECA, PHOENIX JUBLIEE; 8pm, call for cover

2000 K St., (916) 448-7798

FOX & GOOSE

STEPPING STONE, 8pm, no cover

1001 R St., (916) 443-8825

NOAH CLARK’S SHARP DRESSED MEN, BRIAN ROGERS; 8pm, $5

ROBIN BACIOR, SHERMAN BAKER; 8pm, $5

Hip-hop and Top 40 Deejay dancing, 9pm, $5-$10

Hip-hop and Top 40 Deejay dancing, 9pm, $5-$10

RED SKY SUNRISE, TOUCHEZ; 9pm, $5

THE EFFECT, RICH DRIVER, 50-WATT HEAVY; 9pm, $5

G STREET WUNDERBAR HALFTIME BAR & GRILL

Open-mic, 7:30pm M; Pub Quiz, 7pm Tu; Northern Soul, 8pm W, no cover

Sacramento Blues Society Hall of Fame Awards, 2pm, $15; INDUBIOUS, 9:30pm

EVERTON BLENDER, THE YARD SQUAD BAND, TRINITI; 10pm W, $15-$18

KALLY O’MALLY, XOCHITL, EMILY O’NEIL; 8:30pm, $5

DAVID HOUSTON & STRING THEORY, BELLYGUNNER, NOAH NELSON; 9pm, $10

Nebraska Mondays, 7:30pm M, $5-$20; Comedy night, 8pm W, $6

MARILYN’S ON K

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover; REBEL RADIO, ONE MORE LAST TRY; 8:30pm, $5

ISLAND OF BLACK AND WHITE, 9pm, $7

FATE UNDER FIRE, TIDELANDS, WRINGS; Open-mic, 7pm, call for cover 8:30pm, $10

Karaoke, 8pm M; 8pm Tu; RED ROSE, LEVI MOSES, ADIKA; 9pm W, $5

Get Down to the Champion Sound, reggae and dancehall deejays, 10pm, $5

Reverence w/ DJs Panic, Chatttnoir and Gothic, Industrial, Darkwave, EBM, Skarkrow, 9pm, $3 before 10pm; $5 after Retro, 9:30pm-2am, $5

Swing or Lindy Hop, 8pm Tu, $6-$10

DAVID ZINK, VINNIE GUIDERA, AUTUMN SKY; 8:30pm, $5

ERIK HANSON, MASON & DAMON, FREEPORT; 8:30pm, $5

Jazz session, 8pm M, no cover; ANDREW CASTRO, BILLY PATTON; 8:30pm W, $5

1119 21st St., (916) 549-2779

NAKED LOUNGE DOWNTOWN 1111 H St., (916) 443-1927

NICK STOCKMAN, WIVING, THE WESTWARDS; 8:30pm, $5

free

live music

fri 9/27 ~ 9pm ~ $10

e v e r Y f r i & sAT 9 Pm

Latin rhthyms ~ old school ~ r&B

sat 9/28 ~ 9pm ~ $10

rhthym sEction Band featuring the soulful

Ja’nEt WaLLacE fri 10/4 ~ 9pm ~ $10

dJ dancE party

m o n d a y

sePT 27

TOTAl recAll

Monday night Football $1 tacos all day –

90’s alternative cover band

sePT 28

closed for private party

t u e s d a y

OcT 4

geeks who drink trivia @ 7:30pM –

t h u r s d a y

geeks who drink trivia @ 7:30pM

sat 10/5 ~ 9pm ~ $10

mErcy mE

old school ~ funk Jazz ~ r&B

coming soon: 10/12: radio 10/19: miss mouthpEacE 3443 Laguna BLvd • ELk grovE facEBook.com/pinsnstrikEs pinsnstrikEs.com • 916.226.2695

09.26.13

college Football assorted specials –

s u n d a y

rock/alternative rock from the 80’s, 90’s and today

OcT 5 –

s a t u r d a y

lOsT iN suBurBiA The TONe mONKeYs cover band

2109 O street | sacramentO 916.442.2682

•$25 1/8THS SELEcT STrAiNS • meds for every budget • free pre-roll for new patients w/ min donation

sunday Football $1 tacos doors open @ 10aM

buy 3 1/8THS GET 1 free!

• over 20 strains

GOLDEN HEALTH & WELLNESS 1030 Joellis Way, Sac

916.646.6340 Mon - Sat 10am - 7pm Sun closed Arden Way Dr

soLsa

|

Queer Idol, 9pm M, no cover; Latin night, 9pm Tu, $5; DJ Alazzawi, 9pm W, $3

Joe Montoya’s Poetry Unplugged, 8pm, $2

MIDTOWN BARFLY

SN&R

Dragalicious, 9pm, $5

LUNA’S CAFÉ & JUICE BAR 908 K St., (916) 446-4361

|

Community Music Jam, 6:30pm M; Alex & Allyson Grey, 5pm W, $18-$28;

Trivia night, 7:30-9pm Tu, no cover KILL THE PRECEDENT, JUDGEMENT DAY, OUR HOMETOWN DISASTER; 9pm, $12

THE LEMONHEADS, 8pm, $20-$25

1414 16th St., (916) 441-3931

40

Experimental music open-mic, 7pm, $5

TOTAL RECALL, 9pm-midnight, no cover

5681 Lonetree Blvd., Rocklin; (916) 626-6366 2708 J St., (916) 441-4693

STEWART GOODYEAR, 7pm Tu, call for cover

SIMPLE CREATION, 10pm, no cover

228 G St., Davis; (530) 756-9227

HARLOW’S

College Night deejay dancing, 9:30pm Tu; Country Night deejay dancing, 9:30pm W

MARK SEXTON, 8pm, $5

FACES Hey local bands!

Trivia, 6:30pm M, no cover; Open-mic, 7:30pm W, no cover THE DICK GAIL QUINTET, 8:30pm, $5-$10

314 W. Main St., Grass Valley; (530) 274-8384

Want to be a hot show? Mail photos to Calendar Editor, SN&R, 1124 Del Paso Blvd., Sacramento, CA 95815 or email it to sactocalendar@ newsreview.com. Be sure to include date, time, location and cost of upcoming shows.

Mad Mondays, 9pm M; Latin video flair, Wii bowling, 7pm Tu; Trapacana, 10pm W

University of Arizona football game watch party, 3-7pm, no cover

CENTER FOR THE ARTS

594 Main St., Placerville; (530) 642-8481

Sin Sunday, 8pm, call for cover

JESUS CHRIST, MISTER, RIOT RADIO, BLAME BETTY; 9pm, $8

9426 Greenback Ln., Orangevale; (916) 988-9247 GUISTIX, REALZ, FARROH MAC; 8pm, $16

THE COZMIC CAFÉ

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 9/30-10/2

ABANDON THEORY, 9:30pm, call for cover

BISLA’S SPORTS BAR

1815 19 St., (916) 822-5668

SUNDAY 9/29

i Ns i D e s Tr i K e s u Nl i m i T e D 5681 lonetree B l vd • r ockl i n 916.626.3600 sT ri Kes r OcK li N.cOm

• tinctures, hash, capsules, kief, edibles

Joellis Way

me nfe ld

Post your free online listing (up to 15 months early), and our editors will consider your submission for the printed calendar as well. Print listings are also free, but subject to space limitations. Online, you can include a full description of your event, a photo, and a link to your website. Go to www.newsreview.com/calendar and start posting events. Deadline for print listings is 10 days prior to the issue in which you wish the listing to appear.

SATURDAY 9/28

OLLY MURS, BONNIE MCKEE; 7pm, $20

Blu

List your event!

FRIDAY 9/27

160

80

Arden Mall


THURSDAY 9/26

FRIDAY 9/27

OLD IRONSIDES

1901 10th St., (916) 442-3504

JENN ROGAR, 5pm, no cover; Learn to Jam, 7:30pm, no cover

WILLIAM MYLAR, 5pm; EMINOR & THE DIRTY DIAMONDS; 8pm, $8

ON THE Y

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

TRIAL BY COMBAT, FROM THE VOMIT, Karaoke, 9pm, no cover PURIFICATION BY FIRE, STRYK9; 8pm, $7

THE PALMS PLAYHOUSE

DUSTBOWL REVIVAL, 8pm, $15

IT’S A BEAUTIFUL DAY, 8:30pm, $20

PINE COVE TAVERN

Karaoke, 9pm-1:30am, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm-1:30am, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm-1:30am, no cover

SOLSA, 9pm, $10

RHYTHM SECTION BAND, JA’NET WALLACE; 9pm, $10

670 Fulton Ave., (916) 487-3731 13 Main St., Winters; (530) 795-1825 502 29th St., (916) 446-3624

PINS N STRIKES

3443 Laguna Blvd., Elk Grove; (916) 226-2625

SATURDAY 9/28

SUNDAY 9/29

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 9/30-10/2 Karaoke w/ Sac City Entertainment, 9pm Tu, no cover; Open-mic, 9pm W, no cover

Lipstick Special, 9:30pm, $5 Open-mic comedy, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm Tu, no cover; Open Jam Night, 9pm W, no cover

M. BORN, PARANORMAL UNI VERSES, LIGHT SKINNED CREOLE; 8pm, no cover

Battle of the Musicians, 9:30pm Tu; Open-mic, 10pm Tu; Trivia, 9pm W

PJ’S ROADHOUSE

DJ Michael Johnson, 9pm, no cover

STELLAR, POINTDEXTER, 9pm, $5

FULL FUNKY GORILLA, 9pm, $5

POWERHOUSE PUB

SANDY NUYTS, 10pm, call for cover

BUMP CITY, 10pm, call for cover

SAINT SOLITAIRE, BELL BOYS, AUTUMN SKY; 9pm, $5

SHANA MORRISON, 3pm, call for cover

Country Karaoke, 9pm M, call for cover; DJ Alazzawi, DJ Rigatony, 10pm Tu, $3

THE PRESS CLUB

JEFFREY VALENTINE, THE STORYTELLERS, ATOM BOMB; 8pm, $5

Top 40 w/ DJ Rue, 9pm, $5

Top 40 Night w/ DJ Larry Rodriguez, 9pm, $5

Sunday Night Soul Party, 9pm, $5

INSTAGON, MONK WARRIOR; 8pm M; DJ CrookOne, Tu; GDP, NERVOUS; 8pm W

HOUSES OF THE HOLY, 10pm, $5

ROCKIN’ DOWN THE HIWAY, 10pm, $5

Keith Lowell Jensen, 8:30pm W, $5

SKOOL OF LOST SOULZ, 420 DARKSIDE BOYZ, BAD CYMPHONY; 6:30pm, $11-$13

Microphone Mondays, 6pm M, $1-$2; THE EVENS, 7:30pm Tu, $6-$8

SONG PRESERVATION SOCIETY, SHELBY EARL, ALINA HARDIN; 9:30pm, $5

TRAILS & WAYS, BELLS ATLAS, ANNA HILLBURG; 9:30pm, $6-$8

Open-mic, 7pm W, no cover

Country dancing, 7:30pm, no cover; $5 after 8pm

Country dancing, 7:30pm, no cover; $5 after 8pm;

Country dance party, 8pm, no cover

STEELIN’ DAN, 6-10pm, call for cover

RIFF RAFF, SKID ROSES; 2:30-9pm, $8

THE 8 TRACKS, 3-7pm, $5

DANIEL CASTRO, 9pm, $8; PAILER AND FRATIS, 5:30-7:30pm, no cover

WILLIAM MYLAR, 5pm, no cover; KEVIN RUSSELL, 9pm, $8

Blues jam, 4pm, no cover

5461 Mother Lode, Placerville; (530) 626-0336 614 Sutter St., Folsom; (916) 355-8586 2030 P St., (916) 444-7914

SAMMY’S ROCKIN’ ISLAND

238 Vernon St., Roseville; (916) 773-7625

SOL COLLECTIVE

2574 21st St., (916) 832-0916

SOPHIA’S THAI KITCHEN 129 E St., Davis; (530) 758-4333

STONEY INN/ROCKIN’ RODEO

THE TERRY SHEETS BAND, 9pm, $5

1320 Del Paso Blvd., (916) 927-6023

SWABBIES

5871 Garden Hwy, (916) 920-8088

TORCH CLUB

X TRIO, 5pm, no cover; RED’S BLUES, 9pm, $5

904 15th St., (916) 443-2797

Island of Black and White 9pm Friday, $7. Marilyn’s on K Reggae rock

Comedy open-mic, 8pm M; Bluebird Lounge open-mic, 5pm Tu, no cover

Acoustic open-mic, 5:30pm W, no cover

All ages, all the time ACE OF SPADES

MATT NATHANSON, 7pm, $20

1417 R St., (916) 448-3300

BEATNIK STUDIOS

DANCE GAVIN DANCE, ABANDON ALL SHIPS, INCREDIBLE ME; 6:30pm, $15

FRIGHTENED RABBIT, AUGUSTINES; 6:30pm, $15

BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME, FACELESS, CONTORTIONIST; 6:30pm Tu, $18

WOLFHOUSE, BARREL FEVER, NO WHERE BUT UP; 8pm, $5

Open jazz jam w/ Jason Galbraith & Friends, 8pm Tu, no cover

Robin Bacior with Sherman Baker 8pm Saturday, $5. Bows & Arrows Folk

CFR, ROSS HAMMOND, ADRIAN BELLUE, IDEA TEAM, FOR SAYLE; 6pm

2421 17th St., (916) 443-5808

SHINE

CHRIS TRAPPER, ICE AGE JAZZTET; 8pm, $12

1400 E St., (916) 551-1400

TRIKOME, PHAVIAN, QUIET SMILE; 8pm, $5

$10 cap

free 1/8th with 1/4 donation. for first time patients.

on all grams

keep it green delivery 916.296.5564 or 916.812.3956

delivery | 20+ Strains | top shelf meds | edibles | concentrates | and more! | habla espanol

keepitgreen44@yahoo.com BEFORE

|

NEWS

|

FEATURE STORY

|

$35 minimum donation required for delivery sun 1pm to 6pm | mon-wed 11am to 7pm tue hours vary, please call | thu-sat 11am to 7pm

A RT S & C U LT U R E

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AFTER

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09.26.13

|

SN&R

|

41


what’s on your

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3600 Power inn rd suite 1a sacramento, Ca 95826 916.455.1931


Aloha, munchies

Bring in any competitor’s coupon and we’ll beat it by $5 Must present competitor’s ad. Some restrictions apply.

I’ve just started using cannabis for a spinal problem I’ve developed, and it’s at least as effective as ibuprofen for my pain. The only problem is it makes me so hungry that I end up eating everything and anything in the house that’s not tied down. Last evening, I smoked around 6 p.m., and then at 8 p.m. I ate pizza, ice cream, a hamburger, two Snickers bars—and the daily newspaper. Just kidding about the paper, but I would have tried it if I hadn’t had any food in the fridge. I can’t afford to gain any more weight, so is there any way to turn off this EALUM B IO intense need for food after smoking? (By the way, A G N by I’m Hawaiian, and in the Hawaiian language the word for “marijuana” is paka lolo.) —Leliano Aloha. Yeah, the munchies can be pretty vicious. I used to eat a pint of Ben & Jerry’s ice cream almost every day. Weed stimulates the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus is what sends hunger signals to the body. And while a stimulated hypothalamus is great for people suffering from cachexia (also known as wasting syndrome—I like big words), it may not be so great for people that don’t really need any extra calories. There are a few solutions. Have a big glass of water; you probably Weed stimulates the don’t drink enough water, anyway. hypothalamus. The Chew gum. Stock up on healthy snacks. If you eat a giant salad hypothalamus is (easy on the ranch dressing) or a what sends hunger whole bunch of crudités (a veggie signals to the body. plate—Big Words Bealum strikes again), you can have the munchies and be healthier at the same time. Experiment with crazy homemade salad dressings and dipping-sauce combinations. Or, you could be like my boy, Todd. He figured that eating a bunch of food would lessen his high, so when he got the munchies, he wouldn’t eat until the weed had worn off. I wouldn’t do that, but he was always higher longer, if that makes sense.

VOTED 3RD BEST ’13 420 PHYSICIAN IN SAC! ’13

’13

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I have a tiny little bonsai-sized female clone that is starting to bud. What can I do to ensure that I get a good harvest in October? —GBomb Give it love? I mean, it’s a plant. Keep the bugs away, make sure it gets good water and light, don’t overdose it with nutrients, and enjoy watching it grow. You say it’s a bonsai-sized plant, so don’t expect to get a huge yield. If you are looking to start a small grow with nice results, take a look at Ed Rosenthal’s book Marijuana Buds For Less. This book shows how to set up and harvest 8 ounces of medical-grade cannabis for about $100. That’s a good deal.

Ngaio Bealum is a Sacramento comedian, activist and marijuana expert. Email him questions at ask420@ newsreview.com.

Any good festivals coming up? —Peter Potparty October is usually a slow time for festivals, what with the harvest and all, but there is the Marijuana Policy Project Bootleggers Ball in San Francisco on October 12 (www.mpp.org/events/bootleggers-ball-2013.html). And the 23rd annual Humboldt Hemp Fest (www.mateel.org/ festivals) in Redway, Calif., is on November 9. Ω

BEFORE

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F E AT U R E

STORY

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Sacramento

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NOW ACCEPTI NG NEW PATIENT S!

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Simply NEED ATTENTION? the BeSt

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TANTRIC MASSAGE

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SN&R   |  09.26.13

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BEFORE

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be willing to go to extraordinary lengths to transform aspects of your life that you have felt are hard to transform? Now would be a good time to do that. Luck will flow your way if you work on healing your No. 1 wound. Unexpected help and inspiration will appear if you administer tough love to any part of you that’s addicted, immature or unconscious. Barriers will crumple if you brainstorm about new ways to satisfy your frustrated yearnings.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I bet your

normal paranoia levels will decline in the coming weeks. Fears you take for granted won’t make nearly as much sense as they usually seem to. As a result, you’ll be tempted to wriggle free from your defense mechanisms. Useful ideas that your mind has been closed to may suddenly tantalize your curiosity. I won’t be surprised if you start tuning into catalysts that had previously been invisible to you. But here are my questions: Can you deal with losing the motivational force that fear gives you? Will you be able to get inspired by grace and pleasure rather than anxiety and agitation? I advise you to work hard on raising your trust levels.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “Some-

times people have nothing to say because they’re too empty,” writes author Yasmin Mogahed. “And sometimes people have nothing to say because they’re too full.” By my reckoning, Cancerian, you will soon be in the latter category. A big silence is settling over you as new amusements and amazements rise up within you. It will be understandable if you feel reluctant to blab about them. They need more time to ripen. You should trust your impulse to remain a secret and a mystery for a while.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “Insight is not a

light bulb that goes off inside our heads,” says author Malcolm Gladwell. “It is a flickering candle that can easily be snuffed out.” Take that as a constructive warning, Leo. On the one hand, I believe you will soon glimpse quite a few new understandings of how the world works and what you could do to make it serve you better. On the other hand, you’ve got to be extra alert for these new understandings and committed to capturing them the moment they pop up. Articulate them immediately. If you’re alone, talk to yourself about them. Maybe even write them down. Don’t just assume you will be able to remember them perfectly later when it’s more convenient.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): After a

storm, British wildlife lover Gary Zammit found a baby heron cowering in a broken nest. Its parents were dead. Zammit took the orphan under his wing. He named it Dude, and cared for it as it grew. Eventually, he realized that Dude was never going to learn to fly unless he intervened. Filling his pockets full of the food that Dude loved, Zammit launched a series of flying lessons—waving his arms and squawking as he ran along a flat meadow that served as a runway. Dude imitated his human dad, and soon mastered the art of flight. Can you see ways in which this story might have metaphorical resemblances to your own life, Virgo? I think it does. It’s time for your mind to teach your body an instinctual skill or self-care habit that it has never quite gotten right.

bRezsny

explained by the action of the tides. I foresee some sweet marvel akin to this one occurring in your life very soon, Libra. Be ready to take advantage of a special dispensation.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The desire

for revenge is a favorite theme of the entertainment industry. It’s presented as being glamorous and stirring and even noble. How many action films build their plots around the hero seeking payback against his enemies? Personally, I see revenge as one of the top three worst emotions. In real life, it rarely has redeeming value. People who actively express it often wreak pain and ruin on both others and themselves. Even those who merely stew in it may wound themselves by doing so. I bring this up, Scorpio, because now is an excellent time for you to shed desires for revenge. Dissolve them, get rid of them, talk yourself out of indulging in them. The reward for doing so will be a great liberation.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21): Just for a few days, would you be willing to put your attention on the needs of others more than on your own? The weird thing is, your selfish interests will be best served by being as unselfish and empathetic and compassionate as you can stand to be. I don’t mean that you should allow yourself to be abused or taken advantage of. Your task is to express an abundance of creative generosity as you bestow your unique blessings in ways that make you feel powerful. In the words of theologian Frederick Buechner, you should go “to the place where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet.”

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):

Imagine a scenario like this: The CEOs of five crazily rich U.S. corporations, including a major defense contractor, stage a press conference to announce that in the future they will turn down the massive welfare benefits and tax breaks the federal government has been doling out to them all these years. Now, picture this: The pope issues a statement declaring that since Jesus Christ never had a single bad word to say about homosexuals, the Catholic Church is withdrawing its resistance to gay rights. I am envisioning a comparable reversal in your life, Capricorn—a flip-flop that seems equally improbable. But unlike the two I named, yours will actually unfold in the course of the next eight months. If it hasn’t already started yet, it will soon.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Matteo

Ricci was an Italian Jesuit priest who lived from 1552 to 1610. For his last 28 years, he worked as a missionary in China. Corresponding with his friends and family back home required a lot of patience. News traveled very slowly. Whenever he sent out a letter, he was aware that there’d be no response for seven years. What would you express about your life right now if you knew your dear ones wouldn’t learn of it until 2017? Imagine describing to them in an old-fashioned letter what your plans will be between now and then; what you hope to accomplish and how you will transform yourself. Right now is an excellent time to take inventory of your long-term future.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The cosmos is granting you a poetic license to practice the art of apodyopsis with great relish. You know what apodyopsis is, right? It refers to the act of envisioning people naked—mentally undressing them so as to picture them in their raw state. So, yes, by all means, Pisces, enjoy this creative use of your imagination without apology. It should generate many fine ramifications. For instance, it will prime you to penetrate beneath the surface of things. It will encourage you to see through everyone’s social masks and tune in to what’s really going on in their depths. You need to do that right now.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): For four days

twice a year, the East China Sea recedes to create a narrow strip of land between two Korean islands, Jindo and Modo. People celebrate the Jindo Sea-Parting Festival by strolling back and forth along the temporary path. The phenomenon has been called the “Korean version of Moses’ miracle,” although it’s more reasonably

BEFORE

|

NEWS

You can call Rob Brezsny for your Expanded Weekly Horoscope: (900) 950-7700. $1.99 per minute. Must be 18+. Touchtone phone required. Customer service (612) 373-9785. And don’t forget to check out Rob’s website at www.realastrology.com. |

F E AT U R E

PHOTO COURTESY Of OCTOBER COAST

by ROb

For the week of September 26, 2013

STORY

Someday, bloody someday Roseville-native turned indie-filmmaker Matt Thompson credits the “school of hard knocks” for his stage and screen education. Certainly, he’s paid his dues locally—in 2009, the 29-year-old self-taught writer, actor and director delivered a standout performance as Stanley Kowalski in the Big Idea Theatre’s production of A Streetcar Named Desire. Now, his horror-thriller flick Bloodline (from a script that took Thompson 10 years to finish) finally reaches movie theaters on Friday, September 27. A DVD release will follow in January. The movie, filmed in the Eldorado National Forest in 2009 and 2010, follows a seminary student who visits a cabin he recently inherited— only to discover a Native American curse that’s followed his family’s bloodline through an heirloom necklace. Thompson talked to SN&R about shady acting schools, hypothermia and the art of self-directing.

Tell me about your film education. When I was trying to become an actor, I realized very quickly that you’ve got to have something to get something, you have to get something to have something. I talked to a producer, who [advised me to] write something, study it [and] put [myself] in it. I wrote a [2005] film called Fallen Soldier, and I ended up producing the whole thing myself on a Doritos and pizza budget. Once it was done, people encouraged me to explore that directorial side of things.

How did you figure out filmmaking on your own? Instantly, I got screwed by [one of those] acting schools that supposedly get you straight to the top immediately. I then settled into this [[[[other?]]]] school, which, at the time, had Tina Cole from My Three Sons as one of my teachers, and she was in that first film with me. She took me under her wing, taught me about the industry. So, I just went to Borders and loaded my cart full of books like From Reel to Deal [by Dov S-S Simens], Save the Cat! [by Blake Snyder]—those kinds of how-to-make-amovie, how-to-produce books. I think that if you’re passionate about something, you will seek out the materials.

The Bloodline script took 10 years? Yes. I started it when I was 19, pretty much just out of high school. [The script’s] gone through 14 different drafts [and] full rewrites. The seed of Bloodline comes from when I was in one of those private acting classes, and I said, “Let’s make something! Let’s do something in the horror genre, because it’s

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A RT S & C U LT U R E

going to sell. It’s going to be commercially viable.” The great thing about horror is a lot of people can start out there, make a lot of mistakes, and it still goes out. There’s less judgment. It’s really cool to have the opportunity to watch yourself grow in one project. I can go back to the original draft and say, “Oh my God, I wrote that?”

What obstacles did you encounter shooting in the Eldorado National Forest? For one, it does snow in May. The movie is supposed to take place in summertime, so we figured we’ll make it in May, when it’s spring; it’ll be warm enough. We’re in front of the camera in shorts and T-shirts, then cut, we’re all huddled around the heater getting warm. We got 3 or 4 inches of snow. You can’t shoot a summer movie in snow, so we lost a few days, we had to make them up. The last night of filming the grand-finale scene had us in the lake, but the water was freezing. We had little wetsuits on underneath our clothes, but that doesn’t really help. I not only had to be in a really great emotional state to pull off this huge grand-finale scene, but I had to dive into this icy cold water at 3 a.m. I got hypothermia, so they put me in a tent to warm me up, and then threw me back into the water. It was intense.

What was the most challenging aspect of directing yourself? [Acting and directing] are two totally different jobs, and each one hinges on the other. You have to be able to rip yourself out of the

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AFTER

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scene, look at the entire thing objectively, criticize yourself constructively, direct the crew, direct the lights, the camera movement, the actors, your co-stars and then jump back into that scene and forget you said anything. You have to trust your crew to get it right.

Which films and directors influenced you? I studied M. Night Shyamalan’s structure in his early films, The Sixth Sense and Signs. I learned how to write screenplays based off Signs. I love [Steven] Spielberg for his visual sense to a convey story and keep you in it. I love [Martin] Scorsese: Nobody can direct actors like that man can. Of course, I love [George] Lucas for his innovations in the industry. The Departed and Blow, those crime-drama movies really get me.

Favorite horrorthriller movies? Jaws is one. It was totally original, out of the box. [Spielberg] took something that people were naturally afraid of and put it into an awesome story.

What’s next? Next up on my slate is a movie called Split, where I play a cop who goes undercover in a multimillion-dollar drug ring and becomes corrupt in the process, starts living a double life. I co-wrote that with the person it happened to; it’s all based on a true story. Ω

for more information on Bloodline, visit www.bloodline-movie.com.

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MUSEUM

Clockwise from Left: 1) Autry National Center Now on View: Art of the West Bison chair (Detail), Scotland, 1842. Mahogany, rosewood, bison horns, glass. Museum Purchase, Autry National Center 2) GRAMMY Museum® at L.A. LIVE Now on View: Ringo: Peace & Love © www.johnwrightphoto.com 3) Japanese American National Museum. Now on View: Marvels & Monsters: Unmasking Asian Images in U.S. Comics, 1942-1986. Yellow Claw #1 (October 1956), Marjean Magazine Corp. [Atlas] 4) Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens Now on View: Junipero Serra and the Legacies of the California Missions. Mission San Gabriel, CA. 1832, by Ferdinand Deppe. Santa Barbara Mission Archive-Library.

FREE ADMISSION OR SPECIAL OFFERS AT THESE MUSEUMS Autry National Center

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FIND WHAT MOVES YOU. SAVE UP TO $500 at LA’s world-class

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TAbLE OF CONTENTS

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ARTS

Still lifes and saddles, artist battles and genetic genius. Check out just a sampling of October’s art offerings.

13 14 EVENTS

31 days of artober

Art isn’t just something you watch or see on a wall—find it on the dance floor, in a wine glass and on the marathon path.

ON STAGE

Indulge your dramatic side with some choice dance, theater and music selections.

17 19 MUSIC

It’s music’s harvest season, from up-and-comers to big-name acts.

IT’S OCTObER , which means that in Sacramento, it’s also Artober. The leaves are turning golden brown, the air’s imbued with a lovely crisp chill and creativity is on display everywhere. As part of the National Arts and Humanities Month, the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission has teamed up with dozens of local artists—painters, actors, musicians, writers, etc.—to shine a harvest light on the city’s best, most inspired offerings. Throughout the month, Sacramento’s calendar will be rich with events and exhibits. Take a trip to the Crocker

Art Museum to check out how live jazz can be incorporated into a seemingly static visual exhibition. Or drive down Del Paso Boulevard to witness what happens when poets pair with painters. There’s also local storytelling sessions and live music, as well as myriad festivals and even an all-star Halloween-themed punk bill. It’s not all paintings and poets and songs, however. Artober also boasts zombie trains, corn mazes and, for the adults, plenty of beer and wine celebrations. Art isn’t just a medium, after all, it’s anything you want it to be—limited only by your imagination.

Artober is A collAborAtion between sn&r And the regionAl Arts community. ART DIRECTOR: Hayley Doshay

HALLOWEEN Dress up, tune in and freak out.

DIRECTOR Of ADVERTISING AND SALES:

Rick Brown SALES TEAM: Teri Gorman, Dusty Hamilton, Brian Jones, Rosemarie Messina, Dave Nettles, Lee Roberts, Julie Sherry, Olla Ubay, Joy Webber, Kelsi White, Gary Winterholler

EDITOR: Rachel Leibrock WRITERS: Julianna Boggs, Cody

ADVERTISING OpERATIONS MANAGER:

Drabble, Deena Drewis, Becky Grunewald, Lovelle Harris, Rachel Leibrock, Jessica Rine, Jonathan Mendick, Shoka

ADVERTISING SERVICES COORDINATOR:

COpy EDITORS: Kimberly Brown, Deena

Drewis, Jessica Rine, Shoka Shafiee CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Priscilla Garcia WEb pUbLISHING: John Bisignano,

Will Niespodzinski Melissa Bernard SpECIAL kUDOS TO: The Sacramento

Metropolitan Arts Commission and SN&R owners Deborah Redmond and Jeff vonKaenel. On the cover and on this page (above): Julie Heffernan’s “Self-portrait as Animal Skirt.”

Joe Kakacek, Jonathan Schultz A SPECIA L SUPPL EME NT T O S N& R

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Sacramento

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TEACHER RECRUITMENT The Sacramento Yoga Center has openings for teachers of yoga and other spiritually-oriented discipines. Do you know of anyone (including yourself) who is looking for a wonderful teaching venue? Our teachers are private contractors (not employees) and must provide evidence of insurance. Contact Jeff at 916-996-5645 2791 24th St. at the Sierra 2 Community Center, Room 6 (916) 996–5645 • www.sacramentoyogacenter.com • Jeff12345@zoho.com

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Fa l l F O R T H E A RT S

www.artobersac.com Dear Sacramento community, October is “ARTober” a month long celebration of the arts. As part of National Arts and Humanities month, Mayor Kevin Johnson’s For Arts Sake initiative, the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission, the Sacramento Convention and Visitors Bureau, Sacramento365.com, and dozens of local arts organizations are collaborating to spotlight 150 events in the Sacramento region in October. Throughout the month the public can experience and participate in arts events, performances and free activities including exhibitions, temporary public artworks, art festivals, concerts, musicals, live poetry, a street food and design market, and theater. ARTober will kick off with a performance by the Sacramento Opera at the Sacramento City Council meeting at 6 pm on October 1st. This will be followed by the unveiling of a major temporary public art project, titled, “Words and Walls,” on Del Paso Boulevard at 5 pm on October 12th. Five local poets have written poems for and about the boulevard and local graphic designers have turned this prose into monumental temporary works on the exteriors of the buildings on Del Paso Boulevard. Another ARTober highlight is the 3rd Annual Midtown Arts Festival, to be held on Oct. 19th from 12-5. A family friendly event, it will feature live music and performances from local arts organizations. Attendees will also have a chance to explore a variety of innovative art processes. On any given day, Sacramento will be alive with concerts, theater and dance performances, art shows and museum days. For details, log on to www.ARTobersac.com. The arts inspire us, provoke us, amuse us, enlighten us, and humanize us. Enrich yourself by experiencing Sacramento’s vibrant arts community and taking advantage of all that ARTober has to offer. John nicolauS Chair, Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission

cheryl holben Vice-Chair, Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission

PA I D A D V E R T I S I N G A SPECIA L SUPPL EME NT T O S N& R

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Photo courtesy of Jose di gregorio

courtesy of the crocker Art MuseuM

2013

Jose Di Gregorio, “Self-Portrait,” mixed media on wood.

Back on the horse

Lose yourseLf

When two nonprofits team up for a single fundraiser, it’s bound to be greater than just the sum of its parts. Such is the case with La Raza Galeria Posada and the Sacramento Police Mounted Association’s Saddle Up & Paint event on Saturday, October 5. It’ll offer Dia de los Muertos sugarskull and mask-painting workshops for the kids, the presentation of two new saddles to the SPMA, barbecue, and live music with the Josh Macrae Band and the College Fund Band. Have fun, help raise funds for Sacramento police horses and scholarships for children’s arts-education programs. Noon to 4 p.m.; $10 suggested donation, free for kids ages 12 and younger. La Raza Galeria Posada, 2700 Front Street; (916) 446-5133; www.lrgp.org. J.M.

Featured artist Birgitta FranzenMcCarthy, who signs her work under the name “Bittan,” works mostly from nature and scenes outdoors. Lose yourself in her “action paintings,” and feel the branches swaying in the wind. A new exhibit at the Axis Gallery, Loose Ends, highlights her work, including the abstract pieces that Franzen-McCarthy says were inspired by observing the fluid changes of her natural subjects. Loose Ends opens on Saturday, October 5, and runs through Sunday, October 27. The Second Saturday reception happens on October 12, from 6 to 9 p.m. 1517 19th Street, (916) 443-9900; www.axisgallery.org. C.D.

this is your art on acid

Following in their family’s acclaimed footsteps, Lucia Eames and Llisa Demetrios, daughter and granddaughter of legendary California designers Charles and Ray Eames, have forged their own path in the art community. Now The California Museum has honored them with an exhibition, the aptly titled Eames Generations: A Legacy of California Design, which runs through December 1. Staying true to their California roots, Eames, who created the 92-foot-tall “Wind Harp” in South San Francisco, designs functional indoor and outdoor pieces laser-cut in metal, and Demetrios, who creates large-scale sculptures out of bronze, hammers out her creations in their shared studio space in Sonoma County. Admission is $6-$8.50, free for children 5 and under. The California Museum, 1020 O Street; (916) 653-7524; www.californiamuseum.org. L.H.

Saddle Up & Paint

THe CuLT of seLfie by Jessica Rine

Sky IS FallIng: PaIntIngS by JulIe HeFFernan

Julie HeffeRnan is obsessed witH HeRself. Not in a bad way. Rather, the artist creates fantastical paintings full of darkness and light, life and death. Heffernan—whose works go on display beginning on Sunday, October 20, at the Crocker Art Museum in an exhibit titled Sky Is Falling: Paintings by Julie Heffernan—also embeds contemporary messages in rich palettes of muted colors and intricate detail, reminiscent of Baroque and Renaissance art, but with a more modern, surrealist feel. Sensual and provocative, she invites the viewer to examine larger worldly messages through her constant self-examination. In her “Self-Portrait as Animal Skirt,” a pale, nude female dons a headdress of multicolored flowers, and her

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Julie Heffernan, “Self Portrait With Falling Sky,” oil on canvas, 2011.

arms rest on a large flowing skirt of animal carcasses. The figure’s pose is graceful and elegant, like that of European royalty, but the bright blue background and nature-infused coverings suggest an otherworldly setting. Heffernan employs classic technique to create vast, dreamlike stories with incredible detail. She draws viewers in with strange occurrences in naturalistic settings, or realistic still lifes in invented backgrounds. The eye may focus on the beautiful woman draped on stones in the forest in the foreground of a painting, but an explosion in the background of the painting pulls the eye and lures the viewer into Heffernan’s grand, twisted worlds. Though she now lives and creates art in Brooklyn, New York, Heffernan remains tied to her Northern California roots. She earned her bachelor’s degree in fine arts from UC Santa Cruz and is currently represented by the Catharine Clark Gallery in San Francisco as well as the Mark Moore Gallery in Culver City. The Crocker exhibit will feature some of Heffernan’s self-portraits along with other modern surrealistic oil paintings. The exhibit is organized by the Palo Alto Art Center, the paintings borrowed from various Northern California collections. Sunday, October 20, through Sunday, January 26, 2014; $5-$10. Crocker Art Museum, 216 O Street; (916) 808-7000; www.crockerartmuseum.org. Ω

a sP ecia l suPPl eM ent t o sn& R

Night

Get ready to feel like you’re on psychedelics when you peep this show, because Jose Di Gregorio and Jared Tharp aim to stimulate your visual system and trip you out. With Night on display this month at Bows & Arrows, Di Gregorio (whose work is pictured above, top right) continues his Sacred Geometry series of rainbow-hued combos of outer space and precise line work. Tharp also works the optical-geometry vein, but takes inspiration from more Earthbound sources: 1980s skate graphics and animation. Tharp says that he and Di Gregorio are aiming for an “overall hypnotic and visceral effect.” The opening reception is on Friday, October 4, from 6 to 9 p.m.; show ends Thursday, October 31. 1815 19th Street, (916) 822-5668, www.bowscollective.com. B.G.

Loose Ends

a L L i n t h e fa m i Ly

Eames Generations: A Legacy of California Design


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DELPASODESIGNDISTRICT.COM 12

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Laura Edmisten-Matranga and poet Danny Romero teamed up for this work, part of the Del Paso Words & Walls Project, that is at 2138 Del Paso Boulevard.

2013

Beat steady

ARtfuL neigHBoRs by RAChEL LEIbROCk

Del Paso WorDs & Walls Projects DeDication ceremony

ART IN PUbLIC PLACES. The concept seems really simple: A graceful metaland-wood sculpture placed squarely in a library. A vibrant mural painted on the side of a shop’s wall. A bronze statue looming over travelers at an airport. But that’s not all public art can be, and that’s something that Shelly Willis, director for the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission considered when her organization teamed with the Del Paso Boulevard Partnership in an effort to bring more visual art to the north Sacramento neighborhood. The idea, Willis knew, had to go beyond simply tacking up some pictures around the boulevard.

Photo courtesy of the sacramento metroPolitan arts commission

Davis Jazz and Beat Festival

Cheers to that

Hit the road, and saunter across the Yolo Causeway for the seventh annual Davis Jazz and Beat Festival, October 4-5, at the John Natsoulas Center for the Arts. The free event, a celebration honoring the freewheeling ideals of the Beat Generation, promises two days of poetry readings and painting demonstrations set to rhapsodic live jazz performances. There’ll also be a Jack Kerouac poetry contest, as well as music and spoken word. This is a chance to delve into the artistic world that celebrated nonconformity and impetuous creativity. A concurrent exhibition, Beat Generation and Beyond; Lyrical Vision: the Figure, will feature works by notable artists of the era. Beret and sunglasses not required. 521 First Street in Davis, (530) 756-3938, www.natsoulas.com. L.H.

Frosty cold and carb-loaded, amateur pollsters say beer is what the body craves after doing something it doesn’t want to do—namely, running. That’s what makes the Oktobrewfest run such an appealing idea. It combines both. Lace up those lederhosen, pick either the 5k or 10k option and get rewarded with a free “recovery” beer at the finish line. There’s also a half-mile kids run—but we’re guessing the little ones are served apple juice, not brews. The event benefits the A Change of Pace Foundation, a Davisbased nonprofit that aims to promote community education, family-oriented events, youth exercise programs, triathlons and camps. The run, scheduled to start at 6 p.m., October 12, at Davis Community Park, will lead runners through the city streets and bike paths of Davis. The $25-$45 registration fee includes a bib number, custom bottle opener finisher’s medal, race shirt and post-race libation. Prost! http://changeofpace.com/ oktobrewfest. J.B.

dress you up

“I’m interested in finding ways that artists in other disciplines can bring their work into the public realm,” she says. And so, the Del Paso Words & Walls Project was born, and in January, SMAC and the DPBP invited Sacramento poets to submit works for consideration on the subject of Del Paso Boulevard—poems inspired by their perspectives, impressions and memories of the street. The chosen poems would then, in turn, be translated by graphic artists into visual pieces. The resulting exhibit, the Del Paso Words & Walls Project, will feature five “monumental and site-specific” public artworks on buildings located along Del Paso Boulevard, between Arden Way and El Camino Avenue. The project’s participating poets are Susan Kelly-DeWitt, Danny Romero, Paco Marquez, Tim Kahl and Catherine French. The graphic designers are Laura Edmisten-Matranga, Benjamin DellaRosa, Hans Bennewitz, William Leung and Barb Hennelly. The project, currently still in its final stages of completion, will be unveiled Saturday, October 12, at the Sacramento Temporary Contemporary gallery, and while it’s currently planned as a temporary installation, Willis says that ideally it will evolve into a permanent collection. “I hope the Del Paso businesses like [the art] so much that they’ll keep them up,” she says. Reception is on Saturday, October 12, from 5 to 7 p.m. 1616 Del Paso Boulevard, www.sacmetro arts.org/poetwall.html Ω

Carnivale Black Tie Masquerade Ball

Among the myriad costume balls during the Halloween season, the 32nd annual Carnivale Black Tie Masquerade Ball, which takes place Saturday, October 19, at the Elks Tower, offers a chance to dress in black-tie attire, don a glittery mask and play casino games such as blackjack and roulette—all for charity. The event is hosted by the Active 20-30 Club of Greater Sacramento, a group of women that volunteers its time to various local children’s charities. The masquerade ball will benefit KidsFirst, Gravity and Next Move. In addition to the casino hijinks, the evening will also include the Virginia Lights Band’s sultry vocal stylings, food, drinks and overall merriment. 7 to 11 p.m.; $45 advance tickets, $55 at the door. 921 11th Street, (916) 658-9830, www.sacwomens2030.org. J.R.

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Oktobrewfest run

sunday funday Delta Wine & Art Faire

It’s Sunday, right? You just want to chill—maybe have a drink. Or two. Anything to help you forget that Monday’s just around the corner. But you’re also not some rube—you demand culture, sophistication, class. It’s time, then, for the Delta Wine & Art Faire, which takes place Sunday, October 6, at the Old Sugar Mill. The event promises the key essentials to a relaxing yet not completely throwaway weekend afternoon. In addition to works by local artists, there’ll be live music, food vendors and a silent auction that will raise funds for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. See, you already feel better about that bottle of pinot you’re planning to put away, don’t you? 1 to 7 p.m.; $20 in advance, $25 at the door. 35265 Willow Avenue in Clarksburg, www.carvalho familywinery.com/ourEvents_ winery.shtml. R.L.

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HARRIS CENTER AT FOLSOM LAKE COLLEGE PRESENTS

Alonzo King LINES Ballet FRI 9/27

Cultural traditions and collaborative artistry imbue classical ballet with new expressive potential. 8 pm

This Is The ’70s

Capitol Steps

SAT 9/28 – SUN 9/29 Live

WED 10/2 Hilarious come-

music, film and dance combine in a tribute to the “Me Decade” with faithful tributes to Led Zeppelin, Fleetwood Mac, Heart and more. SAT: 8 pm; SUN: 2 & 7 pm

dic songs and political satire from inside-the-beltway direct to your funny bone. 7:30 pm ALSO: 10/3 Vinicius Cantuária Quartet 10/4 Pacífico Dance Company 10/5 Gamelan Sekar Jaya

www.HarrisCenter.net 916-608-6888 14

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The New York-based Ballet Hispanico merges ballet and contemporary dance: The result is a highly accessible, pop-culture-friendly show.


2013

The l ady has Three faces

BeTTer Than a chick flick

My Own Stranger, directed by Kelley Ogden, is a site-specific performance that tells a semichronological story of the Pulitzer Prizewinning poet Anne Sexton, using her poems, letters and quotes from interviews. This KOLT Run Creations production stars Kellie Yvonne Raines, Ruby Sketchley and Lisa Thew, each depicting a different aspect of Sexton’s personality—Ichi, the child who needs to fit in; Dvah, the self-loathing adult; and Mercy, the one who self-medicates. Adapted by Marilyn Campbell and Linda Laundra, performances are scheduled to take place at various locations, and each venue will distinctly inform the play’s vibe. Scheduled venues include the Alex Bult Gallery; Gallery 2110; Sol Collective; Crocker Art Museum; and, on Monday, October 7, the Sacramento Poetry Center. $20, www.koltruncreations.com. t.d.

Jane Austen’s timeless tale of miscommunication gets adapted for the Sacramento Theatre Company’s main stage in a production that runs October 2-27. Pride and Prejudice revolves around the story of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet, one of literature’s most beloved couples, as they endure a rocky start to bicker and banter their way to eventual love and matrimony. Think of it as the original rom-com. But it’s more than just lighthearted fun; this classic romance explores expectations of marriage in the early 19th century, especially for women, and whether matrimonial unions should be made for love or money. Skip the dinner-and-a-movie date, and watch these characters stumble their way to true love. 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays; 12:30 and 6:30 p.m Thursdays; 8 p.m. Fridays; 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays; $12-$37. 1419 H Street, (916) 443-6722, www.sactheatre.org. J.r.

My Own Stranger

Nobody puts bebé iN a corNer by DEENA DREWIS

Ballet Hispanico

IT’S A ROUgh TIME Of yEAR fOR SO yOU ThINk yOU CAN DANCE fANS.

The show is over until next summer, and the tour is only coming as close as San Francisco and San Jose, which means Sacramento fans will be in a serious drought of gnarly Nappytabs or depression-inducing (in a good way!) Mia Michaels routines for a while. Luckily, New York-based Ballet Hispanico is set to come through Davis on Friday, October 11, as part of its 2013 North American tour. The company’s style is pretty much

exactly what it sounds like: classical ballet and contemporary dance, melded with traditional and modern Latino forms. As you might imagine, this makes for a diverse repertoire—tangolaced pas de deux; pirouettes in a paso doble; slow, controlled développés followed by some serious hip work. Formed in 1970 by Tina Ramirez, the troupe, now directed by Eduardo Vilaro, aims to preserve culture and promote education with pieces like “A Vueltas con los Ochenta,” which evokes the post-Franco, 1980s Madrid when culture in Spain was experiencing new freedom in the wake of its former dictator; and “Mad’Moiselle,” a contemporary piece that is both playful and somber, and serves as a dialogue-in-motion about gender identity within Latino culture. The show is highly accessible and aimed at fostering a vital art form that is increasingly underfunded nowadays. The way I’d recommend it to friends that aren’t into dance: It’s kind of like the Sharks’ routines from West Side Story plus Black Swan, with a little bit of Dirty Dancing thrown in the mix. Who wouldn’t want to see that? 8 p.m., $25-$49. Mondavi Center, 9399 Old Davis Road in Davis; (530) 754-5000; www.mondaviarts.org. Ω

from riTe To rioT

o u T, d a m n s p o T !

Paris 1913

When Igor Stravinsky premiered his new ballet The Rite of Spring on May 29, 1913, the flamboyant, avant-garde performance choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky so shocked the Paris elite in attendance that they broke out into a frenzy that ultimately spilled from the stage at the Champs-Elysées Theatre and onto the streets. Indeed, something as seemingly refined as ballet caused a near riot. Now, a century later on Saturday, October 12, the Sacramento Ballet’s artistic director Ron Cunningham will reinterpret Stravinsky’s showy, influential production with a show that will also include a preview of sorts of two other upcoming Sac Ballet presentations, The Firebird and Rubies. 7 p.m., $25. Sacramento Ballet, 1631 K Street; (916) 552-5800; www.sacballet.org. L.H.

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Pride and Prejudice

Macbeth

Capital Stage performs mostly cutting-edge plays or premieres locally written works, but its take on the oft-performed Shakespeare classic Macbeth, being staged from Wednesday, October 23 to Sunday, November 24, promises to be no less interesting. The theater company will present an original adaption of this tragedy, condensing its usual five acts into two. There are some radical departures: According to director Stephanie Gularte, this adaptation is set “in a not-too-distant post-apocalyptic future … where guerrilla warfare rules the land.” There will even be some gender-bending involved. This particular interpretation centers on the “perverse” marital bond between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. The timeless play is as dark as any horror movie and makes for the a perfect night out in the lead up to Halloween. There will be blood. Visit Cap Stage’s website for showtimes. $18-$36. 2215 J Street, (916) 995-5464, www.capstage.org. b.G.     09.26.13

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Tapas

SNEAK PEEK 10/12/13 10AM-8:30PM

Orange Shandy is here.

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tuesday october 1st, 2013 from 6pm–8pm at society for the Blind, 1238 s street (13th & s street) � �

Enjoy a conversation with renowned spiritual director, Brother Don Bisson

Silent Auction features inspirational artist, Mary Dignan’s mosaic “Dragonfly Spirit”

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REno’s

comEs to RosEVillE

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go to Breadoflife.org Spirit in the Arts October Offerings: Contact us for dates & times! Writing from the Spirit ~ Creative Halloween Crafts Octoberfest! Gathering & Celebrating Our Stories Loving Your Brain as a Spiritual Practice

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Sunday, September 29 • 2pm to 6pm Absinthe Tasting • Free Appetizers • Live Music

Outdoor 13 dining Courtyard 13 on Firehouse alley. Unique “Underground” Sacramento dining and full bar.

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Sun – Mon: 11am-8pm | Fri – Sat: 11am-10pm | Happy Hour 3-6pm 916.285.6100 | www.pbgrubshack.com 4 tvs | Beer & Wine | Follow Us

09.26.13

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Casual French • Lunch & Dinner • Cocktails • Private Events absinthe is legal now, but we still serve undergroit und

1023a Front Street • Old Sacramento 9 1 6 . 2 8 7 . 9 8 0 0 • w w w. S a c a b s i n t h e . c o m

Join us out here Please drink responsibly.


Straight outta tulSa

2013

Leon RusseLL by jONAThAN MENdICk

EvEN ThOUgh hE’S PRObAbLy OLdER ThAN ThE AvERAgE SN&R REAdER, LEON RUSSELL ISN’T ONE Of ThOSE AgINg ROCk ’N’ ROLL hALL Of fAMERS wE ShOULd ALL jUST fORgET AbOUT ALREAdy. First of all, he looks like a friggin’ wizard—Gandalf, to be exact. And musically, the bearded Oklahoma-born pianist and songwriter, who moved to Los Angeles in the early ’60s, has penned such classics as “A Song for You,” “Tight Rope” and “Lady Blue.” Over the course of a nearly 60-year musical career, Russell (pictured, right), who performs on Friday, October 20, at Assembly, has also explored and blended blues, country, rock and soul to create a signature sound that’s often now called the “Tulsa Sound.” But Russell’s finest moment just may have been his energetic performance in the George Harrison-organized Concert for Bangladesh at Madison Square Garden in 1971. Though he shared the stage with two Beatles, Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan, Russell managed to steal the show with a spirited rendition of the Rolling Stones’ “Jumpin’ Jack Flash.” Afterward, he retreated into the shadows—literally—switching to bass guitar and backup vocals on a few folk songs as the spotlight turned to Dylan. Fast-forward to more recent times. Two significant events happened in 2010 for Russell: First, he spent some time in the hospital recovering from a brain-fluid leak, pneumonia and heart failure. And shortly after that, he recorded an album with Elton John called The Union, his most commercially successful record in 30 years. Clearly, the wizard of the Tulsa Sound is still taking advantage of the time given to him by continuing to play awesome music. Sunday, October 20, 7 p.m.; $40. 1000 K Street, Suite 100; (916) 341-0176; www.leonrussellrecords.com. Ω

InspIratIon meets ImprovIsatIon Ross Hammond’s The Humanity Suite

Ross Hammond, founder of the In the Flow Festival and the weekly Nebraska Mondays series at Luna’s Café & Juice Bar, often works with musicians and poets, but for his latest project, he takes the concept of collaboration even further. A new Crocker Art Museum exhibit, Emancipating the Past: Kara Walker’s Tales of Slavery and Power, features the African-American artist’s striking black silhouettes which explore both historical

and modern issues of race. As part of the exhibit, Hammond composed The Humanity Suite, a set inspired by three of Walker’s silhouettes. And just as Walker tells stories through art, Hammond tells stories through jazz, some of it improvised. For the project, Hammond will perform live on Thursday, October 3, with Vinny Golia (saxophone, bass clarinet), Catherine Sikora (saxophone), Clifford Childers (trombone, bass trumpet, euphonium), Kerry Kashiwagi (bass) and Dax Compise (drums). 7 p.m., $6-$12. 216 O Street, (916) 808-7000, http://crocker artmuseum.org. t.D.

Boo, yeah

trIp out Cave

The Chicago-based Cave visits Bows & Arrows on Tuesday, October 15, for a night of minimalist jazz-funk-noise whatever. And by “whatever,” we mean whatever fantastic sounds this ensemble coaxes out of its guitars, keyboards, etc. The quartet will also release its third album, Threace, that same day. Like its live sets, the music here drones, heavy on the grooves with meandering, psychedelic and trip-inducing melodies, no drugs needed. 8 p.m., $6. 1815 19th Street, www.dragcity.com/artists/ cave. r.l.

A SPECIA L SUPPL EME NT T O S N& R

Halloween Hootenanny Festival Mark your calendars for the 10th annual Halloween Hootenanny Festival. The music event takes place this year at Old Ironsides from October 24-26, and features way too many punk, Americana and rockabilly bands to list here. Some highlights: the Rocketz, the Nickel Slots, the Vintage Vandals and Rebel Punk. There’ll also be food trucks, a zombie-pinup contest and something billed as, um, a “bloody wet tee shirt contest.” Scary, indeed. 8 p.m. Thursday, 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday; $12-$15. 1901 10th Street, http://tinyurl.com/ hootenannyfestival. r.l.

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Orange Shandy is here. Saturday November 9th 4:30 - 8:30pm Downtown Sutter Creek Stroll Main Street Sutter Creek Taste Amador County Wines Enjoy Music, Local Cuisine, Silent Auction, Art & More Tickets $25 in Advance or $30 at the Door For Tickets and Information: www.amadorarts.org or 209 267 9038 Go to www.touramador.com to build your custom Winefest Weekend

Join us out here Please drink responsibly. 18

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THE GHOSTS ARE REAL

2013

RiDe with the unDeaD by JULIANNA bOggS

Zombie Train AMTRAk NEEdS TO STEP UP ITS gAME.

Sacramento Horror Film Festival The Sacramento Horror Film Festival should get everyone’s heart racing—think of it as a warm-up to the scariest night of them all. This year’s fest, which takes place Friday, October 11, to Sunday, October 13, at the Colonial Theatre, includes a screening of the 2006 cult classic Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon and—bonus!—the film’s star Nathan Baesel will also be in attendance. Also on the bill: the 1976 timeless favorite, The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Yes, it’s time for fans and virgins to do the time warp yet again. Costumes, of course, strongly encouraged. There’ll also be short films and an awards ceremony. $30-$40 for a three-day pass, single day tickets are $15-$25. 3522 Stockton Boulevard, www.sachorrorfilmfest.com. C.D.

the ghosts oF sacramento past The Haunted Fort

It’s Sacramento’s oldest structure, so it’s not too surprising that there are a lot of ghost stories involving Sutter’s Fort. On October 25 and 26, tour docents dressed as the spirits of early Sacramento pioneers will lead The Haunted Fort evening tour program, sharing

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon screens this year at the Sacramento Horror Film Festival.

stories of their lives—and deaths. It’s a great chance to explore the fort when it would otherwise be closed. Tours start every 10 minutes; ghost hunting with electromagnetic field probes and night-vision cameras optional. 6:30 to 9 p.m., $6-$8. 2701 L Street, (916) 445-4422, www.suttersfort.org. J.M.

american horror story live Callson Manor

Remember the 1979 film The Amityville Horror? You only wish these haunted houses were that cheery. Located in Roseville at the Placer County Fairgrounds, Callson Manor is freaking scary—better-bring-your-heart-meds scary. This year, get spooked every Friday through Sunday (and a few Thursdays, too) between October 4 and October 31. Owned and operated by a professional animatronicsprop designer, the Manor employs professional set designers and movieworthy special-effects and makeup artists. There are three haunted houses in all, as well as a courtyard featuring Zombie Paintball, a tarot card reader and some nightmare-inducing thing called “Chainsaw Alley.” Gulp. 7:30 to 10 p.m., $26-$60. 800 All America City Boulevard in Roseville, www.callsonmanor.com. R.L.

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Fright nights

Need more excitement? Purchase a ticket upgrade in exchange for a laser rifle and membership in the Zombie Train Militia. Described as “one part passenger train, one part zombie killing machine,” the show lasts 75 minutes, leaving plenty of time to unwind and enjoy a victorious return ride home among the survivors. Various times on select dates, through November 1; $35-$50; www.sacramentorivertrain.com. Ω

photo courtesy of sacramento horror film festival

While the Sacramento RiverTrain can’t get you much farther than Woodland, its selection of services makes for an experience outside the norm when it comes to one of America’s oldest forms of mass transit. The RiverTrain coaches, representing a handful of eras in rail history, carry passengers over 16 miles of track, from West Sacramento to Woodland and back. The locomotive hosts a variety of offerings through the year, including brunch rides and sunset dining, but come October, it’s time for something more in step with the season: zombie killing and beer. Not at the same time, of course. That would be reckless. But no one’s saying you can’t try both. The Zombie Train bills itself as a two-hour ride and show during which passengers can relax and take in the sites of the undead, all while traveling on long wooden trestle bridges, past the Sacramento riverfront, and through miles of open valley farmland.

and so is the fun!

P r e Hs AtLoL OnW ECE NaHsAtUlNeT

OCTOBER 18, 19, 25 & 26 | 6 to 11pm $20 ADULTS • $10 YOUTH • $5 KIDS CARNIVAL (UNDER 8 YEARS) LIVE BANDS

FOOD

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A SPECIA L SUPPL EM E NT T O S N& R

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Ace of SpAdeS Friday, September 27

Saturday, September 28

1417 R Street, Sacramento, 95814 www.aceofspadessac.com

All Ages Welcome!

Tuesday, OcTOber 1

Thursday, OcTOber 3

TWIZTID

FRIGHTENED RABBIT

plus special guests

maDchilD - blaze ya DeaD homie aqualeo - brutha smith

plus special guests Friday, OctOber 4

senses fail for the fallen Dreams - expire being as an ocean

wednesday, OctOber 16

saturday, OctOber 5

Joshua Radin plus special guests

Friday, OctOber 18

Friday, OctOber 11

saturday, OctOber 12

andre nickatina & krazie bone

arden park roots

babnit

one Drop - street urchinz riotmaker (feat. Jeffry of shakeDown) - kayasun

saturday, OctOber 19

cOMiNg sOON

(of bone thugs-n-harmony)

09/26 10/17 10/20 10/22 10/25 10/26 11/05 11/11 11/12 11/14 11/16 11/17

The Used william control

11/23 11/30 12/08 12/11

Matt Nathanson Story Of The Year Attila Streelight Manifesto Parmalee Jonny Craig AB-Soul & Joey Badass Clutch Mayday Parade Misfits E-40 Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue Mellowhigh Great White Metalachi Blood On The Dance Floor

Tickets available at all Dimple Records Locations, The Beat Records, and Armadillo Records, or purchase by phone @ 916.443.9202


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