S 2013 10 10

Page 1

nominees! see PAGe 22

vote now At

sAmmies.com

Shaqramento: Forgive and Forget? see Streetalk, page 5

DOCTORS’

BY MELINDA WELSH

PAGE 16

SECRET

Physicians regularly prescribe chemotherapy, ventilators, CPR and surgeries for the dying. So, why do they say no to such procedures for themselves?

Sacramento’S newS & entertainment weekly

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Volume 25, iSSue 26

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thurSday, octoBer 10, 2013

Strong mayor a mess see Bites, page 13

Honoring

dead babies— or creepy funerals? see news, page 9


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October 10, 2013 | Vol. 25, Issue 26

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Tipping the balance Recently, I was asked to fill out a research survey on gender equality in the workplace. Sure, why not? After all, I’ve read Lean In, Sheryl Sandberg’s divisive look at what it means to be both female and career-oriented. Even as many embraced Sandberg’s advice to mentor co-workers, her book also rankled with assertions that women should reject the urge to hold themselves back in fear of tipping the work-life balance. Easy enough to say when you’re the chief operating officer of Facebook, right? The reality’s far more complex. I don’t even have children and find myself challenged by the notion. A close friend, a new mother, recently decided to quit her job. Living on just one paycheck, she said, would be less stressful than trying to juggle office life with quality parenting. I nodded in sympathy. After all, my cats have practically figured out how to feed themselves, as I can barely find time to clean the house or cook, much less take care of tiny, dependent beings. And I’m one of the lucky ones. Without a supportive husband, I’m sure you’d find me buried alive by piles of dirty laundry. Now, as I read the survey, it confirmed how out-of-touch notions of a work-life balance really are. Sample question: “Which of the below stop ... women from reaching the top in an organization?” Possible answers (choose just one!) included “Because they are not ambitious enough” and “because they are trapped in household activities.” The problem isn’t singular—it’s multifaceted and fuzzy: lack of government support, antiquated notions about gender roles, and companies that, in their resistance to flexible hours or job-sharing, perpetuate the cycle. “Lean in”? Let’s just try to remain standing.

STREETALK

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Kate Paloy, Patti Roberts, Ann Martin Rolke, Steph Rodriguez Creative Director Priscilla Garcia Art Director Hayley Doshay Junior Art Director Brian Breneman Designers Vivian Liu, Serene Lusano, Marianne Mancina, Skyler Smith Contributing Photographers Lisa Baetz, Steven Chea, Wes Davis, Ryan Donahue, Taras Garcia, William Leung, Kayleigh McCollum, Shoka, Justin Short, Anne Stokes

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“I’m not sure I’m ready to forgive [Shaquille O’Neal] for his ‘Queens’ comment years and years ago.”

Asked at McKinley Park:

How do you feel about Shaqramento?

Jon Lampley

Aida Perez

Jeff Gephart

musician

writer

I think it’s pretty hilarious. A lot of sports guys do that once they retire. It’s funny. I’m sure he’ll end up doing funny stuff with the games.

Jack Castaneda

mental-health worker

I’m not sure I’m ready to forgive [Shaquille O’Neal] for his “Queens” comment years and years ago. But I figure, if he can help DeMarcus Cousins become the player we think he can be, then I’m for it.

I think I’m still a little confused. He put us down so many times when we were rivals with him. We’re the “cow town,” according to Shaq. And now, all of a sudden, you want to put Sacramento on the map because you’re here? I don’t quite get him yet.

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I’m a [Los Angeles] Lakers fan, so I like it. [I like] anything that has to do with Shaq, but I like the Kings and I wanted them to stay [in Sacramento]. That’s all we got. I like the idea of Shaq being part of the Kings.

It’s OK as long as he doesn’t hurt his big toe again. As long as he keeps the Sacramento Kings in Sacramento, it’s fine. Whatever keeps them here.

student

That’s hella funny. It’s surprising. Why him? I would think [he would join] the Lakers, but I guess we have Kevin Johnson as our mayor. It’s cool.

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Email your letters to sactoletters@newsreview.com.

Shutdown breeds cynicism Re “GOP attacks poor (again)” by Nick Miller (Editor’s Note, October 3): This Editor’s Note really hit the nail on the head. It’s absolutely appalling how deeply the GOP has degraded support services for the least well-off. Those folks feel more alienated and powerless in democracy than ever. When you are working two or three minimum-wage jobs, scraping paychecks together and trying to support your family, and the government takes away the two measly food-stamp letter of dollars you get per the week meal, how can you have any faith in democracy, let alone believe that your vote makes any difference? It’s truly sad how the sequester, government shutdown and all the absurd dysfunction are making people—especially young voters—even more cynical and callous about civic participation. At a time when we should be rising up in the streets, demanding that our government work better for the people, the champions for the poor and the innovators for better government have been marginalized and buried under the incessant onslaught of manipulative misinformation and caustic partisanship. All the while, Democratic and Republican candidates and operatives

BEFORE

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are using these fabricated crises to shore up their war chests for the 2014 and 2016 elections—money which no doubt will be spent on more spin, more mud-slinging and more pandering to the mythical swing voter. Merde! Patrick Stelmach

s a c ra m e nt o

Educators doing great job Re “The great education-reform swindle” by Cosmo Garvin (SN&R Bites, October 3): Thank you for covering the Diane Ravitch event and for reviewing her book. I am constantly amazed that, when it comes to education, The Sacramento Bee is not covering what is actually happening. I am a public-school teacher, and I know that we educators are doing a great job. My peers are the education experts that should be involved in setting education policy. Sadly, this is not the case, and we are constantly told what and how to teach by those with no background in education. This is the norm and has been for well over a decade! Regardless of these bad policies, our children flourish due to the education experts in the classroom. Carlos Rico Sacramento

Wal-Mart responds

online buzz

Re “What Wal-Mart should do” (SN&R Editorial, September 19): I’ve been with Wal-Mart for 15 years, and I see associates in the Sacramento region get promoted weekly to positions with more pay and responsibility. Nearly two-thirds of store management teams started as hourly associates. Our jobs offer a chance for people to work hard and climb the ladder from stockers or cashiers to department managers, store managers and beyond. Our managers earn between $50,000 and $170,000 a year—similar to what firefighters, accountants and doctors make. Each year, we promote about 160,000 people to jobs with more responsibility and pay. In addition, we have health-care plans available to eligible full- and part-time associates, including one that starts at about $17 per pay period; 401k retirement plans with up to a 6 percent company match; merchandise discounts; associate stock purchase programs; and company-paid life insurance. Our average, hourly full-time wage in California is $13.03. Jenna Wainaina market manager, Wal-Mart Sacramento

Parklets = Parking sPaces turned into Patios. good idea for sacramento? Is the city big enough to handle parklets? Less parking might mean that more midtown/downtown residents may walk to places, but for visitors from outside areas - Land Park, Elk Grove, Roseville - less parking may be discouraging and stave off visits. Phillip Ginn

v ia fa c e b o o k Good old Sacto, trying so hard to be hip. Ken Cuozzo

v ia fa c e b o o k Parking spaces should be turned into parks Marc Del Chiaro

v ia fa c e b o o k

should medical Pot be allowed on college camPuses? Let me take a hit and think about it.

@SacNewsReview

Steve Warne

v ia fa c e b o o k Facebook.com/ SacNewsReview

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building a

HealtHy S a c r a m e n t o

One-stop Center for Students in Need by L i n da d u b o i s

a

few years ago, teachers, administrators, psychologists, or anyone concerned about a student in the Sacramento City Unified School District often didn’t know where exactly to go for help. For example, a foster child in special education with health problems suddenly had a change in behavior. His teacher might wonder, “Should I call Foster Youth Services, the Special Education Department, Health Services or someone else?” “What would end up happening is people would call all these different departments, and they’d be put on hold, sent to voice mails, people wouldn’t return their calls and meanwhile this child and his family’s needs were not being met,” explains Nichole C. Wofford, a marriage and family therapist and social worker with the school district. It became clear there needed to be a centralized gateway for resources that could be used by students, parents, administrators and teachers. A SCUSD mental health collaborative looking to expand mental health services within the district began working on a solution. The result was the Connect Center, which opened in January 2011 at the SCUSD office. It connects people to both in-district services and a wide variety of community partners, such as Legal Services of Northern California, Sacramento County Children’s Mental Health, several health insurance companies and more. “So there’s one phone call (or email or walk-in

visit),” says Wofford, the center’s manager. “We will actually case manage and walk you through the process of getting this family the support they need.” Wofford runs the center with a social worker, two family advocates (case managers) and usually one to three Sacramento State social-work interns. As of September 2013, they had opened 2,140 cases,

“WE HavE gOTTEn lETTErS frOm prInCIpalS THaT HavE SaId, ‘I am COnvInCEd THaT yOur SuppOrT SavEd THIS STudEnT’S lIfE.” nichole C. Wofford SCuSd Connect Center manager

the child is the emergency room — or they’re undocumented and are fearful of coming forth because they’re afraid of being deported,” Wofford says. A bilingual family advocate walks them through how to get enrolled and how to use the insurance. The other family advocate heads the LGBT services. “This population has been identified as being extremely vulnerable and at risk of challenges at school such as poor grades, poor attendance, bullying, depression, suicidality, homelessness, and substance abuse, so we have a dedicated person who works with the schools and does mentoring for the LGBT youth so they have someone to talk to,” Wofford says. “We have gotten letters from principals that have said, ‘I am convinced that your support saved this student’s life.’”

BuIldIng HEalTHy COmmunITIES In 2010, The California Endowment launched a 10-year, $1 billion plan to improve the health of 14 challenged communities across the state. Over the 10 years, residents, community-based organizations and public institutions will work together to address the socioeconomic and environmental challenges contributing to the poor health of their communities. Sacramento City unified School district Connect Center manager nichole C. Wofford says the center serves as a centralized gateway for resources in the district. photo by laura anthony

an average of about 800 per year. Case management, the center’s primary umbrella service, involves working with students and families who have problems that run the gamut: mental health or behavior issues; lack of food, clothing, shelter or furniture in the home; legal problems; tutoring needs; a death, illness or job loss in the family; etc. This can also include crisis intervention, such as suicide assessment and referral. Health-insurance enrollment connects young people with health care. “We’ve had many, many examples where the family has no insurance and the only place they can take

your ZiP code shouldn’t predict how long you’ll live – but it does. Staying healthy requires much more than doctors and diets. Every day, our surroundings and activities affect how long – and how well – we’ll live. Health Happens in neighborhoods. Health Happens in Schools. Health Happens with prevention.

paid with a grant from the california endowment 8

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Need good teeth to get work? See NEWS

See SCOREKEEPER

12

On craft-beer laws See EDITORIAL

15

PHOTOS BY LOVELLE HARRIS

11

Winners and losers

Spectacle of grief Does nonprofit Garden  of Innocence honor  abandoned children— or secretly conduct  extravagant funerals  for stillborn fetuses   in Sacramento?  During an overcast September morning on a grassy mortuary plot in Citrus Heights, more than a hundred mourners observed the final by Raheem dedication for 20 “abandoned” children. F. Hosseini Backdropped by small caskets on a rain-dappled lawn, the crowd handed tiny ra h e emh@ newsr evie w.c om wooden urns around their solemn circle, offering personal blessings, reciting poems and loosing butterflies into the gray sky. Whenever someone wondered aloud what sort of parent would abandon their dead son or daughter, the man responsible scuttled the topic. “We can’t stop what a parent would do,” Victor Hipolito Jr. told gatherers. “It doesn’t matter. Thank you for stepping forward while others turned their backs.” This is the creed of Garden of Innocence National, an expanding nonprofit that claims to provide “dignified burial services for abandoned and unidentified children.” Problem is, the souls being interred this gloomy September morning aren’t abandoned children at all. They’re stillborn fetuses recovered from hospitals, under a contractual blessing from Sacramento County. And the parents who suffered these miscarriages may not know what’s being done with the fruits of their grief. Formed nine months ago in San Diego by founder Elissa Davey, Garden of Innocence recently landed in Sacramento, where it secured a written contract with the county to bury every child 8 years and younger that isn’t claimed within 30 days of his or her death. The mission sounds saintly, right down to the nonprofit’s Edenic name. Garden of Innocence has 17 chapters scattered mostly throughout California and include some far-flung ones in Alaska and Poland. “It’s all for the babies,” Hipolito, area manager of the new GOI Sierra chapter, told SN&R. But the perception that the group cares for discarded children is different from the reality. Sacramento hasn’t suffered an outbreak of abandoned, dead children. “I can’t remember the last child that was an abandoned baby,” said county coroner Gregory Wyatt, who expected the case to BEFORE

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Song, poems, even the release of doves or butterflies honors stillborn babies at local nonprofit Garden of Innocence’s burial ceremonies.

be the same in each of the counties where Garden of Innocence operates. Instead, the organization has commandeered a more taboo market—conducting extravagant burial rites for stillborn infants, while raising thorny questions about the prohibitive costs of grief, as well as the difference between dignifying a loss and exploiting it. According to Wyatt, “99 percent” of the children Garden of Innocence recovers are stillborn fetuses delivered in local hospitals and not taken home by their parents. “They’re not what you think,” he told SN&R.

reclaiming their children’s remains, but said may benefit financially from the perception such overtures are rejected. that it’s conducting funeral rites for aban“They’re already abandoned at that doned, full-term infants or young children, point,” said the part-time airport employee. rather than miscarried fetuses. “We don’t share those stories, because it “Abandoned children and babies, they doesn’t really matter.” about never happen,” he added. “What dignifies the child is they’re At least locally, it remains to be seen getting a burial. Garden of Innocence is whether the grieving parents knew their honoring the child by giving them a name.” “abandoned” fetuses went to a group It might matter to some, including that provided them names and multifaith donors who assume they’re supporting funeral services. funerals for abandoned children. And to the “I can’t tell you,” said Diane Galati, parents whose private losses actually fuel senior director of Mercy San Juan Medical this spectacle of grief. Center. “Personally, I can’t see my parents At the September 21 ceremony at wanting to do that.” Sierra Hills Memorial Park & East Galati stressed that spontaneous miscarLawn Mortuary, members of Catholic riages are rare at her hospital and that when “Abandoned children organization Knights of Columbus escorted they do happen, “our parents take their and babies, they about 20 handcrafted urns into the circle of babies.” mourners. Hipolito spoke, as did a police Many others may not have that choice. never happen.” chaplain, Christian reverend and nondeAccording to a 2012 national survey Gregory Wyatt nominational minister. Two people sang, conducted by online resource eFuneral, Sacramento County coroner and doves were released at the end of the average funeral costs exceeded $8,500 for 90-minute ceremony. Hipolito described it burial services and notched just a bit more Hospitals are required to file death as “beautiful.” than $3,700 for cremation. certificates on all stillbirths that have SN&R contacted a half-dozen child and “I’ve certainly run across where reached at least 20 weeks of gestation. If medical professionals for this story. No one [parents] couldn’t afford to pay,” said parents don’t claim these fetuses within 30 was aware of the county’s contract with Sacramento therapist Jeanette Maria days, the hospitals turn them over to the Garden of Innocence, but most expressed Salinas, who specializes in grief and coroner’s office. discomfort with the group’s modus loss counseling. Before Garden of Innocence came operandi. Some mortuary homes will waive fees along, the coroner facilitated the cremation “That does not sound like what we for low-income families, said Galati, and and interment of these bodies for a mass contract for,” said one birthing-center direcThe Child Abuse Prevention Center has a burial. The process was slow and cost tor, who didn’t speak for attribution. fund to help such parents. taxpayer money. Sheila Boxley, president and CEO of For everyone else, Garden of Innocence The coroner credits the nonprofit with the Child Abuse Prevention Center, hadn’t will mourn their children for them. freeing up his office’s resources and providheard of Garden of Innocence, but said the Whether this is an act of grace or ing individualized attention to each stillborn presumptuousness could depend on the organization’s mission “raises all kinds of fetus. The all-volunteer organization names questions.” individual. Online discussion forums for each “child” and writes poems for him or Founder Davey didn’t return a request parents who miscarried reveal a community her. It also pays about $700 per fetus for for comment, but her organization has that grieves mostly in private, choosing death certificates, cremation and interment. another local funeral scheduled for not to tell family members they were ever It also buys each infant an obituary, a grave October 19, at East Lawn. Hipolito said pregnant, much less that they suffered a marker and a toy they’ll never play with. the nonprofit already has nine “abandoned devastating loss. “From a publicity standpoint,” Wyatt babies” and anticipates a few more. Ω Hipolito acknowledged occasions said the nonprofit, which runs on donations, where parents contacted his group about   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   |    10.10.13     |   SN&R     |   9


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An inconvenient tooth

BEATS

Low-income Sacramentans still have   a hard time getting dental care Clean and sober since January 2012, Heather Mostajo was eager to enter the workforce. But there was a problem: Her by Dave Kempa teeth were in terrible condition. “That was my biggest hang-up dave k@ with my self-esteem about being able newsreview.c om to attend an interview,” says Mostajo, 38. “Your appearance, your smile. They look at that.” This was not a new problem for her. She spent years too embarrassed even to smile. Fighting back tears, she remembers her choice last year to not join her three kids and three stepchildren in their Christmas family portrait.

School to street

For residents without insurance, oral-care options remain tenuous. The rollout for Covered California will not include dental care, as that is no longer a part of the Affordable Care Act. Denti-Cal, the state’s oral extension of Medicaid that was cut in 2009 due to budget woes, will again be available in 2014, but with a 10 percent drop in reimbursement to dentists providing the services. In the meantime, working-class and poor adults often must rely on volunteer efforts from the dental community. One effort to increase smiles across the state is CDA PHOTO BY WES DAVIS

The California Dental Association says that some 10 million residents experience barriers to dental care. While recent laws and concerted efforts by California’s dentists have helped to ameliorate the problem, there remain serious gaps in care for less-affluent adults. “The need is so great,” says Cathy Levering, executive director of the Sacramento District Dental Society. “And the problem is, it’s not just the indigent. It’s the working poor, the people who have no benefits and are working but can’t afford dental care.” It’s particularly bad here in Sacramento. According to Levering, every county across the state has a free clinic providing dental services to the poor. The county clinic in Sacramento, however, only performs extractions and care for abscesses—the dental equivalent of an emergency-room visit. Preventative care, such as teeth cleaning and fillings, is not available.

Heather Mostajo will enjoy smiling for holiday pictures more with her new dentures.

BEFORE

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Cares, a semiannual volunteer effort where dental professionals provide free care to residents who can’t afford it on their own. Last year, the California Dental Association held two daylong events, one in Modesto and another at Cal Expo here in Sacramento, providing more than 17,000 dental procedures to almost 3,700 uninsured residents. Terry Jones, chairman of the Sacramento County Medi-Cal Dental Advisory Committee and dentist for three decades, says that despite monetary woes and state funding cuts to programs in recent years, dental professionals throughout Sacramento have worked to fill in the gaps for the uninsured. More than a dozen clinics in the region, for instance, provide low-cost care (if only just for pain relief and extraction referrals), and many practices work with the Sacramento District Dental Society to provide services to lower-income residents on a sliding-scale price system.

F E AT U R E

STORY

Levering says that grants to the Sacramento District Dental Foundation, the nonprofit arm of SDDS, have helped Sacramentans in need to receive care. “The hospitals and other organizations have been great in providing these grants,” she says, “[but] I think it’s a Band-Aid.” Jones agrees, pointing to the immense crowds drawn each year to CDA Cares events. “The fact that people stand in line for two days to get dental treatment makes you think, ‘Oh my God, this is terrible.’” A similar thought, one surmises, went through Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg’s mind last year, when he visited the CDA Cares event at Cal Expo. Moved by what he saw that day, Steinberg this summer managed to reinstate Denti-Cal into Gov. Jerry Brown’s state budget—a big win for both the state’s dental association and SDDS. Today, the dental community remains hopeful. Care for California’s children is in a markedly better condition than for adults, and uninsured pregnant women have access to services. Even with the exclusions of dental services in “Obamacare,” dentists hope that universal dental care will be the next logical conversation once the program is in place. “The fact that it’s considered an essential health benefit is critical,” says Jones. “Dental care has a serious impact on the overall well-being of the individual.” Last Tuesday, October 1, Mostajo received her full set of dentures after a year’s worth of oral surgery, which included removal of rotten teeth and reconstructive work on a jaw once disfigured as a result of domestic abuse. She was able to receive her teeth thanks to a collaborative effort between Women’s Empowerment, a group dedicated to getting homeless women under a roof and in the workforce, and SDDS’ Smiles for Big Kids program. Over the past year, Mostajo has gained both permanent housing and employment in a clerical position. But as the holiday season approaches, it’s the new smile for which she is most excited. “Last Christmas, they did family pictures, and I never wanted to be in them,” she says. “This year, I get to be in there with my kids.” Ω

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The number of children who didn’t have a home of their own at least once during the school year has jumped sharply since 2010, according to a recent study by the Sacramento County Children’s Coalition. The report, called the Children’s Report Card, states that 10,404 Sacramento County children enrolled in K-12 grades ended up in homeless situations at least once during the 2011-12 school year—a dramatic increase from the reported 7,254 students over the 2009-10 school year. The report sounded alarms for homeless and youth advocates in the region. “The statistics are shocking and should be a call to action for the County Board of Supervisors and School District officials to address this rising crisis,” Bob Erlenbusch, executive director of the Sacramento Regional Coalition to End Homelessness, said in the nascent group’s most recent press release. Valerie Cousins of the Children’s Coalition agrees the numbers are troubling. Regarding methodology, Cousins said the count isn’t necessarily uniform, and that schools report the numbers to the county office of education. But the rise in Sacramento’s homeless students, twice the national rate, is certainly worth our attention. The two school districts experiencing the highest rates of student homelessness last school year were Robla, at 20 percent, and Galt Joint Union, with 15 percent. (Dave Kempa)

Moth-stalled In early 2007, light brown apple moths fluttered from their Hawaiian roots and said aloha to the mainland. By 2010, the dogged little tourists landed in Sacramento County. Now they won’t leave. Sacramento and 18 other counties receive federal funds to battle their infestation, which are most prevalent locally in parts of North Highlands and Galt, the Delta agricultural region, and several production nurseries. County agricultural officials say the little buggers infest about 200 fruit crops, causing defoliation and negative economic impacts to our local farmingto-forking industry. In the past year, the county received nearly $90,000 for quarantine efforts, which include monthly nursery inspections and monitoring the movement of nursery plants and green waste outside quarantine zones. So far, the moths haven’t taken over. But it looks like they’re staying. (Raheem F. Hosseini)

Steak your Claim More and more chain restaurants and businesses are coming to Sacramento’s central-city grid. The latest? Claim Jumper, the popular gut-stuffer chain, is in at J and 11th streets. McCormick & Schmick’s, the seafoodchain joint, is out. Claim Jumper announced on Monday afternoon that it would open this winter downtown, at 1111 J Street. This is the same location in the Elk’s Tower that houses McCormick & Schmick’s, which closed on October 7. Both restaurant chains are owned by Landry’s Inc., based out of Houston, Texas, which also owns Morton’s Steakhouse and Bubba Gump Shrimp Co. Claim Jumper is based out of Irvine, Calif., where this writer attended undergrad, and was a popular spot with my roommates. Something about artichoke dip and ribs, if I recall (I never actually ate there, so I can’t affirm the virtues of the Claim’s stuffed barbecued-shrimp embrochette). Claim Jumper’s press release say it’s “known for their wide selection of fresh options.” Such as it’s line of microwave frozen dinners. (Nick Miller)

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Strong mayor is back (see Cosmo  Garvin’s column on the next page), this  (fourth) time led by a group of local  business and political players calling  themselves Sacramento Tomorrow,  who deliverd the latest executivemayor pitch to city council last week.  Mayor Kevin Johnson is keeping his  distance from the group—so much so  that he even denied having read the  latest strong-mayor proposal. Riiight.

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Sacramento’s winners and losers—with arbitrary points

The Sacramento Bee will  finally follow suit with the rest  of The McClatchy Company  press by outlawing anonymous comments on its online product.  Commenters now must sign in  using social-media accounts  such as Facebook, Twitter and  LinkedIn. Guess now everyone  is going to know that we’re the  force behind @Horse_ebooks.

+ 200

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Scorekeeper gives owner Vivek Ranadivé and  his Sacramento Kings a big round of applause  for their classy Twitter shoutout to Barbara  “Sign Lady” Rust, the lifelong Kings fan who was  diagnosed with breast cancer last week.

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We’re excited to read  journalist and rabblerouser R.E. Graswich’s  new book, Vagrant  Kings: David Stern,  Kevin Johnson and the  NBA’s Orphan Team.  And we’re relieved  that, with a little  help from his Twitter  friends, he’s stopped  referring to it as   “Vag Kings.”

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Penis for your thoughts

A would-be carjacker came up snake  eyes on his first two attempts  attempts Saturday afternoon in north  north Sacramento before scoring a vehicle  a vehicle with no people in it. According  According to police logs, one of the failed  failed attempts involved a suspect  suspect smashing out the window of  of a car with the driver and a  child still in it. The driver  then suffered minor injuries, then  sped off.

This has become a ballsy  habit: Sacramento city police  habit: Sacramento recorded another instance of a  recorded another man flashing his merchandise  man flashing to passing motorists near  to passing motorists Riverside Boulevard and  Riverside Boulevard Broadway Broadway late Saturday  late morning. This  morning. This broad-daylight attack on modesty ended  when officers picked  when officers up “a man matching  up “a the description” for a  the description” parole violation. We  parole won’t ask. won’t

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Better luck tomorrow The latest strong-mayor proposal, to be debated this week by city council, is a mess Sacramento Tomorrow unveiled its strong-mayor retread last week to the city council. The group wants us to think this effort is somehow basically different than Kevin Johnson’s Checks and Balances Act of 2012. So why title it the “2014 Checks and Balances Act,” hire the same consultants, and take money from the same businessmen to push it? arvin The Sacramento City Council will by CoSmo G consider the measure on Tuesday, cos mog@ n ewsrev iew.c om October 15, the first step on the way to the June 2014 ballot. Just like the old strong-mayor plan, the new one would give the mayor power to hire and fire the city manager, and also control the bureaucracy. The mayor could introduce and veto the budget, as well as ordinances. To garner more support for the plan, Sacramento Tomorrow has tossed in provisions for an independent redistricting commission and new term limits for council members. This version of strong mayor also leaves us with an eight-member city council. In the event of a tie, Sacramento Tomorrow’s spokesman David Nagler says, “one idea is to have the mayor come in and break the tie.” Terrible idea, and just one glaring problem in the measure, which Nagler says should take no more than two council meetings to vet. Sacramento Tomorrow’s argument basically boils down to this: “It is time for the voters to decide on strong mayor.” It’s a half-assed argument, which could be applied to anything. For example, it’s time voters decided on an ethics commission and campaign-finance reform and a full-time city council. Why? Because they haven’t yet. There is nothing magical about the strong-mayor idea that makes it worthy of the ballot—other than the fact that it has been flogged nonstop by a certain stubborn segment of the business community for five years. And, let’s be clear, strong mayor is not about “vision” or “accountability” or “checks and balances” or any of the warm and fuzzy words the consultants use. It’s about redistributing power. Today, labor and business, developers and neighborhood groups try to influence and win as many seats on the city council as they can. Power is spread around. Strong mayor creates a winner-take-all system, removing checks and tilting the balance. Neighborhood groups in particular will see their power diminished. Anybody not down with the winning team will be shut out. So, does Sacramento Tomorrow have the votes? Probably. Bites figures it’s down to the Steves. Councilman Steve Hansen is with Team K.J. much of the time, but maybe not this time. A year ago, when he was running for

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his council seat, he said pretty clearly that voters “don’t think charter reform or the strong mayor is a good idea. So let’s stop talking about it.” Last week, he told Bites he feels the same now. Councilman Steve Cohn has been unpredictable, sometimes voting with the mayor on this issue, sometimes against. Of course, any of the usual dissenters could vote yes just because they want to get it over with, and because they think voters will shoot it down anyway. And Cohn, Bonnie Pannell, Kevin McCarty and Darrell Fong are all shorttimers getting ready to retire or go for higher office. None of them will have to put up with a strong mayor.

Why should a small, self-selected group get to decide what is placed on the reform agenda? If the measure is to be placed on the June ballot, the city council will have to act by the end of the year. The compressed timeline is a problem, because this measure is a mess. The eight-member council is an obvious flaw. A fix would be to create a ninth council district, but that’s going to require a lot of thought and ultimately, cost a lot of money. And why shoehorn term limits and redistricting in with strong mayor? The city council can create a redistricting commission on their own, anytime between now and 2020. As for term limits, consider the hell they’ve played on the state Legislature. Sacramento Tomorrow added these into the deal as some sort of sweetener. But the overall package makes no sense. If the council really buys into the idea that “it is time” for voters to weigh in on strong mayor—it’s not, voters have expressed no interest—then at least let strong mayor stand on its own on the ballot, and let it have some competition. Why should a small, self-selected group get to decide what is placed on the reform agenda? Why not let local community groups and good-government advocates—who have been working for years to improve Sacramento’s governance—put forth their ideas for reform? Bites suggests an ethics commission and a full-time council; others have ideas every bit as worthy as strong mayor. The city council should at least give these community groups and their ideas the same access to the ballot that Sacramento Tomorrow is getting. Then let the voters decide. Ω

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487-0909

Bygone barbershop banter Getting your hair trimmed has  changed since the 1960s in Ohio

For reasons I do not understand but have come to appreciate, hair regularly grows out of my head. This is not a recent phenomenon. To solve this problem, over the last 62 years, I have regularly engaged the professional services of barbers and hairstylists. I would guess I have plodded into the chair, had a sheet draped over me and scissors applied to my hair about 500 times. While my hair color has changed from baby blond to light brown to old-man white over the years, the experience of getting my hair cut has l changed even more. When I was a young lad in a by JeFF VonKaene little town in northern Ohio during the 1950s and j e ffv @ne wsr e v ie w.c o m ’60s, riding my bike to the barbershop was a big deal. At the barbershop, there were sometimes other boys like me, always lots of men and never any women. But there was always a barbershop conversation that included all the men in the room, and sometimes us boys. Just by entering the barbershop, I became a member of the club. The conversation topics varied. The pitiful state of the Vermilion High School football team and the Cleveland Indians were often mentioned. The Cuban missile crisis was a hot topic, as was the assassination of President I grew my hair long. John F. Kennedy. As I got older, I too could share opinBut long hair was ions and even tell some jokes. not popular at the At the barbershop, I felt part of a bigger world. barbershop. Then, for me, things changed. First, it was seeing on television the young kids being blasted down the street by fire hoses because they believed their parents should be able to vote. I started to support the civil-rights movement, which was not very popular in the Vermilion barbershop. But then came the Vietnam War. I was angry. Angry about the war. Angry about the needless human slaughter. Angry that my friends and classmates were being drafted, and even more angry when they were killed. I was angry at my country, my government and even my barbershop. I grew my hair long. But long hair was not popular at the barbershop. I stopped feeling welcome, so I stopped going. Instead, I cut my own hair. A mistake. Had friends cut it. Another mistake. But as the fashion changed, my hairstyle again became shorter. For about 30 years, I went to cheap hair salons. They did a fine job. Jeff vonKaenel But they were definitely not like the Vermilion barberis the president, shop. No community dialogue. CEO and Recently, I have started going back to barbershops. majority owner of the News & Review I prefer them, but it’s not the way it used to be. I will newspapers in be in a room of 20 men, and nearly everyone is on their Sacramento, cellphone. I am in a room with 20 guys, and there are Chico and Reno. no jokes or discussions of politics. There is virtually no conversation, and certainly no group conversation. N Esense W S &ofR E V I E W B U S I N E S I miss the old barbershop. I miss that DESIGNER ISSUE community. Ω DATE AL 06.18.09 FILE NAME TRINITYCATHEDRAL061809R1

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This Modern World

by tom tomorrow

Support craft beer In downtown or Midtown Sacramento, you can buy a bottle of wine or liter of vodka to take home for personal consumption, but it’s illegal to buy a single bottle of beer to go. That’s because the unique-toSacramento single-serve ordinance, passed in the mid-1990s in the hope of controlling street drinking and vagrancy, is still on the books. It’s an impractical law that defies common sense, and we’re surprised the Sacramento County Supervisors are considering a similar ordinance for the parts of the county. It just doesn’t make sense, from a public-safety perspective, to prohibit the purchase of single bottles of beer while allowing sales of similar quantities of higher alcohol-by-volume beverages such as wine and spirits. Besides, there are other laws on the books that offer more effective means of dealing with public intoxication, loitering and other problems the single-serve law seeks to address. Additionally, extending the single-serve law to the county could slow the development of a booming local industry: the craft beer business. The Sacramento region is home to dozens of new breweries, most of which do not sell six-packs, but offer their high-quality brews in 22-ounce or 750-milliliter bottles. The supervisors should be looking for ways to support, not restrict, these dynamic new businesses. Ω

Real possible chaos

When right is wrong Last week, the federal government shut down for the first the ACA is a bad idea, using Dr. Seuss’ timeless time in almost 18 years, sounding a death knell tome, Green Eggs and Ham, as a metaphor for Republicans in the 2014 elections. Few knew by to prove it. (Notably, the book’s protagonist Dave Kempa this better than Sen. John McCain. decides he likes the green fare after trying it, The morning the shutdown began, the which is probably why Cruz is so scared.) Arizona Republican tweeted a Quinnipiac Cruz and his ilk have rallied the conservative University poll showing that American voters base against party affiliates like McCain by opposed the government shutdown by a 72–22 publishing works that paint them as Republicans margin. As we all know, House Republicans in name only, or RINOs. The tactic has proven tried on multiple occasions effective, forcing GOP to tack on a measure to the moderates up for re-election Republicans who budget that would defund the to stand with tea-party can still read the Affordable Care Act, effecmembers on some serious tively terminating President firebrand issues. One puppet signs see where Barack Obama’s signature is former Republican lion they’re headed: health-care legislation. Lindsey Graham. Facing straight out of McCain is a lifelong tough internal challenges Republican—you may to keep his South Carolina Washington, D.C. remember him running Senate seat, Graham is now against Obama on the GOP taking kamikaze orders from ticket in 2008—so why would he tweet such the tea party’s government deconstructionists. Cue the shutdown. For an online damning numbers? Because Republicans like him are no longer According to the Quinnipiac poll, Democratic version of this essay, visit in control of the party line. The tea party has voters oppose it by a 90-6 margin. Independents www.news wrested the wheel from the GOP establishoppose the shutdown 74-19. Hell, Republicans review.com/ only support it by a slim 49-44 count, which, sacramento/ ment, and Republicans who can still read the given the poll’s 2.5 percent margin of error, pageburner/blogs. signs see where they’re headed: straight out of Washington, D.C. actually represents a statistical tie. Given Enter Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, the new face these figures, it’s no wonder Congress has an all-time low approval rating of 10 percent. And email this essay’s of conservatism. Cruz likes to compare universal author at davek@ health-care coverage to Nazi Germany. Given it’s certainly cause for alarm for Republicans newsreview.com. the chance, he’ll spend 21 Bataan Death Marchcontrolling the house. Ω like hours (his words, not mine) telling you why B E F O R E   |   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

The U.S. government shut down last week, unable to pay its bills. The world’s greatest democracy was brought to a standstill by Republicans in Congress who would rather play Russian roulette with the economy than confront the severe dysfunction the teaparty faction has brought to their party and the nation. As of this writing, it’s unclear how long the shutdown will last or how much damage it will do. What’s apparent is that even if the current crisis is resolved quickly, there is another potentially more serious one just days away. If the tea partiers make good on threats to refuse to raise the so-called debt ceiling on October 17, the United States would default on its debts for the first time in history, and there is a very real possibility the result could be economic chaos on an international scale. None of this has to happen. Throughout the standoff in Washington, D.C., it’s been clear that there were more than enough votes to pass a budget and pay the country’s debts—if Republicans in Congress would allow those measures to reach the floor without tacking on anti-”Obamacare” provisions. In effect, the tea-party faction has held the government and the economy hostage, seeking political concessions they’ve been unable to achieve through the electoral process. This is no way to run a country. It’s time for moderate Republicans to take their party back, reject hostage-taking as a political strategy and work with Democrats to address the nation’s business. Ω

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Why do physicians  make different   end-of-life choices  than the rest of   us? SN&R asks   local docs.

DOCTORS’

BY MELINDA WELSH melindaw@newsreview.com

SECRET illustration by hayley doshay photos by anne stokes

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Dr. Ken Murray wrote an essay for the web-only magazine Zócalo Public Square, thinking he’d be lucky to attract a few dozen readers and generate an online comment or two. Instead, the physician—a UC Davis medical-school graduate who taught family medicine at the University of Southern California—drew an avalanche of responses. In fact, what he wrote put him center stage in a swirling debate about life, death and doctors. What did he reveal that was so groundbreaking? He claimed that a vast majority of physicians make dramatically different end-of-life choices than the rest of us. Put simply, most doctors choose comfort and calm instead of aggressive interventions or treatments, he said. Another way to look at it is that doctors routinely order procedures for patients near the end of life that they would not choose for themselves. What do doctors know that the rest of us don’t? According to Murray, physicians have seen the limitations of modern medicine up close and know that attempts to prolong a life can often lead to a protracted, heartbreaking death. Murray’s 2011 “How Doctors Die” was translated into multiple languages and written about in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post and The Sacramento Bee. Thousands of people commented on it via the scores of newspapers and blogs that reprinted it. Readers told of “near-dead relatives being assaulted with toxic drugs,” said Murray, being offered “painful procedures for no good reason.” Among the responses were hundreds of anecdotes from physicians and health-care professionals that backed Murray’s thesis. “Most of the stories were heart-wrenching,” he said. Data that proves the divide isn’t hard to find. Murray cites the Johns Hopkins Precursors Study, one of the longest longitudinal inquiries into aging in the world, which contains a running medical record of health statistics on a group of about 750 doctors, who were members of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore between 1948 and 1964. Through the years, the study has helped medical research correlate, for example, high blood cholesterol with heart attacks. But 15 years ago—with its participants in their 60s, 70s and 80s—the researchers began asking about end-oflife choices. Dr. Joseph Gallo, director of the Precursors Study, was happy to explain how the data has continually found that doctors—by a vast majority—make different choices when faced with dire diagnoses. Physicians who choose the least procedures also tend to have advance directives, an important bit of paperwork that allows patients to choose a health-care proxy and determine in advance what interventions they do or don’t want if they experience a decline in health.

In one scenario where the study group was asked what their wishes would be if they had an irreversible brain disease that left them unable to recognize people or speak, “most people would want everything,” said Gallo, while about 90 percent of doctors “would say no” to CPR, a mechanical ventilator (breathing machine), and kidney dialysis. About 80 percent of the doctors would also say no to major surgery or a feeding tube, he said. “It seems the more familiar you are with interventions, the less you want,” Gallo said point-blank. Welcome to “the gap.” Murray believes blame for the breach can be split three ways between bad physician-patient communication, unrealistic expectations on the part of patients, and their families and a health-care system that encourages excessive treatment. (Note: A quarter of all Medicare spending occurs in the last year of life.) But still, is it really true that doctors die differently right here in Sacramento? Is it possible that the region’s seriously ill people often undergo aggressive interventions before they die—ones they would not want if they better understood the likely outcomes? SN&R spoke to a number of Sacramento area physicians— especially internists, palliative care and hospice-certified ones—to explore their thoughts about the gap and ask about their own end-of-life wishes.

‘Don’t tube me’ When you consider the large number of deaths Sutter Health’s Dr. James McGregor has witnessed in his decades as a Sacramentoarea specialist in palliative care and hospice, it is poignant to see him almost overtaken with emotion while telling the story of Ella. An elderly woman diagnosed with a terminal illness, Ella (not her real name) had strong feelings about not having any medical interventions as she neared her life’s end. She’d filled out her paperwork to this effect and made it official, with her husband serving as her health-care agent in the event that she became unable to make her own decisions. Soon came the inescapable point when Ella, stretched out on a hospital bed and near the end of life, began having difficulty breathing. One of her many doctors said to the husband, “She’s struggling so much. Don’t you want her on a respirator?” Thinking the doctor knew best, the husband gave his consent, and Ella was hooked up to a breathing machine. That one moment’s choice turned into seven long days of regret. Despite her wishes, Ella remained marginally alive in the intensive care unit with “tubes everywhere” and a machine breathing for her throughout the week. According to McGregor, the husband then had to take responsibility to withdraw care. “He was heartbroken,” said McGregor. “He felt he had betrayed his wife during her last week of life. … You could see such pain.” McGregor, an expert in hospice care (which provides terminally ill patients with comfort rather than aggressive treatments) and palliative medicine (with its focus on relieving and preventing suffering), said Ella’s experience was probably more common than most people know. “I’ve seen patients die in the ICU with every line going, everything, and the family can’t even get close to them.”

“feature story” “DoCtors’ seCret” continued onpage page continued on XX BEFORE

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“DOCTORS’ SECRET” continued from page Indeed, though most people want to pass away at home surrounded by loved ones, 70 percent die in a hospital, nursing home or long-termcare facilities after a long struggle with advanced cancer, heart failure, incurable disease or the multiple incapacities of old age. When asked about the gap and why doctors don’t tend to find themselves hooked to respirators in ICUs at the end of their lives in the manner of Ella, McGregor was somber. “Often the question isn’t framed well,” said McGregor, as in, “‘We have two options here: We can go full-court press, or we can aggressively manage your symptoms and keep you comfortable. What would be quality of life for you?’” Physicians, he said, tend to choose option No. 2, because they’ve seen what they’ve seen, and “they know one intervention can start a whole cascade.” Dr. Kevin Ryan, a retired area physician and a self-published author from Solano County, puts it a different way: “Doctors have seen [death and dying] from every vantage point except it personally happening to them. “When you’re close to the fire, you know what it is to get burned.” Each of seven local doctors interviewed for this story brought up the difficulty many physicians have in communicating with patients who face a terminal or otherwise awful diagnosis. Medicine and hospitals exists to fight disease and death, goes the thinking, so if a patient dies, the doctor has failed. McGregor remembered a clinicalskills class he’d taken in medical school that imparted a first-person list of steps a physician should take that concluded with the words “if the patient dies, I failed.” “We’re supposed to do things, we’re supposed to fix things,” said McGregor. “Physicians can feel powerless if they can’t offer something, and it’s difficult for them to talk about the options that are not the aggressive ‘making you healthy’ options. … A physician can feel he’s failed a patient when he says, ‘Well, you can go to hospice.’” Indeed, a report published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine found that 69 percent of lung-cancer patients and 81 percent of colorectal-cancer patients did not report understanding from their doctor that chemotherapy was not at all likely to cure their cancer. But it runs two ways, said McGregor. The patient or the family can often come in with vastly unrealistic expectations, sometimes reinforced by popular culture. Many see CPR, for example, as a sure-bet lifesaver, but in

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truth, it is rarely effective. “There’s a popular misperception that medicine can fix everything,” he said. “And there’s also a sense of entitlement sometimes—‘You should give me everything.’” Sadly, another reason physicians sometimes “do everything” with terribly ill patients is fear of malpractice lawsuits. “I believe it is a factor,” said McGregor. The other doctors interviewed agreed. “Sometimes, [physicians] just say, ‘OK, we’ll give you everything,’ even though we know it’s not going to help” as a way of not becoming entangled in a legal action from a family member who thought more procedures were merited, he said. As for his own end-of-life wishes, McGregor was no different than all but one of the doctors interviewed by SN&R. If faced with a terminal illness, his wish is to die at home without interventions and with the assistance of hospice. “I joke that I have DNR, DNAR and AND tattooed on my chest,” said McGregor (do not resuscitate, do not attempt resuscitation, allow natural death). “Just don’t tube me,” he clarified.

‘No way  are they  doiNg that  to me’ It can be tough work getting a bit of time on a local physician’s schedule if you’re a regular patient, and that goes double if you’re a journalist hoping for an on-the-record interview about death. Canceled meetings, postponed conversations, ignored emails—maybe doctors just don’t want to talk about this subject? Or maybe they really are monumentally busy. In one case, a local physician suggested SN&R meet for a chat in the lobby of the Future Nissan of Roseville in the Auto Mall while his car was being worked on. Dr. Michael GuntherMaher appeared a healthy version of Breaking Bad’s Walter White, with a button-down shirt and tie, shaved head and goatee. After turning his car over to mechanics, the medical director for the Sacramento and Roseville Kaiser Permanente hospice apologized for the offbeat interview location, with its roaming salesmen and soft-rock soundtrack, and proceeded to tell the story of Sophie.


Dr. Jeffrey Yee, seen here with his patient Gloria Shaffer, runs a group-education program at Woodland Healthcare that teaches the elderly and infirmed about the importance of advance directives and Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment, or POLST, forms. “We try to get people to consider the issues beforehand,” he said.

An 88-year-old African-American woman, Sophie (not her real name) checked into Kaiser a few months back with a history of rapid weight loss and an infection called sepsis, said GuntherMaher. “We did some tests and found she was anemic. We scanned her abdomen … and we found a mass. It was very clear she had cancer,” he said. Initially, Sophie said she wanted the doctors to do everything possible to save her life, said GuntherMaher. At the family’s strong urging, the hospital proceeded to pull out all the stops with interventions and drugs. “And this woman just slowly died in the ICU with a tube down her throat,” he said. “The family finally said, ‘Take her off the machine.’ It was a very difficult and protracted ending to her life when there was no reasonable hope any of it would work.” GuntherMaher, who had been asked to consult on Sophie’s case in his role as a palliative specialist, reflected that the woman had given up the chance to return to Oakland to die peacefully in her own surroundings, “around friends and family who wanted so much to visit her, to say goodbye. … That opportunity was completely lost,” he said. “I have a lot of stories like this,” he said. “The hospital is full of them.” GuntherMaher views Sophie’s case as an example of what he refers to as the chaos that accompanies many end-of-life scenarios. BEFORE

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“A lot of life changes go on in Asked why doctors die different, the later years, and families are illas in Murray’s thesis, GuntherMaher prepared,” he said. “There’s illness. responded, “Doctors are different.” People are in and out of hospitals “As a group, we tend to be on the or nursing homes. They’re in these end of the spectrum where you find places, even though they used to capable, intelligent people. So, if you think, ‘I never wanted it to be like take [such] people and expose them to that.’ But there they are. And it’s these complexities and these difficulchaotic.” ties over and over again, they’re going It was a desire to help make order to take that and process it. out of such endof-life turmoil that led GuntherMaher on the path to his current post at Kaiser. “I think most people … what they have is fear,” he said. “They’re afraid. They’re confronted. There’s unfinished Dr. Jim McGregor business. They can’t accept that things will come to an end this way because they’re so “The other thing we [doctors] are not ready.” able to do is reconcile the physiology This state of mind, he said, often issues, the biology failing, with the lays the ground for patients or their more difficult slippery human issues. families to go for whatever procedures What is a life? What is death? What’s are offered, however aggressive. it all about? We’re confronted with Like every other physician SN&R that on virtually a daily basis. Nobody spoke to, GuntherMaher believes else in our society is, except maybe patients should be able to choose for pastors.” themselves whether or not to undergo GuntherMaher said the physitreatments near the end of life. “I’m cians he hangs out with are in the all for people choosing,” he said, “as hospital daily and “most of them long as it’s informed.” who have been vocal about [interventions near the end of life] have

basically said, ‘No way are they doing that to me.’” It was no surprise to find that GuntherMaher’s end-of-life choices echo that of other doctors in the Johns Hopkins’ study. In fact, he’d gathered his three 20-something children just a few months ago for a meeting about his wishes. His son and daughter were with there in person and “We got my daughter and son-in-law on FaceTime on the iPad,” he said. GuntherMaher pulled out his advance directive and showed his children a POLST form. Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment forms state what kind of medical treatment seriously ill patients—usually already in the hospital or a nursing facility—want for themselves. “I think it provided a good opportunity for us to be a family and talk about something meaningful together and practice compassionate listening and thoughtful speaking with one another,” he said, “and consider for a moment that time is precious.”

“ W hat people need to understand is that there is the possibility of having a comfortable death. … and they need to understand that medicine can’t fix everything.”

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Among other things, GuntherMaher told them, “I don’t want to be resuscitated if my heart stops. I don’t want to be on a mechanical ventilator. When my time comes, I want to die in my own home.”

‘Medicine  can’t fix  everything’ The place has the ambience of a modern airport terminal, with its long median aisle, high-ceiling skylights, stylish design and chairs positioned in rows around stations with smiling receptionists. Surprisingly, Woodland Healthcare (a service of Dignity Health) houses a newish Yolo County medical complex that even includes a classroom. Dr. Jeffrey Yee stands before his students—gray button-down shirt, khakis and a pocket pager—with all the friendly charisma of a socialscience professor. But he’s a doctor who takes time from his paid duties as a general internist to teach elderly and chronically ill patents about advanced directives and POLST forms. Yee’s audience in early September consisted

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“DOCTORS’ SECRET” continued from page

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Another program that could result in narrowing the gap between physicians and everybody else on end-of-life choices is dubbed ROYL, short for The Rest of Your Life. Dr. Philip Lisagor, a retired cardiothoracic surgeon and chief medical officer for ROYL in Reno, Nev., had a realization toward the end of his career: “It struck me that nobody was talking to patients with serious illnesses about what was happening,” he said. “A specialist would come in with some high-tech procedure and send them back to the referring doctor. Something else would happen to the patient, and they’d be off for another procedure. Doctors weren’t talking to each other or to their patients. “A game is played,” he said.

“ I DOn’T wanT TO bE RESuSCITaTED If my hEaRT STOpS. I DOn’T wanT TO bE On a mEChanICal vEnTIlaTOR. whEn my TImE COmES, I wanT TO DIE In my Own hOmE.” Dr. Michael GuntherMaher

Local physician Michael GuntherMaher said the doctors he hangs out with at the hospital who have been vocal about interventions near the end of life have said, “No way are they doing that to me.”

of 14 elderly patients—many of whom looked to be struggling with chronic disease or cancer. Yee, who testified in 1997 on behalf of POLST before the state Legislature, led his students through a PowerPoint presentation on advance directives and the importance of naming a health-care agent or proxy. He and a nurse practitioner even performed a skit where the two played siblings with different interpretations of what a doctor recommended should be done with a mom on life support. “We try to get people to consider the issues beforehand, to have conversations,” Yee told SN&R before the class. “We try to get people to experience the tensions and trade-offs they very well may face in the future.” Launched six months ago, Yee’s groupeducation project is one of many approaches being taken in the Sacramento region and across the country to better inform people about their options. Modeled after a much-lauded program at Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center in Lacrosse, Wis., which proactively encourages hospitalgoers to fill out advance directives, BEFORE

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Yee’s patients are invited to attend the two free classes by their doctor if their medical record triggers them as age 60 with a chronic illness (diabetes, heart failure, lung problems) or if they are simply 70 or older. Yee doesn’t use “end-of-life” terminology or the word “death” in his seminars. Nor does he discuss specific procedures and their possible outcomes. “When you reduce it to a conversation about ‘this procedure succeeds this amount of time,’ that doesn’t really give you the big picture,” he said. “What number should it be that you say, ‘This is a low chance of success’?” he asked. If you’re 95, he said, you might answer that question differently than if you are 30 and have three kids. Interestingly, Yee—the youngest doctor interviewed—was the only local physician who didn’t immediately say he would decline interventions if he himself was faced with a terminal illness. “It depends on the situation,” he said. “I don’t know that I could specify that so specifically now.”

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Lisagor noted that the profit motive should not be overlooked when discussing why the gap exists, and so many doctors often encourage interventions they themselves wouldn’t choose. “The health-care industry makes a huge amount of money on end-of-life care,” said Lisagor. Indeed, about 27 percent of Medicare’s annual $327 billion budget—$88 billion—now goes to care for patients in their final year of life. “Everyone in the system profits from more procedures,” said Lisagor, “including doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, people down the line in diagnostic centers and etc. … It’s an enormous issue.” Since retiring, Lisagor and colleagues set up the ROYL program, an online organizational system that walks people through “all the documents and information necessary for you to plan your life and health aging.” ROYL (www.theroyl.com) encompasses financial, emotional and physical issues in addition to medical and end-of-life planning. He hopes to beta test at a skilled nursing facility in the Reno area soon and, eventually, take the program out to the country. Some believe pilot programs like Yee and Lisagor’s will fasten together with other sweeping trends—the growth in hospital-based palliative-care programs, increased use of POLST forms, an uptick in the number of people dying in hospice care—and create a seismic shift in how America, and not just its doctors, faces death. Nudging along that transformation could be the huge numbers of baby boomers who have begun turning 65 (about 8,000 per day)

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and, thus, looking at their final chapter of life. In the social realm, members of this inimitable generation may set their sights on experiencing better deaths than the often-troubling ones they have been seeing their parents undergo. On the economic front, the boomers present a major financial incentive for addressing the issue, since Medicare costs for this single generation are projected to skyrocket if end-of-life scenarios remain status quo. Though a proposal to reimburse doctors for talking about end-of-life choices with patients was ultimately left out of the Affordable Care Act (thanks to Sarah Palin’s 2009 charge that such conversations amounted to “death panels” for “grandma”) many, like Ken Murray, think that controversy actually got people finally talking and thinking about end-of-life matters. “There’s a cultural change taking place across the country,” said Murray, the doctor with the oft-reprinted essay. “The taboo is unraveling. People want to talk about this. ... It’ll take time, but I believe it’s happening.” The local physicians interviewed for this story also tended to agree that things were improving in the end-of-life care realm. “I do think it’s getting better,” said McGregor. “I think what people need to understand is that there is the possibility of having a comfortable death, of mending relationships and dying surrounded by loved ones. People need to understand this as a real and viable option. “And they need to understand that medicine can’t fix everything.” Will better communication, reasonable expectations and a hoped-for future health-care system where financial incentives no longer skew toward senseless interventions help narrow Murray’s gap and increase the possibility for more “good” deaths? Naturally, the local doctors hope so. But perhaps Dr. GuntherMaher’s patient Clarice, who had been to see him just a few days before he talked to SN&R, can best give testament. In her early 60s, Clarice (not her real name) was diagnosed in February with kidney cancer. “She was not curable,” he said. After doing some tests, “We told her, ‘This is not looking good. You have advanced cancer, and you’re too weak to undergo chemotherapy, which means you don’t have any reasonable options for beating this.’” Clarice appreciated the candor, said GuntherMaher. “She has a spiritual belief system. She has a healthy marriage, healthy relationships with her kids, and she said, ‘I’ll be OK with this. I want to go home and be with my family and let them take care of me. I can still enjoy some time with them.’” She left the hospital and went into hospice, said the doctor. “I spoke to her daughter yesterday, and they’re flying her sister home from Guam. … The family is coming together. The children are saying, ‘I’m dropping everything to be with Mom.’ There’s a time in life when you just do that.” In other words, Clarice accepted her fate and prepared for her own good death. She knew what she wanted. She made her choices. She embraced a truth about dying that most physicians already know all too well: Often doing less allows so much more. Ω for more information about end-of-life planning, or to find an advance-directive form, go to the Coalition for Compassionate Care of California at www.coalitionccc.org.

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W

hat’s the old cliche—the more things stay

the same, the more things change? OK, maybe that’s not exactly how it goes, but it does seem apropos for the Sacramento music scene. Artists come, and artists go. Bands form, and bands implode. Venues open, and venues shut down. One constant: For 22 years and counting, SN&R has highlighted the best in local music via the Sacramento Area Music Awards, a.k.a. the Sammies, an annual celebration of musicians who run the gamut of genres, including pop, rock, indie, hip-hop, rap, metal, hardcore, punk, jazz and experimental. Cake, Chelsea Wolfe and C Plus. Tesla, Tribe of Levi and Track Fighter. Deftones, Death Grips, Dog Party and DJ Whores. And that’s just for starters. Another constant? You. Every year, countless Sacramento fans support their favorite local artists by going to gigs, buying merchandise and spreading the word.

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BY

SN&R’S ANNUAL SAMMIES AWARDS CELEBRATE THE DIVERSITY OF THE LOCAL MUSIC SCENE—AND THE FANS WHO SUPPORT IT

RACHEL LEIBROCK

RACHELL@NEWSREIEW.COM

They also get out the vote. And, sure, playing your heart out on a stage—be it to 500 rabid devotees or to a handful of your closest relatives—isn’t about some plaque you might get down the road, but it certainly doesn’t hurt to know that people like you—they really like you. This year, thousands of votes were logged for hundreds of nominees in dozens of categories. The resulting nominations ballot represents a diverse spectrum of sounds and microscenes. There are heavy-metal bands that rock the suburbs, and punks who play grimy basement parties. There are deejays who whip up a frenzied dance party at the latest, hippest club, and reggae bands who lull fans into a peaceful calm. There are, of course, earnest singer-songwriters who toil away in Midtown coffee shops, and seasoned jazz musicians who could easily share the stage with any of the genre’s most famous. They’re all here. And they’re all pretty damn worthy. For your consideration: the 2013 Sammies nominees. Check out the artists, visit their websites, listen to their tracks, buy their records (or whatever it is the kids do these days) and check out an upcoming gig. Listen. Like. Support. Whatever you do, just don’t forget to vote.


Photo CoURtESY oF AUtUMN SKY

Photo BY StEVEN ChEA

Young Aundee is up for the Artist of the Year, Experimental and Release of the Year Sammies awards.

Don’t let that fresh face deceive—veteran Autumn Sky is a multiple Sammies award winner and a Hall of Fame 2013 contender.

Hall of fame 2 0 1 3

The Nickel Slots Rachel Steele & Road 88

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Blu e s

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D a n ce n i g H t

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em cee C Plus Century Got Bars Chuuwee Hennessy Mahtie Bush Nome Nomadd N-Pire Da Great Peso Harlem Soosh*E Task1ne Yung Gatlin

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sammies nominations BEFORE

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Enjoy Responsibly

© 2013 Shock Top Brewing Co., Shock Top® Belgian-Style Wheat Ale, St. Louis, MO

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Ad Name:Shock Top Item #: PST201310453 Job/Order #: 252965

Closing Date:7/15/13 QC: CS

Pub: Sacramento News

Trim: 10x11.5 Bleed:none Live:9.5x11


CONTINUED

sammies nominations FROM PAGE

23 Photo courtesy of stevie Nader

Never heard of Stevie Nader? That’ll change soon. He’s up for Sammies awards in the Live Performer, New Artist, Release of the Year and Singer-songwriter categories.

Hard r ock A Mile Till Dawn A Single Second Allinaday California Riot Act Dogfood Fair Struggle Journal Long in the Tooth Misamore Overwatch Skin of Saints Some Fear None Terra Ferno Track Fighter

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Jazz Elements Brass Band E-Squared Harley White Jr. Orchestra Alex Jenkins Trio Jim Martinez Quartet Tony Passarell Shawn Raiford Derek Thomas Band

La ti n Cura Cochino Dinorah In the No La Noche Oskura Mentes Diferentes

Pro Mañon Rey y Kaye Ritmoz Latinoz Solsa World Hood

L i v e p er f o r m er Alkali Flats Exquisite Corps Kepi Ghoulie Kill the Precedent Nickel Slots Stevie Nader

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our wings are back!

m et a L Black Mackerel Chernobog Deadlands Drop Seven FallRise For All Ive Done In the Silence Lifeforms Plague Widow Prylosis Restrayned Stepchild Zeroclient

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sammies nominations BEFORE

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

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SAMMIES NOMINATIONS FROM PAGE

25 PhotoS BY KAYLEIGh MCCoLLUM

Emcee C Plus knows a Sammies nomination is better than a higher grade any day.

The Island of Black and White is up for another Sammie in the Reggae/ Jam category.

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P oP /Rock

Stevie Nader, 333 Young Aundee, Fear in the Fold

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P ost-P unk

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AM/RT

teen aRtist A Mile Till Dawn Dog Party Four Days Out Ugly Bunny

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CARSON CITY

GHOST WALK

tR i B u t e B a n d Cash Prophets (tribute to Johnny Cash) Chicago Tribute Authority (tribute to Chicago) Journey’s Edge (tribute to Journey) Stellar (tribute to Incubus) SuperHuey (tribute to Huey Lewis and the News)

Re lease of th e Y e a R

t u R nt a B l i s t

Bansky, Red DLRN, Awakenings Dog Party, Lost Control Screature, Screature Doombird, Cygnus Paper Pistols, Deliver Us From Chemicals Ru, Rollr Coastr Saint Solitaire, Full Artistic Control   NEWS

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BAT FESTIVAL FUNDRAISER

From Robert Reich, former US Secretary of Labor, comes a humorous and enlightening exposé on America’s widening income gap.

R o c k PRod u c eR

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– ROGER HICKEY,

Saturday October 12th 4pm • $700 Donation

Charles Albright Dusty Brown Tony Cale Robert Cheek John Glover Joe Johnston Ira Skinner Sean Stack Chris Woodhouse

P u nk

Rock

Charles Albright The Croissants Dog Party Ghostplay G. Green Nacho Business Pets Screature Sneeze Attack

BEFORE

B.F.F.

A MUST-SEE MOVIE!

FEATURE

90 Minute guided walking tours

$15 advance | $20 at the door

MINI GHOST TOURS

MADE FOR KIDS Have Fun! Dress Up!

10:15pm | 10:45pm 11:15pm | 11:45pm

Under 12 Must Be Accompanied By Adult.

All walks meet on the corner of 3rd and Curry Street, Carson City

Tickets at

Vote online at www.sammies.com.

|

All Day 10am-2:30pm

$7 advance | $10 at the door

AmpOne Mike Colossal DJ El Conductor DJ Mr. Vibe DJ Nocturnal Kodac Visualz

October 19, 2013

STORY

brownpapertickets.com 775.348.6279

carsoncityghostwalk.com

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GEM FAIRE October 11, 12, 13 Scottish Rite Center

Info and www.riv tickets: ertan or 916.4 go.com

{ 6151 H St. }

43.7008

FRI. 12-6 | SAT. 10-6 | SUN. 10-5 - General admission $7 weekend pass -

ü Huge selection from around the world!

Gems

ü Buy direct from importers & wholesalers ü Jewelry repair while you shop ü Free hourly door prize drawings ü Displays & demos by Sacramento Mineral Society

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sbl en t er ta inmen t p r e sen t s

leon russell

s u nday, oc tober 20th assembly

The Mavericks s u nday, o c t o b e r 2 7 t h

monday, november 4th crest theatre

crest theatre

nicholas david oct 13 · harlows

rusted root

WITH MASSIVE dELICIOuS oct 25 · harlows

aaron carter nov 12 · assembly

anna nalick nov 20 · harlows

ed kowalczyk of live dec 7 · assembly

chef robert irvine jan 14 · crest theatre

FOR ALL TICKETS VISIT SBLENTERTAINMENT.COM


October picks by SHOKA

Dreaming of the 1980s There are several amazing things to love about photographer Stu Levy. First, his artist’s bio begins like this: “After his college rock band failed to make it big, he went on to med school, becoming a physician and practicing family medicine in Portland, Oregon.” Levy must have channeled his musical creative energy into visual art while he was professionally healing families, capturing fetching landscapes and intricate multiframe environmental portraits. The latter, Grid-Portraits, are black-and-white gestalts of around 12 to 20 individual photographs that create a wide-angle view into his subjects’ homes or offices. In them, sometimes the edges of the furniture don’t align, or sometimes the baby in foreground is also in the middle ground and the background, giving the impression that the room is overrun with babies. He engages the viewer’s perception in a playful way, sometimes leaving humorous details in one of the frames of the grid, such as an ax over a baby’s crib. Or even better, the former mayor of Portland in the 1980s, Bud Clark, with a handlebar mustache, beard and plus fours on his bicycle, way before Portlandia ever spoofed dreaming of the 1890s. And that is hard not to love. Where: Viewpoint Photographic Art Center, 2015 J Street, Suite 101; (916) 441-2341; www.viewpointgallery.org. Artist’s reception: Friday, October 11, 5:30-8:30 p.m. Second Saturday reception: October 12, 5:30-9 p.m. Through November 2. Hours: Tuesday through Thursday, noon-6 p.m.; Friday through Saturday, noon-5 p.m.

“Artist’s Proof and Consequences” by Stu Levy, photograph.

Evolution of space Evolve the Gallery has evolved into a larger gallery space. It recently settled into its new location on Third Avenue and Broadway in Oak Park in the former 40 Acres Art Gallery space. The move only covered a couple blocks, but the larger new space will mean there’s room for more art. The current show features African and African-American female artists, such as Dawn Williams Boyd and her quiltlike “cloth paintings.” Her work addresses racism, spirituality and sexuality. Her provocative “Odalisque,” for instance, is a take on Édouard Manet’s classic painting of a nude prostitute in repose, “Olympia,” but Williams Boyd’s dark figure lies on her stomach instead, contrasted by a pile of colorful pillows, rendering her more like a silhouette. Unlike Manet’s woman, who stares directly at the viewer with a dark-skinned servant presenting her flowers at her bedside, Williams Boyd’s woman faces away from the viewer, glancing over her shoulder, with two contrasting smiles.

“Shizuka” (detail) by Yoshio Taylor, ceramic.

The professor and the professed When one is a professor of art for decades, such as Ruth Rippon, one may accumulate a cadre of talented students. The former Sacramento State University professor’s third annual alumni show features some of her past students of the ceramic arts who have gone on to establish names for themselves in the local art scene and beyond. The group show includes Terry Accomando, Garon Curtis, Eric Dahlin, Linda S. Fitz Gibbon, Ray Gonzales, Fred Gordon, Lee Kavaljian, Steve Klein, Tony Natsoulas, Larry L. Ortiz, Joel Reber, Yoshio Taylor, Warren Tobey, Rimas VisGirda, Doug Wylie, Gloria Woolley and others.

Where: Evolve the Gallery, 3428 Third Avenue; (916) 572-5123; www.evolvethegallery.com. Hours: Second Saturday, 1 to 6 p.m., and by appointment. Through October 26.

Where: Alpha Fired Arts, 4675 Aldona Lane; (916) 484-4424; www.alphafiredarts.com. Hours: Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Through October 26.

“Odalisque” by Dawn Williams Boyd, mixed media cloth painting, 2005. BEFORE

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+

Coffee inspired dinner

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Created by Chef Michael Theimann

18TH ST.

17TH ST.

14TH ST.

13TH ST.

12TH ST.

11TH ST.

26 Oct. 19 Dinner begins 6pm at Folsom Blvd location Tickets at CFCR Folsom Blvd (Limited seating)

ChocolateFishCoffee.com

3 DOWNTOWN 3rd & Q St 6:30am–4pm Mon–Fri

EAST SAC 48th & Folsom Blvd 7am–6pm Daily

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ART MAP 7 BLUE LAMP 1400 Alhambra Blvd.,

MIDTOWN 1 ALEX BULT GALLERY 1114 21st St., (916) 476-5540, www.alexbultgallery.com

2 ART OF TOYS 1126 18th St., (916) 446-0673, www.artoftoys.com

3 ART STUDIOS 1727 I St., behind Michaelangelo’s; (916) 444-2233

4 ARTFOX GALLERY 2213 N St., Ste. B; (916) 835-1718; www.artfox.us

5 AXIS GALLERY 1517 19th St., (916) 443-9900, www.axisgallery.org

6 B. SAKATA GARO 923 20th St., (916) 447-4276, www.bsakatagaro.com

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(916) 455-3400, www.bluelamp.com

8 BOWS & ARROWS 1815 19th St., (916) 822-5668, www.bowscollective.com

9 CAPITAL ARTWORKS 1215 21st St., Ste. B; (916) 207-3787; www.capital-artworks.com

10 CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ART, SACRAMENTO 1519 19th St., (916) 498-9811, www.ccasac.org

11 CUFFS 2523 J St., (916) 443-2881, www.shopcuffs.com

12 ELLIOTT FOUTS GALLERY 1831 P St., (916) 446-1786, www.efgallery.com

13 GALLERY 21TEN 2110 K St., (916) 476-5500, www.gallery2110.com

14 INTEGRATE SACRAMENTO 2220 J St., (916) 541-4294, http://integrateservices sacramento.blogspot.com

15 KENNEDY GALLERY 1931 L St., (916) 716-7050, www.kennedygallerysac.com

16 LITTLE RELICS 908 21st St., (916) 716-2319, www.littlerelics.com

17 MIDTOWN FRAMING & GALLERY 1005 22nd St., (916) 447-7558, www.midtownframing.com

18 OLD SOUL CO. 1716 L St., (916) 443-7685, www.oldsoulco.com

19 RED DOT GALLERY 2231 J St., Ste. 101; www.reddotgalleryonj.com

20 SACRAMENTO ART COMPLEX 2110 K St., Ste. 4; (916) 476-5500; www.sacramentoartcomplex.com

21 SACRAMENTO GAY & LESBIAN CENTER 1927 L St., (916) 442-0185, http://saccenter.org

22 SHIMO CENTER FOR THE ARTS 2117 28th St., (916) 706-1162, www.shimogallery.com

23 TIM COLLOM GALLERY 915 20th St., (916) 247-8048, www.timcollomgallery.com

24 UNION HALL GALLERY 2126 K St., (916) 448-2452

25 UNIVERSITY ART 2601 J St., (916) 443-5721, www.universityart.com


Sacramento Vedanta Reading Group

DON’T MISS E ST.

43

23RD ST.

22ND ST.

Every Friday 7:00 - 8:30 pm · Free admission

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17 14 1 20 13 24 9

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. BLVD 2837 36th St., (916) 457-1240, www.thebrickhousegalleryoakpark.com

28 ZANZIBAR GALLERY 1731 L St.,

38 VOX SACRAMENTO 1818 11th St.,

III DEL PASO WORKS BUILDING GALLERIES

(916) 444-7125, www.artcollab.com

32 CROCKER ART MUSEUM 216 O St., (916) 808-7000, www.crockerartmuseum.org

33 E STREET GALLERY AND STUDIOS 1115 E St., (916) 505-7264

34 EXHIBIT S 547 L St., (203) 500-8679, www.exhibitsstudios.com

35 LA RAZA GALERÍA POSADA 2700 Front St., (916) 446-5133, www.larazagaleriaposada.org

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NEWS

V EVOLVE THE GALLERY 3428 Third Ave.,

J

TRUCKLOAD

(916) 572-5123, www.evolvethegallery.com

VI KNOWLTON GALLERY 115 S. School St.,

40 CAPITAL PUBLIC RADIO 7055 Folsom Blvd.,

St., (916) 456-4455, www.fegallery.com

42 GALLERY 14 3960 60th St.,

All Art Alternatives Canvas will be 50-70% OFF!

VII PATRIS STUDIO AND ART GALLERY 3460 Second Ave., (916) 397-8958, http://artist-patris.com

(916) 278-8900, www.capradio.org

41 FE GALLERY & IRON ART STUDIO 1100 65th

CANVAS SALE

Ste. 14 in Lodi; (209) 368-5123; www.knowltongallery.com

(916) 923-6204, www.archivalframe.com

VIII RECLAMARE GALLERY & CUSTOM TATTOO 2737 Riverside Blvd.,

University Art

(916) 760-7461, www.reclamareart.com

(916) 456-1058, www.gallery14.net

IX SACRAMENTO TEMPORARY CONTEMPORARY 1616 Del Paso Blvd.,

43 JAYJAY 5520 Elvas Ave.,

(916) 921-1224, www.tempartgallery.com

(916) 453-2999, www.jayjayart.com

X AMERICAN VISIONS ART GALLERY

OFF MAP

705 Sutter St. in Folsom, (916) 351-1623, www.avartgallery.com

XI GALLERY 1855 820 Pole Line Rd. in Davis,

I BLUE LINE GALLERY 405 Vernon St., Ste. 100 in Roseville; (916) 783-4117; http://bluelinegallery.blogspot.com

FEATURE

/ San

455-1125, www.deltaworkshopsac.com

39 ARCHIVAL FRAMING 3223 Folsom Blvd.,

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IV DELTA WORKSHOP 2598 21st St., (916)

www.voxsac.com

DOWNTOWN/OLD SAC EAST SAC 31 ARTISTS’ COLLABORATIVE GALLERY 129 K St.,

...

1001 Del Paso Blvd.

(916) 443-4960, www.templecoffee.com

second floor; (916) 672-1098; www.arthouse-sacramento.com

P LU S

o of s ale does d day nt place iscou D rs . e E rd d to me o ing L IT ms limite m fra e Fram custo ms. It stom e s u it e C d d Inclu ounte ers pply to not a y disc C.O.D. ord Does alread or pply to d. No mail not a n on ha stock

If it’s creative, reative, it’s ’s here!

II THE BRICKHOUSE ART GALLERY

Ste. 100; (916) 446-4444; www.smithgallery.com

37 TEMPLE COFFEE 1010 Ninth St.,

30 ARTHOUSE UPSTAIRS 1021 R St.,

including g! amin r F m usto

Alto Palo

2015 J St., (916) 441-2341, www.viewpointgallery.org

492-2207, www.theadamsongallery.com

S!

r nto up fo ame k c Sacr / Sto e os nly.

36 SMITH GALLERY 1020 11th St.,

29 ADAMSON GALLERY 1021 R St., (916)

2013

eryda FF ev O % al 10 ems! ted it dition coun an ad is e D k ta ys! AR EN B olida h GRE e th

KLIN

FRAN

FREEPORT BLVD.

BR

(916) 443-5601, www.zanzibartrading.com

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25% F

80

(916) 585-4483, www.theurbanhive.com

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y a D e n O ! e l a S r Supe

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LY LUTE O S G st AB TH I N Y R at lea E E EV STOR E H T F IN

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26 THE URBAN HIVE 1931 H St.,

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The whole world is your own. — Sri Sarada Devi

For more information please see www.SacVRG.org

OC TO

7

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Parking in back

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N ST.

Sacramento Yoga Center @ Sierra 2 Community Center, Room 6 2791 24th Street, Sacramento

STORY

(530) 756-7807, www.daviscemetery.org

Palo Alto |

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PHOTOS BY iSTOCK/THiNKSTOCK

For the week of October 10

A TALE OF TOO TIPSY IT’S

October, and autumn temperatures continue to drop  on a nightly basis. There are several options to deal with  this situation: turn on the heater, light up a fireplace or wear  warm flannel pajamas. Or another (and my favorite) option:  consume alcoholic beverages. Luckily, that’s something that can  be done while socializing. This week offers two fun events great  for warming the belly with libations (note: Alcohol doesn’t really  warm a person up, so don’t forget to bundle up during chilly  evenings). Sacramento Turn Verein, where, according to its website,  “folks with German ancestry and people with an interest in  German culture congregate,” will host its annual Oktoberfest celebration this weekend. Friday and Saturday night, it’ll fill its halls  with music, food, beer, wine and folk dancing. Admission costs  $20 for adults, $15 for college students with ID and $5 for children  12 and younger. It happens from 6 p.m. to midnight on Friday,  October 11, and from 3 p.m. to midnight on Saturday, October 12,  at 3349 J Street. Visit www.sacoktoberfest.com for more details. There’s plenty of sake to warm oneself up with this week, too,  at the ninth-annual Northern California Premium Sake Fest. It’s  on Tuesday, October 15, from 6 to 9 p.m. at the DoubleTree by  Hilton Hotel Sacramento at 2001 Point West Way. The festival will  serve up more than 100 types of sake, shochu (a Japanese liquor)  and Japanese beer. There will also be taiko drummers, a sushi  contest, an auction and food from local restaurants. Tickets cost  $60 in advance and $70 at the door. For more information, visit  www.nafdc.com.

—Jonathan Mendick

wEEkLy PIckS

Sacramento International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival

Farm Sanctuary’s Walk for Farm Animals

Thursday, OcTOber 10, ThrOugh saTurday, OcTOber 12 Smack-dab in the middle of LGBT  History Month—and also landing  on National Coming Out  FILM Day—the Sacramento  International Gay and Lesbian  Film Festival presents short films,  documentaries and feature films.  This year, proceeds benefit Cares  Community Health. $10-$40,   6 p.m., plus a free 2 p.m. matinee on  Saturday at the Crest Theatre,   1013 K Street; www.siglff.org.

—Jonathan Mendick BEFORE

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NEWS

saTurday, OcTOber 12

saTurday, OcTOber 12, ThrOugh sunday, OcTOber 13

The benefits of participating in  Farm Sanctuary’s Walk for Farm  Animals are: It raises awareness  and funds to help protect and rescue factory-farm animals, the   2.7-mile walk with other animal  lovers will fulfill exercise and social  quotas for the day, dogs are invited  to walk with their  ANIMALS bipeds, and there  will be face painting by the twinkly  fairies of Happily Ever Laughter.  $15-$25, check in at 10 a.m. at  Southside Park, 2115 Sixth Street;  www.walkforfarmanimals.org.

A 30-minute drive down the Jackson  Highway delivers day-trippers to  the bountiful and always bustling  Davis Ranch. This weekend the  ranch emerges in full autumnal  form with hay  FESTIVAL rides, tractor  rides to the pick-your-own pumpkin  patch, a corn maze, and a mountain  of dried gourds that will have you  feverishly perusing Pinterest for  gourd crafts. Free, 9 a.m. to   5 p.m. daily at 13211 Jackson Road   in Sloughhouse, (916) 682-2658,  www.zslproductions.net/harvest.

—Shoka

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Harvest Festival

F E AT U R E

STORY

—Julianna Boggs

|    A R T S & C U L T U R E

Sacramento Puppy & Kitten Show saTurday, OcTOber 12, ThrOugh sunday, OcTOber 13 The upside to being way too  obsessed with your pet is that  PETS there are tons of other  people that are way too  obsessed with their pets, too. Meet  some of them at the Sacramento  Puppy & Kitten show, where attendees can chat with a pet psychic, plan  pet birthday parties, enter their  furry besties in a costume contest  and buy various pet accoutrements.  $8.50-$10, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Cal  Expo, 1600 Exposition Boulevard;  www.sacramentopuppyandkitten  show.com. |

On Trail ThrOugh nOvember 2 So, you didn’t get to go on a summer vacation. Take one this month  by heading to the Viewpoint  Photographic Art Center to check out  On Trail: Images from Hiking Trails  of the American West, a collection of  photographs by Garrett Cotham that  will give viewers glimpses of some of  the best hiking trails this  ART side of the Mississippi. Free,  Second Saturday reception from   5:30 to 9 p.m. on October 12, at  Viewpoint Photographic Art Center,  2015 J Street, Suite 101; (916) 441-2341;  www.viewpointgallery.org.

—Jonathan Mendick

—Deena Drewis

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1

10/4/13

1:36 PM

Same Beautiful Ambience, Whole New Casual Feel.

Big

Kick-Off PARTY

SECOND SATURDAY OCTOBER 12

TH

» New Menu with 3 for $12 apps » Newly redone 2nd floor with new lounge areas » Free live music every Fri & Sat, 9:30 PM » Remodeled upstairs patio » $2.50 Craft Beer Cans | MONDAYS » $2 TUESDAYS » Progressive Happy Hour 3-6 PM | FRIDAYS

RECYCLE THIS PAPER.

Sactoberfest_SNR-CNR_Ad4_10-3-13.pdf

OKTOBERFEST

inaugural

LIVE MUSIC

Synchro 10PM - 12AM

OCT. 19TH

» NO COVER « FOOD

ISTRICT West ED Sa c 2013 X

IDG BR

& DRINK SPECIALS

Craft style bar and grill situated in a classic 1910 craftsmen structure.

C

1217 21st Street, Sacramento

916.440.0401

M

www.kuprosbistro.com

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CM

MY

Think Oktoberfest is over? Think again! We’re saving the biggest and the best for ) 01 d Sactoberfest! Strap on your lederhosen, cinch up your dirndl dress and come experience the largest and most authentic Oktoberfest in the Sacramento Valley! German biers, games, costumes, music, dancing and more!

CY

CMY

K

VISIT SACTOBERFEST.COM FOR TICKETS AND INFORMATION

Help us raise money for our own Hooters Girl & Manager Deanna Arellano

Add $1 or more to any pitcher and donate to Deanna’s cancer treatment

Tickets start at just $25 and include a 1/2-Litre styrene Munich stein* and complimentary first beer! VIP tickets include bottomless beer, free parking, 10 tasting tickets and more! *First 1,000 through the gates PARTNERS:

sacramento

/hootersofnatomas Sactoberfest is a 21 and over event

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/hooterssac

/hootersrancho

YOU’RE WELCOME, NATURE.

» Happy Hour 9 PM - Close | SATURDAYS


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A new take on the grape Downtown & Vine 1200 K Street, Suite 8; (916) 228-4518; http://downtownandvine.com With all the recent talk about “farm to fork,” we seem to be neglecting some unique local “farm-to-glass” by experiences. Only in California—where everyAnn Martin Rolke one and his brother seems to be a home-brewer or winemaker—would such an oversight occur. Microbreweries and pubs abound, but our vintner friends seem less celebrated here. Downtown & Vine, slightly hidden on the K Street block near the Esquire IMAX Theatre, is here to change that. This tasting room and wine bar opened in December 2012, with Gregg Lamer, rating: who holds the title of certified sommelier, and chef Kate Chomko, who trained at the HHHH Culinary Institute of America and Le Cordon dinner for one: Bleu College of Culinary Arts. $10 - $15 These terrifically knowledgeable owners have mostly been operating under the radar, but have big plans afoot. With a new wine-bar license allowing them more event latitude and plans for special guests, Downtown & Vine should be on your to-do list. One of the best aspects of the setup here is that diners can order 2-ounce tasting flights of wine. Choose three from the same vintner to compare styles, or mix and match to H contrast similar wines from different producflawed ers. It showcases 12 wineries, primarily from HH regions nearby. haS momentS The Clarksburg Wine Company in the Delta, HHH for example, specializes in the chenin blanc appealing varietal specific to our area. Its tasting flight HHHH offers three different takes on the grape, which authoritative helps drinkers discern more about personal likes HHHHH and dislikes. Wines are also available in larger epic pours and by the bottle. Lamer plans to highlight a local vintner each week in addition to wines from Italian and Spanish regions as sourced by Bay Area merchant Kermit Lynch. Any good winemaker, however, will tell you that wine is meant to be enjoyed with food. Chomko recently updated the menu to offer a wider selection of tidbits and heartier dishes. Still hungry? Choose from tapas, such as goat-cheese stuffed Search Sn&r’s peppers, chilled Spanish-spiced shrimp, and “dining directory” to find local a cheddar-and-apple melt. The latter helped restaurants by name Downtown & Vine win “best overall” restauor by type of food. rant in August at the Old Sugar Mill’s Wine, Sushi, mexican, indian, Cheese & Bread Faire. italian—discover it all in the “dining” Served on Bella Bru cranberry-walnut bread, section at the open-faced bites are simple enough for kids www.news to enjoy, but also complex enough for adults. review.com. The crunchy, cool apples and melted, warm Fiscalini Farms cheddar are blissful together. Olive-oil potato chips and sweet-sour pickles served alongside are perfect complements. Also try the ambrosial Wine Country sandwich, with salty prosciutto, sweet fig jam, oozy mozzarella and peppery arugula on grilled bread. There are also a variety of flatbreads loaded with topping combos like capicola, three cheeses, piquillo peppers and green onions. The bread for these is nicely crunchy but not too BEFORE

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chewy and comes across as more than a pizza trying to be fancy. Pair a plate of three cheeses with a flight of wine, or choose a platter loaded with tapas and charcuterie to compare with the vino. Downtown & Vine has also recently added flights of craft beers, including selections from North Coast Brewing Co. in Fort Bragg.

Served on Bella Bru cranberry-walnut bread, the open-faced bites are simple enough for kids to enjoy, but also complex enough for adults. Desserts are limited, but include choices from cult-favorite Andrae’s Bakery in Amador City and About a Bite Bakery in Rancho Cordova. Andrae’s Basque cake is part pound cake, part nirvana, with a moist, buttery texture paired with tangy crème fraîche and lemon syrup. The mint-ganache “bites” from About a Bite are the perfect size to enjoy with a dessert wine or glass of sparkly. While the focus is on the wines, the food here is also perfectly executed. Chomko brings her background as a wine-country chef to Sacramento to help make this a true urban winecountry experience, from farm to glass. Ω

Burger under $10

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Frozen elegance Notice any additional little freezer cases appearing in grocery stores over the past few months? Curious eyes that peer into the frosty, white boxes may find an earth-toned rainbow of frozen sorbetto and gelato pops in simple cellophane wrappers called Bar Gelato by Naia from a gelateria in the Bay Area. Of 25 flavors, nine of them are sorbettos, so they’re dairy- and egg-free, such as the elegant kiwi and the Masumoto Farm peach bars. The ingredients are sourced from nearby farms and companies—including the Masumoto Family Farm near Fresno and the Guittard Chocolate Company in the Bay Area, the latter of which makes for a stellar vegan dark-chocolate pop. Find these treats at Whole Foods Markets, Courtyard Market at Sacramento State University (6000 J Street) and other locations listed at www.bargelato.com.

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Davis

403 3rd st | 530.750.3600

SMF Airport

6850 airport Blvd | terminal B

Chico

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Sacramento

1409 r st | 916.442.0900

www.BurgersBrew.com

—Shoka |

spot to Drink a few Pints

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Downtown Estelle’s Patisserie With its marble

Where to eat?

tables and light wooden chairs,  there’s an airy atmosphere,  casual and cozy. Estelle’s offers  an espresso bar and a wide  assortment of teas and muffins and rolls for the breakfast  crowd as well as sweets,  including DayGlo macarons. For  the lunch-inclined, there are  soups, salads, sandwiches and  meat or meatless quiche. One  of the authentic touches is the  spare use of condiments. The  smoked salmon is enlivened by  dill and the flavor of its croissant. Its tomato bisque is thick  and richly flavored, and, in a  nice touch, a puff pastry floats  in the tureen as accompaniment. There’s a lot to like about  Estelle’s—except dinner. Doors  close at 6pm. French. 901 K St.,  (916) 551-1500. Meal for one:  $5-$10. HHH1⁄2 G.L.

Here are a few recent reviews and regional recommendations by Becky Grunewald, Ann Martin Rolke, Garrett McCord and Jonathan Mendick, updated regularly. Grange Restaurant & Bar You  won’t find any “challenging”  Check out dishes on this menu—just  www.newsreview.com delicious local and seasonal  for more dining advice. 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-ham-andGruyere sandwich is just buttery enough, and an egg-white

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.

Zia’s Delicatessen Zia’s  Delicatessen isn’t really about  trying every sandwich: It’s  about finding  your sandwich.  In addition to a large selection of salumi, there’s the  worthy eponymous offering,  served with a wedge of zucchini frittata, a slice of provolone, romaine lettuce, grainy  tomato, and a simple dash of  vinegar and oil that adds tang.  Order it hot, so that the provolone melts into the bread.  Also tasty: the hot meatball  sub with small-grained,  tender meatballs bathed  in a thin, oregano-flecked  tomato sauce that soaks into  the bread. A tuna sandwich  is sturdy, if not exciting. It  is just mayonnaisey enough,  with tiny, diced bits of celery.  A rosemary panino cotto with  mozzarella could benefit from  a more flavorful cheese. For a  meatier option, try the Milano:  mortadella, salami, Muenster;  all three flavors in balance.  The turkey Viareggio has a  thin spread of pesto mayo,  and the smoked mozzarella  accents rather than overpowers.  American. 1401 O St.,   Ste. A; (916) 441-3354. Meal   for one: $5-$10. HHHH B.G.

Midtown 24K Chocolat Cafe This cafe serves  a solid, if very limited, brunch

and lunch menu. One offering is  a firm wedge of frittata with a  strong tang of sharp cheddar  that almost but doesn’t quite  jibe with the slightly spicy mole  sauce on the plate.The spinach  curry, made creamy by coconut  milk rather than dairy, comes  topped with cubes of tofu and  tiny diced scallion and red bell  pepper and rests atop a smooth  potato cake. A side of garbanzobean salad is well-flavored with  the surprising combination of  mint and apricot. The place,  located inside Ancient Future,  has “chocolat” in the name,  and chocolate is in many of the  menu offerings, including a tiny  cup of hot Mexican drinking  chocolate, and chocolatecherry scones served crisp and  hot, studded with big chunks of  bittersweet chocolate and tart  dried cherries. American.   2331 K St., (916) 476-3754. Meal  for one: $10-$15. HHH B.G.

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-and-hydrant  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-andGruyere 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. The  menu also features pizzas  and house-made pastas, but  one of its highlights includes  an excellent smoked-eggplant  baba ganoush, which is smoky  and garlicky and served with  warm flatbread wedges and  oil-cured olives. The bananas  foster bread pudding is equally  transcendent, accompanied  by very salty caramel gelato,  pecans and slivers of brûléed  bananas. 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 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.

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add-ons—various organ meats,  entrails, et al—to three versions of the dish: beef with tripe,  chicken with gizzards, or pork  with pork skin. The beef salad  offers a gentle respite from  aggressive flavors, consisting  of medium-thick chewy slices of  eye of round with red bell pepper, chopped iceberg and hot  raw jalapeño. The single best  dish here is the nam kao tod, a  crispy entree with ground pork  that’s baked on the bottom of  the pan with rice, then stirred  and fried up fresh the next day  with dried Thai chilies and scallions. Thai and Lao. 2827 Norwood  Ave., (916) 641-5890. Dinner for  one: $10-$15. HHHH B.G.

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.

South Sac A&A Tasty Restaurant and Bar This  Little Saigon eatery boasts  such an extensive menu of  Chinese and Vietnamese dishes  that it’s hard to pinpoint its  crown jewel. Notable options  include a salty fish and  chicken-fried  rice entree  with stir-fried  vegetables. The  fried rice offers  copious pieces  of the diced  salty fish. This may seem a bit  weird to the uninitiated, but  the reward is a unique, jolting  pungent flavor that spruces  up an otherwise boring  chicken-fried rice. Elsewhere  on the menu, the Vietnamese  pork-chop rice plate, served  with a small bowl of fish sauce,  surprisingly stacks up to similar dishes from other strictly

North Sac Asian Café Asian Café serves both  Thai and Lao food, but go for  the Lao specialties, which rely  on flavoring staples such as fish  sauce, lime juice, galangal and  lemongrass, lots of herbs, and  chilies. One of the most common  dishes in Lao cuisine is larb,  a dish of chopped meat laced  with herbs, chilies and lime. At  Asian Café, it adds optional offal

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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 stir-fries. 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 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 El Pollo Feliz For a restaurant dubbed “the happy chicken,” El Pollo Feliz sure smokes a lot of birds. These chickens get one

heck of an afterlife: Their parts are rubbed with earthy Mexican spices and then slow-cooked in a smoker for hours. The restaurant’s signature dish is barbecue chicken, and customers can purchase wings, breasts, drumsticks and thighs in a variety of amounts. You can also order it covered in a chocolatey and peppery mole-poblano sauce; shredded and scattered atop a plate of nachos; on top of a salad; inside a torta-style sandwich; or stuffed into a burrito. There’s a friendly neighborhood vibe here, and much of the cooking happens in the parking lot directly in front of the mom-and-pop joint. Mexican. 4717 Whitney Ave. in Carmichael; (916) 485-4446. Dinner for one: $5-$15. HHHH J.M.

Carmichael, (916) 514-0830. Dinner for one: $10-$20. HHH1/2 J.M.

Taqueria Garibaldi One of this 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. Be sure to pick up a glass of the homemade horchata, which is sweet and milky with seductive whispers of cinnamon. You will want seconds. Mexican. 1841 Howe Ave., (916) 924-0108. Dinner for one: $8-$10. HHH G.M.

Skip’s Kitchen You know you’re at an American restaurant when a cheeseburger is one of the healthiest items on the menu. Sure enough, Skip’s Kitchen features a lot of calorie-rich items, such as fried macaroniand-cheese balls, ravioli, chicken strips, chicken wings and shrimp, plus creamy Oreo milkshakes. There are salads, too, but the best dish on the menu is the burger. All five styles (original, mushroom and Swiss, bacon and cheddar, three-cheese, and Western) are served on a brioche bun and cooked “medium,” unless otherwise specified. The kitchen offers a house-made veggie burger as well. If there’s such a thing as a “gourmet” burger that can rightfully sell for $10, this is probably it. American. 4717 El Camino Ave. in

Land Park/ Curtis Park Buffalo Pizza & Ice Cream Co. The eatery, which offers take-out only, keeps the menu simple. Customers can choose from two types of pies: breakfast or lunch. Breakfast pizzas consist of standard pizza dough, on top of which rests a thin layer of egg, cheese and toppings (read: no sauce). One pepperoni-andjalapeños morning pie starts off well, but then the dough disappoints. It doesn’t quite fit in either the “thick” or “thin”

IllustratIon by Mark stIvers

Vietnamese restaurants in the area. The pork is thinly sliced and tender, easily cut with a simple butter knife. A&A’s mash-up of hu tieu and huáng máo ji is unusual: The dish is commonplace, yet here it shines when set atop a steaming bowl of noodle soup. Chinese and Vietnamese. 6601 Florin Rd., (916) 379-0309. Dinner for one: $10-$20. HHH1/2 J.M.

category; it’s not yeasty enough and too chewy and firm. A mushroom-and-spinach pie offers better texture. Lunch pizzas here are less unique, but still hit a nice mark via a few standout ingredients. The garlic pizza reaches a nice balance of sweet and salty with a creamy white sauce, mushrooms, onions, pepperoni and sausage. Buffalo also offers Gunther’s Ice Cream, side salads, fried chicken and canned sodas, but here, it’s breakfast pizza for the win. American. 2600 21st St., (916) 451-6555. Meal for one: $10-$20. HHH1/2 J.M.

The Hideaway Bar & Grill This bar fills a niche Sacramento might not have known it lacked with its vague rockabilly vibe, lots of greased hair on the men, brightly dyed hair in retro styles and cat-eye glasses on the ladies, and an abundance of black clothes and tattoo sleeves for all. The liquor selection is basic (no craft cocktails here). The menu’s heavy on fried appetizers, salads, sandwiches and burgers, the latter of which are architectural, towering assemblages. Happily, the fluffy charred buns are sturdy enough to hold up when the tower is squeezed to a more realistic height. A meaty veggie burger (one of three veggie sandwich options) gets crunch from fried pickles and sweet heat from barbecue sauce. Overall, the Hideaway offers cheap beer, adequate bar food and a comfortable place to hang with out friends. American. 2565 Franklin Blvd., (916) 455-1331. Dinner for one: $10-$15. HHH1/2 B.G.

Meat-and-cheese diet When I drove out to eat at La Trattoria Bohemia in East Sacramento last week, the only vacant parking spot was in front of an under-construction building across the street. Formerly The Electric Bike Shop (which has moved to Midtown), the building was still undergoing major renovation, and I wondered what would come of the space. Fortunately, my curiosity only had to last one evening, because—as luck would have it—the next day, a friend informed me that the storefront will soon become The Cultured & The Cured, a specialty deli selling premium cheese, charcuterie, and local beer and wine. When it opens its doors at 3644 J Street, it’ll be right in the middle of a nice spot for good eats and drinks, with neighbors La Trattoria, Bonn Lair and the relatively new Cielito Lindo Mexican Gastronomy. For more information, and to keep updated on the store’s progress, visit http://cultured andcured.com or www.facebook.com/culturedcured. —Jonathan Mendick

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Of gods and ex-boyfriends Why do girls put so much of themselves into relationships? My sister was dating someone for a year. He broke it off, saying that he wanted time to figure stuff out and wanted to do it on his own. My sister barely came out of her room for weeks, which resulted in her getting fired from her job and bombing her classes. She calls and sends texts to her ex-boyfriend 40 times a day, telling him she by Joey ga rcia needs to talk. When he ignores her, she posts crazy things a s k j o e y @ne w s re v i e w . c o m on Facebook. I tried to talk to her, but she just tells me that I don’t understand. What’s up? Your sister has confused romantic Joey fantasies with the reality of love. Her accepted your behavior is symptomatic of a dangerdare and opened ous series of beliefs: A person is not a Twitter account: complete without a romantic partner, @AskJoeyGarcia a relationship in which a person felt cared for and said (or was told) “I love you� must last a lifetime, and refusing to let go is a sign of true love. These hyperboles are threaded through popular songs and movies and through poetry and novels to entertain us. But extreme dramatic

As long as your sister continues to worship her ex-boyfriend and the relationship she experienced with him, her pain will persist. Got a problem?

Write, email or leave a message for Joey at the News & Review. Give your name, telephone number (for verification purposes only) and question—all correspondence will be kept strictly confidential. Write Joey, 1124 Del Paso Blvd., Sacramento, CA 95815; call (916) 498-1234, ext. 3206; or email askjoey@ newsreview.com.

arcs (think of Whitney Houston singing “I Will Always Love You�) can also inspire obsession. That’s because our unhealthy egos insist that what we’re hearing, seeing or reading is not just entertainment, it’s evidence of passionate, real and lasting love. Of course, that’s rarely true. The deeper problem is that your sister harbors a yawning emptiness in her own heart that cannot be filled by a person. It can only be filled by her own love of and esteem for herself. The pain of heartbreak is a call to grow spiritually. She must learn the joy of being alone without succumbing to loneliness. When she does, her desperate behavior will end. As Thich Nhat Hanh, a Mahayana Buddhist monk and author, says:

“The moment you see how important it is to love yourself, you will stop making others suffer.â€? I would add that when we love ourselves, we suffer less, too. Your sister has made a god of her ex-boyfriend, and that means she is failing to see him as fully human. Everyone “has both flowers and garbage inside,â€? says Hanh. As long as your sister continues to worship her ex-boyfriend and the relationship she experienced with him, her pain will persist. So, what can you do? Be love to her. In Hanh’s words: “Be present. Listen. Respect. Encourage.â€? It’s especially important that you encourage her to see a counselor. She needs a neutral third party to help her wake up. My guy friends are important to me, but every time one of them gets with someone, I’m kicked to the curb. My relationship with these guys is not romantic at all, and I have no interest in any of them in that way. I just don’t understand why our friendship doesn’t continue normally when they have girlfriends. I’ve dropped hints about this, but I not sure how to bring it up without sounding like I’m complaining or jealous. You can’t control how other people see you. If you know who you are, you won’t be too concerned if one of your friends labels you as whiny or jealous. That said, try not to see yourself as displaced, either. When a guy friend starts hanging out a lot with someone new, be happy for him. Clock time is limited: Most people shift their commitments and obligations to make space for someone new. It’s not a diminishment of you, unless you choose to believe it is. And please, stop dropping hints. If you care about these guys and yourself, be authentic. Address the issue directly and without blame. Honest communication is a key to good friendship. Ί

Meditation of the Week “Comparison leads to violence,� said  actress Kathryn Grody, wife of actor  Mandy Patinkin. Can you accept your  uniqueness?


Fast food for hungry lit-lovers Pride and Prejudice Michael Stevenson directs Sacramento Theatre Company’s production of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice like an Evelyn Wood speed-reading by Jim Carnes demonstration. Words and words and more words fly by in a flurry, and even if you miss some here and there, you get the gist of it. This year marks the 200th anniversary of the publication of Austen’s most popular novel, and STC’s adaptation by Joseph Hanreddy and J.R. Sullivan turns the Regencyera tale of economics and class distinctions wrapped around a love story into a veritable rom-com. Its romantic center is surrounded by broad comedy. John Lamb gives a master class in physical comedy as Mr. Collins, a man of the cloth who is stitched a little too stiffly. The whole play’s much funnier than you’d expect Austen to be.

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Katharine Mantz’s singular set design serves all scenes equally well, and Jessica Minnihan’s fine costumes are both flouncy and simple and stately. Ω

3Detroit

BEFORE

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Detroit is a play with great potential that doesn’t quite deliver the satisfying payoff it first promises. The award-winning play by Lisa D’Amour about the unlikely friendship between two sets of neighbors takes us down a pretty entertaining road, but fails to find the more interesting paths. Instead, the plot increasingly becomes more sitcomesque with a strange, disjointed ending that feels a bit preachy and tagged on. It’s a shame, since this play has so much going for it: a creative storyline and engaging dialogue delivered by a fearsome foursome cast of B Street Theatre regulars—Elisabeth Nunziato, Jason Kuykendall, David Pierini and Tara Sissom. Detroit takes place in a typical suburban neighborhood that once held promise of a middle-class utopia but is now as tired and rundown as its residents. Mary (Nunziato) and Ben (Pierini), barbecuing in their backyard, put on a brave facade in front of new neighbors, despite the fact they’re reeling with Ben’s unemployment and Mary’s resentment and her love of liquor. The in-your-face new next-door neighbors Kenny (Kuykendall) and Sharon (Sissom) are pretty blunt right off the bat: recovering rag-tag addicts with no social charms or filters who are just trying to get through each day with little money and big urges. The fascination is the unusual bonding that occurs between the improbable foursome and the influences both good and bad that seep between the two couples’ backyards. Between the raucous romps, there are some unexpected sweet moments that charm and humanize. It’s just too bad that the silly overthe-top antics supplant what could have been a more satisfying ending. —Patti Roberts

Detroit, 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday; 5 and 9 p.m. Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday; 2 and 6:30 p.m. Wednesday; $23-$35. B Street Theatre, 2711 B Street; (916) 443-5300; www.bstreettheatre.org. Through November 17.

STORY

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After Juliet

City Theatre puts an authentic steampunk look on this epilogue to William Shakespeare’s tragedy of young love, as Romeo and Juliet’s cousins, Benvolio (Anthony M. Person) and Rosaline (Julianna Camille Hess) struggle with their own starcrossed love and lingering urges to vengeance. Directed by Lori Ann DeLappe Grondin. F 8pm; Sa 2 and 8pm; Su 2pm. Through 10/13. $10-$15. City Theatre in the Art Court Theatre at Sacramento City College, 3835 Freeport Blvd.; (916) 558-2228; www.citytheatre.net. K.M.

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It’s about art, it’s about porn, it’s about the law and how it sometimes equates the two and finds every way it can to limit them and to punish their practitioners. Big Idea Theatre tackles playwright Lee Blessing’s controversial adult drama with ferocious conviction. Th, F, Sa 8pm. Through 10/26. $10-$16. Big Idea Theatre, 1616 Del Paso Blvd.; (916) 960-3036; www.bigidea theatre.com. J.C.

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My Name Is Asher Lev

Playwright Aaron Posner’s adaptation of Chaim Potok’s book, which became an offBroadway hit last year, takes the same premise of misunderstood

artistic boy aching to break out of his social and religious confinements. For the most part, it’s 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, making the main character unsympathetic at times. Tu, W, Th, F, Sa 8pm. Through 10/19. $23-$35. B3 Stage at the B Street Theatre, 2711 B St.; (916) 443-5300; www.bstreettheatre.org. P.R.

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Radio Golf

Celebration Arts’ production of the final play in August Wilson’s “century cycle” takes place in the ’90s, as Harmond Wilks (Romann K.B. Hodge) is on the verge of “making it”—he’s in a partnership to redevelop Pittsburgh’s Hill District and about to announce his candidacy for mayor. The discovery that a house belonging to an old man (Kelton Howard) was purchased illegally for demolition forces Wilks to examine his values—at great cost to his success. Directed by James Wheatley. Th, F, Sa 8pm; Su 2pm. Through 10/20. $8-$15. Celebration Arts, 4469 D St.; (916) 455-2787; www.celebrationarts.net. K.M.

Short reviews by Jim Carnes, Kel munger and Patti roberts.

3 GOOD

4 WeLL-DONe

5 SuBLIme–DON’T mISS

PHOTO COurTeSy OF THe SaCrameNTO HOrrOr FILm FeSTIvaL

Pride and Prejudice, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday; 12:30 and 6:30 p.m. Thursday; 8 p.m. Friday; 2 and 8 p.m. Saturday; 2 p.m. Sunday; $15-$38. Sacramento Theatre Company at the Wells Fargo Pavilion, 1419 H Street; (916) 443-6722; www.sactheatre.org. Through October 27.

The play revolves around the Bennet family (long-suffering Matt K. Miller as Mr. Bennet and long-winded Jamie Jones as Mrs. Bennet) and their five unmarried daughters. The family’s financial future is tenuous, since they stand to lose their home when Mr. Bennet dies. Hence, there is some urgency to marry off one or more of the girls to a man of wealth and status. Enter Mr. Bingley (Matt Surges), a single man worth a fortune, and his friend, Mr. Darcy (Ryan Snyder), who is even richer. The two older Bennet babes—Jane (the fetching Rebecca Scott) and Elizabeth (Brittni Barger, who delivers a smart, unfussy performance)—become the centers of attention, and Jane and Mr. Bingley seem happily matched. But the pairing of Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy is far less sure. They exude genuine disdain for one another, but the chemistry between the characters and the sexual spark between the actors assure a happy ending somewhere down the road. It’s a briskly paced production that moves with real efficiency. Stevenson’s large cast is strong, top and bottom. Anna

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Lonesome Hollow

PHOTO COurTeSy OF SaCrameNTO THeaTre COmPaNy

“I’ll dance with you, but I won’t look at you, Miss Elizabeth.”

Now Playing

Did you know that zombies can sing? Now you do.

Heaps of horror Sacramento loves Halloween. People get all theatrical, dress up and take on the personalities of dark, odd characters. Such is the case with this weekend’s Sacramento Horror Film Festival, which features costumes, stage performances, a zombie tribute to Michael Jackson and, of course, film. The festival kicks off on Friday, October 11, at 5:30 p.m. with the M.J. tribute followed by short films; a feature film (An American Terror); a performance by the Shadow Circus Creature Theatre and Jay Siren; and a zombie beauty pageant at 8:30 p.m. The night closes with Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon with lead actor Nathan Baesel in attendance for a Q-and-A. Saturday features a day full of short films, followed by a live shadow-cast performance of The Rocky Horror Picture Show by Amber’s Sweets. And Sunday offers a family-friendly film, more shorts and a performance by aerialist Alia Omran. Basically, it’s a weekend of beautiful but horror-filled sensory overload. Visit www.sachorrorfilmfest.com for more information. —Jonathan Mendick

jo na th a nm@ ne wsr e v ie w.c o m

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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 “WONDERFULLY MOVING TALE.”

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“IMPASSIONED.” - Sheri Linden, HOLLYWOOD REPORTER

INEQUALITY FOR ALL

Battleships down Captain Phillips

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- David Edelstein, NEW YORK MAGAZINE

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Every word that accurately describes the experience of Captain Phillips makes it sound like the movie beats the hell out of its viewers. Captain by Daniel Barnes Phillips is indeed a gripping, grueling, agonizing, nail-biting, brutalizing, kick-punching motion picture, but beyond the technical thrills and vise-grip tension, it also offers a weary, hard-won empathy. Much as he did in United 93, director Paul Greengrass employs his punishing brand of verisimilitude to immerse the audience in a situation that many wouldn’t want to experience even vicariously. This time, Greengrass locates his handheld camera 150 miles off of the East African coast, where in April 2009 Somali pirates brazenly commandeered a container ship and took captain Richard Phillips hostage.

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1 Poor

2 Fair

3 Good

4 Very Good

5 excellent

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Tom Hanks plays Phillips, captain of the MV Maersk Alabama, and Billy Ray’s script is based on Phillips’ book A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Dangerous Days at Sea, co-written with Stephan Talty. Hanks’ casting may be character shorthand for “decent and dutiful,” but Greengrass and Ray are after more than a simple tale of heroism. The film’s bland title is almost perversely misleading, since Captain Phillips is really the story of multiple captains. While Phillips’ book bounced between his ordeal in the ocean and his wife’s anguish back home, the movie focuses mainly on Phillips and his Somali captors. The film opens in Underhill, Vermont, as Phillips prepares to depart for Africa, bemoaning the elevated levels of competition that force him to work longer hours and take ever more dangerous assignments. Greengrass then cuts to a beach in Somalia, where viewers are immediately engaged in a more cutthroat form of job competition, as penniless men offer meager bribes to gain employment as pirates. This is where we meet the second “captain,” a violently ambitious pirate played by Barkhad Abdi, who possesses one of the most compelling faces you’ll see on screens this year. Abdi’s Muse is selected to captain a motorboat of three

robbers, but he is barely less impoverished than his crew (one of whom is barefoot), and Greengrass has an obvious ambivalence toward him as a figure of villainy. In a perverse reflection of Phillips, Muse is also at the mercy of his bosses, but without the bosom of American prosperity and debt lending to fall back on. He dismisses the $30,000 in the vessel’s safe as not enough, which Phillips initially misinterprets as greed, not realizing that warlords will likely take every cent of the spoils. Muse and his crew are not just hungry, they’re literally malnourished, and attempt to kill their appetites by constantly chewing an amphetaminelike herb called “khat.” It is the khat that fuels their daring takeover of the MV Maersk Alabama, but when their supply begins to dwindle during the claustrophobic lifeboat sequences in the second half, they become more unpredictable and dangerous. Greengrass repeatedly relies on the same starboard-to-port helicopter shot of a destroyer knifing through the water that has become a staple of Michael Bay’s military-recruitment oeuvre. Some may dismiss this as fetishizing American might, but the point is that the emaciated Somalis are absurdly outmatched. They’ve brought cheap guns and herbal stimulants to a snipers-and-drones fight. Neopolitical thrillers are Greengrass’ stock in trade, but his disappointing previous film Green Zone was a more plotdriven and less visceral take on the same sort of material. Captain Phillips is a return to the queasily compelling, relatively real-time docuthriller approach of United 93 (and to a lesser extent, Greengrass’ two Bourne films), and its success indicates that this may be Greengrass’ one good trick.

Tom Hanks’ casting may be character shorthand for “decent and dutiful,” but Paul Greengrass is after more than a simple tale of heroism. It is possible that sounding this same strident note could cause Greengrass to devolve into a shaky-cam Stanley Kramer. The pertinent question is whether or not there is value in recreating the real-life terror and tragedy of these events beyond a bruising entertainment. In the end, perhaps we just want to be like Hanks’ Phillips, covered in someone else’s blood and gasping in shock, but reassured that we’re safe. Ω


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by daniel barnes & JiM lane

4

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2

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.

Donate your eggs Earn $7000 - $7500 Call: Fertility Connections 415.383.2553 www.fertilityconnections.com Bullock and Clooney, under pressure.

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Don Jon

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In an effort to prove that he can do literally anything better than you, Joseph Gordon-Levitt writes, directs and stars in the nimble anti-romantic 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.

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Grace Unplugged

Enough Said

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Jacob Kornbluth’s documentary Inequality for All explores the increasing income disparity in America, taking a cheeky tone and glorified PowerPoint approach that is colorful but tired. Fortunately, Kornbluth has an energetic and likable central figure in Robert Reich, the diminutive, longtime friend of former President Bill Clinton and the former labor secretary in his cabinet. Reich is predominantly an author and lecturer now, and the film is structured around his UC Berkeley class on wealth and poverty (cut to students nodding serenely at Reich’s every word), while also wading delicately into his personal life. The film is not immune to the straw-man arguments endemic to advocacy documentaries, and occasionally employs clips from The Daily Show With Jon Stewart in place of salient points. Despite the blatant advocacy and hackneyed approach, though, Inequality for All pulls up the roots of an issue that should transcend political ideology. D.B.

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NEWS

Pulling Strings

The plot of this bilingual, cross-cultural romantic comedy is too contrived and silly to go into in detail. Suffice it to say it involves the leader of a Mexico City mariachi band (Jaime Camil), a visa clerk at the American Embassy (Laura Ramsey) and a lost computer. With little help from the script (a typical too-many-cooks affair involving Issa López, Georgina Reidel, Gabriel Ripstein and Oscar Orlando Torres), director Pedro Pablo Ibarra is forced to rely on the sights of Mexico City and the appeal of his two stars. Fortunately, sights and stars deliver on a modestly likeable level. Camil has presence and charm, plus a pleasant singing voice and a nice rapport with Ramsey (a Naomi Watts lookalike). Stockard Channing and Tom Arnold contribute drive-by cameos as Ramsey’s mother and boss, respectively. J.L.

Inequality for All

BEFORE

Prisoners

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 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.

It has become second nature for a struggling film actor to reinvigorate his or her career on television, but it is much less rare for the star of a long-running TV show to find new life on the big screen. Against all odds, Nicole Holofcener’s witty and observant Enough Said successfully reinvents a couple of TV stars who never quite connected as film actors. Julia Louis-Dreyfus and James Gandolfini play Eva and Albert, divorced empty nesters who begin a tentative courtship. Of course, it is bittersweet watching Gandolfini on screen again, especially when he’s so good in a role that is the polar opposite of Tony Soprano. Louis-Dreyfus and Gandolfini have genuine chemistry, and their self-effacing flirtation grounds the film. D.B.

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BEST

Gravity

Two astronauts (Sandra Bullock, George Clooney) are stranded in space when a debris storm demolishes their space shuttle and wipes out the rest of the crew. Director Alfonso Cuarón, who co-wrote the script with his son Jonás Cuarón, has crafted one of the great white-knuckle thrillers of all time—as airtight as the pressure suits the astronauts wear, without a wasted syllable and just enough featherlight touches to keep the tension from becoming entirely unbearable. Despite Clooney’s presence, it’s a virtual onewoman show for Bullock, and she’s as brilliant as the movie itself, showing the panic, despair, hope and hopelessness in her character’s struggle to survive. The story is so riveting that Cuarón’s virtuosic touches go almost unnoticed, but they’re there, with stunning visual effects to boot. J.L.

An Alabama teenager (AJ Michalka) rebels against her ex-rocker, born-again father (James Denton) and runs away to Los Angeles to break into the music business, where she finds her commitment to “the God thing” put to the test. Written and directed by Brad J. Silverman, this earnest little Sunday-school movie has sincerity going for it, plus decent performances, especially from old pro Kevin Pollak as Michalka’s producer. On the other hand, the songs (both spiritual and secular) are nothing special, the movie tilts into awkward preachiness, and Silverman’s flat direction renders both background and characters as untextured as Stash Slionski’s flat photography. Michalka, as singer and actress, is pleasant enough, but it’s hard to believe, even in today’s Hollywood, that she’d be hailed as the wonder of the age. J.L.

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Riddick

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.

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FEATURE

STORY

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E-CIGARETTE SELECTION

IN TOWN!

Runner Runner

A Princeton University student with a penchant for online gambling (Justin Timberlake) lands a job with the kingpin of one such site operating out of Costa Rica (Ben Affleck)—then begins to suspect he’s being set up to take some kind of fall, and learns that everything is easier to get into than out of. Brian Koppelman and David Levien’s script is smart and taut, and director Brad Furman serves it up with an eye for the murky shadows of film noir updated to the 21st century. Furman gets sharp performances from all concerned, including Gemma Arterton as Affleck’s armcandy assistant, whose own motives and priorities remain unclear until the end. Timberlake slides smoothly from smug to desperate to determined, while Affleck has seldom been better: He makes a villain of ingratiating charm straight out of a Hitchcock flick. J.L.

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E-CIGARETTE STORE

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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..

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Wadjda

In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a young girl enters her school’s Koran recitation contest so she can use the prize money to buy a bicycle—even though riding a bike in public is hardly an appropriate activity for a devout Muslim girl. Writer-director Haifaa Al-Mansour’s first feature sneaks up on you: It begins in a leisurely, diffident manner, almost drably understated in its slice-of-Saudi-life way, as it matter of factly lays out the challenges of growing up female in that part of the world. But Al-Mansour builds her story carefully, mainly through the subtly luminous performances of young Waad Mohammed in the title role and Reem Abdullah as her mother. The movie ends on a highly emotional note that might easily have tipped over into bathos. But Al-Mansour knows her stuff—she earns her emotion honestly. J.L.

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11FRI

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12SAT

J. Lately & J. Good

Narwhal

Bat Festival Fundraiser

Ahmad Jamal

Bows and Arrows, 7:30 p.m., $5

Shine, 8 p.m., $5

Back in April, Oakland rapper J. Lately and  Sacramento rapper J. Good collaborated  on the PB&Js album. While individually both  HIP-HOP rappers are known for their  laid-back flows and old-school  boom-bap beats, together they produce an  album that’s twice as relaxed, twice as raw  and twice as old-school. These aren’t retro  beats by any means. The production is   top-notch, slicker than anything going  around at the dawn of old-school hip-hop,  but it has the same bare-bones aesthetic  that the genre was built on. This show at  Bows & Arrows is part of the PB&Js West  Coast promotional tour. The duo will be  joined by Sacramento rapper Chuuwee.   1815 19th Street, www.justlatelymusic.com.

—Aaron Carnes

Shine, 3 p.m., $7

Harkening back to early Genesis, Pink Floyd  and even Neil Young on “Open Road,” Narwhal’s  progressive folk-rock sound blends electronica with guitar, keyboards, bass, percussion  and mandolin. This quartet has been performing around the greater-Sacramento area for  the past couple of years and will be joined by  instrumental quartet 4th World, whose work  is influenced by trumpeter John Hassell, Brian  Eno and Farafina, among others. Its sound is  both ancient and contemporary, beckoning  listeners to step into another time and place.  PROGRESSIVE ROCK Opening   is Chad   E. Williams, Sacramento guitarist, filmmaker,  frequent contributor to Instagon and founding member of Garage Jazz Architects. 1400 E  Street, www.facebook.com/narwhaltheband.

Mondavi Center, 8 p.m., $25-$49

For the past three years, the fall season  has inspired owner of Shine coffeehouse,  Rena Davonne, to host an all-day affair that  benefits the winged creatures of the night:  bats. Shine’s annual Bat Festival Fundraiser  is a day packed with live music, food, drink  MULTIMEDIA specials, art sales and  more. All proceeds  (cover charge and art sales) go to Flying  Mammal Rescue of California. Live entertainment for the evening by Tao Jiriki   (pictured), Travis Latrine and more begins  at 6 p.m. Art submissions for this batthemed event are accepted until Friday,  October 11. This benefit starts early   at 3 p.m. and goes well into the night.   1400 E Street, www.shinesacramento.com.

Jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal has tickled the  ivories for more than six decades. Over the  years, he’s pioneered a rhythmic method  of jazz piano solos—something that’s  continued to stick out in an era of speedy  bebop licks. The 83-year-old, who performs  Saturday at the Mondavi Center, is also  known for his keen sense of interplay with  other musicians (check out the 1981 LP  Ahmad Jamal/Gary Burton in Concert, for  example). He’s also popular with a new  generation of hip-hop artists—several  have sampled his work; most notably, Pete  JAZZ Rock featured a sample of Jamal’s  “I Love Music” on the Nas song  “The World Is Yours.” 9399 Old Davis Road  in Davis, www.ahmadjamal.net.

—Steph Rodriguez

—Jonathan Mendick

—Trina L. Drotar

Ace of SpAdeS Friday, OctOber 11

ANdRe NIcKATINA & KRAZY BoNe (Of BOneThugs-n-harmOny)

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

All Ages Welcome!

COMING

Saturday, OctOber 19

GWAR

SOON

whiTeChapel - irOn reagan - a BanD Of OrCs

BaBniT - Charlie musCle - K-hawK

Saturday, OctOber 12

ARdeN pARK RooTS One DrOp - sTreeT urChinz - Kayasun - BrODi niChOlas riOTmaKer (feaT. Jeffry Of shaKeDOwn)

Sunday, OctOber 20

10/31

Stick Figure

ATTILA

11/01

Nike’s Never Not & TW’s Nation

11/05

AB-Soul & Joey Badass

11/06

Soulfly

11/11

Clutch

11/12

Mayday Parade

11/14

Misfits

11/16

E-40

11/17

Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue

11/23

Mellowhigh

12/07

Frank Hannon & John Corabi

12/08

Talib Kweli

12/11

Blood on the Dance Floor

12/13

Great White

upOn a Burning BODy – iwresTleDaBearOnCe The plOT in yOu - fiT fOr a King - merChanTs

tueSday, OctOber 22

WedneSday, OctOber 16

STReeTLIGHT MANIfeSTo plus speCial guesTs

THe USed william COnTrOl

thurSday, OctOber 17

SToRY of THe YeAR liKe mOThs TO flames - hawThOrne heighTs

Friday, OctOber 25

pARMALee maTT w. gage - save & COnTinue

CapTure The CrOwn - seT iT Off - i am King

Friday, OctOber 18

RoAcH GIGZ & HUSALAH

Saturday, OctOber 26

JoNNY cRAIG

Kyle luCas - hearTs & hanDs - BleaCh BlOnDe - seCreTs

playa K - lil BiT - marK snipes

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

42   |   SN&R   |

10.10.13


14MON

15TUES

16WED

17THURS

Joe Pug

Modern English

John Vanderslice

Koffin Kats

Harlow’s Restaurant & Nightclub, 7:30 p.m., $10

Harlow’s Restaurant & Nightclub, 8 p.m., $17.50

Joe Pug is the good kind of cranky: Highly  skeptical of the music-industry status quo  (and not afraid to say so), the singer-songwriter has based his career largely on direct  interaction with fans and faith in word-ofmouth publicity. In the past, he distributed  free CDs to anyone who wanted one (covering  postage, even) and attempted to eliminate  additional ticket fees by selling directly to  attendees. His coarse-grain vocals inevitably  draw comparisons to Bob Dylan, and fans  of Whiskeytown-era Ryan Adams and local  SINGER-SONGWRITER favorite  Jackie  Greene will also find much to like.   2708 J Street, www.joepugmusic.com.

One of the classic ’80s new-wave rock bands,  Modern English has broken up and reunited  twice now. Though it has never matched the  NEW WAVE success of songs like  “I Melt With You” and  “Hands Across the Sea,” it is still turning out  some pretty good pop rock. If Modern English  has gotten a little grayer and wider since  1982, well—haven’t we all? Video from recent  gigs, though, proves the group can still bring  the ’80s angst and mix it up with some distinctly 21st-century moves. The band will   be joined by the Generals, a Sacramentobased indie-pop duo with a full sound and  some thoughtful lyrics. 2708 J Street,   http://modernenglish.me.

—Deena Drewis

—Kel Munger

LowBrau, 8 p.m., $10

Cafe Colonial, 8 p.m., $10

John Vanderslice has always ridden that line  between crazy, creative artist and meticulous,  calculating producer. His unique songwriting  has earned a lot more respect from musicians  than mainstream appeal. Yet, he can produce  a really solid, palatable album. He’s that good.  He owns the Tiny Telephone recording studio  in San Francisco, where musicians wait almost  a year to get in. For his own music, he spends  months tinkering with songs, adding subtle  SINGER-SONGWRITER nuances  that a  small handful of discerning fans catch on   their headphones. Sometimes his albums  suffer from studio excess, but generally, he  balances his two worlds really well and creates  unique indie-rock albums. 1050 20th Street,  www.johnvanderslice.com.

Straight outta Detroit comes three-piece  psychobilly band the Koffin Kats. These  guys blend elements of punk and oldtime rock ’n’ roll into their music with, of  course, plenty of stand-up bass. Lyrically,  PSYCHOBILLY the band’s material  covers a wide range  of topics from life experiences growing up  in the band’s hometown to a combined love  of science fiction. What’s more is these cool  Kats just returned from a three-month  European tour and are scheduled to shake  things up at a new music venue in town,  Cafe Colonial. Supporting performances   for the night include the Infamous Swanks,  Avenue Saints and the Devil’s Train.   3520 Stockton Boulevard, www.koffinkats  rock.com.

—Aaron Carnes

—Steph Rodriguez

1000 K Street, Sacramento, CA 95814

FLOW Thurs OcT 10

Hosted By Andru defeye 8pm | $5 | 21 And over

Fri OcT 11

rOcca varnadO tHe Bell Boys | lAdy remedy | BAd nuze 9pm | $10 - $15 | 21 And over

sun OcT 13

Wed OcT 16

caPELTOn

YO GOTTI & YG

7pm | $20 - $25 | All Ages

7pm | $25 | All Ages

AfricAn foundAtion & dJ nice up

cA$H out

Upcoming ShowS

Thurs OcT 17

CLAIRY BROWN & THE BANGIN’ RACKETTES 9pm | $12 | 21 And over

BEFORE

|

NEWS

|

saT OcT 19

sun OcT 20

9pm | $10 - $20 | 21 And over

7pm | $40

SIZZLInG SIrEnS LEOn rUSSELL nigHtmAre on K street

FEATURE

STORY

|    A R T S & C U L T U R E

|

AFTER

Oct 24 Oct 25 Oct 26 NOv 01 NOv 06 NOv 09 NOv 12 NOv 15 NOv 22 NOv 27 NOv 29 NOv 30 Dec 07 Dec 08 Dec 09 Dec 13 Dec 20

cAli swAg district & loverAnce Alpine & speed of sound in seAwAter rAHeem devAugHn fringe mAtt zo Andy Allo AAron cArter cHucK inglisH & Kings deAd viennA teng Arden pArK roots Big B orgy ed KowAlczyK from live metAlAcHi Krs one los rAKAs rocK for tots

|    10.10.13

|

SN&R

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43


NIGHTBEAT

THURSDAY 10/10

FRIDAY 10/11

1000 K St., (916) 832-4751

Flow: Jazz, soul and hip-hop w/ Andru Defeye, 8pm, $5

ROCCA VARNADO, THE BELL BOYS, LADY REMEDY, BAD NUZE; 9pm, $10-$15

BAR 101

Karaoke, 7:30pm, no cover

FM80s, 9:30pm, no cover

ASSEMBLY List your event!

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.

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

BISLA’S SPORTS BAR

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

BLUE LAMP

FIRST DIRT, 9pm, call for cover

THE HORMONES, THE SHEETS; 9pm, call for cover

ICON FOR HIRE, 8pm, $15-$20

BABY BASH, REIGN, STATUS GOES, J ROC MGMT, K-HAWK; 8pm, call for cover

1400 Alhambra, (916) 455-3400

THE BOARDWALK

T. HILL, APRIL FOOLZZ, JOE TYLER,

BOWS & ARROWS

Classical Revolution, 8pm, no cover

9426 Greenback Ln., Orangevale; (916) 988-9247 JOEY MO; 8pm, call for cover 1815 19 St., (916) 822-5668

CENTER FOR THE ARTS

Hey local bands!

PRINCE WINSTON, CHALICEVILLE SOUND, IAH SOUND; 9pm, $5

DISTRICT 30

DJ Nick G, 9pm, call for cover

DJ Elements, 9pm, call for cover

DIRT NASTY, 9pm, call for cover

FOX & GOOSE

STEVE MCLANE, 8pm, no cover

NACHO BUSINESS, MONSTER TREASURE; 9pm, $5

KEYSER SOZE, THE STORYTELLERS, SACTO SOUL REBELS; 9pm, $5

G STREET WUNDERBAR HALFTIME BAR & GRILL

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

NORTH BOUND TRAIN, 9pm, $7

WONDERBREAD 5, 10pm, $12

STEELIN’ DAN, 7pm, $15-$20; ROYAL JELLY, 10pm, $7

LUNA’S CAFÉ & JUICE BAR

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

HAYLEY JANE AND THE PRIMATES, OLD GROVE; 8pm, $6

Readings by Beth Lisick, Rachel Leibrock, Frank Andrick, David Houston, 8pm, $10

MARILYN’S ON K

908 K St., (916) 446-4361

KATIE KNIPP, MIDNIGHT TRANSPORT, RED UNION BLUE, 8pm, $5

CAPO STEW, BRITTANY MCKINNEY, STONEBERRY, ATHENA; 8pm, $7

JUKEBOX JOHNNY, 9pm, $5

NAKED LOUNGE DOWNTOWN

ComedySportz Improv, 8:30pm, $5

THE KELPS, HONYOCK; 8:30pm, $5

AMERICAN NOMAD, SUNMONKS, JUSTIN FARREN; 8:30pm, $5

Jazz, 8pm M; ADAM ARCURAGI, CHEYENNE MIZE; 8:30pm W, $5

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

JENN ROGAR, 5pm; CHRISTOPHER FAIRMAN, JOE KOJIMA; 8pm, no cover

SANS SOBRIETY, SUMMIT, WEST COAST FURY, SIMPL3JACK; 9pm, $7

WALRUS, HORSE NECK, GHULHEIM, LOS FRUGALES; 9pm, $7

Karaoke, 9pm Tu, no cover; Open-mic, 9pm W, no cover

ON THE Y

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

ROCKBAND 2000, ARTEMIS GONE, DAN MUMM; 9pm, $6

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

HARLOW’S

2708 J St., (916) 441-4693

670 Fulton Ave., (916) 487-3731

FREE

LIVE MUSIC

monday

trivia @ 6:30pm

EVERY FRI & SAT 9PM

OCT 11

BLACKWATER

COUNTRY, SOUTHERN ROCK

OCT 12

DYER MAKER ROCK

OCT 18

TAKE OUT

COVER BAND - DANCE HITS FROM THE 70’S TO TODAY

OCT 19

FUNK ROCKERS FUNK BAND, ROCK

EVERY TUESDAY

TACOS - 2 FOR $2 LIVE TRIVIA AT 7:30PM

INSIDE STRIKES UNLIMITED 5681 Lonetree Blvd • Rocklin 916.626.3600 HALFTIMER OCKLIN.COM

10.10.13

m o n d a y

tuesday

taco tues

Monday night Football $1 tacos all day –

$1 tacos, $2 coronas, 2–8pm wednesday

geeks who drink trivia @ 7:30pM –

open for lunch & dinner 7 days a weeK

doors open at 11:30 –

s a t u r d a y

college Football assorted specials s u n d a y

sunday Football $1 tacos doors open @ 10aM 2109 O street | sacramentO 916.442.2682

upcoming shows oct 11 fm 80’s oct 12 Block Party oct 18 one sharP mind oct 19 tijuana Weekend oct 25 old screen door oct 26 doWn the hatch facebook.com/bar101roseville 101 main street, roseville • 916-774-0505

Karaoke, 8pm M; DENVER J. BAND, OIL & SMOKE; 9pm W, $5

Open-mic, 7pm, no cover

Open-mic comedy, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm Tu, no cover

fri 10/11 ~ 9pm ~ $10

dj dancE party

sat 10/12 ~ 6:30pm

luchaxtreme.com

mon-fri 3pm-7pm

JOE PUG, 7:30pm M, $12; MODERN ENGLISH, 9pm Tu; KYLESA, 7:30pm W, $15 Nebraska Mondays, 7:30pm M, $5-$20; Comedy night, 8pm W, $6

thursday

happy hour

geeks who drink trivia @ 7:30pM

NICHOLAS DAVID, 8pm, $16.50-$20

BattLE of thE goLd

KaraoKe @ 7:30pm –

t h u r s d a y

Trivia night, 7:30-9pm Tu, no cover

open mic

sign-ups at 7:30pm

t u e s d a y

|

DJ Benzi, 9pm, call for cover

DYER MAKER, 9pm-midnight, no cover

OLD IRONSIDES

SN&R

CAVE, THE CAIRO GANG, DONALD BEAMAN; 8pm Tu, $6; Comedy, 8pm W

BLACKWATER, 9pm-midnight, no cover

5681 Lonetree Blvd., Rocklin; (916) 626-6366

1111 H St., (916) 443-1927

|

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

THE BRODYS, WARP 11; 9pm, no cover

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

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

44

Trivia, 6:30pm M, no cover; Open-mic, 7:30pm W, no cover

LEROY BELL, 8pm, $18-$22

Open-mic, 7:30pm, no cover

1001 R St., (916) 443-8825

YO GOTTI, YG, ZED ZILLA, SHY GLIZZY, CASH OUT; 7pm W, $25

THE DICK GAIL QUINTET, 8:30pm, $5-$10

THE COZMIC CAFÉ 1016 K St., (916) 737-5770

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 10/14-10/16

CAPLETON, AFRICAN FOUNDATION; 7pm, $20-$25

J.GOOD & J.LATELY, CHUUWEE, SOOSH THE GENERALS, SCISSORS FOR LEFTY; E, AZURE, CALIMADE AND OTW; 8pm, $5 8pm, call for cover EARLES OF NEWTOWN, MOJO GREEN; 8pm, $12-$15

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

SUNDAY 10/13

BLOCK PARTY, 9:30pm, no cover

7042 Folsom Blvd., (916) 383-0133

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

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.

SATURDAY 10/12

pro wrEstLing 9 pm ~ $10

radio

pop ~ rock ~ Latin ~ r&B

fri 10/18 ~ 9pm ~ $10

dj dancE party

MICRO & HOME BREW

COMPETITION SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20 TH

2 PM TO CLOSE

BEER! E H T E G D U J U « YO D! O O F N A M R E G « ITH 00 W C I S U M E V I « L LE STICKY! $5 UNC TING TAS E FE

sat 10/19 ~ 9pm ~ $10

miss mouthpEacE record Launch party

3443 Laguna BLvd • ELk grovE facEBook.com/pinsnstrikEs pinsnstrikEs.com • 916.226.2695

10413 Franklin Blvd. Elk Grove, 95757 916.684.2261


THURSDAY 10/10

FRIDAY 10/11

SATURDAY 10/12

THE PALMS PLAYHOUSE

13 Main St., Winters; (530) 795-1825

FOGHORN STRINGBAND, BONANZA KING; 8pm, $15

DREW HARRISON, 8pm, $20

DIRK HAMILTON, 8pm, $20

PINE COVE TAVERN

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

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

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

ESSEX, 9pm, $10

RADIO, 9pm, $10

502 29th St., (916) 446-3624

PINS N STRIKES

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

PISTOL PETE’S

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

PJ’S ROADHOUSE

DJ Michael Johnson, 9pm, no cover

140 Harrison Ave., Auburn; (530) 885-5093 5461 Mother Lode, Placerville; (530) 626-0336

SUNDAY 10/13

MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 10/14-10/16

Open-mic, 10pm-1am Tu, no cover; Trivia, 9-10pm W, no cover

BONEDRIVERS, 9pm, $5 DOG PARK JUSTICE, 9pm, $5

Karaoke, 9pm Tu, W, no cover

DJ Old Griff, 9pm, no cover

POWERHOUSE PUB

LACE AND LEAD, 10pm, call for cover

DECADES, 10pm, call for cover

SUPERLICIOUS, 10pm, call for cover

JIMMY JAMES, 3pm, call for cover

Karaoke, M ; Deejay dancing, Tu; SOME FEAR NONE, ZEN ARCADIA; 9pm W, $5;

THE PRESS CLUB

BEHOLD...THE ARCTOPUS, BOTANIST, PLAGUE WIDOW; 8pm, $10

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

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

Sunday Night Soul Party, 9pm, $5

KEVIN SECONDS, RYAN DAVIDSON; M; CELESTIONS, HOPELESS JACK; 8pm W, $5

614 Sutter St., Folsom; (916) 355-8586 2030 P St., (916) 444-7914

SAMMY’S ROCKIN’ ISLAND

THE ALL MY BROTHERS BAND, 10pm, $5 TOTAL RECALL, 10pm, $5

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

Comedy with Mark G and, 8:30pm W, $5

SOL COLLECTIVE

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

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

STONEY INN/ROCKIN’ RODEO

NEON CIRCUS, 9pm, $5

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

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

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

Microphone Mondays, 6pm M, $1-$2; SLV, 7pm Tu, $5

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

BOCA DO RIO, 9:30pm, $5

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

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

Country dance party, 8pm, no cover

ERIC MARTIN, LARISA BRYSKI; 3-9pm, $15-$20

Roots American Rockabilly Festvial, 1-7pm, call for cover

JOHNNY KNOX, 5pm, no cover; TERRY HANCK, 9pm, $10

Blues jam, 4pm; AUSTIN LUCAS, LEE BAINS & THE GLORY FIRES; 8pm, $6

5871 Garden Hwy, (916) 920-8088

TORCH CLUB

The Sol Mercado and Kid’s Day, 1pm, no cover EL RADIO FANTASTIQUE, 9:30pm, $5

SWABBIES

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

Haley Jane and the Primates with Old Grove 8pm Friday, $6. Luna’s Café & Juice Bar Folk rock

Acoustic open-mic, 5:30pm W, no cover; KERI CARR BAND, 9pm W, $5

All ages, all the time ACE OF SPADES

ANDRE NICKATINA, KRAYZIE BONE; 7pm, $25

CLUB RETRO

FOUR DAYS OUT, TAYLOR CULLEN, KARLEE AND CONNOR, WAR PAINT; 6:30pm, $7

1417 R St., (916) 448-3300 1529 Eureka Rd., Roseville; (916) 988-6606

LUIGI’S SLICE AND FUN GARDEN

THE SPEED OF SOUND IN SEAWATER, POSTMADONNA, SO MUCH LIGHT; 7pm, $7

SHINE

ORANGE MORNING, SOUL SHINE, OLD GROVE; 8pm, $5

1050 20th St., (916) 552-0317 1400 E St., (916) 551-1400

NARWHAL, 4TH WORLD, CHAD E. WILLIAMS; 8pm, $5

ARDEN PARK ROOTS, ONE DROP, STREET URCHINZ, RIOTMAKER; 6:30pm, $10

TAO JIRIKI, TRAVIS LATRINE, BFF, JUSTIN PURTILL; 6pm, $7

Larisa Bryski’s Vocalist Showcase, 4pm, $5

Jazz Jam w/ Jason Galbraith and friends, 8pm Tu, no cover

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!

THURSDAY 10/10

SAM BAM’S COMEDY JAM

FRIDAY 10/11 - SUNDAY 10/13 FROM DAVE’S OLD PORN AND COMEDY CENTRAL’S INSOMNIAC!

DAVE ATTELL MATT DAVIS, JOHNNY TAYLOR

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

THURS 10/10

RED UNION BLUE

MIDNIGHT TRANSPORT KATIE KNIPP 8PM // $5 FRI 10/11

STONEBERRY

ATHENA, CAPO STEW THE TAYLOR CHICKS BRITTANY

CAITLIN GILL

MOSHE KASHER

ALL REQUEST COVER 9PM // $5

Ras Shiloh

Oct 27

Cat Stevens Tribute

Oct 29

Lake Street Dive

Oct 31

Harloween

CLASSIC ROCK & BLUES REVIEW // 8PM // FREE

Nov 01

Mazzy Star

WED 10/16

Nov 02

Tempest

OIL AND SMOKE STRANGE MENTAL BLANK SPOT

Nov 06

Rubblebucket

Nov 07

Ruthie Foster

Nov 08

The Black Lilies Death Valley High

Steelin’ dan (dinner show) • $15adv • 5:30pm

GSET

BOBBY SLAYTON

HONEST POP ROCK // 9PM // $5

ROBERT DUCHAINE

FOLLOW US ON TWITTER!

Modern engliSh The Generals • $17.50 • 8pm

WWW.PUNCHLINESAC.COM

CALL CLUB FOR SHOWTIMES: (916) 925-5500

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

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

FEATURE STORY

- October 16 -

KyleSa

- October 13 -

UPCOMING SHOWS: TH 10/19 CHUCK’S 16 ANNUAL HALOWEEN COSTUME PARTY

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NEWS

- October 15 -

THE DENVER J BAND

THURSDAY 11/14 - SUNDAY 11/17 THE PITBULL OF COMEDY!

Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe Zach Deputy

Oct 26

- October 12 -

TUE 10/15

SAL CALANNI, JASON LOVE

Down North

Oct 20

Polecat

KARAOKE 8PM // FREE

BRYAN CALLEN

Earthless / Brubaker

Oct 19

Rusted Root

MON 10/14

FROM MADTV AND THE JOE ROGAN EXPERIENCE!

Wrings / Cold Eskimo

Oct 18

Oct 25

7PM // FREE

DC ERVIN, AMY MILLER THURSDAY 11/7 - SATURDAY 11/9

Oct 17

Oct 23

OPEN MIC TALENT SHOWCASE

ALI WONG

|

Vandaveer $10adv • 6:30pm

SUN 10/13

FRIDAY 11/1 - SUNDAY 11/3 FROM CHELSEA LATELY AND ARE YOU THERE, CHELSEA?

BEFORE

$12 • 9pm

JUKEBOX JOHNNY

ALEX KOLL, KEVIN O’SHEA

Coming Soon

Joe Pug

Wonderbread 5

SAT 10/12

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

- October 14 -

- October 11 -

ACOUSTIC // ELECTRIC // ROCK // 8PM // $7

ROB DELANEY

Boca do Rio 9:30pm Saturday, $5. Sophia’s Thai Kitchen World

THE USED, WILLIAM CONTROL, SHE SAID FIRE; 7pm W, $25

follow us

Pinkish Black, Sierra • $15 • 6:30

HaRLOWSNiTECLUB HaRLOWSNigHTCLUB

$16.50adv • 7pm

HaRLOWSNigHTCLUB

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what’s on your

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SN&R   |  10.10.13

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


Bring in any competitor’s coupon and we’ll beat it by $5

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Must present competitor’s ad. Some restrictions apply.

VOTED 3RD BEST ’13 420 PHYSICIAN IN SAC!

Hi, Ngaio. Read your note on “Any good festivals coming up?” (SN&R The 420, September 26), and thanks for the info. Is there a listing of the yearly events up someplace on the Internet? Don’t mind traveling, but need to schedule. Thanks.

by NGAIO

—Don and Millie I wish. For some reason, stoners can’t seem to get it together enough to have just one spot on the Web with a comprehensive event listing. You have to visit all the websites of all the various organizations.’13 It’s a bit of a hassle. Maybe we should start a website.

BEALUM

a s k420 @ ne wsreview.c om

Hey, I heard California just legalized hemp production. Is this true?

—Shirley Hemple Yes, Gov. Jerry Brown did indeed sign Senate Bill 566 allowing farmers to grow hemp. Here is a quote from the author of the bill, state Sen. Mark Leno (D-San Francisco): “With the signing of this bill, California is poised to grow industrial hemp when the federal government gives states the green light. In the past year, the conversation to legalize the cultivation of hemp has gained momentum at the federal level, and it is only a matter of time before a farmer’s right to grow hemp is restored.” This law is similar to a law passed in Kentucky last year. And while this is a good step forward, it will take a while before California farmers start to reap the benefits of hemp farming, although a farmer in Colorado just harvested his legal hemp crop (thank you, Amendment 64!) last week. Hemp, hemp, hooray! High! It’s harvest season, and I plan on doing a ton of trimming this year. Well, maybe not a literal ton, but a lot. Any advice on how I can avoid a repetitive stress injury? —Sally Scissor-Sister Right? Harvest season is fun, but you can cause yourself permanent damage if you don’t do it right. Be sure to stretch your hands and wrists before you start, and take frequent breaks. Learn to trim with your nondominant hand. You can also look into handheld electric trimmers like the Speedee Trim. You can always invite me over if you need extra help. Ngaio Bealum is a Sacramento comedian, activist and marijuana expert. Email him questions at ask420@ newsreview.com.

BEFORE

Dude. Why so much weed activism? Why not work on something more important? —Dudley Do-right Yeah. I hear this a lot. It’s usually something like, “You guys just want to get stoned; you aren’t real activists.” I call bullshit. Let’s look at what marijuana and hemp legalization would accomplish: Fewer people in prison for drugs would help end prison overcrowding; legalizing weed would help stop racial profiling (black and brown people do more time and are arrested more often for drugs, even though whites use drugs more often); pot stores and clubs would create a bunch of jobs, leading to more tax revenue for states and cities. Legal hemp would also mean more money for agriculture. I could go on and on. My point is that while weed legalization may seem like one small, not terribly important thing, we could actually tackle a whole bunch of problems by legalizing marijuana. Who says stoners can’t multitask? Ω

|

NEWS

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F E AT U R E

STORY

’13

’13

’13

’13

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Sacramento

420 Doc MEDICAL MARIJUANA EVALUATIONS

SUMMER COMPASSION SPECIAL

34 44

$

$

RENEWALS

NEW PATIENTS

Must bring ad. Limit one per patient. Some restrictions apply.

Must bring ad. Limit one per patient. Some restrictions apply.

916.480.9000 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

2100 Watt Ave, Unit 190 | Sacramento, CA 95825 | Mon–Sat 11am–7pm 2633 Telegraph Ave. 109 | Oakland, CA 94612 | 510-832-5000 | Mon–Sat 10am–5pm RECOMMENDATIONS ARE VALID FOR 1 YEAR FOR QUALIFYING PATIENTS WALK-INS WELCOME ALL DAY EVERYDAY

YOUR INFORMATION IS 100% PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL VISIT OUR WEBSITE TO BOOK YOUR APPOINTMENT ONLINE 24/7 AT

www.Sac420Doc.com   |    A R T S & C U L T U R E

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Get Your Recommendation! North Of Hwy 50 @ Bradshaw & Folsom Blvd RENEWALS

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Photo ID Available for $15

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50

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Routier

Bradshaw

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5711 florin perkins rd | sacramento, 95828 | 916.387.8605 | open 10am – 8pm 7 days a week 48

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SN&R   |  10.10.13


S H T 8 / 1 3 Y U B DELIVERY ! E E R F 1 T E G 9AM-11PM DAILY

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916.646.6340

Mon - Sat 10am - 7pm Sun closed

purchase of $100 or more. Expires 10/16/13.

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veteran, senior, activist, a.d.a. patient discounts

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315 North 10th St | Sacramento 916.804.8975 | Open 7 days, 9am-9pm

BEFORE

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NEWS

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FEATURE

STORY

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ARTS&CULTURE

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SIMPLY THE BEST Winner 3 years in a row! ’13

’13

Best Medical Marijuana clinic

’13

- Sacramento News and Review Readers’ Poll -

Thank You for Voting For Us!

’13

’13

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Good Massage Grand Opening

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*this is a model

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$3 addition for multi-grade oil Good at Fulton location only Most vehicles savings of $7 1700 Fulton at Arden Way, Sacramento

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50

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SN&R   |  10.10.13

DESIGNER

MB/BG

ISSUE DATE

03.05.09MRKT

FILE NAME SMOGDIAGMKT0305098R2

$80+

916.722.7777

481-1192 OPEN MON-SAT 8-6 • SUN 9-4 ACCT. EXEC.

KEW

REV. DATE

10.16.08

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new Staff!

10am - 10pm daily

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Midtown Sacramento, 95816 Between K St. & L St.

one hour

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H e av e n ly m a s s ag e

1730 Santa Clara Dr #3 | Roseville 95661 10am – 10pm Daily | 916.781.2828 BEFORE

|

NEWS

|

(916) 726–1166 7530 Auburn Blvd Ste D • Citrus Heights

FEATURE

STORY

|

ARTS&CULTURE

Jason Shimomura CMT 601-1292 (9am-9pm daily)

Cash for Cars Same day free pick up. Cash on the spot. 916-992-5447

MASSAGE WITH A WOMAN’S TOUCH

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916-372-7334 916-599-9588 in & out calls 9-9

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$40 1-hour

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adult SENSUAL TOUCH

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Be touched! She puts the Mmm in Sensual Massage. Upper thigh massage included. Daily/Nightly appts until 3am 916-256-7093

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Special rates for seniors. Private upscale home w/ shower. By appt only in Fair Oaks (Sunset & Minnesota). *82-916-961-3830

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916-729-0103 Wheatland Country Living Share home with young senior. Prefer gay male 50+, rent $300/ mo, possibly less + util. Vehicle a must. No drugs, light drinking, smoking ok. Smoking outdoors. Mikie 530-633-2570

|

AFTER

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KILL ROACHES Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Roaches-Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware, The Home Depot, homedepot.com (AAN CAN)

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Notice of caution to our Readers! Whenever doing business by telephone or email proceed with caution when cash or credit is required in advance of services.

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*Nominal fee for adult entertainment. All advertising is subject to the newspaper’s Standards of Acceptance. Further, the News & Review specifically reserves the right to edit, decline or properly classify any ad. Errors will be rectified by re-publication upon notification. The N&R is not responsible for error after the first publication. The N&R assumes no financial liability for errors or omission of copy. In any event, liability shall not exceed the cost of the space occupied by such an error or omission. The advertiser and not the newspaper assumes full responsibility for the truthful content of their advertising message.

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10.10.13

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Absolute Deluxe Massage Red Crystal Red Lace Massage. $70 for 2 hours, Incall also, outcalls always. Great hands with a great girl. Marvelous lemon or plain oils. In call special $38. Call til late 916-256-7093

SN&R

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Coco

Massage

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SN&R   |  10.10.13

SUNDAYS

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SN&R   |  10.10.13


by Raheem F. hOsseini

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Sometimes

you quit games too early, Aries. You run away and dive into a new amusement before you have gotten all the benefits you can out of the old amusement. But I don’t think that will be your problem in the coming days. You seem more committed than usual to the ongoing process. You’re not going to bolt. That’s a good thing. This process is worth your devotion. But I also believe that right now you may need to say no to a small part of it. You’ve got to be clear that there’s something about it you don’t like and want to change. If you fail to deal with this doubt now, you might suddenly quit and run away somewhere down the line. Be proactive now, and you won’t be rash later.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Jugaad is

a Hindi-Urdu word that can be translated as “frugal innovation.” People in India and Pakistan use it a lot. It’s the art of coming up with a creative workaround to a problem despite having to deal with logistical and financial barriers. Masters of jugaad call on ingenuity and improvisation to make up for sparse resources. I see this as your specialty right now, Taurus. Although you may not have abundant access to VIPs and filthy riches, you’ve nevertheless got the resourcefulness necessary to come up with novel solutions. What you produce may even turn out better than if you’d had more assets to draw on.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In ac-

cordance with your current astrological omens, I authorize you to be like a bird in the coming week—specifically, like a bird as described by the zoologist Norman J. Berrill: “To be a bird is to be alive more intensely than any other living creature. … Birds have hotter blood, brighter colors, stronger emotions … they live in a world that is always present, mostly full of joy.” Take total advantage of the soaring grace period ahead of you, Gemini. Sing, chirp, hop around, swoop, glide, love the wind, see great vistas, travel everywhere, be attracted to hundreds of beautiful things and do everything.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “The

nonexistent is whatever we have not sufficiently desired,” wrote Nikos Kazantzakis in his book Report to Greco. I’m hoping that when you read that statement, Cancerian, you will feel a jolt of melancholy. I’m hoping you will get a vision of an exciting experience that you have always wanted but have not yet managed to bring into your life. Maybe this provocation will goad you into finally conjuring up the more intense desire you would need to actually make your dream come true.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “It is truly strange

how long it takes to get to know oneself,” wrote the prominent 20th-century philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. “I am now [62] years old, yet just one moment ago I realised that I love lightly toasted bread. … I loathe bread when it is heavily toasted. For almost 60 years, and quite unconsciously, I have been experiencing inner joy or total despair at my relationship with grilled bread.” Your assignment, Leo, is to engage in an intense phase of self-discovery like Wittgenstein’s. It’s time for you to become fully conscious of all the small likes and dislikes that together shape your identity.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): “I’d rather

be in the mountains thinking of God than in church thinking about the mountains,” said the naturalist John Muir. Let that serve as your inspiration, Virgo. These days, you need to be at the heart of the hot action, not floating in a cloud of abstract thoughts. The dream has to be fully embodied and vividly unfolding all around you, not exiled to wistful fantasies that flit through your mind’s eye when you’re lonely or tired or trying too hard. The only version of God that’s meaningful to you right now is the one that feeds your lust for life in the here and now.

bRezsny

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The advice I’m

about to dispense may have never before been given to Libras in the history of horoscopes. It might also be at odds with the elegance and decorum you like to express. Nevertheless, I am convinced that it is the proper counsel. I believe it will help you make the most out of the highly original impulses that are erupting and flowing through you right now. It will inspire you to generate a mess of fertile chaos that will lead to invigorating long-term innovations. Ready? The message comes from Do the Work, a book by Steven Pressfield: “Stay primitive. The creative act is primitive. Its principles are of birth and genesis.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Two years ago, a British man named Sean Murphy decided he had suffered enough from the painful wart on his middle finger. So he drank a few beers to steel his nerves, and tried to blast the offending blemish off with a gun. The operation was a success in the sense that he got rid of the wart. It was less than a total victory, though, because he also annihilated most of his finger. May I suggest that you not follow Murphy’s lead, Scorpio? Now is a good time to part ways with a hurtful burden, but I’m sure you can do it without causing a lot of collateral damage.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):

Grace has been trickling into your life lately, but I suspect that it may soon start to flood. A spate of interesting coincidences seems imminent. There’s a good chance that an abundance of tricky luck will provide you with the leverage and audacity you need to pull off minor miracles. How much slack is available to you? Probably as much as you want. So ask for it! Given all these blessings, you are in an excellent position to expunge any cynical attitudes or jaded theories you may have been harboring. For now, at least, it’s realistic to be optimistic.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):

Capricorn innovator Jeff Bezos built Amazon.com from the ground up. He now owns The Washington Post, one of America’s leading newspapers. It’s safe to say he might have something to teach us about translating big dreams into practical realities. “We are stubborn on vision,” he says about his team. “We are flexible in details.” In other words, he knows exactly what he wants to create, but is willing to change his mind and be adaptable as he carries out the specific work that fulfills his goals. That’s excellent advice for you, Capricorn, as you enter the next phase of implementing your master plan.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Here’s

the horoscope I would like to be able to write for you by the first week of December: “Congratulations, Aquarius! Your quest for freedom has begun to bear tangible results. You have escaped a habit that had subtly undermined you for a long time. You are less enslaved to the limiting expectations that people push on you. Even your monkey mind has eased up on its chatter and your inner critic has at least partially stopped berating you. And the result of all this good work? You are as close as you have ever come to living your own life—as opposed to the life that other people think you should live.”

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): “It’s an

unbearable thought that roses were not invented by me,” wrote Russian poet Vladimir Mayakovsky. You’re not as egotistical as Mayakovsky, Pisces, so I doubt you’ve ever had a similar “unbearable thought.” And it is due in part to your lack of rampaging egotism that I predict you will invent something almost as good as roses in the coming weeks. It may also be almost as good as salt and amber and mist and moss; almost as good as kisses and dusk and honey and singing. Your ability to conjure up long-lasting beauty will be at a peak. Your creative powers will synergize with your aptitude for love to bring a new marvel into the world.

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.

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FEATURE

phOTO by liSA bAeTz

by ROb

For the week of October 10, 2013

STORY

Dirty girls Mud wrestling. Roller derby girls. Have we got your attention? On Saturday, October 12, the baddest chicks in the Sacred City Derby Girls league will get down and dirty for their spectators’ viewing pleasure—and a little cash. Turns out, it’s not cheap to strap on skates and pads and bash into each other around a flat-track rink several months out of the year. “Our team holds many fundraisers throughout the season, as we are a pay-to-play sport,” explained the league’s marketing director Renee Mazyck, a.k.a. “Dirty~8~Special.” “[We] have expenses that, if it weren’t for fundraising and sponsors, would come out of our very tiny pockets.” Here’s how it works: Local combatants—all from area teams— grapple until one is pinned for three seconds. If it all sounds a little titillating, well, it’s supposed to. But don’t be fooled—these women are in it to win it. “It has become a pretty competitive event for the participants who are wanting the title and the belt—but there can only be one!” said Mazyck, who agreed to give us the dirt on mud, sexism and gnarly injuries.

As a guy, I should probably already know this, but what’s appealing about women wrestling in mud? I was kind of hoping you would tell me! All we know is it’s a crowd-pleaser to watch women wriggling around in liquidish-type substances. I’d like to think it’s the brutal beauty of the mono y mono competition aspect. Alas, I really think it’s the thought of someone’s boob popping out of their uniform that gets the fans there.

Where did the idea come from? Well, a bunch of brilliant minds [came] together and tried to think of events where we could draw a large crowd—which may care to partake in a cool, refreshing beverage—and the team could compete in something other than our beloved roller derby. It seemed like a good transition, and we were hoping to get those who attend to come to a bout and watch us play.

Mud seems like a natural enemy to skates, so was anyone skeptical at first? Mud certainly is a natural enemy of skates. Thankfully, we don’t wear skates while in the mud. Our competitors are excited for a chance to drop the skates and get on their knees and put their hands on their teammates. Of course, this is all in good fun, but sometimes sticking a teammate’s face in the mud gives you a whole new love for them.

Does the cleanest person win? The only clean people are in the back of the arena! |

ARTS&CULTURE

Roller derby is about subverting stereotypes by playing up to them in a tongue-in-cheek way, i.e., pinup women in short shorts beating the crap out of each other. How does this mesh with that? I think it falls right in line with all of it. Unfortunately, women’s sports still are not treated with the same respect as men’s sports. Until such a time when the sports world can see women’s flat-track roller derby as a serious sport, we use what we have to try and draw a crowd. [W]e are a fun-loving bunch of athletes who love what we do so much, we are willing to, as some would say, “degrade” ourselves to get attention.

What do you enjoy most about it? I’ve played some type of sport throughout my life, and nothing compares to roller derby. The highly competitive aspect, the full contact, the athleticism and the camaraderie. I live, eat and breathe this sport. My family, friends and co-workers are well-versed because it is part of me.

What’s the gnarliest injury you’ve gotten? I’ve had a severely dislocated finger. It was completely sideways. Got some great pictures of it. I’ve also had to have cortisone injections in both shoulders, and it feels like my hip needs one now. I’ve also lost numerous toenails—gross, I know! I have a permanent callous on the bottom of my foot, which I have to protect when I get a pedicure ’cause those ladies always want |

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to mess with it! Technically, that’s not an injury, but it’s what some would consider a downside to derby.

Have you ever wrestled in mud? My first season with the team I wrestled. It was an awesome experience. My sister, Knee High Ninja, was [in] my corner, and we wore matching face masks and I donned my high-school son’s singlet. He wasn’t embarrassed at all—not!

What’s the weirdest place you found mud? I think the weirdest for me was how much can get in your ears. It just kept coming out!

Where did the “Dirty~8~Special” name come from? I polled my friends to help come up with a name that fit my personality. I wanted something catchy and fun for the announcers to say and for the fans to hear. I wanted a name that had a gun connotation, as I am a huge fan of firearms. One of my best friends came up with Dirty~8~Special after the [band] 38 Special. The “Dirty” part of my name fits me, and not because I don’t shower. Imagination, go! Ω

The Sacred City Derby Girls mud-wrestling fundraiser starts at 7 p.m. on Saturday, October 12, at The Onyx Club, located at 116 Main Street in Roseville. On November 9, the league will hold its season-closing bout at the Sacramento Memorial Auditorium at 1515 J Street. Visit http://sacred cityderbygirls.com for details.

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