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Sacramento’S newS & entertainment weekly

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eibrock by Rachel L

Volume 29, iSSue 18

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thurSday, auGuSt

17, 2017

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newSreView.com


2   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17


EditoR’S NotE

auguSt 17, 2017 | Vol. 29, iSSuE 18

34 33 Our Mission: To publish great newspapers that are successful and enduring. To create a quality work environment that encourages employees to grow professionally while respecting personal welfare. To have a positive impact on our communities and make them better places to live. Editor Eric Johnson News Editor Raheem F. Hosseini Arts & Culture Editor Rebecca Huval Associate Editor Mozes Zarate Staff Reporter Scott Thomas Anderson Intern Kainoa Lowman Contributing Editor Rachel Leibrock Contributors Daniel Barnes, Ngaio Bealum, Alastair Bland, Rob Brezsny, Aaron Carnes, Jim Carnes, Willie Clark, John Flynn, Joey Garcia, Lovelle Harris, Jeff Hudson, Dave Kempa, Matt Kramer, Jim Lane, Michael Mott, Kel Munger, Kate Paloy, Patti Roberts, Steph Rodriguez, Ann Martin Rolke, Shoka, Bev Sykes

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35 Design Manager Christopher Terrazas Creative Director Serene Lusano Art Director Margaret Larkin Production Coordinator Skyler Smith Designers Kyle Shine, Maria Ratinova Marketing/Publications Designer Sarah Hansel Web Design & Strategy Intern Elisabeth Bayard Arthur Contributing Photographers Lisa Baetz, Evan Duran, Adam Emelio, Lucas Fitzgerald, Jon Hermison, Kris Hooks, Gavin McIntyre, Michael Mott, Shoka, Lauran Fayne Thompson Sales Coordinator Joanna Graves Senior Advertising Consultants Justin Cunningham, Rosemarie Messina, Kelsi White Advertising Consultants Matt Kjar, Paul McGuinness, Michael Nero, Wendy Russell, Manushi Weerasinghe Facilities Coordinator & Sales Assistant David Lindsay Director of First Impressions Hannah Williams Distribution Director Greg Erwin Distribution Services Assistant Larry Schubert Distribution Drivers Mansour Aghdam, Beatriz Aguirre, David Dorr, Kimberly Bordenkircher, Daniel Bowen, Gypsy Andrews, Heather Brinkley, Kelly Hopkin, Mike Cleary, Lydia Comer, Tom Downing , Rob Dunnica,

Richard Eckert, Chris Fong, Ron Forsberg, Joanna Gonzalez-Brown, Lori Lovell, Greg Meyers, Sam Niver, Lloyd Rongley, Lolu Sholotan, Eric Umeda, Zang Yang N&R Publications Editor Michelle Carl N&R Publications Associate Editor Kate Gonzales N&R Publications Writer Anne Stokes Marketing & Publications Consultant Steve Caruso, Joseph Engle President/CEO Jeff vonKaenel Director of Nuts & Bolts Deborah Redmond Nuts & Bolts Ninja Leslie Giovanini Executive Coordinator Carlyn Asuncion Director of People & Culture David Stogner Project Coordinator Natasha vonKaenel Director of Dollars & Sense Nicole Jackson Payroll/AP Wizard Miranda Dargitz Accounts Receivable Specialist Analie Foland Developer John Bisignano, Jonathan Schultz System Support Specialist Kalin Jenkins

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STREETALK LETTERS NEwS + BEATs gREENLighT ScoREKEEpER FEATuRE SToRy ARTS&cuLTuRE DiSh STAgE FiLm muSic cALENDAR ASK joEy ThE 420 15 miNuTES

covER DESigN by mARgARET LARKiN covER phoTo by ANNE SToKES

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Fight nazis with non-violence It’s a horrifying fact that our president won his office by courting and  fueling white rage. He and his chief  policy consultant, Steve Bannon, are  heroes to the white nationalists who  precipitated murder in Charlottesville  last week. To my way of thinking, the  blood of the Charlottesville murder is  on both of their hands. It’s despicable that it took the  president two days to lay blame for  this heinous violence at the feet of  ultra-right thugs and their white nationalist ideology. Obviously, tragically,  Trump did not want to alienate his  base of support. That’s a disgusting  thing to consider, but it is true. For Bannon, white nationalism  is not a side project—he has spent  years spreading the pernicious lie  that America’s true heritage is white  and European, and spreading fear  that Western civilization is under  attack. He made Breitbart “News”  into the alt-right movement’s most  powerful tool via fear-mongering and  hate-mongering. That is precisely  why Trump made Bannon his righthand man. It was Bannon who helped  craft Trump’s message of fear and  hate, and it was Bannon who helped  orchestrate the 2016 Trump rallies  that frequently turned violent. With the sudden ascendance of the  alt-right under the Trump/Bannon  regime, we now have nazis marching  in our streets. And in Charlottesville,  as in Sacramento, we witness them  facing off against armed and armored  anti-fascist foot soldiers.  I understand the Antifa movement’s motivation. There’s a part  of me that would love to bash some  fascists’ skulls in, too. But that’s not  the best part of me. And we need to  confront this demonic uprising with  our best selves.

—Eric Johnson ericj@newsreview.com

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because nothing came at night. It has quite good acting but the story is no good. It reminds me of Night of the Living Dead, [but] if there were no zombies. It’s all about the acting and the pace but there is no payoff.

It made me so uncomfortable because it was so racist and sexist. The jokes were all really crappy and cheap. It sounded like a bunch of drunk people trying to be funny and failing.

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The worst one I’ve seen is The Shining. I first saw it when I was super young and it scared the shit out of me. … I watched it recently and didn’t realize the comedic value of it. It’s not a bad movie necessarily, but I love it in a much different way than I used to.

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New editor is deluded Re “The most basic need,” by Eric Johnson (Editor’s Note, August 10): Thank you for drawing attention to the city’s lack of access to water. For years we have addressed this at city council meetings, only to be ignored. However, I am appalled by your delusions concerning [Mayor Darrell] Steinberg. He says a lot of good things, but his actions go the opposite direction. He has done nothing to resolve the homeless situation and is following KJ’s plan on the issue while trying to claim credit for it. In reality, he has actively been working to further criminalize our existence and resisted any ideas that would have an impact that doesn’t benefit his developer buddies. I guess when you live inside he looks great. Stop letting his gaslighting convince you of his merit. JaMes “FayGo” clark s a c ra m e nt o v i a s act ol et t er s @ n ew s r e v i e w . c o m

Spend the money now Re “Fountain of truth,” by Michael Mott (News, August 10): The city just received a huge grant for homeless initiatives.

There’s no reason they can’t allocate a portion to repair and build fountains in the downtown/ midtown area where there’s

a large concentration of the unhoused population. They can work on finding the money in the Parks and Rec budget for maintenance once they have them in place. It’s urgent and can’t be put off. Dennessa atiles via Facebook

Don’t break nice things Re “Fountain of truth” by Michael Mott (News, August 10): I’ve always joked that by building the Golden 1 Center, we are aiming for Rome, but if we don’t take care of the people of this metaphorical Rome, then history will repeat itself. On the other hand, the people need to stop breaking all the public property in town. Marcus anzelone via Facebook

That’s my boy! Re “Rumbles from the underground,” by Aaron Carnes (A&C, August 10): Real nice article about Jeffrey Harris. Keep up the good work exposing residents to other interested people. I am Jeffrey’s great grandmother in Las Vegas, so I am a little prejudiced in his favor. I am real proud of him trying to do so much for others. He is also an excellent father who loves his children. May he have every success. Gloria robinson l a s Ve ga s v i a ne w sr e v ie w.c o m

And that’s my boy! Re “Keep it honest,” by Aaron Carnes (Music, August 10): Alex Salveson is my grandson and I am hecka proud of how far he has come with his artistry in music. Keep reaching for your

dreams. You’re on your way. He definitely takes after my son and his father Andrew, who taught him well. I’m one very proud Grandma. alice salVeson

read more letters online at www.newsreview .com/sacramento.

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Draft Donald Jr. Donald Trump continues to play to his doomsday crowd and base. The rhetoric President Trump has been using shows what a madman we have sitting in the White House. Donald Trump says the military is “locked and loaded.” Are Americans ready to be dragged into another Republican war like Iraq and Afghanistan? A good idea: Let’s let Trump’s kids and Republican politicians’ kids be in the first wave of those invading North Korea. ron lowe

Facebook.com/ SacNewsReview

@SacNewsReview

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08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   7


David Engberg wheels through the third apartment he’s had in two years. Photo by Karlos rene ayala

First to fall

Their stories offer a warning, but will anyone heed the alarm? Karen Ketterling lives in a tidy flat in the

Severely disabled renters feel the brunt of Sacramento’s housing crisis by Scott thomaS anderSon

an extended version of this story is available at www.newsreview. com/sacramento

8   |   SN&R

David Engberg and James Clark cling to their independence by a thread. Both men were born with cerebral palsy and live off Supplemental Security Income, or SSI—a stipend that puts them under the federal poverty line. So far, they’ve managed to keep a roof over their heads by splitting the cost of rent. But since the affordable housing crisis hit, the roommates have been priced out of two apartments in just two years. The stressful shuffling was witnessed by Jennifer Schmidt, their case manager at InAlliance, a nonprofit that provides employment and living services for   |   08.17.17

people with disabilities. Advocates such as Schmidt are becoming increasingly alarmed by the way skyrocketing rents are affecting Sacramento County’s 14,000 disabled residents. Several independent surveys suggest Sacramento is experiencing some of the largest rent increases in the nation. Few feel those tectonic market shifts more intensely than people with severe disabilities. Experts say it’s becoming next to impossible to find them accessible, affordable and safe apartments. And, as a static housing inventory allows landlords to be more choosey, one of the last lifelines available to vulnerable

sc o tta @ ne wsr e v ie w.c o m

renters—the government-issued housing voucher—is quickly losing its value. In the case of Engberg and Clark, InAlliance was able to help them move into their current flat at the Sycamore Square Apartments in Rancho Cordova. Engberg says he is barely keeping afloat at a complex that frequently draws police visits. “The main problem with apartments is that the rents keep going up, and my SSI only covers the rent,” Engberg said. “But then I don’t have any money left for food.” Existing on the outer edges of the housing crisis, people like Engberg are among the first to fall through the cracks.

Arborelle Apartments in Citrus Heights. Like two of her neighbors, she was born with cerebral palsy and has spent her life in a wheelchair. Ketterling was cared for by her grandparents. By 1993, they’d become too elderly to care for themselves, let alone her. Ketterling found herself forced to live in a skilled nursing home. “It was horrible,” Ketterling said. “I got numerous infections. The place was not sanitary. It was closed down, thank goodness. Nobody should be subjected to that kind of living.” By 2000, Ketterling was on her own, juggling the rent through a combination of her SSI and a Section 8 housing voucher. It worked for a time. In 2011, a rent increase priced her out of her apartment. For Ketterling, looking for a new place was a three-fold conundrum that many people with severe disabilities must navigate. First, she had to find an


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cHiEf anD tHE citizEn available unit she could qualify for on SSI. (At many apartments, applicants can only qualify if their income is double the rent.) Additionally, it needed to be an apartment with low-fixed light switches, low-set counter tops, wide hallways, spacious doors, no steps and room for a Hoyer Lift, the mini-crane that lifts her out of her wheelchair. Finally, the apartment complex had to be willing to accept her voucher from the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency. “It was so hard to find a place that accepts a housing voucher,” Ketterling said. “It had been a nightmare.” With the help of Options In Supported Living LLC, a local nonprofit, Ketterling was eventually able to move into a cozy spot in the Arborelle. Ketterling and OSL Director Paul Wurst say the Arborelle has been remarkably accommodating for renters with disabilities, with its management installing wall-guards and special flooring for sanitation, and allowing OSL to remodel several bathrooms. But the Arborelle is an outlier: Not only are its managers sympathetic; it was built through a state bond program that keeps its rents low, and it still accepts SHRA-issued Housing Choice vouchers (formerly Section 8 vouchers). It’s Wurst’s understanding that there are currently more than 240 people on the waiting list to get into the Arborelle. One of Wurst’s disabled clients has been in line for a unit there for more than eight months. Wurst says the situation in Sacramento County is getting more dire. “We have an aging population of parents in their 70s, 80s and 90s whose [disabled] kids are living with them, and at some point they won’t be able to,” Wurst said. “It will be very difficult to find anything for them in this current climate.” More than 70,000 Sacramento County residents are currently waiting for a voucher. In January, elected officials ordered SHRA to seek a balance between maintaining disabled families’ place on that list and also creating room for homeless people getting on the list for the first time. The proposal left many advocates worried that recalibrating the voucher system even slightly might put homeless people and disabled people in a cruel lottery against each other. After more than six months of radio silence, SHRA spokeswoman Angela Jones addressed the confusion this week. “Disabled families will continue to be a priority to be served with the Housing Choice Voucher program,” Jones told SN&R in an email. “While the Board of

respiratory treatments someone with Supervisors prioritized ‘turnover vouchers’ for homeless individuals and families, cerebral palsy can undergo outside of a hospital; but he still beams his signature disabled families will also continue to be smile, enjoying the clear skies and a cool prioritized on the waiting list.” summer breeze. That’s one of the rare pieces of When Wurst first met him in 2000, good news disabled Sacramentans have Compo was being institutionalized against heard in the last few years. Yet Options his will. He’d been taken into conservaIn Supported Living, InAlliance and torship, an administrative process that Housing Now—a nonprofit helping resimade him a ward of Sacramento County. dents with developmental disabilities— For Compo, who has a sharp mind and a have all told SN&R that getting landlords passion for music and visual arts, being to accept the Housing Choice vouchers is shut away in a care facility was a becoming extremely difficult. virtual prison. Andrea Croom, director Compo can barely speak, of InAlliance, says the but given enough time, he more apartments that gets the words out. stop taking SHRA “They abused me,” vouchers, the more Compo managed. her clients are forced It was Options In into vulnerable living David Engberg Supported Living that situations in high-crime local renter with cerebral helped Compo find the areas, as well as apartpalsy attorney who eventually ments where they can’t emancipated him. Compo access Regional Transit’s now spends his days writing Paratransit Service, a vital to friends on social media, chatshuttle service for the disabled. ting with people on Skype and Facetime, Schmidt, one of Croom’s case managand attending church and community ers, told SN&R she’s had to move three events in his neighborhood. different clients out of their apartments Unfortunately, for Wurst and his in the last six months after landlords changed their policies and stopped accept- colleagues, Compo is becoming a miracle client for another reason—he’s one of the ing SHRA vouchers. severely disabled people in Sacramento Jones says SHRA officials are workwho can still afford his rent. ing to create a new Flexible Supports Wurst emphasized that Compo’s Rehousing Program, which will fund case situation is only stable because the managers to help families with vouchers Arborelle was part of a bond program, connect with landlords who accept them. “We continuously outreach to landlords to has exemplary management and still accepts housing vouchers. As the rental participate in our program,” she wrote. Patti Uplinger, a volunteer for Housing crisis intensifies, Wurst knows the stars won’t align for some of his other clients. Now, feels part of the challenge around And there’s no county or statewide safety the vouchers is perception. “It’s because net for severely disabled renters who get the Housing Choice vouchers used to be priced out of their housing. called Section 8 vouchers and are still For people in that position—especially associated with the term,” Uplinger said. those who don’t have nonprofits looking “We need to reframe that, because there’s out for them—some could end up homesuch a stigma attached.” less. According to Sacramento County, Engberg, who doesn’t have a voucher, 2,715 disabled residents were signed up says renters don’t have to be part of the for a little-known CalFresh program that embattled SHRA program to feel that allows recipients to use their benefits at stigma, at least from the landlords who participating restaurants. Nearly 300 of look at a rental application and see only those were both disabled and homeless. an SSI income. Even those disabled renters who don’t “We’re people too,” Engberg said. end up on the streets have to worry about “We’re a special population, but we want being forced into the kind of care facilito be competitive with everybody else.” ties Compo fought to escape. Gliding his Wearing his Dean martin fedora with a wheelchair under the afternoon clouds, he Star Wars backpack on his wheelchair, struggles to tell SN&R what it means to Jesse Compo rolls through the Arborelle have his freedom, friends and a commuapartment complex nodding at people nity. Finally, he mustered the words: he knows. Moments earlier, Compo “I’ve gotten a second life.” Ω completed one of the most arduous

“We’re people too.”

Before he left to become a police chief in Roseville and before he returned to accept the job here in Sacramento, Daniel Hahn was a police sergeant taking a call from an unhappy citizen—his mother. In a sit-down interview with SN&R, Hahn said his mom had called him years ago to complain about an officer who ticketed her neighbor for riding a bicycle the wrong way on a sidewalk in their Oak Park neighborhood. Mary Jean Hahn went on to tell her son that, at the same moment the officer was issuing the citation, a drug dealer was slinging his product in plain view just 40 yards away. “I said, ‘Mom, he’s a traffic officer. He doesn’t deal with drugs,’” Daniel Hahn recalled. “And she said, ‘I don’t care what kind of officer he is. The man getting the ticket doesn’t cause any problems to my neighborhood. That drug dealer is absolutely killing my neighborhood.’” Hahn told SN&R he started thinking a lot about the difference

between stat-driven police work and purpose-driven police work after that conversation with his mother, a white woman who adopted the African-American Hahn when he was 3 months old. Standing in front of 1,200 people last Friday inside Sacramento State University’s Union Ballroom, the city’s new police chief indicated one of his top priorities will be making sure the most challenged neighborhoods are not left behind. He went on to challenge community members and law enforcement personnel alike to be “less concerned about who has the power and who gets the credit,” and instead work together to make “every corner, every street” a place where kids are safe to grow up. Ending his August 11 address to a standing ovation, Hahn then made his way back to the woman who taught him something about being a good cop. (Scott Thomas Anderson)

BanKing on BungaloWS A cure for a blighted area is how county officials are describing the recently approved destruction of the mather field Bungalows. The 40 studio apartment-style units have stood on Bleckely Street since the 1940s, originally built for u.S. air force personnel. On July 25, the Sacramento County Board of Supervisors voted 3-0 to approve a plan to demolish the bungalows by September, which will cost $302,062 in tax-exempt bond proceeds. Supervisor Susan Peters abstained from the vote because of property she owns nearby. In 2005, the bungalows were used to temporarily house relocated Hurricane Katrina survivors. Even then, the buildings were falling into disrepair, said county Program Manager Clark Whitten. The bungalows were most recently used as a location to train guide dogs for the blind. “We did what we could with them,” Whitten said. When asked if the county considered fixing up the bungalows as an emergency shelter for the homeless—rather than an unofficial one for squatters—Whitten stressed the units are uninhabitable and infested with mold. Even if money were no object, he said, the bungalows are beyond repair. So why did it take so long to approve demolition? Whitten said the county initially wanted to secure an “end user” to develop the property before moving forward with destruction. But officials changed their minds as the bungalows continued to deteriorate and offers proved scarce. Now they’re hoping the demolition will make the land more attractive to investors. “It puts it in a better position to attract a business to come there and buy the land and create jobs,” Whitten said. (Matt Kramer)

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   9


Protesters gather outside the Yolo superior Court in Woodland to voice their support for the “Picnic Day 5” defendants inside. Photo by Luis GaeL Jimenez

In defense of the defense ‘Picnic Day 5’ told detectives they didn’t know they were fighting cops by Luis GaeL Jimenez

Immediately following the April 22 melee in which three police officers were injured, a member of the so-called “Picnic Day 5” told Davis police Detective Kimberly Walker that he unknowingly swung at a an extended version plainclothes officer after seeing him strike of this story is a black man. available at Walker recalled her interview with www.newsreview. defendant Elijah James Williams while com/sacramento testifying during a preliminary hearing on Thursday, August 10. Williams, Antwoine Rashadek Perry, Alexander Reide Craver, Iszir Daquan Price and Angelica Monique Reyes face multiple felony counts of assaulting a peace officer and resisting arrest in what the Police Department initially characterized as an ambush on the officers—the department rescinded that account after an eyewitness video appeared to contradict it. Attorneys for the five defendants say their clients had no idea they were fighting 10   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

undercover officers and only answered force with force. Over two days of testimony last week, police officials called to the stand say the defendants largely told them the same thing. The Yolo County District Attorney’s Office and Davis PD maintain that the defendants knew or should have known they were dealing with officers. According to testimony and eyewitness video presented in court, Officers Ryan and Sean Bellamy (who are brothers) were both dressed in T-shirts and shorts. Officer Steve Ramos, who was the last to engage with the rowdy crowd, wore a tactical vest with “POLICE” inscribed on the back, but was otherwise not in uniform. All three officers wore their badges on necklaces that defendants claim they didn’t see until it was too late. A chaotic sequence of events toppled like dominoes from the moment the

officers responded to a call regarding a crowd blocking traffic. In the video, the unmarked police van can be seen rolling up on a throbbing crowd, which was gathered across from the university’s campus. Dressed in a T-shirt and shorts, a man exits the passenger side and appears to shove a man in an orange T-shirt. The man runs and violence erupts. The man dressed in the orange sports jersey was Perry, who had approached the passenger side of the van where Officer Ryan Bellamy sat. According to Detective Walker, Bellamy told her Perry made “a startling movement” to his pants pocket and that’s why he opened his car door and grabbed for Perry. That was portrayed as an inciting incident for the violence that ensued. In her August 10 testimony, Walker said Williams told her he entered the rumble after seeing a man attack an

African-American member of the crowd. Walker testified that Williams said he immediately stopped fighting and ran once that man identified himself as an officer. Asking Williams why he ran, the detective testified that Williams told her, “‘I didn’t want to get shot or something.’” Similarly, Walker testified that Craver said he only intervened after watching Officer Ramos punch Reyes and place her in a headlock. Craver told Walker that seeing a man striking a woman triggered traumatic childhood memories and forced him into action, Walker testified. Craver then told her he knocked Ramos to the ground and tried to put the officer in a chokehold, but was unable to, Walker said. As soon as Ramos announced he was an officer, Craver said he let Ramos go and surrendered, Walker testified. The next day, police Detective Joshua Helton testified that Reyes told him she blacked out after being punched in the head and only learned she had been in a street fight after friends informed her. Showing a previously unreleased eyewitness video in court, Deputy District Attorney Ryan Couzens asked Helton to describe what it showed. The detective said the clip appeared to show Reyes kicking Officer Ramos in the head as Craver locked him in a chokehold. Helton testified that when he asked Reyes if she had kicked the officer, she responded, “‘I never touched anyone.’” The Bellamy brothers weren’t the only siblings in the mix that day. Price, who is Perry’s brother, said he ran to the scene from a fraternity party around the corner after receiving a phone call that Perry had been jumped, Officer Nicholas Peel testified on August 11. Peel testified that he arrested Price a block and a half away, wearing only one shoe. Asked why he ran, Price told the officer, “‘I’m not trying to fight a police officer,’” Peel testified. The preliminary hearing stretched over two days and will continue for three more at the end of this month in Yolo Superior Court, an unusually long stretch for a criminal proceeding that just needs to show enough evidence to justify a jury trial. As the proceedings unfolded, a small crowd gathered outside the Woodland courtroom to protest the charges against the five defendants, all of whom are people of color. The city has appointed an independent investigator to review the Police Department’s handling of the case. Ω


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The grand jury most recently targeted the Boys Seven years after budget cuts forced its Ranch in 2014, but this time for its closure. The loss closure, a onetime detention camp for delinquent of the ranch and another detention center sapped the boys may finally find a second life as an agribusilocal juvenile court of options “to house and treat ness training academy for underserved youth. long-term offenders,â€? the jury reported. On July 25, the Sacramento County Board of The county has tried to offload the Boys Supervisors granted conceptual approval to a group Ranch before. In 2011, the county rejected a bid that wants to launch the Carson Creek Ranch Food for a 20-plus year lease in the hopes of reviving and Agriculture Center on a site currently occupied the site as a juvenile detention facility, according by the defunct Boys Ranch. to a staff report. Backed by the Africa USA International In 2014, two private prison corporations made Chamber of Commerce, California Black Chamber separate offers to open a residential reentry facility of Commerce and California Black Agriculture for federal inmates on the site. Both bids, from a Working Group, the “farm incubatorâ€? could subsidiary of The GEO Group, Inc., and Corrections “repurpose the center into a positive thing,â€? Corporation of America, were ultimately rejected project manager Michael Harris told supervisors due to community opposition. last month. “We’re looking at putting crops in the The most recent proposal fizzled in ground the first of the year, depending on the 2015, when All About Equine Animal weather,â€? added Harris, who chairs Rescue, Inc., a horse rescue and the California Black Agriculture rehabilitation nonprofit, withWorking Group. drew its bid after being unable Board of Supervisors to agree on lease terms with Chairman Don Nottoli, in the county. whose district the ranch lies, General Services said the agriculture center Director Michael Morse “presents a fairly grand expressed measured opportunity.â€? optimism that Carson Creek If that opportunity would finally break the Boys Don Nottoli becomes reality, it would Ranch curse, telling SN&R chairman, Sacramento County end a string of failed attempts that the county was doing its Board of Supervisors to retool the former juvenile “due diligence ‌ to ensure that work camp. But much depends Carson Creek FAC is formally estabon whether the venture’s backers lished and has adequate financial backing can secure enough private capital to begin in order to follow through.â€? agriculture production. Morse said he expected a formal proposal by “Our team is exploring financial investors and the end of September, but emphasized that this educational institutions who will offer in-kind was only a guess. contributions, loans, and grants to make sure our Supervisors authorized staff to enter negofinal plans are supported,â€? Harris said in a followtiations with the nonprofit, which is seeking a up email. Harris’ email also promised “a showcase five-year lease. Morse’s department is looking of our Sacramento rural agricultural heritage.â€? to set a rent price that will offset some of the Opened in 1960, the Boys Ranch housed up $490,000 the county has been paying annually to to 120 boys, typically for six to 12 months, a staff keep the property maintained and pay down its report says. Intended to reintegrate troubled youth debt service. into society by offering them agricultural and life Located southeast of suburban Rancho Cordova skills in a farm environment, the juvenile camp in the rural outpost of Sloughhouse, the camp courted trouble over its 50-year history. In 1998, covers 140 acres and is pocked with dorms, classthe Sacramento County grand jury reported that a rooms, a kitchen, gymnasium and other mothballed lack of actual farmland and agricultural programs facilities. One of the program’s first milestones is to coincided with a third of the wards escaping work perform site clean-up and soil analysis. crew assignments. Jurors also chronicled unsanitary Harris told supervisors his team is developing housing conditions, poor medical facilities, and a STEM program with UC Davis and an urban dormitories and recreation rooms that lacked agriculture one with Cosumnes River College. â„Ś adequate fire sprinklers and smoke alarms.

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Let’s stop kicking the can down the road by jeff vonkaenel

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10 percent. … If we went up to 40 This year’s Sacramento County Budget percent, we could bridge the gap in is $4 billion —$11 million a day. about 20 years.” Regarding fees, she County Supervisor Sue Frost points said that, “Our fees across the board out that we have only $88 million in are uncomfortably high. So I don’t reserve. This would keep the county suggest we up them, as we need to afloat for just eight days. attract business to our county as part In a recent newsletter headlined of the solution.” “Kicking the Can Down the Road,” Hmm. I wrote her back, asking Frost argued that the county budget how we could set aside more money should have a larger reserve. She said if we were not cutting services or a county our size should have $407 increasing fees. million in reserve. So, over time, She responded, in another email, we would need to add another $319 that in next year’s budget there might million to our reserve fund. be completed projects that would no I have mixed feelings about this. longer need to be funded, such as I certainly agree that we should have “computers for our Vote Centers a larger reserve fund. And now, or the Sheriff’s intelligence when the economy is doing led policing.” well, is the natural time Well, of course to be adding to such there will be some old a fund. However, I’d like to programs that will no I fear that elected challenge our longer need funds, officials are not county supervisors but there will also concerned about be important new reserve funds when to think a bit more endeavors that will I see them giving tax creatively. need new funding. breaks to corporations And right now, we’re and the wealthy, then dealing with this year’s trotting out this concern budget. If we’re going to as an excuse to cut social increase the reserve, we’re going to programs. need solutions now. It’s easy to say, “Let’s be fiscally I’d like to offer two ideas for responsible.” But it’s harder to take the county’s consideration. The the political heat for actually being first is a no-brainer. Like the city of fiscally responsible. For example, Sacramento, the county could allow Democrats and Republicans agree that cannabis cultivation and/or sales, and California’s roads are in bad shape. start collecting millions of dollars But many of these same politicians in fees. Or, like many other councome out against a higher gas tax. ties, they could save an estimated Do they offer an alternative source of $50 million in incarceration costs revenue for fixing the roads? No. by adopting a pretrial risk assessSo I wanted to find out where ment program that allows low-risk Supervisor Frost felt the money nonviolent offenders who cannot should come from to eliminate make bail to be released on their own the county deficit. What programs recognizance. should we cut? What fees should be I’d like to challenge our county increased? Or did she embrace new supervisors to think a bit more sources of revenue to help solve the creatively. Ω problem? I emailed her my questions. Her reply said, in part, “I wouldn’t cut current services, but I would save a significantly higher percentage of Jeff vonKaenel is the president, CEO and majority our yearly available fund balance than owner of the News & Review. we currently do. Right now we save


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nucLear nincompoopS With Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un engaged in a contest about the size and strength of their nuclear projectiles, Veterans for Peace has a message for Beale Air Force Base. The Sacramento chapter co-sponsored a 15-second advertisement, featuring trump’s screaming face superimposed on a mushroom cloud, that urges the base to not “help Donald Trump kill North Koreans.” The video quotes Martin Luther King Jr.’s proclamation about a choice between “nonviolent coexistence” or “violent co-annihilation.” With King’s words still ringing true, the world’s fate couldn’t be in worse hands.

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“impulsivity and self-control in teens and young adults” to discover ways to diminish the likelihood of engaging in risky behavior that could produce long-term damage. As someone who’s still wondering why he bought a $300 counterfeit surround-sound speaker system out of the trunk of a car, Scorekeeper eagerly awaits the results of these findings.

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Sacramento Kings forward Zach Randolph, arrested last week for allegedly possessing two

pounds of marijuana (about 32 times the legal limit), now faces an NBA ban. Randolph was released on a $20,000 bail, and now both the Kings and the NBA seem to be waiting to see if he will be convicted of a felony. If so, Randolph shouldn’t be punished more than two Kern County sheriff’s deputies who helped traffic 32 pounds of marijuana and were sentenced on August 7 to only a few years probation, a forfeiture of their profits and community service hours. No word on if Randolph will cite “team bonding” as a defense.

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The moon will pass between the sun and the earth from about 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. on august 21, which should be a sunny day. At the high point of the eclipse, up to 76 percent of our local star will be obscured. But that doesn’t mean it’s safe to look at. Since our retinas have no pain receptors, you can scorch them without feeling a thing. Harmless viewing can be done through a pinhole camera made out of a shoebox.

Donald Trump has set a shining example for assholes. A day before KKK mascot David Duke credited the president for inspiring a deadly gathering of nazi snowflakes in Charlottesville, NRA flak Grant Stinchfield tweeted, “Let’s send a note to North Korea that Sacramento changed its name to Guam!” Stinchfield deleted his joke, inspired by a president who provokes nuclear war but is too cowardly to challenge nazis.

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Accountability in the construction industry by Robbie HunteR

holding everybody below him in line— When it comes to protecting and to make things right if they don’t. construction workers in the underground General contractors on taxpayereconomy, the history of California has funded public works projects have been found that the buck stops . . . nowhere. doing this for years, and they’ve had little Most of the cheating, most of the trouble enforcing wage standards lower rip-offs, most of the theft of workers’ down in the construction food chain. wages takes place two or three rungs Now it’s time to extend this force of down from the general contractors at the law to their counterparts in the private top of the construction pyramid. There’s sector. so much of it that the overwhelmed state A 2014 study by the Economic Department of Industrial Relations can’t Roundtable found that one-sixth of the keep up on the enforcement end. The state’s construction industry work force outcome: tens of thousands of construcis hired on an “informal” basis. That tion and other blue-collar workers are means that unscrupulous employers paid denied hundreds of millions of dollars some 144,000 workers cash under the a year in lost wages, while the state table—if they paid them at all—with is shorted somewhere between $8.5 no Social Security, tax, workers billion and $28 billion a year by comp, disability or other employers who don’t pay withholdings. their taxes. This is the world It’s a situation of the underground studied to death by Making sure economy. academicians while that workers get The same lawmakers have study revealed hesitated to throw paid for their labor that workers in up the stop sign. is as bedrock as it this dog-eat-dog Finally, someemployment market body in Sacramento gets. made about half the is doing something earnings of their aboveabout it. Assemblyman board brothers and sisters. Tony Thurmond has taken While they shorted construction the lead, and if his colleagues in workers $1.2 billion in the underground the Legislature follow it, we might soon economy, the same employers who have a mechanism to crack down on the either ran off with the ill-gotten gains cheating. or went out of business also cheated the Thurmond, a Democrat from state out of $774 million in taxes, the Richmond, is the author of Assembly study found. Bill 1701, a simple but powerful If the provisions of this bill might piece of legislation that will bring force some general contractors to work a accountability to the private construclittle harder to keep tabs on their subcontion industry. The bill maintains that tractors, we say good. If it prompts them if you are the general contractor on to put forth a little more due diligence in a construction project, and if your examining the solvency of the smaller sub-contractors—or even their “subbusinesses they do business with, we say subs”—stiff a worker out of his or her better. If it means that the subcontractors pay, you are liable. End of story. must post a bond to ensure that workers Making sure that workers get paid for get paid, we say it’s about time. Ω their labor is as bedrock as it gets when it comes to old-fashioned American labor-management relations. Under Robbie Hunter is president of the State Building Thurmond’s bill, it will be the employerand Construction Trades Council. in-chief who will be responsible for

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The evasive

AmericAn DreAm Former DACA recipient defies the odds to win national poetry awards and a Harper Collins contract

by Rebecca Huval rebec c ah@ n ewsrev i ew . com

Poet Marcelo Hernandez Castillo Photo BY serene lusano

16   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17


m

arcelo Hernandez Castillo had never seen such opulence. Inside a domed ballroom in New York City, a crystal chandelier twinkled and purple light splashed across every wall and gown. Bow-tied waiters swiveled around the merriment with trays of hors d’oeuvres. Tickets to enter the Park Avenue room were $500 a head on that night in March 2016, and these high-paying guests were all there to celebrate him. But Castillo spent most of the night in the bathroom, he says, sobbing to the attendant who handed out mints and towels. “I was telling him how bullshit all of this was,” Castillo recalls. “I just wanted none of it.” Castillo—along with poets Christopher Soto and Javier Zamora—had just won the Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Award. They were the founders of Undocupoets, a movement to petition first-book-award contests to cease requiring proof of U.S. citizenship. Many prizes would only consider poets with papers. These included the prestigious BOA Editions’ A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize, which Castillo won this spring. As a result of that award he will publish his first full-length book of poems, Cenzontle, in 2018. The sprightly 29-year-old poet taught at Sacramento State University until this summer, and he usually speaks through a glowing smile. As the first undocumented writer to graduate from University of Michigan’s Master in Fine Arts writing program in 2014, he has become something of a poster child for poets who lack citizenship. Since then, his career has blossomed. After he snagged those awards, publishers got into a bidding war over his memoir. HarperCollins, one of the “Big Five,” won the battle this spring. But Castillo’s rising stardom has come at a personal cost. The young poet has struggled with his immigration status throughout his schooling, and his ascendant career occasionally whisks him away from his family. On the other hand, he’s also been forced to take breaks from his work to fight bureaucratic or political skirmishes on behalf of his relatives. In the midst of all of this, he questions whether he should relish any of his fortune while his family fights to live here. He’s so preoccupied, he says, he frets about being truly present for his loved ones. Sometimes, he even doubts whether he enjoys the act of writing. On that evening in New York, none of the pomp and prestige mattered to Castillo because he had just spoken on the phone with his mother. She had returned to Mexico to retire

and reunite with his father. Castillo says this was a kind of death. No longer could he lean on his mother’s shoulder or comb her hair. She didn’t have U.S. citizenship, so her move to Mexico was final, and he remembers that she sounded so distant on the phone. He later beseeched a mentor who had delighted in the festivities on Park Avenue. “How can you enjoy this?” Castillo asked the poet, who had also come from humble beginnings. “How do you live with yourself knowing that you’re out here, posh in this Park Avenue building with attendants in the bathroom and attendants everywhere and the food was amazing—how do you live with yourself?”

the page, sometimes beginning in the middle, sometimes inching toward the right edge. In his poem “Origin of Drowning or Crossing the Rio Bravo,” Castillo memorializes all who have crossed the border before and after him. Like a bittersweet dream, he imagines lovers settling down at the bottom of that river where so many have died by trying to live. This tragic couplet bubbles up in the center of the page: “Let’s keep waking underwater / until one of us gets it right.” He probes the subject of immigration for its universal resonance. In the same poem, he writes, “If they can kiss you, / they can kill you.” That’s as true of a nation as it is of a lover.

will. The title of his upcoming collection is Cenzontle—“Mockingbird”—and his words flutter off the page: “Because the bird flew / before there was a word / for flight / years from now / there will be a name / for what you and I are doing.” He writes about other winged things, including butterflies and bees, enviably free creatures unbound by the ground or their passports. He returns to honey, miel, with erotic sensuality, often contrasting that pleasure with pain. In grade school, for example, a young boy called him “wetback.” He addresses that boy all these years later in a poem by shoving honey down his throat and gifting him with a morbid present: “I made him a necklace out of the bees that have died in my yard.” Mind you, Castillo’s allergic to bees. The poet flirts with the razor’s edge of danger in surreal scenarios where he’s safe—at last. “There’s a dreamlike quality to the way he makes a scene or imagery,” says Eduardo Corral, another mentor and the first Latino writer to win the Yale Series of Younger Poets award. “It’s very intense and intimate and they’re calm, but they have such an emotional truth to them. They resonate. A lot of Marcelo’s work is the emotion of feeling broken and accepting brokenness of the human condition, and pleasure in being fragmented and pulled in different directions.” Castillo has been torn between Mexico and the United States, between feeling welcome and unwanted. He began writing to suppress his alienation and discovered that poems were the perfect escape from reality. He writes, “Perhaps the butterflies are mute / because no one would believe their stories.” Poetry was the only place where he felt protected, where he didn’t need a Social Security number, as he wrote in a 2014 essay for BuzzFeed: “I made myself invisible in my poems.”

“This is a young, ambitious writer with some obstacles in front of him, but he’s finding ways to move beyond what’s in front of him. No matter if he had the right quote-unquote papers, he’s gonna write.” Eduardo C. Corral, poet

As he recalls, his mentor responded bluntly: “‘You’re an asshole if you think that your mom wouldn’t want you to be here. Do you think she wants you to be out on the street, or out working on the fields?’” And Castillo had to admit that he agreed: “Yeah, it’s right, she wants you to be here, exactly. That shook me to my core.” Now, nearly a year-and-a-half later, Castillo still chafes at success like an ill-fitting suit. By the time his memoir will be released in 2019, he must learn to wear it.

Poetics of a dreamer Castillo’s poems reveal his slippery sense of time. The stanzas come unglued from the left margin and their indentations drift around

Joshua McKinney, poetry professor at Sacramento State and a mentor to Castillo, reveres this quality in his former student’s writing. “I sometimes become annoyed at identity politics in literature,” McKinney says. “Marcelo taps into his cultural experience, and that’s an integral part of his work, but I never feel he foregrounds that in a way that is sensational. It’s just who he is. And he had interesting and difficult struggles as a result of his experience coming into the United States, and language is linked with that in an integral way. Language—English—became a kind of tool for protecting himself from questions that people might ask about his status.” For someone who learned English as a second language, McKinney says, Castillo has a remarkable faculty for manipulating it to his

Pushing the limits The poet was only 5 years old when he crossed the border on foot from Tijuana to California. Castillo remembers going momentarily blind with worry while waiting for the go-ahead from a coyote. His mother was five months pregnant with his brother. She led Castillo across the desert, and when he

“The evasive AmericAn dreAm” continued on page 19

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“The evasive AmericAn dreAm” continued from page 17

GrowinG pains Castillo and his new wife moved not just from sunny California to frigid Michigan, but to Ann Arbor—“the whitest town,” he says. There was no precedent at the school for someone who was undocumented. Castillo had been accepted on the merit of his poems, and he told the faculty of his citizenship status only once he got in. “They didn’t know what to do with me.” To enable him to get in without papers, they gave him a scholarship so he wouldn’t have to teach, he says. Although it was a financial relief, it introduced soul-crushing moments. “My [program] director said, ‘You know, the only reason you got the first-year fellowship is because we couldn’t put you to work. We had to give it to you because it’s a private fellowship because you didn’t have a Social,’” he says. “I felt terrible. I was like, OK, you didn’t have to tell me that.” It was Castillo’s cohort of fellow writers who helped him grow, he says. His fondest school memory: On the lawn in the springtime, he and Rubi laid out on a blanket with his friends Brit Bennett—who’s since published the New York Times-bestselling novel The Mothers—and poet Derrick Austin—winner of the same poetry prize as Castillo, the year before him. Castillo guzzled most of a warm bottle of gin. He recalls traipsing down the hill with abandon and breaking his toe. The tightknit group of writers traded books, and Castillo became exposed to “contemporary black, brown, Asian poets—because that was not my experience in college.” They also watched lots of

RuPaul’s Drag Race; Castillo named his small white dog after one of his favorite drag queens on the show, Kim Chi. These friends finally gave him “permission to be glamorous,” so much so that he wore a tight purple dress one snowy Halloween. “I feel like I’ve been denied glamor all my life, especially being a Latino man, and with my father’s very complicated ideas around masculinity. I always have to wear boots, jeans and a tucked-in shirt—that was his idea of masculinity.” Castillo began to drape himself in elegant scarves. Then, within the comforting cocoon of his cohort, Castillo finally began to express his queerness on the page. Although he’s monogamous with his wife, Castillo explores his sexuality through the sensuality of words: “I close my eyes and lick your beard / and the salt of your cheek / tastes like batteries and liver. / You are the first man I have ever kissed.” After his first-year fellowship ran out, Castillo was worried about being able to pay for school. He legally couldn’t teach. Then, former President Obama passed the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program just in time for Castillo to stay in school and start lecturing at Michigan. A year later, Castillo was granted a special visa to visit Mexico for the first time since he was 5. He says he was looking for “the zero,” as poet Galway

“The evasive AmericAn dreAm” continued on page 21

Photo by serene lusano

couldn’t keep up, his older sibling hoisted him on his back. The family’s reason for crossing the border was simple: “My mom, she knew hunger, and she didn’t like it.” Before they moved to the states, his parents had worked here seasonally, picking strawberries in Washington, asparagus in Stockton. They decided to move to Yuba City because Castillo’s aunt had settled there, and she sheltered the family until they saved enough money to move out. Despite giving them a place to stay, his aunt—now deceased—sparks bitter memories. “She treated us like garbage,” he says. “She wrapped all of her furniture in plastic as soon as we came because we were dirty.” The six children hid in their room. His mother worked at a prune factory off Highway 113, but Castillo says his father never worked a steady job. Then, in 2003, his dad was deported. “Little did I know how strongly that would affect me later on in life,” he says. Castillo has been jumpy around authority since, afraid of getting deported over the smallest clerical errors. He says undocumented people are always living 10 seconds into the future. “We’re always mapping an escape route. We’re always living in that near distant future, which doesn’t give us the luxury to just chill.” To contain his anxiety, he started writing poetry at Yuba City High School. Castillo read the early iambic pentameter to his future wife, Rubi. Sometimes, he would shove Spanish poems in her locker. “That’s kind of when I knew he was serious about being a poet,” Rubi recalls. “He’s dedicated to it. He’s never been lazy about it or ever thought about giving up, even when it’s been hard.” Rubi was and is the “Sagittarius queen” to Castillo’s “triple Aquarius,” he says—in other words, they both agree that she’s level-headed while he spins in circles with wild ambitions. When he speaks, words trip out of his mouth all at once like the Three Stooges stuck in a door. She pauses to consider the perfect thing to say. “I never walk on ground, I’m always in the air,” Castillo says. “She’s been like—cliché—but been like my rock.” They studied together at Sacramento State. There, Castillo met professor McKinney and read many of the books he mentioned in class, even those in passing, McKinney says. “I’ve taught now for 25 years at the university level; I think it’s fair to say that Marcelo has shown the most rapid progress,” the professor says. “When I first read his poetry he was solid, but it didn’t wow me, to be candid. But by the

time he graduated, it was like talking to a colleague.” McKinney encouraged Castillo to apply to MFA programs. Corral, too, says he reached out to advise Castillo: Let the poems speak for themselves. “He wanted to write a book of poems and write a novel,” Corral remembers of their first conversation. “I remember thinking: This is a young, ambitious writer with some obstacles in front of him, but he’s finding ways to move beyond what’s in front of him. No matter if he had the right quote-unquote papers, he’s gonna write.” Without that support, Castillo says, he doubts he would have taken the leap. Inside a Starbucks one day, he opened the email of acceptance from the University of Michigan, and he and Rubi began to scream and cry. “I said, ‘This is it! Our problems are over!’” Castillo recalls, unleashing a belly laugh as he plunks down his coffee mug. Anyone who’s considered an MFA might know to cue the laugh track at those words. For Castillo, the odds were even worse: He was an undocumented student about to enter a school that had no handbook to support him.

Photo courtesy of marcelo hernandez castillo

Marcelo Hernandez Castillo with his wife, Rubi, in Michigan.

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   19


Nevada’s Learning Curve

What the Golden State can learn from the Silver State’s quick rollout of recreational cannabis by Ken Magri

Y

ou probably saw news stories about the long lines and shortages at Nevada cannabis dispensaries after recreational sales began on July 1. “It was real,” said one Reno customer, standing in a much shorter line three weeks later. “I gave up and went home the first time.” Media reports cited distribution problems more often than the real reason: Dispensaries simply didn’t stock enough product. “Some weren’t ready for the July start,” said Kyle, a budtender at Sierra Wellness in Reno. Despite Sierra’s expansion plans, their current selection was down to four flower strains, and a handful of concentrates, drinks and CBD products. “That’s just temporary,” explained Kyle, who said more inventory arrives each day, now that the initial surge has subsided. “That story was mostly media driven,” said budtender Emma Coombs, at Reno’s The Dispensary, a chain with sister stores in Las Vegas and Henderson. Because Nevada requires all cannabis to be grown in-state, many dispensaries couldn’t restock with outside suppliers. Coombs said their Reno dispensary remained fully stocked by coordinating with the southern Nevada stores. Could similar shortages happen in California? It is unlikely, due to the sheer size of the cannabis industry. “We are producing too much,” said Hezekiah Allen of the California Growers’ Association, at a recent Sacramento Press Club panel. He refers to the estimate that California currently grows (legally and illegally) far more cannabis than dispensaries will ever need.

“The Bureau does not anticipate any shortages. We’ve learned from the experiences of other states.” Alex Traverso, California’s Bureau of Medical Cannabis Regulation

After a wobbly start, Nevada dispensaries are now fully stocked. Photo by Ken Magri

patients is shorter. Californians who bring their local doctor’s recommendation can qualify by filling out a simple form. Meanwhile, slow permitting keeps Carson City dispensary Rise from fully expanding into recreational until January. “Sorry, Medical Only” reads the sign out front. It’s all part of Nevada’s learning curve.

“The Bureau does not anticipate any shortages,” said Alex Traverso, at California’s Bureau of Medical Cannabis Regulation. “We’ve learned from the experiences of other states, and hope to have a regulatory framework … that will allow California’s cannabis industry to thrive.” Despite the wobbly start, Nevada’s regulators did a few things very well. New product labeling includes harvest dates, test dates, the product’s potency and a breakdown of terpene potencies. Using sealed, double zip-lock envelopes, the packaging regulations go beyond mere child-resistance to discourage customers from opening products on the way home. Like Colorado, Nevada dispensaries sell both medical and recreational cannabis in the same store. The difference is an 18 percent tax on recreational sales, and the line for medical

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“The evasive AmericAn dreAm” continued from page 19

Kinnell calls it—his point of origin. When Castillo found the horseshoe-shaped edifice in Tepechitlan, Zacatecas, that had been his childhood home, he says he wanted to tear off his clothes and rub his naked body against the walls and the dirt. But his father was watching, so he simply touched everything in the dilapidated shack. Still, he couldn’t access a feeling of comfort. To this day, neither Mexico nor the states feel quite like home, he says. All the same, Castillo applied for U.S. permanent residence. His interviewer inspired one of the more absurd poems in Castillo’s book, “Immigration Interview with Jay Leno.” “What is your objective?” a talk-showhost-turned-immigration-official asks. “To return all the children / hidden behind the street lamps,” answers an immigrant. “How long do you plan on staying here? I don’t understand / the question.” Castillo plans on staying in the states indefinitely—he got his green card in 2014. When an immigration official granted his permanent residency, she said, “Welcome to the United States!”And Castillo thought, “I didn’t just get here. I’ve been here for 21 years.” He also dwelled on his less fortunate relatives. “There are so many people that need this more than me,” he says. “I felt kind of empty when I got it.”

to respond to Emma Lazarus’ sonnet on the Statue of Liberty (“Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free”). In a briefing on immigration reform a few days earlier, the White House downplayed the poem’s significance to the statue’s construction. In response, Castillo told Levine, “When I came undocumented into this country, I wanted to learn English so that I could be considered ‘enough.’ But after this terrible year, it’s been solidified in me that maybe, that’ll never be reached.”

poems, which he had written throughout the past seven years. He’s afraid he wrote them for the wrong reasons: to suppress his dread, to keep “the mad dogs on the leash,” to please his professors and readers, but never himself. “Actively looking for joy in your poems, it doesn’t come for free,” he says. “I feel like you have to give something up.” The poet knows what he has given up so far. His wife often tells him that he cares more about work than spending time with her, Castillo says. If inspiration strikes, he’ll

Bittersweet fruit Last year, just a month after the poet’s mother retired to Mexico, he says, his dad was kidnapped and held for a ransom. His family did everything they could think of to rescue his father. Castillo put his work on the back burner to prioritize his loved ones. Then, after 45 days, he says, his father returned to safety, and the U.S. government allowed his parents to move to the states and apply for asylum. They’ve since returned to Yuba City, minutes away from their son. In Castillo’s home office in Marysville, a photo is pinned to his bulletin board showing the relieved poet with his arms engulfing his mother, his head leaned against her shoulder. His eyes are shut in quiet bliss. Rubi admires the image and says, “He was so happy to see her.” Under President Trump, it might not have been possible—new policies have made it harder to apply for asylum. A February 2017 memo from the Department of Homeland Security states that asylum seekers should be moved into the country “sparingly.” Castillo says he’s nervous about losing his parents again. “I’m trying to stay positive about it, but I know how difficult it’s going to be.” Earlier this month, New York Times reporter Alexandra S. Levine asked Castillo

The poet and his father in Mexico in 2015. Photo courtesy of Marcello hernandez castillo

Recently, Castillo pulled his car into a farm field off Highway 113, the same road where his mother packed prunes. He called up his poet friend Austin to tearfully confess that he doesn’t find pleasure in writing. “I get joy in the moments before, like when you get that little pain,” he told his friend, “and the moments afterward when you’re finished. But the grind? When you’re in the grind, I don’t enjoy that.” Castillo says he felt alienated from his

wake up at 2 a.m. to rush to his office. Rubi doesn’t admit to feeling neglected, but says pausing her undergraduate studies to move to Michigan was lonely, at times. Now that Rubi is six months pregnant with a boy—due around the same time that his chapbook of poems is set to be published—Castillo feels the pressure to be more attentive. So that he’ll be more mindful for the birth of his son, he’s scrawled a reminder across a whiteboard in his home

office: Slow down. “One of my biggest fears is that I’m never present; I’m always absentminded even when I’m talking amongst friends or we’re grilling with my family,” he says. “I’m always somewhere else. So I don’t really feel like I’m going to be there for him.” Though he keeps telling himself to chill out, he says he has no real intention of doing so in the scheme of his life plans. He’s applying for tenure-track jobs around the country. Already, he’s dreaming up a second book of poems, and this summer, he taught five literature classes at UC Davis for Upward Bound, a program for low-income high schoolers. In front of a dozen students, it becomes apparent where Castillo feels at home. He sits atop a desk and dangles his white Converse. When students contribute insights, he excitedly paces around the room and exclaims “Yes!” with big eyes. He looks and acts like these teens, with his references to emojis and Orange Is the New Black. One student mentions some “bros or friends” who’ve drifted apart, down a bad path, and Castillo grants him poetic license: “You can write about that, too!” After reading poems like “Pluto Shits on the Universe” by Fatimah Asghar and “The Double Blind,” a lyrical treatise on sexual assault by Tafisha A. Edwards, his students have learned to open up about the details of their lives. Diana Morales, 18, says she wants to start writing poetry again after Castillo’s class. “He’s passionate about everything he teaches, and then it’s contagious,” Morales says. “Whenever I thought about poetry, I thought ‘old white people,’ for some reason. Now I’m thinking literally anyone can be a poet. It can be young and an immigrant, or an old white dude, too. He gives me confidence.” In class, one student shares a poem about her father who left the family. “Dad? No, more like coward,” she writes. After she finishes reading it, another student asks: Why did she include the internet slang “LOL” in the poem? The teen poet answers, “It’s kinda like a laugh to keep from crying.” What Castillo says next might as well be the tagline of his life. “A lot of the most successful poems exist in that space between laughing and crying.” In poetry, Castillo has found the language to articulate his sanity and the world’s madness, allowing both to coexist in the white space between the lines. On the page, it’s possible to desire and reject your fortune at the same time. “If they can kiss you, / they can kill you.” Later that day, Castillo returns to Marysville, surrounded by poetry. He surveys the hundreds of years of effort on his bookshelf, the many voices from Frank O’Hara to Audre Lorde to C.D. Wright to his own friend, Austin. He pulls out a manuscript and tosses it in the air. “This is seven years of work, right? What does it weigh?” Ω

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   21


Haley Leming, Eliot Olson and Rio Soluaga rock out, unplugged.

r o f p m a C

r e k roc

grrrls I Photo BY ANNE StoKES

In Its second year, GIrls rock sacramento expands to a weeklonG camp for GIrls to pluG In and rock out by Rachel Leibrock | r a c h el l @n ews r ev i ew. c om

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t’s a hot Saturday afternoon when the members of Riddiance take the stage at Ace of Spades. Outside it’s blazing bright but inside the lights are dim, the crowd ready and the mood 100 percent rock ’n’ roll. Haley Pierce, 14, adjusts her guitar, Shelby Kelso, 14, steadies herself behind the drums, and Haley Leming, 16, waits with her bass as Veronica Hankins, 16, steps up to the microphone. After a quick introduction from an emcee, the band launches into a post-punk riot grrrlesque anthem with a hooky earworm of a chorus: “You can’t tell me what to say / I’m not your / not your babe.” A few minutes later and they’re done. Just one song—but it’s executed with fevered polish and flawless delivery. The crowd erupts in cheers as the girls exchange smiles then hurry to make way for the next band, Summer Snow. Less than a week ago these band members didn’t know each other, much less know how to play their instruments. Now, after five days in Girls Rock

Sacramento, a day camp for teens, they’re seasoned rock stars. Summer Snow finishes and local singer-songwriter Xochitl steps behind the mic. The 20-something musician can hardly contain her joy with the show. “I’m a million years old and have played a million times,” she says. “But I loved this so much; these girls killed it.” Go back in time 24 hours and the scene is decidedly more chaotic, with the campers working hard to prep for the spotlight. The members of Riddiance are cramming in a post-lunch practice in the multipurpose room at the Met Sacramento High School as other musicians put the finishing touches on silk-screened T-shirts. Nearby, several girls have grabbed hula hoops to blow off energy and nerves. As the band makes its way through numerous false starts, the room swells with a girlish energy that roller-coasters between serious concentration and a gleeful sense of camaraderie forged through songwriting, missed notes and flubbed chords. Finally, Riddiance plays the song in one take. Afterwards, a young girl balancing a hula hoop on her hips calls out to the band. “Your song is amazing,” she says. “I want more.” That’s the same feeling Girls Rock Sacramento co-founder Emma Simpson remembers. She was 10 when she participated in her first camp in Portland, where the inaugural school launched under the name Rock ‘n’ Roll Camp for Girls in 2007. “I loved it and always wanted to do something here,” says the bassist, now 22. Simpson found a kindred spirit in her one-time vocal coach Larisa Bryski, who had experience working with teens as the director for Skip’s Music’s annual Stairway to Stardom summer program.


Rubi-gone bRewing Co. See oFF Menu

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When Simpson asked if she was interested in launching a local Girls Rock chapter, Bryski didn’t hesitate. “I just dropped everything I was doing,” Bryski says. In 2016 the pair hosted two half-day sessions; one camp for preteens, the other for older girls. They finished with a show at Bryski’s studio space. They enjoyed it so much they decided to expand to a full week. In addition to another minisession for preteens, this year’s camp brought together 22 girls, ages 12-16, for a week with coaches and volunteers to learn instruments and collaboration. The women also received guidance on how to navigate what’s still a very maledominated music world, with workshops on health and sexuality (the parents sign waivers), self esteem, self defense and body image. “We want to stress empowerment,” Simpson says. The same issues and stereotypes she faced when starting out persist today. Some of them are just annoyingly sexist: sound engineers who are surprised she can play or want to help lug her gear. Other concerns are more insistent: the real dangers a woman faces, for example, leaving a gig at night. “Girls Rock gives young girls a place for empowerment,” Simpson says. That empowerment, she adds, finds its strength in numbers. “It takes so many women, a network of women,” she says. It takes a rock ‘n’ roll village: Girls Rock Sacramento is a fiscally sponsored nonprofit. Bryski and Simpson are working on obtaining independent 501(c) (3) status and would like to implement sliding-scale tuition. For now, the camp largely relies on the generosity of others. Tuition is $350 per student but doesn’t cover the entirety of operational expenses, Bryski says. To supplement, the team solicits donations and aid. The Met donated use of its space, local restaurants supplied free lunches and a volunteer squad of musicians and music-minded people led instruction. A lot of work, but worth it. For X Spearmint’s Bella Bright, 14, and Rio *, 13, the camp’s been a totally not-boring way to make friends and try something new. “My parents told me about the camp, they said it was run by girls and I said, ‘Cool I’m in,’” Soluaga says. “Then they told me it’s just girls and I said, ‘I’m definitely in.’”

MiMing the boRdeR wall

This camp lets girls bang on real drums without buying their own.

“My parents told me about the camp, they said it was run by girls, and I said, ‘Cool I’m in.’” Rio Soluaga camper, Girls Rock Sacramento

Soluaga, who plays clarinet in her school’s marching band, now plays bass. Bright spent the week learning guitar. “It’s cool, my fingers have gotten tougher,” she says, showing off the calloused pads of her fingers like trophies. Unlike other similar camps, Girls Rock isn’t a contest. There are no judges, no prizes at the end. This, Bryski says, is essential. “I believe it takes a tremendous amount of pressure off of them,” she says. “They’re all so much more relaxed, it’s like, ‘We’re all in this together, my girls are up front and onstage.” Next summer Bryski and Simpson hope to expand to include workshops, simple hangout time and more campers— they’d love to grow it to 30 girls. “The girls want more time to bond,” Bryski says. “They just want to spend more time together.” Back in the multipurpose room, Liz Salmi watches this bonding in action and smiles. The former Luckie Strike drummer has spent the last week mentoring young drummers. She says it’s been a while since she played in a band—about 15 years, actually—and this week at camp has given her perspective. “I wish there’d been something like this when I was [younger],” she says. “I

only got the chance to play with boys, and when you’re playing with boys, you have to insert yourself into that boys’ club.” Allie Bogetich, 14, says the camp’s given her confidence to explore making music on her own. The teen plays drums in her high school’s jazz band, now she wants to lead her own garage rock band. “I already have a name for it— Sabertooth—and I’ve picked out the album art,” she says, pulling up a photo of a cat on her phone as evidence. “This has been really fun,” Bogetich adds. “Chill, no pressure.” That’s part of the magic, the organizers say. “The girls are supportive of each other,” Bryski says. “Egos are put aside. They work out their challenges through songs.” The next day at Ace of Spades, Girls Rock Sacramento’s 2017 season officially closes as any good camp does, with a sing-a-long. The stage fills with dozens of girls and volunteers, all holding hands, kumbaya-style, as their voices rise to fill the club. “This is a place where we all belong,” they sing. “We rock!” Ω

The mood is laid-back inside the William A. Carroll Amphitheater. A woman on stage loops her flute riffs. a lone pagan dancer shrouded in shiny gold fabric leaps to and fro. A  quartet takes to the stage, armed with a saxophone and  a didgeridoo, and plays music that shouldn’t work but  somehow does. Hippie jazz, I think. Dig it! Technically, the  10th annual Fire Spectacular has already started, but the  evening is young.  About a dozen troupes dance with fire on August 12,  and roughly 100 people congregate to watch them for $15  per adult. What started a decade ago as a loose collection  of dancers exploring movement and performance art has  blossomed into a full cast of talented artists working together, using fire as a means to connect to a deeper sense  of self and to practice control and humility. Learning to  feel comfortable with fire is learning to feel comfortable  with oneself. Also, spinning fire looks really, really cool. I amble over to the vegan food  kiosk and order nachos. A stickthin kid scoops a greenish muck  into a tray: “That’s the nacho  ‘meat,’” he says. I say thanks  and sit, politely munching on  my not-nachos while   an aztec dance troupe performs a sacred fire dance.  They light a small flame at  the front of the stage and  dance around it. Fire! At the front gates, a giant plume of flames shoots into the sky. A stocky  man with a cigar has crashed the party with his own  incendiary contraption: hot dogs on a wire. “Want a dog?”  he calls to me, pulls a lever and sets fire to the sausages.  He sticks one in a bun and thrusts it at me. I guiltily scarf  it down, hoping the vegans aren’t watching. Back at the amphitheater, night has come, and dancers are spinning orbs of fire. Unfortunately, the action feels  too far away, causing a disconnect between the awe  of fire play and the audience that wants to vicariously  enjoy it. The final act, Obsidian Butterfly seems to sense this  disconnect, so they cavort among the people, swallowing  flames and breathing billows of fire into the night sky. The  crowd collectively sits taller, their eyes widening as they feel the heat on their faces. Obsidian Butterfly has everyone’s  full attention.  I’m as rapt as everyone else. Obsidian’s boardwalk  sideshow culminates into a cornucopia of lit lassos, hoops, fans, flame throwers, torches and phoenix wings. It is a truly  spectacular spectacle.  As the flames die out, the crowd cheers, and we are  left again with the lonely dark. I make my way out of the  gates, musing about the relationship we humans have  with fire. We may have learned to use fire to our benefit,  but it certainly holds a mythical power over us.  Behind me, a vegan is confronting the guy with the  cigar setting hot dogs on fire. “Hot dogs are evil,” he says.  I don’t hear how the cigar man responds. If he’s smart,  he’ll blame the mysterious nature of the fire spirits.

Learning to feel comfortable with fire is learning to feel comfortable with oneself.

—Amy Bee

Learn more about Girls Rock Sacramento at www.girlsrocksacramento.com.

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24   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17


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SM


IllustratIons by kyle sHIne

Sweet chili on a stir fry eggplant Stir-fry, p thai eatery A new Thai place is generally either inexpensive and  homey, or costly and swanky. P Thai Eatery sits in  between with its stir-fries and curries, all ranging  between $10 and $14 depending on your protein choices.  The eggplant stir-fry hits all the right notes. Delightfully  plated fresh vegetables are still firm to the bite. A small  pool of sweet chili sauce is coupled with tender chunks  of chicken, all cooked deftly enough to let each component’s taste shine independently and in conjunction. And  the eggplant, hoo boy. Of all Thai eggplants I’ve found,  this ranks as the best around. 7837 Stockton Boulevard,  Suite 700, (916) 476-6546.

—anthony Siino

Peppy, not sorry roSé all Day, hook & laDDer Manufacturing co.

IllustratIon by Mark stIvers

Last pints by John Flynn

Rubicon on the ropes: Glynn Phillips

sat on his pub’s rapidly filling patio on August 9. Two days earlier, as the owner of Rubicon Brewing Co., he had announced the closing of this nearly 30-year-old Midtown institution. He said those past two days had been the busiest in the brewery’s history by far. Phillips tightened his lips and called the recent support “bittersweet” as he was cycling in and out of meetings regarding the future of the brewery, which will likely shutter by the end of August. “Monday was one of the hardest days of my life,” he said. “[Rubicon] is my dream.” Phillips said business suffered following an influx of nearby taprooms and dozens of regional

breweries. The craft beer industry’s recent emphasis on bolder flavors also juxtaposed with Rubicon’s more balanced beers, like the Monkey Knife Fight Pale Ale or Rubicon’s IPA, which astonished judges at the Great American Beer Festival with its hoppiness and won gold medals in 1989 and 1990. Now, those brews seem tame compared to modern hop bombs. “I’m really proud that we’ve always made good, clean beer,” he said. “By today’s standards, some of them are not as exciting as others. But, you always knew what to expect when you purchased a Rubicon beer.” Jennie Simpson, who worked at the brewery from 1997 to 2000, said she’ll miss the “chill flow” of the pub. She ordered an amber ale

for herself and her mother Nancy, just as they had done 20 years ago. Jennie said she fell in love with beer at Rubicon and grew apoplectic upon noticing the absence of the neon Rubicon sign out front. “It’s totally not cool at all that this is happening,” she said. “It’s a knife to the heart. I can’t imagine these beers just being gone.” After owning the brewery for 12 years, Phillips said there are multiple paths for him to take, some “not so good,” some “pretty good” and some “really nice.” For now, he’s focused on the present, but apparently, the brewery’s fate isn’t completely sealed yet. “I’m mostly concerned with letting our good customers have that last pint,” he said as he left for another meeting. “And, you know, maybe somebody might buy it. We’ll see.” Another one: Founded in 2012, American River Brewing Co. of Rancho Cordova closed on August 8. The brewery won a gold medal at the 2016 California State Fair for their Coloma Brown ale. Ω

Mistakenly, rosé has gotten a bad rap. Food nerds  moan about its popularity among the set of women who  popularity among the set of women who sport gemstone-studded T-shirts  gemstone-studded T-shirts and “woo-hoo!” about wine. To  wine. To reclaim rosé as the innocent  innocent varietal that it is, defiantly  defiantly sip on Rose All Day ($11).  The perky drink mixes  Lillet Rose—a wine-based  wine-based aperitif—with sweet  hibiscus, a sour pinch of  lemon, bittersweet Aperol  Aperol and bubbly soda. It’s all atop a  atop a base of Forty Ounce Rosé, wine from  France’s Loire Valley. Woo-hoo all day, we won’t judge.  1630 S Street, https://hookandladder916.com.

—rebecca huval

Beans from the source Shelling beanS What are dried beans before they’re dried? Shelling  beans! For a short time in late summer, you can find  freshly harvested beans like cranlike cranberry, butter and cannellini  cannellini that only need brief cooking.  cooking. Simmer them in cream and  and sprinkle with pepper for an  an indulgent treat. Or shuck  shuck and boil them to serve  in a salad with cherry  tomatoes and abundant  herbs. Beans grow easily in  in this area and help fix nitrogen  nitrogen in the soil for winter crops. For fun,  crops. For fun, try heirloom varieties like tongue-of-fire or Christmas  limas and revel in their lovely mottled colors.

—ann Martin rolke

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   27


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barnes & Noble Kitchen

280 Palladio Parkway in Folsom, (916) 984-4407 http://barnesandnoblekitchen.com Meal for one: $12 - $22 Good for: reading magazines for free while noshing on New American food Notable dishes: brisket burger, brick-cooked chicken, avocado toast

Why must our food have a soul? American consumers increasingly demand that our food not just be locally grown, but have a meaningful origin story. It’s not enough to have clovers from the backyard delicately sprinkled atop poached eggs. Ideally, the chef grew up cultivating clovers. She cares about those damned clovers like little children. Above all, the chef must be singular and human—and not a corporation. I bring this up because I am guilty of this line of thinking. I went into Barnes & Noble Kitchen in Folsom—the bookstore’s third full-service restaurant in the country—with every expectation of disliking it. Surely a big-box peddler of books can’t know how to properly grill salmon on a plancha. Reader, I was wrong. In the past few years, the once-giant bookseller has posted sluggish sales as it competes with Amazon and other online retailers. The business stole a move from those nimble tech entrepreneurs and pivoted last June. The first restaurant-slash-bookstore opened in Eastchester, New York, and next in Edina, Minnesota. Both are affluent suburbs. The brick-and-mortar stores offer something Amazon can’t: an “experience,” according to the press release. In Folsom, past the tables of bestselling fiction, a circular cafe presents its drinks on an overhead menu reminiscent of a scrabble board, a subliminal temptation for the store’s word nerds. That day’s New York Times and San Francisco Chronicle hang from sticks, ready for perusing. Couches and single-serving benches call out to book-browsers to plop down with a novel, only

to discover they can—why not?—get a seasonal fruit crisp. Wooden nooks display blank books to signify a literary lifestyle that is in fact a simulacra. But let’s not blame that on the food. Executive chef Sheamus Feeley—a restaurant consultant with the Santa Monica-based Branstetter Group—created the trendy menu. In a siren call for local consumers, wines and beers from the region are on offer, including Gold Digger from Auburn Alehouse and grenache blanc from Lodi. The lunch and dinner entree list is refreshingly short, with summer spaghetti ($12), a brisket burger ($16), grilled cheese ($14), brick-cooked chicken ($17) and that planchacooked salmon ($22). There are also standardissue salads, housemade dips and three breakfast items including lemon-ricotta pancakes ($10). These dishes feel unambitious. They play it safe. After all, the name of the restaurant is “Kitchen”—how plain can you get? No one will be surprised by its take on avocado toast ($12) or chicken. But they might be taken aback by how thoroughly delicious they are. A steel brick weighs down the chicken on the grill and traps its juices in even layers of tender meat. It’s eerily perfect in its consistency, as if a robot made it. Does it matter if a corporation cooks your food if soulless excellence tastes good? Herbed with just tarragon, pepper and salt, the chicken is surefooted in its simplicity. It’s surrounded by a mote of potato purée that is lavishly buttery and spiked with bitter watercress. And that brisket burger. Melted cheddar glistens and cabbage flashes with the freshness of chartreuse. The ground beef fuses fat and pepper on its crisp edges. A soft, sweet brioche bun frames it. The accompanying crispy potatoes are not overly fried, but they were the weak point—if anything, these were too salty. For a business that trades in imagination, Barnes & Noble’s food lacks it, and yet, despite myself, I still enjoyed it. When you can peruse magazines, newspapers and latest-release books for free, your menu requires less creativity. What remains to be seen is whether the retailer can be the author of its own turnaround story. Ω

For a business that trades in imagination, Barnes & Noble’s food lacks it.


For the first time in almost 20 years, the pink flamingos that greet visitors at  the pink flamingos that greet visitors at the Sacramento Zoo (3930 W Land Park Drive) gave birth to six chicks. To see  Park Drive) gave birth to six chicks. To see these gangly, fluffy birds and to celebrate the Zoo’s  celebrate the Zoo’s 90th birthday, try the 33rd annual all-you-canall-you-caneat Ice Cream Safari on August 19 from 4 to  from 4 to 8 p.m. The exhibits will remain open later  later than usual as guests have their choice of  choice of flavors from Bayview Farms ice cream  cream (Save Mart’s generic brand) including  including espresso chip, cookies-and-cream and  and rainbow sherbert that can be topped  will with the usual sundae fixings. There will  sugar be options for those who don’t do sugar  a or dairy as well as face-painting and a  Tickets “GiRaffle” for zoo-related prizes. Tickets  children, and the cost $24 for adults and $18 for children, and the  general maintenance of proceeds will raise money for general maintenance of  to turn those flamingo chicks pink. the animals, including enough shrimp to turn those flamingo chicks pink.

—John Flynn

Recently, SN&R reviewed Selland’s Market-Café’s new spot at 915  Broadway, but today, lettuce focus on its vegan offerings. That’s  right, it’s all about salads—though  not all of them have lettuce. Of  the nearly two-dozen items on  Selland’s vegetarian menu, only  seven are identified as vegan, and  three of those are green salads.  The remaining are premade cold  salads: roasted beet, roasted cauliflower and chickpea, roasted broccoli

and red pepper, seasonal fruit salad  and Asian Noodle. The menu in the  cafe doesn’t indicate vegetarian  or vegan items as it does online,  so plant munchers will have to  use their memories—or smartphones—to confirm when ordering. Or ask the staff, which The V  Word did when ordering the Asian  Noodle salad as part of the Salad  Trio ($9) and was told the noodles  had egg in them. Say what now?

Wine & Food Experience AUGUST 26th &27th 10am-4pm both days

voting ends august 28

by Shoka

Ulitmate Gourmet

bestofsac.com

Selland’s salads

where’s the best place to eat ?

Hatchlings and ice cream

The Regions

’17

Sacramento’S newS and entertainment weekly. on StandS every thurSday.

Tickets sold at snrsweetdeals.newsreview.com or localwineevents.com

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   29


Review

Loud and timely by Jeff Hudson

Free introductory class given by a regional speaker followed by optional free vegetarian lunch and discussion September 3rd, 12 noon • Sierra 2 Center, Curtis Hall 2791 - 24th St. • Sacramento

916-492-2671 • www.santmat.net

A Midsummer Night’s Special... FOR A LIMITED TIME RECEIVE 100 REWARD POINTS WHEN YOU MENTION SNR!

1 visit and you’re hal ay to your first reward RESERVATIONS: (916) 443–2347 • 814 15TH STREET • SACRAMENTO, CA www.meltingpot.com/sacramento-ca Exp. 8/31/17. 30   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

A statue of Liberty and a statue of love.

The San Francisco Mime Troupe returns to the region 7 p.m. friday, $20; Miners foundry, 325 spring street in nevada city; (530) 265-5040; www.minersfoundry.org. 7 p.m.,saturday, august 19; free (donations accepted); community Park, east 14th street and f street in Davis. 4:30 p.m., sunday; free (donations accepted); southside Park Bandshell, 6th street and t street; www. sfmt.org.

The San Francisco Mime Troupe has staged socially relevant theater, leavened with music and earthy humor, since the 1950s. The acclaimed group is touring the region this weekend with performances in Nevada City, Davis and Sacramento. Its latest production covers a timely topic. Titled Walls, it follows an Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agent who falls in love with an undocumented immigrant, says Edris CooperAnifowoshe, the show’s co-director. “I’m married to an immigrant who recently became a U.S. citizen,â€? Cooper-Anifowoshe says. “For years and years, we never worried about it. But now, a lot of people are in a panic because of Trump.â€? The characters include immigrants from Ireland, Somalia and Mexico. Written by Michael Gene Sullivan with music by Michael Bello and lyrics by Piero Amadeo Infante, the show also features a three-piece band. Cooper-Anifowoshe, who got her first professional job in the theater with the San Francisco Mime Troupe in the 1980s, also worked at the Sacramento Theatre Company for several years. She has since performed all over the country. A word of note for those who’ve never seen the San Francisco Mime Troupe perform: Don’t expect silent mime. The troupe favors the classical definition of mime—“the exaggeration of daily life in story and song.â€? Ί

Photo courtesy of the san francisco MiMe trouPe

3 Shrew! A Jazz Age   Musical Romp

It is surprising how well the current Fair Oaks Theatre Festival production of Shrew! works. Set in the fashion world of 1930s Paris, the original Jazz Age musical version of Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew features many vintage songs (“What Is This Thing Called Love,� “Lovely to Look At,� et al.) while hewing to the Bard’s tale: A mother attempts to marry off her elder, contrarian daughter to make a more profitable match for her younger, sweeter offspring. The Taming of the Shrew was one of the first productions under festival artistic director Bob Irvin, who died last September, and this production of Shrew! was a long-held dream of his. He started writing the book for it before his death; it was finished by playwright Jennifer Longo based upon Irvin’s notes. Directed by Beth Duggan, the festival’s new artistic director, the play features three of Irvin’s great divas: Deane Calvin (as Baptista, head of the Baptista Minola fashion house), Brianne Hidden-Wise (as lovely daughter Bianca) and Analise Langford-Clark (as the strong-willed Kate). Eddie Voyce plays Kate’s suitor, Petruchio and Dan Slauson plays Lucentio, Bianca’s tutor and suitor. There have been stronger productions in the 35-year-history of the festival, but none more passionately pursued. —Jim Carnes

shrew! 8 p.m. friday, saturday and sunday; $15-$18. Veterans Memorial amphitheatre, 7991 california avenue in fair oaks; (916) 966-3683; www.fairoakstheatrefestival.com. through september 17.


5

Bloomsday

play makes its points with  just a little heavy-handedness. F, Sa 8pm, Su 2pm.  Through 8/20. $17-$20. Mesa  Verde Performing Arts  Center, 7501 Carriage Drive  in Citrus Heights; www.errantphoenix.com. J.C.

Time bends Steven  Dietz’s tale of love  found, lost and remembered as a young American  meets an Irish “Joyce Tour”  leader who changes his life.  Elisabeth Nunziato directs  an outstanding cast of four.

4

The Hound of the Baskervilles

Th, F 8pm, Sa 5pm and 9pm, Su 2pm, Tu 6:30pm, W 2pm and 6:30pm. Through 9/10.

This irreverent, fastmoving spoof of Sherlock  Holmes features three  energetic actors, bad wigs,  fake beards and crossdressing guys with falsetto  voices playing the women.  It’s one-part Arthur Conan  Doyle, one-part silly satire  of cinematic cliches, and  two-parts Monty Python.  Well-performed, though a  bit formula-driven, the production alternates in repertory with Love’s Labour’s  Lost. Sa, Tu 7:30 pm. Through 8/21. $27-$99. Sand Harbor,  Lake Tahoe Nevada State  Park, 2005 Highway 28 in

$27-$39. B Street Theatre  Mainstage, 2711 B Street;  (916) 443-5300; www.streettheatre.org. J.C.

4

Come Back to the Five & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean John Ewing meticulously  directs a strong cast in  this comedy-drama about  respect and acceptance  denied to those who are  “different” in any way. Set  in two time periods in the  same West Texas diner, the

1 FOUL

Incline Village, Nevada; (800)  747-4697; http://laketahoe  shakespeare.com.  J.H.

3

The Robber Bridegroom

Set in 18th century  Mississippi, this bluegrass  fairy tale is filled with  eccentric characters and  lively music as the Bandit  of the Woods is faced with  an uncomfortable dilemma  when he falls for the nice  girl he happens to kidnap.

F, Sa 8pm; Su 2pm. Through 8/27. $18. Green Valley

Theatre, 3823 V Street;  https://greenvalleytheatre. com. B.S.

2

3

4

FAIR

GOOD

WELL-DONE

5

—Bev SykeS

voting ends august 28

Rich Hebert gives an unforgettable performance in B  Street’s production The Absolute Brightness of Leonard  Pelky, directed by Jerry Montoya. As detective Chuck DeSantis, Hebert recalls the decade-long case of a 14-year-old  boy, reported missing and then found dead, the victim of a  bullying incident gone terribly wrong. Hebert plays the roles  of all the residents of the small town, as he discovers what  an impact the young boy made on everyone. The play is both  funny and heartbreaking. The show runs through September 9. 7 p.m. Thursday, August 17 and Friday, August 18; 8 p.m.  Saturday, August 19; 1 p.m. Sunday, August 20; 7 p.m. Tuesday,  August 22 and Wednesday, August 23; $32-$39. B Street Theatre, 2711 B Street; (916) 443-5300; www.bstreettheatre.org.

bestofsac.com

Detective tour de force

— NY1

SUBLIME– DON’T MISS

Evidence from a fashion crime. PhOTO cOURTESy OF RUDy MEyERS PhOTOGRAPhy

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we’re

HIrING!

Lucky Steven

John Developer Kate Calendar Editor

logan lucky The most intense staring contests require a knee-brace.

• custom • dIstrIbutIoN publIcatIoNs drIver assocIate edItor For more INFormatIoN aNd to apply, Go to www.NewsrevIew.com/jobs. 32   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

4

by Daniel Barnes

struggling single father, while Driver plays Jimmy’s one-armed brother Clyde and Riley Keough slings attitude as their gearhead sister Mellie. When 50-year-old Steven Soderbergh announced his When Jimmy gets fired from his job at the retirement from film in 2013, most people scoffed. Speedway, he ropes Clyde and Mellie into a plan The notion that a talent as restless and curious as to rob the stadium’s vault. Due to the construction Soderbergh was ready to hang up his jodhpurs and join around the stadium, the vault’s seismic sensors the shuffleboard set seemed ridiculous. As it turned out, will be disabled, meaning the would-be robbers Soderbergh was hardly a bingo-night regular during his just need to break in and blow up the safe. four-year sabbatical—he directed twenty episodes of Unfortunately, the only explosions expert they The Knick, helped Spike Jonze with Her, posted strikknow is a bottle-blonde pyro named Joe Bang ing re-edits of movie classics on his website, served (Daniel Craig, getting a rare chance to cut up), who as cinematographer on Magic Mike XL and produced is currently incarcerated. More complications come three other series, including an adaptation of from Jimmy’s blonde moppet daughter, and his own The Girlfriend Experience. from a fatuous race car promoter unrecSoderbergh did more (and better) ognizably played by Seth MacFarlane. work in his retirement than most Logan As with any halfway decent heist people do during their entire careers, film, the fun comes from watching is one Lucky and now he returns to feature filmthe characters create and execute of Soderbergh’s making with Logan Lucky, which a seemingly impossible plan, with is like last year’s Hell or High deceptively all the setbacks, double crosses and Water rebooted as a gregarious audience misdirects that entails. lightweight genre heist movie. Logan Lucky stars In that respect, Logan Lucky is a excursions. Channing Tatum and Adam Driver as roaring success, endlessly entertaining likeable ne’er-do-well brothers who rob as a process movie without sacrificing Charlotte Motor Speedway to pay their any of its good-natured swagger. But the bills. The screenplay is credited to Rebecca film is also overstuffed with broad character turns Blunt, who was recently revealed to be fictitious, seemingly borrowed from a Coen Brothers reject and some think Blunt might really be Soderbergh (he pile (Dwight Yoakam is a marvelous exception as a already serves as his own director of photography stubborn prison warden), and while amusing in the under the pseudonym Peter Andrews). moment, it feels a little flimsy in retrospect. Logan Lucky is one of Soderbergh’s deceptively Logan Lucky is certainly a sharp-looking lightweight genre excursions, and he borrows elements vehicle, even if there’s not much going on under from previous works ranging from the Ocean’s the hood. Ω trilogy to Magic Mike to Out of Sight. Soderbergh often struggles to find a balance between following his clinical inclinations and fulfilling commercial expectations, but Logan Lucky hits a sweet spot. Tatum gives a sturdy star performance as Jimmy Logan, an Poor Fair Good Very excellent Good unemployed West Virginia construction worker and

1 2 3 4 5


fiLm CLiPS

3

BY DANIEL BARNES & JIM LANE

Atomic Blonde

Stunt coordinator David Leitch makes  his directorial debut with Atomic Blonde,  a graphic novel series adaptation set in Berlin  during the waning days of the Cold War. Charlize Theron stars as Lorraine Broughton, a British spy dispatched to Germany to investigate  the death of a colleague, and to secure a list  of undercover agents before it falls into the  wrong hands. Lorraine is greeted at the airport  by unnamed assassins, and the bloody mayhem  gushes on from there, with most of the action  scenes set to 1980s Europop. The script by 300  scribe Kurt Johnstad is decidedly unclever, and  Leitch works way too hard to invest a familiar  story with new life. It’s mostly wasted energy,  merely an exercise in vapid style, but Theron  makes for an extremely compelling kung fu  cipher, and there is one extended action scene  set in an apartment building that almost justifies the entire endeavor. D.B.

3

The Big Sick

If you’re a stand-up comedian in a  movie, it’s only a matter of time before  you’re suffering a sad, unfunny, baggagespewing nervous breakdown on stage. In  Michael Showalter’s The Big Sick, the comedian  on the brink is Kumail Nanjiani, playing himself  as a Pakistan-born man torn between worlds.  Kumail’s traditional family tries to push him  into an arranged marriage, but he instead  dates strong-willed white therapist Emily (Zoe  Kazan) on the sly, before his surplus of secrets  pulls them apart as well. The entire situation  becomes exponentially complicated when  Emily goes into a coma. There is a lot to like  about The Big Sick, especially the charismatic  performances of Nanjiani and Kazan. But at  119 minutes long, it may be too much of a good  thing—I have rarely been so aggravated by  such a funny and heartwarming film. D.B.

2

The Dark Tower

A teenage boy (Tom Taylor), haunted by  the death of his firefighter father, has  mysterious visions of a Dark Tower, a Gunslinger and a Man in Black. His mother worries  that he’s unhinged by grief, but it’s all true—as  he learns when the Man in Black (Matthew  McConaughey) tries to kidnap him and he  escapes to another dimension where he meets  the Gunslinger (Idris Elba). The script by Akiva  Goldsman, Jeff Pinkner, Anders Thomas Jensen  and director Nikolaj Arcel is based on Stephen  King’s eight-novel series (which King considers  his magnum opus, incorporating elements from  different genres and his other books). Maybe  the story makes sense at 4,250 pages. At 95  minutes it’s just a messy sci-fi-horror-fantasy  salad; King’s elements become mere clichés.  The actors and special effects crew do their  best. J.L.

4

Dunkirk

Christopher Nolan ascended from indie  unknown to the crown prince of PG-13  darkness, but in recent years he has become  low-hanging fruit for mockery—his heaviness,  his humorlessness, his lead-foot ponderousness. But just when the diminishing returns of  The Dark Knight franchise and the philosophical emptiness of Interstellar seemed to cement  his irrelevance, along comes Dunkirk to remind  us what Nolan does so well. Nolan is a master of  escalating and sustaining tension across multiple dramatic planes, and the outwardly simple  yet slightly fractured structure of Dunkirk  affords him the ideal canvas to practice his  art. You’re stuck in Nolan’s grasp within  minutes, and he only keeps squeezing tighter,  the pinprick tension growing more unbearable,  with the phony dramatic crescendos kept to a  relative minimum. Nolan does himself a favor  with his own terse script, largely laying off the  blockhead exposition and instead crafting a  fingernail-obliterating cinema experience. D.B.

3

The Glass Castle

Two free-spirited parents (Woody Harrelson, Naomi Watts) raise four children  in a most unconventional way, first as roadvagabonds camping out at night, then in the  father’s ramshackle West Virginia hometown.

Now Boarding!

Frolicked through the hills: check.

3

In This Corner of the World

A hand-drawn animated epic based on a Japanese manga, Sunao  Katabuchi’s In This Corner of the World concerns Suzu, a daydreaming  teenager from Hiroshima married off to a young naval clerk in the early days  of World War II. Suzu is forced to relocate to a nearby naval town to live with  her husband’s ungrateful family, slowly settling into her role but still carrying a torch for the gruff boy back home. As the tide of war turns and her new  hometown becomes a daily target for air raids, Suzu finds her strength, even  employing ancient methods to stretch their food supply; meanwhile, we wait for  the inevitable nuclear horror to hit. Fascinating and frustrating in equal measures, In This Corner of the World offers a compelling look at life in Japan during  and directly after wartime, with a rich female character at the center, but it’s  also maddeningly choppy. D.B.

Happy hour and party river cruises departing from Old Sacramento. Book today!

888-467-6256 | HORNBLOWER.COM/RIVER Director Daniel Destin Cretton (co-writing  with Andrew Lanham) brings gossip columnist  Jeannette Walls’ memoir to life in vivid if occasionally exasperating fashion, time-hopping  back and forth among Walls’ adulthood (played  by Brie Larson), childhood (Chandler Head)  and adolescence (Ella Anderson). Cretton  and Harrelson portray Walls’ father as an irresponsible, self-deluded, emotionally abusive,  drunken blowhard—which tends to make her  retrospective affection for him look like a case  of Stockholm Syndrome. Still, it’s an unusual  story unusually well-told, and performances  are first-rate. J.L.

2

Kidnap

When a mother (Halle Berry) sees her  son being kidnapped from a fairground,  she roars off in hot pursuit, forgetting her  purse and cell phone in the heat of the moment.  Written by Knate Lee and directed by Luis  Prieto, the movie is basically a one-character,  mama-bear version of Taken. Berry’s character has a run of luck, plowing through a lot  of highway mayhem without attracting much  attention; the one cop who tries to pull her  over is conveniently disposed of by the kidnappers, who keep slowing down to let Mom catch  up. Prieto has trouble finessing the shift from  early sugary-sweetness (in scenes evidently  meant to pad the movie’s modest running time)  to demolition derby for the rest. It’s efficient  but unsubtle; Lee and Prieto don’t know the  difference between real suspense and mere  tension. J.L.

1

The Nut Job 2: Nutty by Nature

When their town’s corrupt mayor sets  out to transform their beautiful park  into a grotesque money-grubbing tourist trap,  the squirrels (voiced by Will Arnett and Katherine Heigl) and their animal pals swing into  action to thwart his nefarious plans. Featurelength animation hits rock-bottom yet again  with this who-cares sequel. It has all the traits  that made The Nut Job so completely pointless—complicated non-story, dull characters,  lame sight gags, lamer puns—then ups the ante  with an in-your-face nastiness, stomping and  bellowing at the top of its obnoxious voice, that

amounts to a sadistic form of audience abuse  (especially in 3-D). Directed by Cal Brunker,  who co-wrote with Bob Barlen, Scott Bindley  and Daniel Woo. Remember those names, and  be warned: they’re already at work on The Nut  Job 3. J.L.

4

Step

This intimate and emotionally affecting  documentary from director Amanda  Lipitz follows several senior girls on the step  dance team at Baltimore Leadership School for  Young Women. A relatively new school with a  student body largely composed of AfricanAmerican girls from low-income families, the  BLSYW began with a single sixth grade class,  and the film covers the senior year of those  founding students. The strength of these girls  is inspiring (although many family backstories  are left tastefully vague), but the highs and  lows they experience on the way to the film’s  inevitable “big game” finish are haunted by the  ghost of Freddie Gray, the African-American  man who was killed in 2015 while in Baltimore  Police custody. His specter lends an extra level  of gravitas to the routines (the most powerful  of several electrifying step dance scenes is a  tribute to Black Lives Matter) and an additional  significance to the report cards. D.B.

4

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets

When a mysterious force threatens a  vast space station where many intergalactic  species exist in harmony, a team of bantering  special agents (Dane DeHaan, Cara Delevigne)  are sent to investigate—but nothing about the  case is quite what it seems. Writer-director Luc  Besson (adapting comic books by Pierre Christin  and Jean-Claude Mézières) goes crazy with an  intoxicating array of creatures and wondrous  effects. (Think The Fifth Element cubed.) The  story is slight but sufficient, and the fun keeps  coming. Amid all the magic some performances  stand out: DeHaan has the boyish charm of the  young Tom Cruise, and Delevigne adds spicy  star-making sauce. Clive Owen as a sinister  soldier and Ethan Hawke as a pimp have their  moments too, and there’s a poignant cameo by  Rihanna as a shape-shifting “entertainer.” J.L.

Need VeteraNs disability CompeNsatioN beNefits or Help witH aN appeal? law offiCe of steVeN H. berNiker,apC (916) 480-9200

2424 ardeN way, suite 360, saCrameNto, Ca 95825 Veteran adVocate: camie Jo decker-Laske Veterans assistance is our #1 Priority “ On the battlefield, the military pledges to leave no soldier behind. As a Nation, let it be our pledge that when they return home, we leave no Veteran behind.” – Dan Lipinski

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   33


The Moans, here to stay

LIVE MUSIC

Old school punk with a bloody twist

Aug 18 MICHAEL RAY TRIO Aug 19 STEPHEN YERKEY Aug 25 BANJO BONES

by Jordan ranft

Aug 26 JAYSON ANGOVE Sept 01 JESSICA MALONE Sept 02 STEPHEN YERKEY Sept 08 JASON WEEKS Sept 09 CHRISTIAN DEWILD Sept 15 TODD MORGAN Sept 16 DYLAN CRAWFORD

Photo by jon hermison

Sept 22 ANIMALS IN THE ATTIC

33 BEERS ON DRAFT

MONDAY PINT NIGHT 5-8 PM, TRIVIA @ 6:30 PM TACO TUESDAY $1.25 TACOS NOON - CLOSE WEDNESDAY OPEN MIC – SIGN-UPS @ 7:30 PM 101 MAIN STREET, ROSEVILLE 916-774-0505 · LUNCH/DINNER 7 DAYS A WEEK FRI & SAT 9:30PM - CLOSE 21+

/BAR101ROSEVILLE

FALL 2017 STRAWBERRY MUSIC FESTIVAL

AUG 31ST - SEPT 4TH | NEVADA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, GRASS VALLEY CA THURSDAY 8/31 MITCH THIRD WITH SPECIAL GUESTS NINA GERBER AND CHRIS WEBSTER, WESTERN CENTURIES, GHOST OF PAUL REVERE, JEFF AUSTIN BAND

BAND, BIRDS OF CHICAGO, KELLER WILLIAMS’ GRATEFUL GRASS FEATURING THE INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS WITH SPECIAL GUEST JOHN SKEHAN

FRIDAY 9/1 RUSTY STRINGFIELD, LINDI ORTEGA, PAINTED MANDOLIN, AMY HELM, TIM O’BRIEN WITH JAN FABRICIUS, MAVIS STAPLES

SUNDAY 9/3 SUNDAY MORNING REVIVAL (9AM-11AM INCLUDES BZ SMITH, RUSTY STRINGFIELD, LAURA LOVE, MARLEY’S GHOST, BIRDS OF CHICAGO, AND TIM O’BRIEN & BRYAN SUTTON), JOAN & PETE WERNICK, ISMAY, FRONT COUNTRY,

SATURDAY 9/2 RISKY BISCUITS, LAURA LOVE, KAHULANUI, BRYAN SUTTON

SPECIAL DISCOUNTS INCLUDE OUR 2 FOR 1 SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY’S EVENING TICKET, AS WELL AS FOR KID’S AND TEEN’S ALL DAY/ANY DAY TICKET TYPES

TICKET INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND AT: STRAWBERRYMUSIC.COM/TICKETS/ OR CALL (209)984-8630 M-F, 9-5

THIS MESSAGE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY ROCK IN ROAD - ENHANCING THE STRAWBERRY WAY

34   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

their first full-length album From Underground, Crap sings, “When there’s no room in hell / we’ll take the bible belt,” in front of a thrashing series of guitar riffs and a pulsing drumbeat. The chorus galvanizes an anthemic feeling that you can’t help but bang your head to: “The Moans are here to stay, The Moans won’t go away,” And The Moans haven’t gone away. From 2011 to 2012, the band released four self-recorded demo EPs. “Our early recordings sound very much like a garage When horror punks won’t let you enjoy your dang brunch. rock band that was still trying to find its groove,” Secretion says. Then in 2013, they took to a studio to record When I say that The Moans draw heavily from an From Underground, followed by two EPs, Arrested attitude of having fun, I mean something like this: For Possession and Graveyard Sale. “Over time, When they formed in 2011, their original name was our sound has become solidified and amplified,” “The Shitty Ramones,” and they billed themselves Secretion says. as a “Ramones karaoke tribute band” before introThe music is unmistakably punk, but it isn’t ducing original songs about vintage horror movies. necessarily angry in the way many folks might They’ve since developed into a fully original and believe punk rock has to be. Instead, it’s raw and refreshing punk group in the Sacramento scene. enthusiastic, and therefore more accessible. You What’s not to love about an origin story like that? can thrash around in the pit to this, but their Comprised of singer-bassist Matt Crap, style also lends itself to listening for drummer Jeff Reset and guitarist-punk enjoyment’s sake. veteran Danny Secretion, The Despite their motives for just Moans play songs about vintage having fun and playing music, “It’s crazy how horror tropes such as zombies, The Moans are in for a big fast it went from Frankenstein and vampires in the couple of months. On August style of 1970s, proto-pop punk. being a side project 23, the band is opening for Yet The Moans’ music the internationally known to the band I wanted never feels gimmicky. If British act The Adicts, everyone to see.” anything, their conceptual along with the Los Angeles focus grants the band immunity group Igor Spectre at Ace of Danny Secretion from falling into the realm of Spades. Then in September, guitarist, The Moans self-seriousness. It maintains an air they are on the bill for the City of fun. “You can try really hard and of Trees festival, with Blink-182 have a good time while your doing it,” as the headline act. explains Reset. “It’s crazy how fast it went from The group’s focus is the music. “I love the style being a side project to the band I wanted everyone of music,” says Secretion, “It’s just down strokes to see.” Secretion says. The Moans also have been and eighth notes.” At the same time, they don’t back in the studio working on a new project of seem all too concerned with giving themselves original songs. With all their recent and upcoming a specific label. “We’ve never shot down what successes in mind, Reset gives me the final word someone wants to call us. Horror-punk, nerdy, on The Moans’ philosophy: “As long as we get to vintage pop-punk, whatever we are to that person, have fun and play music, I’m happy.” Ω that’s what we are,” says Crap. Digressing from theories of how concept Check out the moans 7 p.m. August 23 at Ace of spades. the Adicts and igor affects attitude, The Moans have found a great spectre are also on the bill. tickets are $20. sound. On the track titled “Theme Song” from


foR the week of AuguSt 17

by mozes zarate

Online listings will be considered for print. Print listings are edited for space and accuracy. deadline for print listings is 5 p.m. Wednesday. deadline for Nightlife listings is midnight sunday. send photos and reference materials to calendar editor mozes Zarate at snrcalendar@newsreview.com.

POST EVENTS ONLINE FOR FREE AT

www.newsreview.com/sacramento

LOUDER THAN LOVE: Tribute show for the  late rockers Chris Cornell and Chester  Bennington, who both passed away this  summer. Cornell was most known for  singing in Audioslave and Soundgarden,  and Bennington in Linkin Park. Some of  the bands performing include A Foreign  Affair,  A Demon In Me, and Pacific Skyway.  A portion of the proceeds will benefit the  National Alliance on Mental Illness.  7pm, $15. Ace Of Spades, 1417 R St.

MYLAR’S HIPPIE HOUR: The long-running show  was held at Old Ironsides and Starlite  Lounge over the past five years. Now,  William Mylar’s weekly free-form music  night, along with it’s tradition of having  guests spanning all genres, has moved to  a new venue.  5:30pm, no cover. Louie’s  Cocktail Lounge, 3030 Mather Field Road.

PREGNANT: Part of First Fridays, a weekly

OCT 05

PHOTO cOurTesy Of magge gagliardi

S eN d

Spaghetti Yeti by Magge Gagliardi.

Are you afraid of the art? Fe GalleRy, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. monday-FRiday, no coveR Our world lurks with monsters, real and  imagined, toupéed and nuclear. The latest  exhibit at Fe Gallery examines our  ART aversion to the creatures that go  bump in the night. Tiny Monsters crawls  with monstrosities of many mediums: a  pillow embroidered with the Kraken, a felt  doll with several eyes, exquisite corpses

that mix-and-match painted canvases of  body parts. A jolly spaghettiman marches  onward, unfazed by the fork in its skull.  Together, these demons ask: Where is the  line between scary and cute? More than 60  artists are selling their 2-D and 3-D beasts  of varying frightfulness. 1100 65th Street.

—Rebecca Huval

local music showcase begun by Danielle  Vincent, who founded First Festival and  the equally-cool local music calendar app,  #ShowUpSacramento. This week’s band is  the local experimental rock group, which  mixes looped guitars with Neil Young-esque  vocals and electronic sounds.  8pm, no cover (or $5 donation). The Purple Place Bar  & Grill, 363 Green Valley Road in El Dorado  Hills.

saTurday, 8/19 THE ALARM: The ’80s British new-wave band  will perform with Sac American rock  troupe The Ghost Town Rebellion.  8pm, $20-$25. Harlow’s Restaurant & Nightclub,  2708 J St.

BURNING LANDSCAPES: Album release show  for the local alternative rock band.  Performing with Death Party at the  Beach and Desario.  8pm. Blue Lamp, 1400  Alhambra Blvd.

DAHLIA FIEND:  Sacramento multiinstrumental electronic artist. Performing  with Blue Oaks and DJ Lady Grey.  6pm, $8-$10. Momo Lounge, 2708 J St.

GIN BLOSSOMS: Twenty-year-old Arizona  jangle-pop-rock band known for songs  like “Hey Jealousy.”  8pm, $47-$62. Harris  Center, 10 College Parkway in Folsom.

THursday, 8/17 HANNAH JANE KILE: Auburn acoustic folksinger. Performing with Josiah Gathing  and Lili St. Anne.  8pm, $5. The Acoustic  Den Cafe, 10271 Fairway Drive, Suite 120 in  Roseville.

JOHNNY HELL PROMOTIONS PRESENTS: A SHOW FOR WOUNDED VETERANS: Hardrock/metal  benefit show for the Vet-Traxx Project  Inc., a music nonprofit for disabled vets.  Some of the bands include: Surviving The  Era, Rex Means King, Ghost Color and Stars  of the Party.  8pm, no cover ($5 suggested donation). Cheers, 321 Merchant St. in  Vacaville.

RAY OBIEDO: Part of the Crocker Art  Museum’s summer jazz concert series.

Mellow out to the smooth Latin sounds  of the Bay Area guitarist and composer.  During intermission, enjoy dinner at the  cafe, listen to Jazz Chats with Carolyne  Swayze and an Art Spotlight talk, or  wander the museum’s galleries.  6:30pm, $8-$14. Crocker Art Museum, 216 O St.

friday, 8/18 COCO MONTOYA: Stratocaster-fueled

Southern blues singer and guitarist.  8pm,

$20. Palms Playhouse, 13 Main St. in  Winters.

THE DECEMBERISTS: Portland indie-rock band  touring a new record titled What a Terrible  World. They’ll perform with British folksinger Olvia Chaney, who’s collaborated  with the Decemberists in a recently  released album called Offa Rex.  8pm, $24.50-$179. Mondavi Center, 1 Shields Ave.  in Davis.

DOYLE BRAMHALL II: Son of the Texas music  legend. A leftie who plays a guitar stringed  for a right-hander but flipped backwards.  Longtime collaborator with Eric Clapton  and the Vaughn brothers.  8pm, $24$27. The Center for the Arts, 314 West Main  St. in Grass Valley.

HOBO JOHNSON & THE LOVEMAKERS: SAMMIEwinning “sad boi” hip-hop artist back  from a West Coast tour. Performing  with Destroy Boys (also won SAMMIES  this year), Benjamin Hecht and Worthy  Goat.  6pm, $9. The Band Room, 175  Placerville Drive in Placerville.

JOY & MADNESS: Sac soul-funk nine-piece  performing with Mama’s Gravy, a funk  rock troupe celebrating their 20 year  anniversary.  9:30pm, $10-$13. Harlow’s  Restaurant & Nightclub, 2708 J St.

perform with San Diego electronic artist  Kyle Flesch.  9:30pm, no cover before 10pm, $5-$15 afterward. The Park Ultra Lounge,  1116 15th St.

REGGAE NIGHT: Held every third Saturday of  the month. Performing this time: Grass  Valley reggae artist Kurrency King.  8:30pm, no cover before 10:30pm, $5 afterward.   Queen Sheba, 1704 Broadway.

Performing with Rochester, New York indie  rockers Joywave.  7pm, $27.50. Ace Of  Spades, 1417 R St.

MILO (RAPSMITH): Milwaukee, Wisconsin  alternative hip-hop artist. Performing  with  Sparks Across Darkness, Randal  Bravery, Signor Benedick The Moor and  Kenny Segal.  8pm, $10. Cafe Colonial, 3520  Stockton Blvd.

WedNesday, 8/23 THE ADICTS:  Clockwork Orange-esque  clad ’80s British punk band. Performing  with horror punks The Moans and Igor  Spectre.  7pm, $20.  Ace Of Spades, 1417  R St.

DEFECRATOR: Death metal from Sacramento.  Performing with Panzergod and Gloam.

8pm, $10.  Blue Lamp, 1400 Alhambra Blvd.

THE DOOBIE BROTHERS: San Jose blue-eyed

soul rock group, popular in the ’70s.  8pm, $65-$125. Community Center Theater,  1301 L St.

MICHAEL RAY TRIO: Local blues outfit

performing with The Outcome.  7pm, $7.   Momo Lounge, 2708 J St.

PETER PETTY & HIS DOUBLE P REVUE: Singer  and actor who fronts an entertaining  swing band.  9pm, $6. Torch Club, 904 15th  St.

fesTiVals friday, 8/18 THE BANANA FEST INTERNATIONAL: Stockton’s  version of the annual fest celebrating the  giant berry. Live music. Art. A parade with  banana-themed floats and banana-themed  food.  10am, $8-$10. San Joaquin County  Fair Grounds, 1658 South Airport Way in  Stockton.

saTurday, 8/19 dozens of varieties of locally grown  heirloom tomatoes. Tomato-eating and  recipe contests. A carnival, a classic car  show, live entertainment, a food court,  tomato-related vendors, children’s  activities, and beer and wine. 11am, no cover.  Tomato Alley, Jefferson and Texas St.  in Fairfield.

34TH ANNUAL SACRAMENTO SCANDINAVIAN FESTIVAL: See event highlight on page  Center, 6151 H St.

FATE UNDER FIRE: Sac alt-pop group.  Performing with Civil Youth, National Lines  and Caliscope.  8pm, $10. Blue Lamp, 1400  Alhambra Blvd. thrash band. Performing with WORWS,  VVOMEN and The Challenge.  8pm, $5. Hideaway Bar & Grill, 2565 Franklin  Blvd.

COLD WAR KIDS: Long Beach indie rock.

41.  10am. $5 for adults, kids ages 12 and under get in free. Scottish Rite Masonic

suNday, 8/20

KILL THE SHARK: Vancouver, Washington

mONday, 8/21

26TH ANNUAL TOMATO FESTIVAL:  Sample

LADY KATE: The Sacramento Kings DJ will

music

snr c a le nd a r @ ne wsr e v ie w.c o m

THE BANANA FEST INTERNATIONAL: See Friday  event description.  10am, $8-$10.  San  Joaquin County Fair Grounds, 1658 South  Airport Way in Stockton.

GENDER BENDER BALL: A party scene with  glitz, glamour, dancing and gender

CALENDAR LISTINGS CONTINUED ON PAGE 36

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   35


see more events and submit your own at newsreview.com/sacramento/calendar

tuesday, 8/22 CaLendar ListinGs Continued From PaGe 35 ambiguity. More than just a fundraiser,  the Gender Bender Ball has become a  night for community, fun, dancing, gender  bending, connections, love, costumes and  more.  8pm, $20-$30. Pagoda Building, 429  J St.

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JaPan Fest 2017: A day of Japanese culture,  art and cuisine. Performances by groups  like Ensohza, a traditional folkdance  troupe, and displays from the Northern  California Japanese Sword Club. Learn  Japanese games, origami and caligraphy.

11am, $5-$20, kids ages four and under get in free. Fairfield Community Center, 1000  Kentucky St. in Fairfield.

sunday, 8/20

COLLEGE PARTY DANCE NIGHT $2/$3/$4 DRINK SPECIALS 9-11

THURSDAY

COUNTRY DANCING IN BACK, KARAOKE UP FRONT (NO COVER CHARGE)

FRIDAY

18 & OVER COUNTRY DANCE NIGHT $2 JACK & .50 CENT BEER SPECIAL 8-9PM

SATURDAY

21 & OVER COUNTRY DANCE NIGHT, KARAOKE UP FRONT

SUNDAY FUNDAY

COLLEGE DANCE PARTY NO COVER OVER 21 FREE DANCE LESSONS NIGHTLY 9PM WEEKNIGHTS, 8PM FRI/SAT KARAOKE NIGHTLY UP FRONT AMAZING FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS NIGHTLY STONEYS HAS BEEN VOTED BEST DANCE CLUB OF SACRAMENTO 2016!

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36   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

805 BEER SPONSORED ARTIST

Gethen Jenkins OUTLAW COUNTRY “UNCHAINED” OPENS @ 7PM $10 EVENTBRITE.COM OR DOOR BACK 40 AMPHITHEATRE “COME OUT FOR AN ALL OUT 805”

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—KAINOA LOWMAN

event description.  11am, no cover. Tomato  Alley, Jefferson and Texas St. in Fairfield.

Film

tHe banana Fest internationaL: See Friday  event description.  10am, $8-$10. San  Joaquin County Fair Grounds, 1658 South  Airport Way in Stockton.

Friday, 8/18 trianGLes and terribLe times: Premiere

Food & drinK tHursday, 8/17 anCHor brews & JaZZy tunes: Grab a pint  with the Anchor Brewing Company crew,  learn about the brewery’s history and  enjoy live jazz from the Harley White Jr.  Orchestra.  8pm, no cover.  Shady Lady  Saloon, 1409 R St.

19tH annuaL “oFF to tHe raCes Food & wine tastinG”: Food and wine pairing judged by

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7TH

When asked what we want  to be when we grow up, it’s  always hard to choose between  “nun” and “pop star.” But  PHoto courtesy oF Joan marcus (2014 tour) why not both? Featuring a cast  stacked with Broadway veterans and scored by the  Tony-winning composer Alan Menken, Sister Act is a  on staGe musical about an aspiring disco diva who witnesses  a mob murder and joins a nunnery for protection. Her misadventures there – evading hitmen, leading a hapless choir – will make you  laugh, even if they don’t help you pick a career. 1409 H Street.

26tH annuaL tomato FestivaL:  See Saturday

saturday, 8/19

NOMINATED BEST DANCE CLUB 2017 WEDNESDAY SACRAMENTO’S ULTIMATE

divine Comedy WELLS FARGO PAVILION, 1409 H StREEt, tHROuGH AuGuSt 26, $45-$86

the “three tenors,” the well-known and  respected culinary experts Darrell Corti,  David Berkley and Mike Dunne. Additionally,  as guests sample grub from select  restaurants, wineries and brewery, they  are encouraged to vote for their favorite  pairing for the People’s Choice Award.  Performances by the Rio Americano Small  Jazz Ensemble, Kitty O’Neal, Kurt Spataro  and the Capital Dance Project.  6pm, $40$50. California State Railroad Museum,  111 I St.

sunday, 8/20 ForK it over: Join Slow Food Sacramento  at its August fundraiser. Slow Food’s  Chef’s Alliance and American River College  culinary students will create fork-sized  bites from locally sourced ingredients.  Chef and owner Ed Roehr will discuss how  restaurants strive to provide good, clean  fair food for all.  6:30pm, $10-$35. Magpie,  1601 16th St.

Great adobo CooKout: Sinag-tala Filipino  Theater and Performing Arts Association  presents a taste test of a slew of  adobo recipes, with entertainment and  karaoke. Vote for your favorite. Adobo  is a popular Filipino dish and cooking  process in Philippine cuisine that involves  meat, seafood, or vegetables marinated  in vinegar, soy sauce, and garlic, which  is browned in oil, and simmered in the  marinade.  11am, $5-$15, kids ages five and under are free. Sinag-tala Studio, 4200  82nd St., Suite E.

of an indie film about a brother’s travel  through time to find out what happened to  his missing sister.  6:30pm, $12. The Guild  Theater, 2828 35th St.

saturday, 8/19 eLeven: A documentary sharing stories from  the veterans of Air Group 11, who flew  off the USS Hornet and were stationed  at Guadalcanal during World War II. A  newly located member of Air Group 11 will  be attending the showing.  2pm, no cover.   Sacramento Public Library – Rancho  Cordova Branch, 9845 Folsom Blvd. in  Rancho Cordova.

sunday, 8/20 Cory’s CuLt CLassiCs: saLad days, FiLmaGe:  Held every third Sunday. This month, a  showing of two punk documentaries. Salad  Days: A Decade of Punk in Washington  DC examines the early DIY punk scene  in the nation’s capitol with bands like  Bad Brains, Minor Threat and Fugazi.  Filmage: The Story of the Descendents  follows the Manhattan Beach punk band  that influenced Dave Grohl (Nirvana, Foo  Fighters),  Mark Hoppus (Blink-182) and  Brett Gurewitz (Bad Religion).  7pm, no cover. Cafe Colonial, 3520 Stockton Blvd.

west side story: A showing of the classic  musical blending Romeo and Juliet with  street gangs in New York City, starring  Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer.  7pm, $7.50-$9.50.  Crest Theatre, 1013 K St.

LauGHs unLimited Comedy CLub: Say It Loud  Comedy Show.  Headliner B.T. Kingsley  has been featured on Comedy Central  shows, including Kevin Hart’s Hart Of  The City. 8pm thursday, 8/17. $20.  Vince  Morris. Performing with Cris Sosa. Morris  has appeared on BET’s Comedy Jam and  HBO’s Def Comedy Jam, to name two  shows. through 8/20. $20. 1207 Front St.

momo saCramento: Comedy Burger  with Ngaio Bealum. Monthly stand-up  show featuring the News & Review pot  columnist, activist, actor, publisher of the  West Coast Cannabis magazine and host of  the Cannabis Comedy Festival. 7pm sunday, 8/20. $$10-$25.  2708 J St.

PunCH Line: Kelly Pryce. Pryce has written  for the TBS’s Lopez Tonight and the TV  Guide pilots Hollywood Buzz and Date  Night. As a stand-up, she’s performed  with Louis C.K., Bill Burr, Dave Attell and  others.  8pm thursday, 8/17. $15; Tony  Rock. The younger brother of Chris  Rock. You may have seen him on the  show Everybody Hates Chris or the film  Think Like A Man.   through 8/20. $18.50$22.50;  Mike E. Winfield.  New material  night for the local comic.  8pm wednesday, 8/23. $15; The Hodgetwins. Twin comics who  host a popular YouTube series that blends  comedy with life advice. through 8/22. $25.  2100 Arden Way, Suite 225.

tommy t’s Comedy CLub: Gary Owen.  Currently stars in the BET docuseries  The Gary Owen Show.  through 8/19. $30-$40. 12401 Folsom Blvd. in Rancho  Cordova.

on staGe b street tHeatre: Bloomsday. In Steven

comedy Comedy sPot: Cage Match. Two Improv teams  each have 20 minutes to perform a longform improv show using any structure.  The audience votes for the winner.  8pm every thursday. $6; Dystopia News Network.  Sketch comedy that parodies a newscast.  DNN provides unparalleled access to the  latest on current events from across  parallel universes. It’s news, whether  you like it or not. 10:30pm saturday, 8/19. $5;  Lady Business. Sacramento’s only  all-female improv troupe uses true stories   to create a long-form improv show. This  month’s theme: the news.  8pm every third saturday. $8.50.  1050 20th St., Suite 130.

Dietz’s new love story, time travel  and James Joyce help illuminate the  lives of Robbie and Cat, who meet in  Ireland.  through 9/10. $27-$39; The  Absolute Brightness of Leonard Pelkey.   One actor portrays every character in a  small Jersey Shore town as he unravels  the story of a tenaciously optimistic and  flamboyant 14-year-old boy who goes  missing.  through 9/9. $19-$39;  2711 B St.

CaLiFornia musiCaL tHeatre: The Sister Act.  See event highlight above.  through 8/27. $45-$86. 1510 J St.

CHautauQua PLayHouse: Screwtape.   Follows a mid-level Satanic beauracrat,  Screwtape, who is training a young demon,  Wormwood, to lure his first soul, named  Mike, into a pit. The demons seek to trip


Bridegroom. A bluegrass musical set in  18th century Mississippi. Tells the story  of Jamie Lockhart, who seeks to romance  (but not necessarily wed) the daughter  of wealthy landowner Clement Musgrove.  Clement is married to the vicious  Salome, who is jealous of her beautiful  stepdaughter Rosamund. Mistaken  identities, hidden motives and thwarted  romance. Through 8/27. $18.  3823 V St.

MESA VERDE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER:

SIERRA 2 CENTER: Darkside. Musical featuring  songs from and thematically based on Pink  Floyd’s album, The Dark Side of the Moon.  Through 8/20. $20.   2791 24th St.

THE WILKERSON THEATRE INSIDE THE CALIFORNIA STAGE COMPLEX: Gidion’s Knot.  A grieving mother and an emotionally  overwhelmed primary school teacher have  a fraught conversation about the tragic  suicide of the mother’s son, the teacher’s  student, Gidion. As his story is slowly  uncovered, the women try to reconstruct  a satisfying explanation for Gidion’s act  and come to terms with excruciating  feelings of culpability.  Through 9/2. $15$20.  1721 25th St.

TOWER THEATRE: The Music Man. Follows  fast-talking traveling salesman Harold Hill  as he cons the people of River City, Iowa,  into buying instruments and uniforms for  a boys’ band that he vows to organize this,  despite the fact that he doesn’t know a  trombone from a treble clef. His plans to  skip town with the cash are foiled when  he falls for Marian, the librarian, who  transforms him into a respectable citizen  by curtain’s fall.  Through 8/27. $8-$20. 417  Vernon St., Roseville.

VETERAN’S MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATRE: SHREW!  A Jazz Age Musical Romp. An original  adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Taming  of the Shrew, set in 1930s Paris against  a backdrop of competing fashion houses

Dream. An outdoor performance of  Shakespeare’s classic.  Through 8/27. $10. 3141 Bridgeway Drive in Rancho  Cordova.

WOODLAND OPERA HOUSE: My Fair Lady. World  famous phonetics expert and British  upper-class bachelor Henry Higgins is  willing to wager that he can pass off a  Cockney flower girl in high society as a  duchess just by teaching her to speak  proper English.  7:30pm. Through 8/27. $7$25. 560 Main St in Woodland.

SOUTHSIDE PARK: Walls. A politically-charged  show about U.S. immigration by the San  Francisco Mime Troupe.  5pm Sunday, 8/20. No cover. 2115 6th St.

ART CROCKER ART MUSEUM:  Turn The Page: The  First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose.  A collection of 51 contemporary art pieces  featured in the first decade of the lowbrow art magazine.  Through 9/17.   $5-$10. 216 O St.

FE GALLERY: Tiny Monsters.   See event highlight on page 35. Through 9/29. No cover.  1100 65th St.

WIDE OPEN WALLS:  A mural festival featuring local and international artists. Takes  place at over 40 locations in Sacramento.  Learn more about it by reading SN&R’s  story, “Wide Open Walls: Art in the street”  published July 27. Check out a map of  the murals at www.wow916.com.  Through 8/20. No cover; Condensed. A group show  featuring the artists of  Wide Open Walls.  Some of the muralists include Franceska  Gamez, Roy Gonzalez and Demetrius  Washington.  Through 8/24. No cover. Beatnik  Studios, 723 S St.;  The Wall Ball. Benefit  party for arts education. Artisan chefs.  Craft cocktails. Visual and performance  art. Music by Royal Jelly And DJ Shaun  Slaughter.  8pm Saturday 8/19. $100. 1425 C  St.;  Wall Wrap Picnic Party. Closing party  hosted by the Power Inn Alliance. Food  from Squeeze Burger. Beer from Beers  in Sac. Music by the City of Trees Brass  Band. A petting zoo. Shuttle tours of the  Power Inn District murals.  11am Sunday, 8/20. No cover. Granite Regional park, 8181  Cucamonga Ave.

CALENDAR LISTINGS CONTINUED ON PAGE 40

SUNDAY, 8/20

Norcal’s 2nd Annual Barber Battle ACE OF SPADES, 1 P.M., $24-$65

Think of it like the Olympics for  those who cut, shave and trim.  At Norcal’s 2nd Annual Barber  Battle at Ace of Spades, proPHOTO COURTESY OF JODY TAYLOR fessionals and amateurs alike  compete in five distinct categories: combover, low fade,  COMPETITION low taper, freestyle/design and beard. Look for local  “celebrity contestants” such as Anthony Giannotti of Anthony’s Barbershop and Justin Thomas of the hair salon Black Black. 1417 R Street.

’s Independent Journalism Fund: independentjournalismfund.org

Come Back to the Five & Dime, Jimmy  Dean, Jimmy Dean. James Dean’s legend  looms large for four Texas women who  were teenagers when the star filmed  Giant in their town. Now, 20 years later,  the “Disciples of Jimmy Dean” come to  reminisce about the past.  But when  a familiar stranger walks in, tensions  bubble to the surface and old secrets  are revealed. Through 8/20. $17-$20.  7501  Carriage Drive in Citrus Heights.

VILLAGE GREEN PARK: A Midsummer Night’s

if you like it, help support it

GREEN VALLEY THEATRE COMPANY: The Robber

and swing jazz.  Through 9/17. $12-$18. 7991  California Ave. in Fair Oaks.,

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up Mike by way of his overprotective   mother, a new boss, a demon-possessed  co-worker and even his new lover.  Through 8/20. $18-$22. 5325 Engle Road, Suite 110 in  Carmichael.

VISIT AMERICANSPIRIT.COM OR CALL 1-800-435-5515 PROMO CODE 96726

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Offer for one “1 for $3” Gift Certificate good for any Natural American Spirit cigarette product (excludes RYO pouches and 150g tins). Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer. Offer and website restricted to U.S. smokers 21 years of age and older. Limit one offer per person per 12 month period. Offer void in MA and where prohibited. Other restrictions may apply. Offer expires 12/31/17.

—KAinOA LOWMAn Sacramento News and Review 08-17-17.indd 1

08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   37 7/10/17 10:11 AM


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SEE MORE EVENTS AND SUBMIT YOUR OWN AT NEWSREvIEW.COM/SACRAMENTO/CAlENDAR

MONDAY, 8/21 CALENDAR LISTINGS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 37

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SMUD ART GALLERY: MATRIX Revisited. MATRIX, a women’s artist group of the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s celebrates their July reunion with this exhibit. Through 9/11. No cover. 6301 S St.

bestofsac.com Woman on the Verge of Paradise

DiscovEr thE awarD winning mEmoir chosEn by acorn publications as mEmoir of thE yEar, writtEn by local author robyn EngEl! using humor and heartbreak, robyn flattens the fairtytale notion of love and marriage forever after.

SPARROW GALLERY: Dissent Group Art Show. Created as a platform for the artists to express their concerns to recent current events. Promised not to be the typical “Anti-Trump” show. The artists cover events and topics that cross political and social lines. Through 8/19. Free. 1021 R St.

SOL COLLECTIVE: Our Times, Our Resistances, Our Autonomies. A printmaking exhibit by artists based in the United States and Mexico. Through 9/2. No cover. 2574 21st St.

MUSEUMS CALIFORNIA MUSEUM: 10th Annual California Hall of Fame Artifact Exhibit. A collection of artifacts, which include Harrison Ford’s Indiana Jones costume from Raiders of the Lost Ark, George Takei’s Hikaru Sulu costume from Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, Isabel Allende’s Presidential Medal of Freedom for Literature awarded by President Barack Obama in 2014 and more. 10am. Through 9/10. $9; Light & Noir Exiles & Émigrés in Hollywood, 1933-1950. Highlights the history of émigrés in the American film industry who fled Europe as refugees of Nazi persecution and their legacy in American cinema through the film noir genre. The exhibit features rare artifacts and memorabilia from 16 iconic films. Through 10/15. $9; Patient No More People with Disabilities Securing Civil Rights. Chronicles the lives and legacies of the courageous Californians whose activism launched the American disability rights movement. Through 11/15. $9. 1020 O St.

CALIFORNIA STATE ARCHIVES: California

She’ll yank on your heartstrings one moment and then tickle your funny bone the next.

- Alex J. Cavanaugh, Amazon Bestselling Author

Packs plenty of humor. Engel really finds her groove.

- Kirkus Reviews

E-book & papErback availablE now on amazon 40

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08.17.17

Memoirs The William M. McCarthy Photograph Collection. William and Grace McCarthy, native Californians born in the late-19th century, pursued their passion for both photography and travel for many years. The end result is a collection of nearly 3,000 photographs mounted in 11 albums that provide rare pictorial documentation of the couple’s early20th century travels through California and beyond. 9:30am. Through 8/31. No cover. 1020 O St., Fourth Floor.

CALIFORNIA STATE RAILROAD MUSEUM: A World on Wheels. Five vintage automobiles are on display to highlight how innovative train technology and design paved the way for the emergence of the automobile. The five automobiles on loan from the California Automobile Museum will include the following: a 1914 Stanley Steam Car, a 1932 Ford Model B Station Wagon, a 1937 Cadillac Series 60 Sedan, a 1940 Lincoln Zephyr and a 1953 Chevrolet Bel Air. 10am. Through 9/4. 111 I St.

SUTTER’S FORT STATE HISTORIC PARK: Hands on History: Frontier Medicine – Sacramento’s First Hospital. Fort guests can see demonstrations provided by several physicians and a midwife showing many aspects of 19th century medicine, including dentistry and homeopathic cures. Artifacts will be on display, such as

Solar Eclipse THE SKY 9:02 a.m.

Nobody knows why the moon and the sun appear to be exactly the same size in the sky. There is no scientific explanation for this bizarre coincidence. And even though the odds against such NATURE a thing are (ahem) PHOTO COUTRTESY OF NASA/HINODE/XRT astronomical, no one gives it much thought. That will change when the pair perform a pas de deux resulting in a total solar eclipse. In parts of North America, the sun’s aurora will show itself and the stars will come out. Here in Sac we’ll see about 70 percent of the show—still literally awesome. 9:02-11:39 (peak at 10:17).

—ERIC JOHNSON

an amputation kit circa 1870, bleeding and cupping implements, tooth extractors, an ether mask, wooden splints, early medications and more. Plus, Fort docents will lead demonstrations where visitors can get involved and participate as “volunteer victims” to learn more about Gold Rush medicine practices. 10am Thursday, 8/19. $5-$7. 2701 L St.

SPORTS & OUTDOORS SATURDAY, 8/19 “209BEATDOWN III” EXTREME CAGE FIGHTING: Several Stockton brawlers will defend their titles against cage fighters from everywhere else in California. 6pm, $20$70. Stockton Memorial Civic Auditorium, 525 North Center St. in Stockton.

5TH ANNUAL FXR’S OF CALIFORNIA EVENT: A day of drag bike racing, stunt shows, wheelie contests and more. 11am, $20. Sacramento Raceway Park, 5305 Excelsior Road.

SACRAMENTO RIVER CATS VS. ALBUQUERQUE ISOTOPES: 7:05pm, $10-$63. Raley Field, 400 Ball Park Dr.

GUIDED PADDLE TOUR: Join the Cosumnes River Preserve for a leisurely paddle up the river. You’ll likely see forest birds, maybe even a beaver. Bring your own boat (canoe, kayak, SUP), paddle and PFD. No experience necessary. Meet at the Cosumnes River Preserve Visitor Center Parking lot at 8:30 a.m. Register on Eventbrite.com. 8:30am, no cover. Cosumnes River Preserve, 13501 Franklin Blvd. in Galt.

IPF INTERNATIONAL PUMP FEST 2017 USA, CALIFORNIA: A state tournament for an arcade rhythm game similar to Dance Dance Revolution. Compete in the female speed, male speed and freestyle divisions. 1pm. Strikes Unlimited, 5681 Lonetree Blvd. in Rocklin.

SAC REPUBLIC FC VS. RENO 1868 FC: 8pm,

$17.75-$90.75. Cal Expo, 1600 Exposition Blvd.

TWF ALL IN: Local wrestling league. The

main event is a four-way match. 7pm, $8. Colonial Theatre, 3522 Stockton Blvd.

SUNDAY, 8/20 IPF INTERNATIONAL PUMP FEST 2017 USA, CALIFORNIA: See Saturday event

description. 1pm. Strikes Unlimited, 5681 Lonetree Blvd. in Rocklin.

NORCAL’S 2ND ANNUAL BARBER BATTLE: See

event highlight on page 37. 1pm, $24. Ace of Spades, 1417 R St.

WTF (WOMEN, TRANS, FEMME) NIGHT: Work on your bike, then go for a 2.5 mile ride to Gunther’s Ice Cream to enjoy a frozen treat and tell bike stories. The ride is at 7pm. 5pm, no cover. Sacramento Bicycle Kitchen, 1915 I St.

MONDAY, 8/21 MONDAY NIGHT HOODSLAM: Popular Oakland underground wrestling show hits Sacramento. Just remember: don’t bring your f’n kids. 7pm, $15. District 30, 1022 K St.

SACRAMENTO RIVER CATS VS. ALBUQUERQUE ISOTOPES: 7:05pm, $10-$63. Raley Field, 400 Ball Park Dr.

SOLAR ECLIPSE: See event highlight above.

TUESDAY, 8/22 SACRAMENTO RIVER CATS VS. ALBUQUERQUE ISOTOPES: 7:05pm, $10-$63. Raley Field, 400 Ball Park Dr.

WEDNESDAY, 8/23 SACRAMENTO REPUBLIC FC VS. SWOPE PARK RANGERS: 8pm, $17.75-$93. Bonney Field, 1600 Exposition Blvd.

TAKE ACTION THURSDAY, 8/17 STORY CIRCLE AFFORDABLE HOUSING: Capital Public Radio’s upcoming documentary, The View From Here: Place and Privilege, explores the history, politics and economics of housing affordability in California’s capitol. In collaboration with community partners, CPR is hosting a series of intimate storytelling gatherings that bring diverse residents together to share experiences, listen to one another and explore solutions. Sign up required online. 5:30pm, no cover. Women’s Empowerment, 1590 N A St.


TUESDAY, 8/22

19TH AMENDMENT 97TH ANNIVERSARY RALLY:

AWAAZ: RECRUITING THE NEXT GENERATION OF SIKH & SOUTH ASIAN PUBLIC OFFICIALS:

A rally that’s intended to unite women  from all walks of life to honor those who  have worked in the suffrage movement  since the mid-19th century.  Noon, no cover. California State Capitol, 1315 10th St.

SATURDAY, 8/19 LEGALIZE DEMOCRACY HOUSE PARTY FILM SCREENING & DISCUSSION: Screening of a  mini-documentary about the movement  to pass the We the People Amendment to  the U.S. Constitution, which is intended to  end corporate personhood and get money  out of politics. Post-film, there will be a  discussion that will include opportunities  to learn more about the Move to Amend  movement and get involved locally.  7:30pm, no cover. Organize Sacramento, 1714  Broadway.

PEOPLE’S CONGRESS OF RESISTANCE BBQ FUNDRAISER: Come enjoy food and hear  updates from speakers about the People’s  Congress of Resistance and ongoing local  struggles in the anti-racist and immigrant  rights movements, the struggle against  police terror, the LGBTQ and disabled  rights movement, the fight for healthcare  and the defense of science.  6:30pm, $5 suggested donation.  2860 Florin Road.

WALK FOR WISHES 2017:  Spend your  Saturday morning walking with friends,  family and co-workers for this MakeA-Wish fundraiser for children with  life-threatening medical conditions.  8am, register and donate online. California State  Capitol, 1315 10th St.

SUNDAY, 8/20 ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE - A MORAL ISSUE:  An opportunity to engage with other  faith traditions in the work of improving  the sustainability of the environment.  The outcome will be the formation of  the Interfaith Environmental Justice  Committee comprised of Sacramento  community members, primarily from  the organizations of Sacramento ACT.  1pm. Unitarian Universalist Society of  Sacramento, 2425 Sierra Blvd.

Join the American Sikh Public Affairs  Association for this day-long forum to  discuss why under-representation of  Sikh and South Asian representation  in legislature exists, how can we  fix it and which strategies can be  implemented to recruit the next  generation of lawmakers and community  leaders.  10:30am. California State Capitol,  1315 10th St.

CIVIC ENGAGEMENT DINNER - AMERICAN SIKH PUBLIC AFFAIRS ASSOCIATION: An annual  dinner that brings together elected  officials, community leaders and Sikh civic  leaders from across the state. Keynote  speeches will be delivered by California  Congressman Ro Khanna (17th District)  and California State Assemblyman  Ash Kalra (27th District).  6pm, $50$75. Mirage Banquet Halls, 2159 El Camino  Ave.

CLASSES SATURDAY, 8/19 BEYOND DICE IMPROV FOR ROLE PLAYING AND TABLE TOP GAMES: Learn improv to  strengthen and embody your characters,  improve your storytelling and world  building craft, enhance your team work  and collaborative play, manage and enjoy  those unexpected situations when plans go  awry, unlock your ideas and enhance your  creativity.  1pm, $20. CSZ Sacramento,  2230 Arden Way, Suite B.

JOURNEY TO AWAKEN KIRTAN: Yoga of sound.  Music, mantra, chants and bhajans from  Hindu, Buddhist , Kundalini and Western  traditions. No experience is required.  7pm, $10 suggested donation.  Lion’s Roar  Dharma Center, 3240 B St.

PHOTO COURTESY OF JASON KNIgHT

—Scott thomaS anderSon

voting ends august 28

Sacramento Scandinavian Festival Sacramento ScottiSh rite maSonic center, 10 a.m., $5

Mayweather vs McGregor Aug 26 | Sat VIEWING PARTY

bestofsac.com

SATURDAY, 8/19

Get ready for some cultural  plunder! The Sacramento  Scandinavian Festival  celebrates all things from  “the land of ice and snow,”  allowing  FESTIVAL event-goers  to pillage  culinary treasures and  carry off baked goods from  their rightful owners. It’s  Odin’s outing. From horned  helmets to Nordic crime  noir, this folk dance-inducing afternoon arrives with  games, crafts, prizes and  even a viking ship. 6151 H St.

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FRIDAY, 8/18

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08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   41 JOB #: HRT-10517 AD TITLE: MCGREGOR VIEWING PARTY COLOR INFO: 4C

PUBLICATION: NEWS REVIEW


STEVE MARTIN MARTIN SHORT Saturday, August 26

Thursday, August 31

SMOKEY ROBINSON Friday, September 1

Voted Best Overall Gaming Resort & Hotel In Reno o Again! (800) 501-2651 • GrandSierraResort.com 42   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17


THURSDAY 08/17 The acousTic den cafe

Hannah Jane Kile, Josiah Gathing, Lili St. 10271 fAiRWAY DRivE, ROSEvillE, (916) 412-8739 Anne, 6pm, $5

mONDAY-WEDNESDAY 8/21-8/23

Hillary Scott, 7pm, $10

Ukulele group, 11am, no cover

Open-Mic, 6:30pm, W, no cover

Fridays Are a Drag, 8pm, call for cover

Spectacular Saturdays, all night, call for cover

Industry Sundays, 8pm, no cover

Half-off Mondays, 8pm, M, no cover; Trapacana, 10pm, W, no cover

Blue lamp

1400 AlHAmbRA blvD., (916) 455-3400

State of Krisis, L3FTY, Nena Kapone and more, 9pm, call for cover

MoxieCrush Burlesque Comedy Show, 8pm, $10

Burning Landscapes, Death Party at the Beach, Desario, 8pm, call for cover

Civil Youth, Fate Under Fire, National Lines, Caliscope, 8pm, $10

Panzergod, Gloam, Defecrator, 8pm, W, $10

The Boardwalk

Awells Birthday Show, 9pm, $12

Represa, California Child, Dead Celebrities, A Hero To Fall, 8:30pm, $10

Battle of the Boardwalk w/ Delta Heavy and more, 8pm, $15-$20

The cenTer for The arTs

Doyle Bramhall II, 8pm, $24-$27

314 W. mAiN ST., GRASS vAllEY, (530) 274-8384

with Josiah Gathing 6pm Thursday, $5. The Acoustic Den Cafe, Roseville Americana pop

SUNDAY 08/20

Yo! And The Electric, 1pm, no cover; The Time Warps, 7pm, no cover

#Turntup Thursdays College Night, 8pm, no cover

9426 GREENbACk lN., ORANGEvAlE, (916) 358-9116

Hannah Jane Kile

SATURDAY 08/19

Badlands

2003 k ST., (916) 448-8790

PHOTO COURTESY Of EmilY O’NEil

fRiDAY 08/18

Pokey LaFarge, 8pm, $22-$27

disTillery

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm, no cover

Karaoke, 9pm, M, Tu, W, no cover

faces

Dragon: New Wave Tour, 9pm, $25-$30

Western Line Dancing, 7pm, no cover

Decades, 7pm, call for cover

Sunday Funday Pool Parties, 3pm, call for cover

Every Damn Monday, 7pm, M, no cover; Noche Latina, 9pm, Tu, call for cover

fox & Goose

Stepping Stone, 8pm, $5

Rollin’ Blackouts, Gillian Underwood & The Lonesome Doves, 9pm, $5

Scotty McConaha and others, 9pm, $5

2107 l ST., (916) 443-8815 2000 k ST., (916) 448-7798 1001 R ST., (916) 443-8825

Goldfield TradinG posT

Cuco, 7pm, W, $12

1630 J ST., (916) 476-5076

halfTime Bar & Grill

5681 lONETREE blvD., ROCkliN, (916) 626-6366

harlow’s

2708 J ST., (916) 441-4693

“Let’s Get Quzzical” Trivia Game Show Experience, 7pm, Tu, no cover

Karaoke Happy Hour, 7pm, call for cover

Live DJ and Karaoke, 9pm, call for cover

Groove Thang, 9pm, $5

Tyrone Wells, Mike Annuzzi, 5:30pm, $15-$18

Joy & Madness, Mama’s Gravy, 9:30pm, $10-$13

The Alarm, The Ghost Town Rebellion, 8pm, $20-$25

The hideaway Bar & Grill hiGhwaTer

On The Low, 9pm, call for cover; Eric & Juan, 10pm, call for cover

1910 Q ST., (916) 706-2465

luna’s cafe & Juice Bar

Sac United Poetry Slam, 6:45pm, no cover

1414 16TH ST., (916) 441-3931

memorial audiTorium 1515 J ST., (916) 808-5181

Bring It! Live, 8pm, $32.75

Tussle, 10pm, Tu, call for cover; Only The Good Stuff, 10pm, W, call for cover

Frank Joseph G, PuddleStomper, Old & Grey, 8pm, $6

Comedy Showcase w/ Jaime Fernandez, 8pm, W, no cover

Rancid, Dropkick Murphys, 6:30pm, $45-$50

The Doobie Brothers, 8pm, W, $65-$125

momo sacramenTo

with Death Party at the Beach 8pm Saturday, call for cover. Blue Lamp Alternative rock

old ironsides

Music Night: Open Acoustic Jam, 7pm, no cover

Trouble Makers, Control Freaks, Sell Woods, 9pm, $7

Lipstick Dance Party, 9pm, $5

on The y

Open-Mic Stand-up Comedy, 8pm, no cover

Exodus: Gothic Industrial Nightclub w/ DJ Nacht DOOM, 10pm, $5

Not Like You, 8pm, call for cover

Dahlia Fiend, Blue Oaks, DJ Lady Grey, 5:30pm, $8-$10

2708 J ST., (916) 441-4693

670 fUlTON AvE., (916) 487-3731

See How They Run, Ricky Berger, 6:30pm, Tu, $8-$12

Salty Saturday, 9pm, call for cover

Burning Landscapes

1901 10TH ST., (916) 442-3504

Adrian Bellue Project, Chad Wilkins, 5:30pm, $15-$20 Kill The Shark, WORWS, VVOMEN, The Challenge, 8pm, $5

2565 fRANkliN blvD., (916) 455-1331

PHOTO COURTESY Of DAN SUTTON

Open Mic, 7:30pm, M, no cover; Pub Quiz, 7pm, Tu, no cover

www.momosacramento.com

Karaok “I,” 9pm, Tu, no cover; Open-Mic Night, 7:30pm, W, no cover Open 8-Ball Pool Tournament, 7:30pm, $5 buy-in

8/22 6:30PM $8ADV

8/17 5:30PM $15ADV

8/19 5:30PM $8ADV

SEE HOW THEY RUN

TYRONE WELLS

DAHLIA FIEND, BLUE OAKS & DJ LADY GREY

(CD RELEASE) RICKY BERGER (ALL AGES)

MIKE ANNUZZI (ALL AGES)

8/20 6:30PM $10ADV

COMEDY BURGER

8/18 9:30PM $10ADV

RICH CORPORATION

MAMA’S GRAVY

8/25 8PM $15

JOY & MADNESS

SWINGIN’ UTTERS

WESTERN SETTINGS

SPILLER 8/23 7PM $7

MICHAEL RAY TRIO

8/19 8PM $20ADV

THE ALARM

THE OUTCOME 8/24 7PM $7

THE GHOST TOWN REBELLION

ADDVERSE EFFECTS (FROM PORTLAND) THROBAQ 8/27 6PM $15ADV

ZYAH BELL SACRAMENTO’S FAVORITE DJS EVERY FRI & SAT AT 10PM

For booking inquiries, email Robert@momosacramento.com

Rich Corporation, Spiller, 7pm, Tu, $7

Free Pool & Karaoke, 9pm, M, no cover; Movie Night, 7pm, no cover

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

2708 J Street

HOSTED BY NGAIO BEALUM 8/22 7PM $7

Comedy Burger w/ Ngaio Bealum, 6:30pm, $10-$25

8/26 8PM $10ADV

THE GREG GOLDEN BAND

8/20 5:30PM $15ADV

ADRIAN BELLUE PROJECT CHAD WILKINS

8/27 7PM $12.50ADV

TALKING DREADS

(REGGAE TRIBUTE TO TALKING HEADS)

COMING SOON 08/31 Ryder Green 09/01 Com Truise / Nosaj Thing 09/02 Parsonfield 09/04 George Kahumoku Jr. 09/05 Gangstagrass 09/07 Martin Moreno 09/08 Martin Barre 09/09 Joel the Band 09/10 Danielle Mone Truitt 09/12 The Church 09/13 Marshall Crenshaw y Los Straitjackets 09/14 Geographer 09/15 Dead Winter Carpenters 09/16 Kawika Kahiapo 09/17 Pup 09/18 Robbie Fulks 09/19 Andrew Belle 09/20 Curren$y 09/21 Willie Walton 09/22 Tennyson

08.17.17

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ONE LOVE ONE HEART

Reggae Festival September 2nd-3rd International Food & Merchandise Vendors Artists Performing:

Enjoy a Billiant sampling of local foot hills wines & food at 20 locations throughout Downtown

SATurDAY, AuguST 26

1 - 4 Historic Downtown Nevada City

TICKETS $35 ADV $45 DAY $30 Win

e Club Members

Wines Available at the Uncorked Wine Store RAFFLE! Buy tickets to win Nevada City Vacation Packages! TICKETS: sierravintners.com or at the Nevada City Chamber of Commerce 132 Main Street, downtown Nevada City nevadacitychamber.com (530)265-2692

Steel Pulse Sizzla Anthony B Akae Beka, Fiji, Sister Carole IrieFuse, Guidance Band International Dub Ambassadors Irae Devine, Pacific Vibration & President Brown

> AUG 18

The Decemberists with Olivia Chaney

Yolo Country Fairgrounds

1250 East Gum Ave. Woodland, CA Gates Open 10a - 11p #mondavicenter 44   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17

mondaviarts.org


suBMit your calenDar listings for free at newsreview.coM/sacraMento/calenDar Palms Playhouse

13 MaIN ST., WINTERS, (530) 795-1825

Placerville Public house

414 MaIN ST., PlaCERvIllE, (530) 303-3792

THURSDaY 08/17

FRIDaY 08/18

Nicola Són, 8pm, $17

Coco Montoya, 8pm, $20

Pint & Flight Night: Anderson Valley Brewing, 6pm, no cover

Powerhouse Pub

614 SUTTER ST., FOlSOM, (916) 355-8586

The Press club

SaTURDaY 08/19

SUNDaY 08/20

MONDaY-WEDNESDaY 8/21-8/23

Dana & Woody, 8:30pm, no cover

Good Samaritans, 8:30pm, no cover

Left of Cool, 1:30pm, no cover

Taco Tuesday & Game Day, 11am, M, no cover

Rock Monsterz, 10pm, $10

Retro Metro, 10pm, $10

John Clifton, 3pm, $10

2030 P ST., (916) 444-7914

The Fruitbat, Halcones, Brotha RJ, Crush, 8:25pm, call for cover

social nighTclub

SNBRN, 10pm, no cover before 11pm, $4

Joseph One, 10pm, no cover before 11pm, $5

Romeo Reyes, 10pm, no cover before 10:30pm, $5

sol collecTive

DANZA, 6:30pm, call for cover

Wide Open Walls panel, 6pm, call for cover

Escritores del Nuevo Sol meeting, 10am, no cover

1000 K ST., (916) 947-0434 2574 21ST ST., (916) 585-3136

Vinyl Exam: Lesson 45, 9pm, M, call for cover; Emo Night, 8pm, W, call for cover

soPhia’s Thai kiTchen

1320 DEl PaSO BlvD., (916) 927-6023

Bobby Zoppi & The Corduroys, 11pm, no cover

swabbies on The river

5871 gaRDEN HIgHWaY, (916) 920-8088

PHOTO COURTESY OF SaRaH PHENIX

Line Dancing Lessons, 8pm, no cover; 18 & Over Country Dance Night, 9pm, $5-$10

Barb’s Da Bomb Birthday Bash, 7pm, $5

Hot Country DJ Dancing, 9pm, no cover 21+, $5 ages 18-20

Third Friday Reggae w/ Mystic Roots, Marla Brown, 6:30pm, $10

Appetite 4 Destruction (Guns ’N’ Roses Tribute), 7pm, call for cover

Third Sunday Country w/ Rachel Steele, Whiskey Dawn, 1pm, $10

Thunder valley casino resorT 904 15TH ST., (916) 443-2797

Mind X, 5:30pm, no cover; Blue Lotus, 9pm, $6

Jimmy Pailer, 5:30pm, call for cover; Lew Fratis, 9pm, $7

Loose Engines, 5:30pm, call for cover; Daniel Castro, 9pm, $10

wildwood kiTchen & bar

Ryan & Kaz, 7pm, no cover

Jayson Angrove, 7pm, no cover

Hanz Eberbach, 7pm, no cover

Band in the Beer Hall: Cloudship, 6pm, no cover

Band in the Beer Hall: Digisaurus, 6pm, no cover

MASK, 7pm, call for cover

556 PavIlIONS lN., (916) 922-2858

yolo brewing comPany

1520 TERMINal ST., (916) 379-7585

Destroy Boys

West Coast Swing & Taco Tuesday, 7pm, Tu, $5

with Hobo Johnson 8pm Friday, $9. The Band Room, Placerville Punk

Ramon Ayala, Chiquis Rivera, 7pm, $49.95-$179.95

1200 aTHENS avE., lINCOlN, (916) 408-7777

The Torch club

Luna Yoga, 8pm, M, call for cover

West Nile Ramblers, 9:30pm, $5

129 E ST., SUITE E, DavIS, (530) 758-4333

sToney’s rockin rodeo

Kuikatl music workshop, 1pm, call for cover

Monterey Pop Festival tribute show, 4pm, Mudfolk, 9pm, Tu, no cover; Peter Petty, call for cover 9pm, W, $6 Whiskey on the Wood: Nikka Japanese Whiskeys, W, call for time & cover Band in the Beer Hall: Wonder, 3pm, no cover

Live Blues and Cornhole, 4pm, W, no cover

NorCal’s 2nd Annual Barber Battle, 1pm, $24

Cold War Kids, 7pm, M, $27.50; The Adicts, The Moans, Igor Spectre, 7pm, W, $20

Films: Salad Days, Filmage: The Story of Descendants/All, 7pm, no cover

Milo, Randal Bravery, Sparks Across Darkness and more, 8pm, M, $10

all ages, all the time ace of sPades

Louder Than Love: A Tribute to Chris Cornell & Chester Bennington, 7pm, $15

cafe colonial

Union Hearts, Bastards of Young, Trinidad Silva, Flip Offs, 8pm, $6

The colony

3512 STOCKTON BlvD., (916) 718-7055

At Both Ends, United Defiance, Surface Report, 8pm, $5-$7

shine

Nzuri Soul Band, 8pm, $15

1417 R ST., (916) 930-0220 3520 STOCKTON BlvD., (916) 718-7055

1400 E ST., (916) 551-1400

Bitter Inc., Killer Couture, Corroded Massacre, 8pm, $5-10 sliding scale

PHOTO COURTESY OF MaRION CHaRlOTTE PHOTOgRaPHY

Chemical State, Exposure, Dying For It, Crucial Measures, 8pm, $7 Sacramento Video Game Ensemble, 8pm, $10

Joy & Madness with Mama’s Gravy 9:30pm Friday, $10-$13. Harlow’s Funk, soul

All Ages Welcome!

1417 R Street, Sacramento, 95811 • www.aceofspadessac.com Sunday, auguSt 20

norcAl’s 2nd AnnuAl BArBer BATTle

AugusT AlsinA rotiMi - tonE Stith

friday, SEptEMbEr 1

Monday, auguSt 21

fAMous dex

cold WAr Kids WEdnESday, auguSt 23

The AdicTs thE MoanS – igor SpEctrE Saturday, auguSt 26

Y&T Evolution EdEn WEdnESday, auguSt 30

siMple plAn SEt it off – patEnt pEnding

COMING

thurSday, auguSt 31

tuESday, SEptEMbEr 5

uglY god WintErtiME

WEdnESday, SEptEMbEr 6

sisTer hAzel thurSday, SEptEMbEr 7

Minus The BeAr vElvEt tEEn

SOON

09/08 Quiet Riot 09/09 Magpie Salute 09/10 Sza SOLD OUT! 09/12 Against Me! 09/13 Corbin & Shlohmo 09/14 Troyboi 09/15 Reverend Horton Heat 09/16 The Dan Band 09/21 Twiztid 09/26 Mura Masa 09/30 Superjoint Ritual and Devildriver 10/03 Dope / Hed PE 10/05 Shooter Jennings 10/06 Obituary + Exodus 10/11 & 12 Cafe Tacvba 10/13 Intocable 10/17 The Kooks 10/20 Paul Weller 10/21 Brujeria w/Voodoo Glow Skulls & Piñata Protest 10/23 Issues 10/25 The Maine 10/26 The Underachievers 10/28 Yelawolf 10/29 The Devil Wears Prada 11/03 Chelsea Wolfe 11/04 Aaron Watson 11/05 Lecrae 11/09 $uicide Boy$ 11/11 Waterparks 11/14 Gryffin 11/15 Third Eye Blind 12/01 Collie Buddz 12/12 Chris Robinson Brotherhood 05/21 Peter Hook & The Light

TickeTs available aT all Dimple RecoRDs locaTions anD www.aceofspaDessac.com

08.17.17

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46   |   SN&R   |   08.17.17


by JOEY GARCIA

@AskJoeyGarcia

No Regrets disappointment, anxiety, tears, My 20th high school reunion is coming depression. Don’t rewrite the past as and I have a big decision to make. On if you two were star-crossed lovers. grad night, 20 years ago, I had sex for Turn the page (yes, it was a page in the first time. It was with a guy in my your life, not a chapter). It’s the only class who I had a huge crush on. We hung way to be free to make decisions fed out a little right after graduation, but by self-love instead of regret. Self-love then he left town early for college and never kept in touch. A few months later, I means that you release the hope that a boy who discarded you in high school realized I was pregnant. has become a man who will desire you Ultimately, I had an abortion. I’ve always above all else. When you accept reality, felt bad for not letting him know. I’m the regret you’ve been carrying will divorced now and heard he is, too. He’s melt away. coming to the reunion. Do you think At the reunion, don’t make I should tell him about the a beeline for him. Say pregnancy and abortion? hello when your paths It would lift a big weight My suggestion cross naturally that off my shoulders. is for you to be night. Don’t tell him Advice, please! about the pregnancy If it’s a woman’s the adult woman and abortion, either. right to choose you are now, not a Let him enjoy his whether or not teenager hungering to reunion. Allow yourto terminate a self to savor the event, pregnancy, and you understand love and too, by remaining in made that choice sex. 2017. It’s the best way without his input, why to avoid creating another say anything now? I think missed opportunity. After the motivation to confess is all, the reunion isn’t a once-in-alinked to your newly single status. A lifetime chance to connect with a former high school reunion might seem like the flame. It’s your opportunity to show perfect venue to repair the frayed thread yourself that you are worthy of being of hope, but I’m concerned you’re setting cherished. And that’s something you’ll yourself up for disappointment again. never regret. Ω Yes, again. The first letdown was that your crush never kept in touch. For you, the summer fling was significant—first experience MeDItAtION Of tHe Week of sexual intercourse, and a crush that “I haven’t lived a perfect life. I  started turning into something more, at have regrets. But that’s from  least briefly. He may have let go because a lifetime of taking chances,  he was moving away and preferred no making decisions, and trying  long-distance complications. There could not to be frozen. The only  have been other reasons, too, the ones thing that I can do with my  you might not want to hear. Like this: He regrets is understand them,”  just wasn’t that into you. Or he had his said actor Kevin Costner. Are  heart set on someone else. Something in you settling for a superficial  you knew that the relationship had run friendship with yourself? its course. Otherwise, you would have located him and let him know he had become a poppa. My suggestion is for you to be Write, email or leave a message for the adult woman you are now, not Joey at the News & Review. Give a teenager hungering to understand your name, telephone number (for verification purposes only) and question—all and experience love and sex. Curate correspondence will be kept strictly confidential. your thoughts. Toss out leftovers from 20 years ago. This guy was not your Write Joey, 1124 Del Paso Boulevard, Sacramento, CA boyfriend. He was a crush, a fling, a 95815; call (916) 498-1234, ext. 1360; or email hookup. The connection likely inspired askjoey@newsreview.com. moments of happiness, fun, fear,

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or go to www.clearhorizonmg.com 52   |   SN&R   |    08.17.17

capital cannabis newsletter


Green Business

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I want to learn more about the cannabis business. What should I do? —Ahn Trap-Enoor Um, read a book? If you are brand new to cannabis and don’t know your Blue Dream from your Blue Dragon, ganja guru Ed Rosenthal’s publishing company (www.edrosenthal.com) has a plethora of books all about the cannabis plant. If you are just trying to get a feel for the ins and outs and what to expect from running a cannabis business, longtime cannabis activist and cannabusiness owner Debby Goldsberry has just published a book called Starting & Running a Marijuana Business. It is full of good information. Start there. Depending on where you live, there may also be different workshops devoted to cannabusinesses. Sacramento has CANaccelerate, and I know Magnolia in Oakland offers free workshops to folks that want to get into the business. Running a cannabis business is just like running any other business, except the fact that the feds may come after you, although the Rohrabacher-Farr amendment is supposed to keep them at bay. Do your homework and remember to work hard. Running a cannabisbased business isn’t a license to print money. For every person that becomes a millionaire, there are dozens that lose all of their money. Yay, capitalism. I am a pretty good cook, and I would like to invite my friends over for a cannabis-infused dinner. Any tips? —Gus Tatory Have fun. Be careful. Make sure everyone has a safe ride home. Use organically grown cannabis, and keep an eye on the flavor of your weed. Too much pot flavor can be off-putting. Running Some of us remember the old school pot a cannabisbrownies where people would just dump ground weed into the mixing bowl, making based business the brownies taste like gr(ass) and chocolate. isn’t a license to Andrea Drummer, perhaps the greatest cannaprint money. chef in America (she’s my favorite), recently said this to Vogue Magazine: “I approach cannabis similarly to any strong seasoning or spice I’d put in food. In no case would you want to have a cup of soup that has way too much garlic or way too much rosemary. You want it to complement all the other components in the dish. Why would I want you to have this overtly pungent flavor that overwhelms the dish?” If you are a good cook, you already know that, but I will tell you this: Keep an eye on how much THC each dish contains. My advice is to keep the dosage in each dish relatively low. Sure, those hors d’oeuvres only have 10 milligrams of THC each, but someone may eat three (or five, if they are especially tasty). Add in an entree (10 to 20 milligrams,) and a dessert another (10 to 20 more) and now they are heading up to 100 milligrams total in THC and are in danger of being over-medicated and having a bad experience. Maybe use some high CBD strains in the dessert section to smooth everyone out a little. Oh, and please invite me. I promise to help with the dishes. Ω Ngaio Bealum is a Sacramento comedian, activist and marijuana expert. Email him questions at ask420@newsreview.com.

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08.17.17    |   SN&R   |   57


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62   |   SN&R   |    08.17.17


FRee will aStRology

by John Flynn

by Rob bRezsny

FOR THE WEEk OF AUGUST 17, 2017 ARIES (March 21-April 19): “To disobey in order

to take action is the byword of all creative spirits,” said philosopher Gaston Bachelard. This mischievous advice is perfect for your use right now, Aries. I believe you’ll thrive through the practice of ingenious rebellion -- never in service to your pride, but always to feed your soul’s lust for deeper, wilder life. Here’s more from Bachelard: “Autonomy comes through many small disobediences, at once clever, well thought-out, and patiently pursued, so subtle at times as to avoid punishment entirely.”

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Congratulations! I

expect that during the next three weeks, you will be immune to what psychoanalyst Joan Chodorow calls “the void of sadness, the abyss of fear, the chaos of anger, and the alienation of contempt and shame.” I realize that what I just said might sound like an exaggeration. Aren’t all of us subject to regular encounters with those states? How could you possibly go so long without brushing up against them? I stand by my prediction, and push even further. For at least the next three weeks, I suspect you will also be available for an inordinate amount of what Chodorow calls “the light of focused insight” and “the playful, blissful, allembracing experience of joy.”

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The coming days

would an excellent time to celebrate (even brag about) the amusing idiosyncrasies and endearing quirks that make you lovable. To get you inspired, read this testimony from my triple Gemini friend Alyssa: “I have beauty marks that form the constellation Pegasus on my belly. I own my own ant farm. I’m a champion laugher. I teach sign language to squirrels. Late at night when I’m horny and overtired I may channel the spirit of a lion goddess named Sekhmet. I can whistle the national anthems of eight different countries. I collect spoons from the future. I can play the piano with my nose and my toes. I have forever banished the green-eyed monster to my closet.”

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Your education may

take unusual forms during the coming weeks. For example, you could receive crunchy lessons from velvety sources, or tender instructions from exacting challenges. Your curiosity might expand to enormous proportions in the face of a noble and elegant tease. And chances are good that you’ll find a new teacher in an unlikely setting, or be prodded and tricked into asking crucial questions you’ve been neglecting to ask. Even if you haven’t been particularly street smart up until now, Cancerian, I bet your ability to learn from uncategorizable experiences will blossom.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): “If you love someone, set

them free,” said New Age author Richard Bach. “If they come back, they’re yours; if they don’t, they never were.” By using my well-educated intellect to transmute this hippy-dippy thought into practical advice, I came up with a wise strategy for you to consider as you re-evaluate your relationships with allies. Try this: Temporarily suspend any compulsion you might have to change or fix these people; do your best to like them and even love them exactly as they are. Ironically, granting them this freedom to be themselves may motivate them to modify, or at least tone down, the very behavior in themselves that you’re semi-allergic to.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In 1892, workers

began building the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. But as of August 2017, it is still under construction. Renovation has been and continues to be extensive. At one point in its history, designers even changed its architectural style from Neo-Byzantine and Neo-Romanesque to Gothic Revival. I hope this serves as a pep talk in the coming weeks, which will be an excellent time to evaluate your own progress, Virgo. As you keep toiling away in behalf of your dreams, there’s no rush. In fact, my sense is that you’re proceeding at precisely the right rate.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In accordance with

the astrological omens, I hereby declare the next two weeks to be your own personal Amnesty Holiday. To celebrate, ask for and dole out forgiveness. Purge and flush away any nonessential guilt and remorse that are festering inside you. If there truly are hurtful sins that you

still haven’t atoned for, make a grand effort to atone for them -- with gifts and heart-felt messages if necessary. At the same time, I urge you to identify accusations that others have wrongly projected onto you and that you have carried around as a burden even though they are not accurate or fair. Expunge them.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): How many countries has the United States bombed since the end of World War II? Twenty-five, to be exact. But if America’s intention has been to prod these nations into forming more free and egalitarian governments, the efforts have been mostly fruitless. Few of the attacked nations have become substantially more democratic. I suggest you regard this as a valuable lesson to apply to your own life in the coming weeks, Scorpio. Metaphorical bombing campaigns wouldn’t accomplish even 10 percent of your goals, and would also be expensive in more ways than one. So I recommend using the “killing with kindness” approach. Be wily and generous. Cloak your coaxing in compassion.

A fabled stable

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You know

At Fairytale Town, Evanne Harrison takes care of a mythic cast of  animals. The assistant animal keeper  spends her days with Eeyore, an  occasionally melancholy donkey,  Maddie, a red-haired cow that  allegedly jumped over the moon,  and Charlotte, a friendly tarantula  that lives next to a hive of bees  that make honey and lip balm for  the gift shop. There are also three  little pigs, three billy goats gruff, a  rabbit named Peter and his sisters.  In addition to providing a tangible  illustration of some familiar fables,  these Fairytale Town creatures are  often the first members of their  species that children meet, helping to instill within them a gentler  disposition toward animals for the  rest of their lives. I remember my  first visit well.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Here’s a defini-

How did you get this job?

about the Ten Commandments, a code of ethics and behavior that’s central to Christianity and Judaism. You may not be familiar with my Ten Suggestions, which begin with “Thou Shall Not Bore God” and “Thou Shall Not Bore Thyself.” Then there are the Ten Indian Commandments proposed by the Bird Clan of East Central Alabama. They include “Give assistance and kindness whenever needed” and “Look after the well-being of your mind and body.” I bring these to your attention, Sagittarius, because now is an excellent time to formally formulate and declare your own covenant with life. What are the essential principles that guide you to the highest good?

tion of “fantasizing” as articulated by writer Jon Carroll. It’s “a sort of ‘in-brain’ television, where individuals create their own ‘shows’ -- imaginary narratives that may or may not include real people.” As you Capricorns enter the High Fantasy Season, you might enjoy this amusing way of describing the activity that you should cultivate and intensify. Would you consider cutting back on your consumption of movies and TV shows? That might inspire you to devote more time and energy to watching the stories you can generate in your mind’s eye.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In 43 cartoon

stories, the coyote named Wile E. Coyote has tried to kill and devour the swift-running flightless bird known as the Road Runner. Every single time, Wile E. has failed to achieve his goal. It’s apparent to astute observers that his lack of success is partly due to the fact that he doesn’t rely on his natural predatory instincts. Instead, he concocts elaborate, overly-complicated schemes. In one episode, he camouflages himself as a cactus, buys artificial lightning bolts, and tries to shoot himself from a bow as if he were an arrow. All these plans end badly. The moral of the story, as far as you’re concerned: To reach your next goal, trust your instincts.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You temporarily

have cosmic permission to loiter and goof off and shirk your duties. To be a lazy bum and meander aimlessly and avoid tough decisions. To sing offkey and draw stick figures and write bad poems. To run slowly and flirt awkwardly and dress like a slob. Take advantage of this opportunity, because it’s only available for a limited time. It’s equivalent to pushing the reset button. It’s meant to re-establish your default settings. But don’t worry about that now. Simply enjoy the break in the action.

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.

I interned here when I was in college. I was an animal science major, originally. Then I ended up switching majors to wildlife conservation biology. I decided I didn’t want to do the whole vet school thing: lot of schooling, very competitive, lot of indoor stuff and I like being outside.

What is that construction crew working on? The chicken coop, or Little Red Hen’s House. We currently have four chickens and we are getting 11 more little chicks towards the end of this month. The chickens are really popular because we let them out and they get to roam around and dig for worms over by the Crooked Mile.

Were these chicks, um, conceived here? Our rooster is really old, so no...he doesn’t help our hens lay fertile eggs.

Why does the cow have long, red hair? Maddie is a miniature Scottish Highland Cattle. When we first got her, she was mistaken for a yak, a dog and a pony. She’s going on nine months old. So she’s still a baby and she’s very friendly, very affectionate. She’ll stand there and lick your arm for an hour if you let her. Her tongue feels like a cat’s so it freaks people out at first because it’s very raspy.

Is it important to get animals when they’re younger? We work really hard to socialize them just to make sure that everyone has a good experience. Having people petting you and touching you all day can be stressful. But we

PHOTO BY JOHN FLYNN

Which of the three billy goats gruff is the biggest troublemaker?

make sure that they’re used to it.

Are all these animals smaller than usual? All, but one [a Flemish rabbit] are miniature. That makes them very approachable to the kids. They’re about their same size. They’re not some huge animal.

Does the donkey share the disposition of his literary namesake? Actually, yes. He can be a bit ornery and he just stands in his corner looking mad at the world. But he’s a love—he has his moments where he’ll come up and let kids pet his cheeks and stuff. He’s just got a grumpy seeming disposition. Sometimes, we all need to hang out in the corner.

And you’ve got tarantulas? We have quite the collection. We’ll actually take out Charlotte, a Chilean rose-haired tarantula, and let people hold her. She’s really friendly. Some of these other ones are not friendly. Like the bird-eating tarantula. Not super friendly. But they’re still really cool to look at. We feed them Madagascar hissing cockroaches, really big cockroaches that we let kids pet and hold.

Do kids want to pet and hold the cockroaches? Yeah. Most kids, surprisingly, aren’t as afraid of bugs as adults. Most kids think bugs are cool. Just because they’re so different from most of the animals you see in your daily life. Most of the time, it’s the parents that don’t want to see the tarantulas or hold the cockroaches.

Fregley, a miniature Nubian, he’s the troublemaker. He puts his front hooves on their little house and he eats the moss and pulls off the shingles in the process. There’s no stopping him. He doesn’t usually get to come out because he chews on people’s jackets and sweaters and steals walkie-talkies and phones—classic goat, trying to eat whatever he can.

Besides shingles, are there any special treats these animals enjoy? The donkey and the cow both love banana peels, of all things, so a lot of the staff members will give them their leftover banana peel. And the cow loves watermelon this time of the year. The cafe serves watermelon. So we’ll get the watermelon rind. And the pigs love that too. Well, the pigs love anything. These guys are funny because we’ll bring them out and they’re so food-oriented that the entire time, they’ll just be sitting there eating grass and they don’t even notice the kids petting them.

Why is it important to have kids interact with the animals? In an urban environment like Sacramento, a lot of kids don’t even know what these animals are before coming here. There’s kids that have never seen a cow before. But it also teaches them to approach animals and be friendly because the little kids just want to smack them or jab them really hard. And you have to teach them to be gentle. Ω

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