AltWeeklies Wire

The Exceptionally Cranky Life of Brother Theodorenew

To those who remember his appearances on David Letterman's show in the '80s, Brother Theodore was a German-accented, white-haired old crank whom Dave tried to goad—without much success—into a smile.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-25-2010  |  Movies

Dinner & a Movie: My Date With Sandra Bullocknew

Dinner-and-a-movie joints face two main challenges: 1) having the clout to book first-run pictures from studios and 2) pricing a menu above the cheese-drenched nachos at Pacific Place yet below the $100-plus you can spend for a dinner date at Gold Class.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Patti Smith on Christ, Cobain and Robert Mapplethorpenew

Twenty years after the death of her friend and lover, photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, punk-rock pioneer Patti Smith has released Just Kids, her memoir of the couple's bohemian, hardly-fed days in late-'60s New York City.
Seattle Weekly  |  Chris Kornelis  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Tooth & Nail’s Latest Cover Boy, a Grammy-Nominated Seattleitenew

Rural Appalachia is not generally regarded as a breeding ground for the arts, but it was in a house on a hillside in the West Virginia woods that Jordan Butcher cut his teeth as a rock-'n'-roll designer.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Citizen Action: An Army Vet Goes After the Officers Who Held Him at ICEnew

Imagine that you, as an American citizen, were plucked from normal life and taken to a detention facility for illegal immigrants. Now imagine that it took seven-and-a-half months for officials to figure out that—as you'd said all along—you were not only a citizen, but had honorably served in the U.S. Army.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  01-25-2010  |  War

Seattle's Program for Handling Injured Workers is in a World of Hurtnew

Employers complain that Washington's workers'-comp system is generous to the point of crippling employers. They believe rates are being raised to support ever-expanding benefits that are too easily obtained, and a bloated bureaucracy.
Seattle Weekly  |  Laura Onstot  |  01-25-2010  |  Business & Labor

'Strongman': Like 'The Wrestler,' Only Realnew

Ten years in the making, Strongman both anticipates and follows The Wrestler: Stanley Pleskun is no longer young, keeps hoping for his luck to change, and ekes out a living as a scrap-metal dealer. (He inks the design on his costume with a Sharpie.)
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-11-2010  |  Reviews

'Leap Year': Amy Adams Deserves Betternew

Leap Year belongs to the Prada-backlash subgenre of women's pictures—epitomized by The Proposal — in which smart, stylish women must be muddied, abased, ridiculed, and degraded to get their man.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-11-2010  |  Reviews

'Died Young, Stayed Pretty': Grunge Artifacts, Suitable for Framingnew

Several local artists are featured in Eileen Yaghoobian's fan-ish documentary about rock-poster designers. In her film, she lets the artists speak for themselves — which is both a good and a bad thing.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  01-11-2010  |  Reviews

Maria Cantwell, Monday-Morning-Quarterbacking the Financial Crisisnew

It's a regular lovefest for Sen. Maria Cantwell, who recently teamed up with Sen. John McCain to try to re-regulate Wall Street. A week ago, Tina Brown's The Daily Beast declared Cantwell one of a dozen "rising political stars."
Seattle Weekly  |  Mark D. Fefer  |  01-11-2010  |  Politics

Former Seattle Weekly Editor Aja Pecknold’s a Fleet Foxnew

As the paper's former clubs editor, Aja Pecknold churned out blurbs for The Short List, maintained her "Behind the Scenes" column, and penned some lively features. She now serves as point person for all things Fleet Foxes.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  01-04-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Amazon's Supply Chain: When You've Got the Monopoly, You Set the Recordsnew

Tech writers working this past holiday weekend were blessed with a last-minute gift from Jeff Bezos: On Dec. 26, Amazon issued a press release proudly trumpeting the fact that on Christmas Day, for the first time ever, its online superstore sold more electronic books than regular books.
Seattle Weekly  |  Caleb Hannan  |  01-04-2010  |  Tech

Maas Media: How a Local Filmmaker Rediscovered Seattle’s Soulnew

As co-producer of the breakout indie hit Humpday, Jennifer Maas had the good fortune of attending Sundance and Cannes this year. She also put the finishing touches on a film of her own, Wheedle's Groove, wrapping up five years of documenting Seattle's forgotten soul scene.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  12-28-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

In Seattle, Local Somalis Struggle to Understand Why Young Men Would Return to a Country They Never Knewnew

23-year-old Abdifatah Yusuf Isse's family thought he was visiting his girlfriend in Minneapolis during an extended break from studying economics at Eastern Washington University. In fact, he revealed, he was calling from Somalia.
Seattle Weekly  |  Nina Shapiro  |  12-21-2009  |  War

Can an Apparently Law-Abiding Citizen Be Arrested For Having a Bulge in his Pants?new

It happened to Dustin Warren Harrington around 11 p.m. on Aug. 13, 2005. Police Officer Scott Reiber thought Harrington looked suspicious walking through a neighborhood at night. He then flipped a U-turn and asked Harrington if they could talk.
Seattle Weekly  |  Rick Anderson  |  12-21-2009  |  Crime & Justice

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