AltWeeklies Wire

Brilliant 'Baghead' Mashes Genres with Unexpected Resultsnew

At first the film looks like the latest entry in the indie sub-genre that's come to be known as "mumblecore" -- but no sooner has the movie established its quartet of characters than it switches gears and goes somewhere creepier and far more intense than mumblecore pictures have previously ventured.
NOW Magazine  |  Norman Wilner  |  08-11-2008  |  Reviews

Alt.health: Have an Art Attacknew

Boost your creative juices with guided imagery, and leave time for the unexpected.
NOW Magazine  |  Elizabeth Bromstein  |  08-08-2008  |  Advice

Ecoholic: The Hunt for 100-mile Beernew

You've recommended organic beer, but the ingredients come from all over the world. Does anyone use strictly ­local ingredients?
NOW Magazine  |  Adria Vasil  |  08-08-2008  |  Advice

Who's Who of Toronto's Microbreweriesnew

With an ever-increasing number of microbreweries cropping up on the smoggy horizon, Hogtown is well on its way to becoming ­Hoptown, and it’s not just the pigs who think this is good news.
NOW Magazine  |  Graham Duncan  |  08-08-2008  |  Food+Drink

'Innercity Girl Like Me' Reads Like a Memoir But It's Fictionnew

The market is flooded with terri­bly written sensationalist survival stories, and Innercity Girl Like Me seems to aspire to be one of them.
NOW Magazine  |  Zoe Whittall  |  08-04-2008  |  Fiction

Lien Chao's 'The Chinese Knot' Offers Unique Perspectivenew

All these stories are told from the point of view of single Chinese-Canadian women, who make up an intriguing demographic. Many of them came to Canada in the 80s and 90s only to experience painful family conflict – usually ending in divorce – once they got here.
NOW Magazine  |  Staff  |  08-04-2008  |  Fiction

South African Hip-hop Hero Tumi Goes Solonew

Tumi has the verbal dexterity of Pharoahe Monch and the lyrical clarity of Nasir Jones. His moniker often gets bandied about in "who's the best MC?" conversations across the globe.
NOW Magazine  |  Addi Stewart  |  08-04-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rick Ross' Rough Real Talk Turns Out to Be Not So Real After Allnew

How stunning was it when The Smoking Gun discovered that Ross, one of hip-hop's most popular new artists, was really a former Florida Department of Corrections officer named William Leonard Roberts?
NOW Magazine  |  Addi Stewart  |  08-04-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Alt.health: Your Daily Routine Could Be Cooking Your Spermnew

There are a lot of things that might make you shoot blanks. Among them are obesity, pes­ticides, stress, heat, smok­ing and drinking.
NOW Magazine  |  Elizabeth Bromstein  |  08-04-2008  |  Advice

Ecoholic: Sniffing Out Radioactive Gases in Your Kitchen and Basementnew

I heard that radioactive radon gas could be coming from my granite counters as well as my basement. Should I ­worry?
NOW Magazine  |  Adria Vasil  |  08-04-2008  |  Advice

Why Was Obama's Wailing Wall Display Treated as Sacred?new

What bothers me is how we understand prayer in this culture and how that understanding enables a presidential candidate to use prayer as a political tool, as both symbol and action, when it is neither.
NOW Magazine  |  Jacob Scheier  |  08-04-2008  |  Commentary

Skyrocketing Food Prices and Biofuels Aren't What's Feeding Global Hunger Crisisnew

It sounds counterintuitive, I know, but the real food crisis gripping the world these days is not what everyone thinks it is. It's really more about the 80 per cent drop in real-time food prices since 1947 than the modest, dare I say, "market correction" of recent years.
NOW Magazine  |  Wayne Roberts  |  08-04-2008  |  Food+Drink

Robert Englund Fesses Upnew

Robert Englund, the man who donned the burn marks, tattered fedora and steel fingers of Freddy Krueger for the Nightmare On Elm Street series, crept into town last week to scare up some publicity for his latest blood-and-guts role in Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer.
NOW Magazine  |  Radheyan Simonpillai  |  07-28-2008  |  Reviews

On October 27, 1962, the World Nearly Came to an Endnew

Much has been written about the ultimate crisis of the Cold War, but Michael Dobbs' account vividly captures the white-knuckled anxiety that gripped the White House and the Kremlin during those dark days.
NOW Magazine  |  Howard Goldenthal  |  07-28-2008  |  Nonfiction

Nila Gupta Creates Real, Distinct and Well-Developed Characters in Her Debut Fictionnew

In The Sherpa And Other Fictions, she looks at the places she's known as home and bravely zooms in on areas of possible contention: a woman modernizes her father's sweet shop while he's on his death bed, Toronto cops raid Bloor Station, a daughter resists an arranged marriage.
NOW Magazine  |  Tara-Michelle Ziniuk  |  07-28-2008  |  Fiction

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