AltWeeklies Wire

Bars, Lounges and Wine Cellars to Visit During the Sundance Film Festivalnew

There is no shortage in Park City of places to drink and, maybe, bump into a B-list celebrity during the Sundance Film Festival. But if you want to know where A-listers are likely to turn up — or at least where you and your pals can score a good glass of wine or cold beer in a snazzy setting — read on.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Ted Scheffler  |  01-26-2010  |  Food+Drink

Buffalo Native Adam Lippes Has Fashion Design Down to a Teenew

When pondering the elements of high fashion, the staple known as the T-shirt rarely comes to mind. Let alone finds its way down the runway. To contrast with the logo-printed and distressed tees out there, Adam Lippes yearned to create a more substantial hallmark suitable for everyone’s wardrobe.
Artvoice  |  Morgan Schimminger  |  01-22-2010  |  Fashion

Poetry in a Cold Climate: Ron Smith Found His Muse in Antarcticanew

Tall and thin with close-cropped hair, Ron Smith served with the Air Force's Operation Deep Freeze, rising to commander in 2004. In December 2008, he was transferred to Scott Air Force Base, where he now serves as the Air National Guard adviser for strategic planning.
Riverfront Times  |  Aimee Levitt  |  01-22-2010  |  Culture

Pee-Wee's Big Comeback: 18 Years After a Fall, Paul Reubens Returnsnew

Pee-wee Herman is a fey and infantile parody of an awkward child circa 1961, even though the movie Pee-wee’s Big Adventure is set in the 1980s. When called names by the neighborhood bully, he chirps back, “I know you are, but what am I?”
L.A. Weekly  |  Steven Leigh Morris  |  01-22-2010  |  Performance

City Cracks Down on Chinatown Fakes While Putting a Squeeze on Legit Merchantsnew

Very soon, locals say, Canal Street will join Times Square, Astor Place, the Lower East Side, the Garment District and all the other former centers of down-and-dirty capitalist grit that have been safely gentrified. As watch peddler Greg “Heavy” Duval explains, “They want to make this a franchise block.”
New York Press  |  Matt Harvey  |  01-21-2010  |  Shopping

A Brand-New Bag: The Women's Design Collectivenew

Women’s Design Collective is a program formed out of St. Joseph Community Health that teaches women basic craft skills. The hope, says Community Services Director Michelle Melendez, who’s responsible for getting the effort off the ground, is that women can use those skills in entrepreneurship to help feed their families.
Weekly Alibi  |  Christie Chisholm  |  01-19-2010  |  Art

African Women and Children Affected by HIV/AIDS Let the World Innew

The program The House is Small But the Welcome is Big allows women and children affected by HIV/AIDS in Africa to tell their own stories, and to gain empowerment, through the experience of creating art.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Edie Adelstein  |  01-19-2010  |  Art

Why Urban Chicken Farming is Not as Weird as it Soundsnew

Have you ever had a fresh egg? Not simply organic, not just free-range, but one yet to see the inside of a refrigerator. A fresh egg is like a tomato straight off the vine, barely resembling its supermarket brethren, beautiful in its imperfection.
New Haven Advocate  |  Adrienne Kane  |  01-19-2010  |  Food+Drink

Rising Brew Culture: Japan is Producing Some World-Class Beernew

There’s another invasion coming from the land of Godzilla — an attack from Japan’s emerging craft beer scene. You may laugh at the notion of Japan making great beer, but it’s producing some of the world’s best, with 13 brews already on the shelves at Calgary beer stores.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Mike Tessier  |  01-14-2010  |  Food+Drink

'American Squatter' Barry Smith Returns With a Love Storynew

Hard as it may be to imagine a light-hearted look at life in a doomsday cult, the untrained actor's earned awards including 2005's New York International Fringe Festival Outstanding Solo Show Award with an intimate and friendly approach.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Edie Adelstein  |  01-14-2010  |  Theater

Flesh Mob: New York’s Vegetarians Have Come Down With Some Serious Bloodlustnew

These days, as high-profile chefs like David Chang resolutely refuse to cater to an animal product-free world, many New York vegetarians are giving up the greens and developing a taste for flesh.
New York Press  |  Linnea Covington  |  01-14-2010  |  Food+Drink

Not Just Another Roadside Attraction, World's Biggest Cowboy Boots Turn 30new

According to TxDOT, every day an estimated 182,000 cars pass by Bob “Daddy-O” Wade’s Giant Justins sculpture in front of North Star Mall. When I explained to the TxDOT public-relations employee why I wanted to know, she gasped, “Oh, I love those boots!”
San Antonio Current  |  Sarah Fisch  |  01-13-2010  |  Art

Indulge in the Culinary Triple-Threat at Restaurant Insiginianew

Salt, sugar, and fat: They’re the one-two-three punch of 21st-century food. In coming up with a menu for Insignia in the Fairmount, his new globally influenced American restaurant, Jason Dady unabashedly makes use of all three. Chicken and waffles are a case in point.
San Antonio Current  |  Ron Bechtol  |  01-13-2010  |  Food+Drink

A Chinese Oregonian Takes Back the Armorynew

Bruce Locke starred in such films as Black Rain, The Shadow, and especially Robocop 3, in which he played a trio of robot ninja assassins. Now Locke is starring in a production of Snow Falling on Cedars in a building that building was built in case of a Chinese immigrant uprising.
Willamette Week  |  Ben Waterhouse  |  01-13-2010  |  Theater

'Electrosensitive' Activist Sues to Stop Neighbor's iPhone Usenew

Arthur Firstenberg claims that the low-level electromagnetic radiation emitted by cell phones and other modern gadgets makes him suffer terribly. The side-effects of exposure, he believes, include “nausea, vertigo, diarrhea, ringing in the ears, severe headaches and body aches, crippling joint pains," and other ailments.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Corey  |  01-12-2010  |  Tech

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