AltWeeklies Wire

Obama's Grassroots Ground Gamenew

Barack Obama's path to the White House is being created out of his experience as a community organizer in Chicago, a nontraditional route to power that harnesses the grassroots, empowers individuals to find their strengths and builds communities around attainable goals.
Shepherd Express  |  Lisa Kaiser  |  06-27-2008  |  Politics

Combat Exposure for Women Soldiers Complicates an Old Problemnew

On the front lines, equality means exposure to more danger for women soldiers. Whether that's progress or not depends on whom you ask.
Arkansas Times  |  Jennifer Barnett Reed  |  06-27-2008  |  War

'Silent Light' is Long and Slow but Full of Moments of Beautynew

Reaching nearly two and a half hours at an unrelentingly glacial pace, this is most definitely not a film for the ADD set; comparatively, Jim Jarmusch's Broken Flowers feels like the latest Indiana Jones flick. But the peculiar setting keeps things interesting, the cast is compelling and the cinematography and editing are truly exceptional.
Montreal Mirror  |  Malcolm Fraser  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

Your Favorite Sasquatch is Back with 'Bigfoot: I Not Dead'new

The grammatically challenged sociopathic hero returns in Graham Roumieu's sasquatch sequel.
Montreal Mirror  |  Juliet Waters  |  06-27-2008  |  Fiction

'Stop-Snitching' is More Complicated than You Might Thinknew

The mainstream media is generally the last to know, and by the time it catches on, the trend it's highlighting ceases to be a trend. So it is with the stop-snitching movement. But the culture of snitching and the incipient rise of its anti-snitching counterpart are deadly matters.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Damon Hodge  |  06-27-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Superfund, or Superfraud?new

The EPA wants you to look at the Milltown Dam and see Superfund restoration at work. Look further and see the costly truth.
Missoula Independent  |  Patrick M. Klemz  |  06-26-2008  |  Environment

Graphic Novelist Hope Larson Debuts New Booknew

Larson, a rising star in the world of graphic novels, is back with her new tale of two nerdy girls at summer camp, Chiggers.
Mountain Xpress  |  Anne Fitten Glenn  |  06-26-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

How Comedian Dave Rubin Found His Niche (and Success) After Coming Outnew

When Rubin came out two years ago, he wasn't met with relentless scorn, hostile derision or frequent stonings as you might expect. Quite mercifully, the opposite had taken place: He opened himself up to a world of opportunity that didn't exist before.
New York Press  |  Nate Sloan  |  06-26-2008  |  Performance

Emperor X Speaks a Private Language that Remains Accessible to Allnew

I watched Matheny, who records and plays out solo under the Emperor X moniker, strum a charmingly small six-string acoustic as pedal-delayed tones pouring out of his tiny amp.
New York Press  |  Greg Burgett  |  06-26-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Homeless World Cup Gets Mainstream Exposure in 'Kicking It'new

The popularization of sports documentaries in recent years has allowed for the rise of a new genre dealing exclusively with fringe athletic pursuits, and the appeal of Kicking It falls between the intensity of furious quadriplegics in Murderball to the full-grown geeks reigning over the arcade world in King of Kong.
New York Press  |  Eric Kohn  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

Hollywood's Liberal Elite Builds the Dalton Trumbo Mythnew

The one-word title is suitably mythic since Trumbo himself spent the latter years of his career creating a mythology around his victimization by the post-WWII House Un-American Activities Committee and Hollywood's eventual enforcement of a blacklist.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

Weezer's Red Album: Vacuously Tolerablenew

The group's latest CD may be OK when played on a crappy boombox at a pool party; otherwise, it makes a great coaster.
Tucson Weekly  |  Michael Petitti  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

Catherine Breillat Proves She's More Than a Porno-polemicistnew

As if to legitimize her unorthodox approach, the period drama of The Last Mistress brings Breillat into the haughty realm of Choderlos de Laclos' Les Liaisons Dangereuses, the infamous (often adapted) 18th-century novel of sexual gamesmanship as psychological and political intrigue.
New York Press  |  Armond White  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

The Careful Dynamics of Shearwaternew

Like any great album, the subtleties on Rook are what make it mesmerizing.
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

Jeremy Jay's Present Vintage Rock on His Debut Full-lengthnew

Recorded by Calvin Johnson at his Dub Narcotic Studio in Olympia, Wash., A Place Where We Could Go presents Jeremy Jay as the K Records version of Buddy Holly--classic, vintage rock, but delivered with that K Records raw and relaxed aesthetic, which, said Jay, comes partly from the vintage equipment in Johnson's studio.
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  06-26-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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