AltWeeklies Wire

Andre Dubus Ill Gets Pulpynew

Dubus III, who also wrote House of Sand and Fog, has achieved some Houdini-caliber misdirection, and his third act may bring you tumbling to the ground.
Willamette Week  |  John Minervini  |  06-25-2008  |  Fiction

Blood-drenched Underdog 'Wanted' Should have Stayed on the Porchnew

In a summer of Dark Knights and Iron Men, Wanted is a movie version of titular football lameass Rudy.
Willamette Week  |  AP Kryza  |  06-25-2008  |  Reviews

'Last Comic Standing' Makes Sure You Go Home Unhappynew

Unlike American Idol, pros are allowed to compete NBC's comedy competition. Too bad the voters prefer Larry the Cable Guy to David Cross.
Willamette Week  |  Daniel Carlson  |  06-25-2008  |  TV

Rollerball: Portland's Best-kept Secret for Far Too Longnew

These people are so humble, it doesn't occur to them that they ought to be lauded alongside local legends like Smegma, the Wipers and Yellow Swans. Musicians revere them.
Willamette Week  |  Nathan Carson  |  06-25-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Southern Bon Mots From Leslie Jordannew

Not only has he written books since Will & Grace wrapped, he's also appeared onstage and on TV shows (Ugly Betty) and will soon star in the Logo network's Sordid Lives with Olivia Newtown-John and The Golden Girls' Rue McClanahan.
Willamette Week  |  Byron Beck  |  06-25-2008  |  Theater

Obama Economic Appointment Highlights Old Trade Disputenew

Before giving Jason Furman a pass on his emerging trade polices, it's important to focus on the true differences between Free Trade and Fair Trade.
East Bay Express  |  Jay Youngdahl  |  06-25-2008  |  Politics

An Afternoon in Napa: Your Plan for 'Adult Disneyland'new

Napa Valley's scenery, and more importantly its wines, can be truly transporting. I suggest going on a weekday afternoon (come on, you can play hooky for a few hours this summer, can't you?) and visiting two wineries at most.
East Bay Express  |  Blair Campbell  |  06-25-2008  |  Food+Drink

'Tuya's Marriage', 'Savage Grace' and 'Brick Lane': A Trio of No-Hanky Women's Picsnew

Three unhappy marriages, three desperate wives, three drastically dissimilar circumstances. Whom to feel sorry for? The bored spouse of the American plastics heir in Savage Grace? The homesick Bengal immigrant confined to her claustrophobic London council flat on Brick Lane? How about the eponymous protagonist of Tuya's Marriage, a woman who lives in a yurt on the Mongolian steppes, caring for her disabled husband and two children by herding sheep and running a farm by herself?
East Bay Express  |  Kelly Vance  |  06-25-2008  |  Reviews

Rebirth Brass Band's Drummer Hopes to Train Another Generation of Local Musiciansnew

Derrick Tabb's Roots of Music is an independent year-round music program for New Orleans children.
Gambit  |  Alison Fensterstock  |  06-25-2008  |  Music

Two Queer Legends of Indie Rock and Queercore Look Backnew

Pansy Division's Jon Ginoli and Camper Van Beethoven's Victor Krummenacher got together recently to talk about the way it was, coming out in the repressed 1980s and coming into their own experientially, politically, and musically in 1990s San Francisco -- each, as Krummenacher puts it, a "gay guy suddenly in Candyland."
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Kimberly Chun  |  06-25-2008  |  Music

Charo Spills the Cuchinew

The singing, dancing, and "cuchi-cuchi!" spouting Castilian sex kitten that pratfalled with the best of 1970s television, the Vegas institution who wound up in that sub-A list purgatory The Surreal Life, is the Charo America knows and loves. But according to this 40-year show biz veteran, the other Charo -- a classically trained musician with serious Spanish guitar chops -- is just getting warmed up.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Matt Sussman  |  06-25-2008  |  Performance

Louisiana Perks Up for the Emerging Carbon Trade Marketnew

The rapidly evolving industry — dubbed the "cap-and-trade" market — pays sellers, typically landowners, for sequestering carbon dioxide by growing trees and plants that remove it from the atmopshere with the potential of limiting the level of pollutants that contribute to global warming.
Gambit  |  Mollie Day  |  06-25-2008  |  Environment

Fleet Foxes Tears Back the Centuriesnew

In their quest to fuse pre-rock 'n' roll sounds with indie-rock sensibilities, Fleet Foxes don't simply settle for 20th-century American Music 101. Rather, their time-travel extends all the way back to the Black Plague.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Todd Lavoie  |  06-25-2008  |  Reviews

Why is a Prominent Peace Dem Backing a Hawkish Republican for US Senate?new

A mini shitstorm rained down from Democrats on Elizabeth Furse last week after the peacenik and former congresswoman crossed party lines to endorse U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) for a second straight election.
Willamette Week  |  Beth Slovic  |  06-25-2008  |  Politics

Shakin' West Saharan Booty with Toubab Krewenew

In the circles of African and world music, the Asheville, N.C.-based band has already made it. Last year, they performed at the Festival of the Desert in Timbuktu, perhaps the most remote music festival in the world. This summer, amidst a U.S. tour that includes four dates in Alask, they'll fly to Portugal for the Festival Musicas do Mundo.
Charleston City Paper  |  Stratton Lawrence  |  06-25-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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