AltWeeklies Wire

Zoe Kazan, an Indie Starlet on the Verge of Fame, Doesn't Need More 'Friends'new

Zoe Kazan is contemplating suicide. No, not in real life, where she’s doing just fine, thank you very much. But she’s had it with that dubious realm of interactivity known as Facebook. So it may be time for online suicide.
New York Press  |  Eric Kohn  |  03-11-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Laura Veirs Gets Excited for Summernew

Classic finger-picking and Laura Veirs' girly vocals characterize the feather-light songs she's written about sweet summer days on her seventh album, July Flame.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Amber Schadewald  |  03-10-2010  |  Reviews

Will San Francisco's Sunshine Ordinance Finally Get Some Teeth?new

On the same evening the Police Commission shot down Chief George Gascón's plan to arm his officers with Tasers, a Sunshine Ordinance Task Force committee reviewed a proposal to give itself a set of tools that could help nail officials that violate public information laws.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Sarah Phelan  |  03-10-2010  |  Politics

Rodrigo y Gabriela Strum and Pluck with Extreme Originalitynew

Rodrigo y Gabriela could have been just another heavy metal garage band from Mexico City and you'd never have heard of them. But a fateful decision to sell their equipment and buy nylon-string guitars and plane tickets to Ireland changed everything.
Charleston City Paper  |  Stratton Lawrence  |  03-10-2010  |  Concerts

New Symbols of Fortune and Doom in South Carolina Politicsnew

There are historical symbols of good and bad luck, from the albatross to the lucky thong, but the past year has offered a handful of new trinkets that spell either good fortune or doom for South Carolina politicians.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  03-10-2010  |  Politics

T-Model Ford Makes an Unannounced Stop Through Townnew

T-Model Ford is an old Mississippi Delta curiosity and a holdover from the early days of Fat Possum Records, an Oxford, Mississippi label originally formulated as a platform for a dying breed of blues — old, mostly African-American men with inscrutable relationships with their out-of-tune guitars.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Andrew Cedermark  |  03-10-2010  |  Music

What's Stopping Virginia From the Movement to Legalize Marijuana?new

After activists and academics and law enforcement members testified to change Virginia’s marijuana laws, and after a General Assembly subcommittee struck down two bills that would do that, what was left in a hearing room was this: a small baggie of a “leafy substance,” stashed behind the podium.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Scott Weaver  |  03-10-2010  |  Drugs

Remembering Barry Hannah: Chris Rose on a Southern Writing Legendnew

This week's homage is paid to a man whom I assume touched more lives in New Orleans than just my own. He was Barry Hannah, a hard-drinking, savage wit possessed of a sorcerer's command of the English language, a writer of crystal daggers and diviner of the secrets of love.
Gambit  |  Chris Rose  |  03-10-2010  |  Books

Reflections from the Founder of an African-American Community Theaternew

Anthony Bean has heard enough. With his arms folded across his chest, the founder of the Anthony Bean Community Theater in New Orleans sits alone in the empty auditorium, staring long and hard at the two teenage actresses onstage.
Gambit  |  David Winkler-Schmit  |  03-10-2010  |  Theater

To Inform the Public (and Censor Them)new

The Carr family detests all that is evil, from hacks to kids on their lawn, to politicians who sneeze into your tax dollars, to the liberal establishment, to... kids on their lawn. And the Boston Herald's favorite columnist isn't the only one with an inky thumb.
Dig Boston  |  Media Farm  |  03-10-2010  |  Civil Liberties

Consensus on the Censusnew

Every ten years, a survey is sent to each household in America to find out just how many people live here. Answering basic questions that pigeonhole you demographically might not sound that tough, but in the past it's proven to be a sweat-inducing task for many Americans.
Dig Boston  |  Catherine Krug  |  03-10-2010  |  Policy Issues

Death by Inches: Why Eric Fonseca’s Film Won’t Bring Down the Housenew

The house of Eric Fonseca, the auteur behind the latest stop-motion-animation adaptation of Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher is in no way gloomy or in ill-repair. It’s just another house on a typical Southwest San Antonio street.
San Antonio Current  |  Jeremy Martin  |  03-10-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

A Tour of the Eco-Friendly, Low-Tech Porn Counterculturenew

What the fuck does it mean to fuck a bike?” Reverend Phil Sano asked the crowd at C4 Workspace on Monday, March 8. The dozens of San Antonians assembled in the community space were about to find out. Sano was screening Bike Porn 3: Cycle Bound.
San Antonio Current  |  Ashley Lindstrom  |  03-10-2010  |  Sex

AtticRep Event Needs Spectators and Spect-Actorsnew

It’s a chilly, rain-slick evening soon after Valentine’s Day, and members of the AtticRep Theatre Ensemble have gathered in a small conference room in the Ruth Taylor Fine Arts Center on Trinity’s campus to talk marriage.
San Antonio Current  |  Sarah Fisch  |  03-10-2010  |  Performance

Pros and Cons of a Proposed High School Redesignnew

After more than two years of planning, the Portland School Board voted 5-2 Monday night to approve the broad outlines of a new high-school system for Portland Public Schools. The Superintendent now has 45 days to return with a detailed proposal of the changes she envisions.
Willamette Week  |  Beth Slovic  |  03-10-2010  |  Education

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