AltWeeklies Wire

How Suburban Voters are Sabotaging the Governments They Seek to Reformnew

Suburban mobs throughout the region have vandalized local institutions in their own way. They have hurled rhetorical bricks at their local governments, and hauled their neighbors from town hall offices, gleefully setting fire to the positions those individuals previously occupied.
Artvoice  |  James A. Gardner  |  02-26-2010  |  Commentary

Montreal Real Estate May have Saved the Lower Main, but Cleopatra Isn’t Feeling Any Lovenew

Did capitalistic excess spare the lower Main? Maybe so. Christian Yaccarini’s Société de développement Angus had big plans to remake St-Laurent between René-Lévesque and de Maisonneuve that are, as of last week, dashed... or at least drastically scaled back.
Montreal Mirror  |  Patrick Lejtenyi  |  02-26-2010  |  Economy

The Oral History of Toronto’s Punk Rock Scene is Retold in 'Treat Me Like Dirt'new

Liz Worth’s oral history Treat Me Like Dirt proves to be long overdue, finally exposing Toronto’s influential but often forgotten punk rock scene between 1974 and 1981.
Montreal Mirror  |  Johnson Cummins  |  02-26-2010  |  Nonfiction

'How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamites,' Reviewednew

When the financial tailspin of 2008 forced Alan Greenspan to confess that he was mistaken about the unshakable rationality and self-correcting nature of the economy, it was as if a Roman Catholic cardinal publicly doubted the divinity of Christ.
Shepherd Express  |  David Luhrssen  |  02-26-2010  |  Nonfiction

Hayward Williams' Songs From a Long Winternew

Milwaukee’s harsh winters take a well-documented toll on us physically, numbing our limbs, wearing out our backs and testing our immune systems. They can be just as rough on us psychologically. Singer-songwriter Hayward Williams’ latest album was born of this annual seclusion.
Shepherd Express  |  Evan Rytlewski  |  02-26-2010  |  Reviews

Redneck Woman Gretchen Wilson's Search For Radio Redemptionnew

Just over a year ago, Gretchen Wilson looked into the abyss. Her third album, One of the Boys, had tanked. The label team that had guided her 2004 debut CD Here for the Party to quintuple platinum sales had largely been swept away in the wake of a corporate merger.
Nashville Scene  |  Rob Simbeck  |  02-26-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Forced to Watch Ice Ballet? Better Get Drinkingnew

In celebration of one the most popular Olympic sports, figure skating, and to make it more enjoyable when your special friend makes you watch it, it’s time to discover Belgian-style beers. These beers are perfect for cheering on our Canadian figure skaters.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Mike Tessier  |  02-26-2010  |  Food+Drink

Dana Loesch of the Tea Party and Conservative Talk Radio, Reporting For Duty!new

Dana Loesch is nervous. Executive producer Beowulf Rochlen sent word late last night that his boss, nationally syndicated conservative radio host Michael Savage, enjoyed her fill-in on The Savage Nation five days prior: Would she like to do it again in less than 24 hours?
Riverfront Times  |  Kristen Hinman  |  02-26-2010  |  Media

Bruce Willis, Tracy Morgan and Movie Mockery in Kevin Smith's New Featurenew

The film's opening shot, set to the Beastie Boys' No Sleep 'Til Brooklyn, is a slow-motion, toe-to-head tilt-up of white cop-black cop buddies Jimmy (Bruce Willis) and Paul (Tracy Morgan) swaggering stone-faced toward the camera.
L.A. Weekly  |  Karina Longworth  |  02-26-2010  |  Reviews

99 Things to Eat in L.A. Before You Die: Fugu to Foie Gras, Pizza to Panuchosnew

The theme of this is somewhat morbid. We were going to call it "99 Things to Eat in L.A. Before You Move to San Diego," but it didn’t have the same ring of finality. You could drive up if you were really in the mood for a maple-bacon biscuit, but from beyond the grave?
L.A. Weekly  |  Jonathan Gold  |  02-26-2010  |  Food+Drink

Damian Lazarus Talks Techno and the Changing Face of Electronic Labelsnew

Damian Lazarus is sitting at the dining-room table of his Echo Park home trying to recover from a five-day touring blitz that he and his label mates at Crosstown Rebels have just finished. He's a bit worn down, but that's part of the deal.
L.A. Weekly  |  Randall Roberts  |  02-26-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rodney Alcala's Final Revenge: Alleged Serial Killer Ratchets Up the Sufferingnew

In letters to him, Bruce Barcomb compared Rodney Alcala to notorious serial killers Jeffrey Dahmer and Ted Bundy, and begged him to spare the victims' relatives from a painful trial — including Barcomb's own elderly mother, who was undergoing chemotherapy.
L.A. Weekly  |  Christine Pelisek  |  02-26-2010  |  Crime & Justice

Fines Jacked Up by L.A. City Council Send Strapped Residents to Community Servicenew

What to do when, as Professor Thomas Griffith puts it, "we're running out of tricks"? Raise fines and fees: parking tickets coupled with meters that now must be fed well after 6 p.m.; "Denver" boots on cars; tow-away surcharges; littering fines. None of it has to go before L.A. voters.
L.A. Weekly  |  Michael Goldstein  |  02-26-2010  |  Transportation

Whose Turn is It Now? The 2010 Oscar Race

You can practically already hear Academy Award producers shouting, after the fact, "Whose idea was this?" about changes in the ceremony that are doomed to be criticized for months after the last statue is handed out.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  02-25-2010  |  Movies

When it Comes to Arkansas Black History, Annie Abrams Has Just About Seen It Allnew

In an illustrated history of signal African-American events in the past half century, one person would be always in the picture: Annie Mable McDaniel Abrams.
Arkansas Times  |  Leslie Newell Peacock  |  02-25-2010  |  Race & Class

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