AltWeeklies Wire

Same Song: The Goner Fest 4 DVD/CDnew

The DVD dutifully documents Memphis, Tenn.'s annual garage-punk marathon from 2007 with clean, nonintrusive camera work, but after a while it all starts to look and sound the same.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  01-19-2010  |  Reviews

More Money, More Problems: 'We Are Young Money'new

Young Money has been on a roll recently. An imprint of Cash Money helmed by Lil Wayne, it is home to two of 2009's biggest breakout stars, Drake and Nicki Minaj. Indeed, it's hard to turn on the radio recently without hearing a Young Money song, particularly the cutesy bubblegum-rap track "Bedrock."
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Ben Westhoff  |  01-19-2010  |  Reviews

'Fire In My Bones': Post-World War II African-American Gospelnew

Fire in My Bones functions like an unofficial sequel to Dust-to-Digital's inaugural collection of pre-WWII African-American gospel music, Goodbye, Babylon – albeit far less grandiose in its presentation.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  01-19-2010  |  Reviews

Jamie Iredell Bends His Prose Poems Into a Novelistic Arcnew

The narrator of Jamie Iredell's Prose. Poems. A Novel. is named Larry, but no one ever calls him that. His co-worker Sharon calls him a "fucking son of a bitch" – a more fitting moniker despite its lack of brevity.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Wyatt Williams  |  01-19-2010  |  Fiction

Don't Panic...Your War Questions Answered: Obama's Foreign-Policy Objectivesnew

Government policy initiatives aren't quite the same as New Year's resolutions, but in recent weeks the Obama administration has offered hints about its top objectives for 2010. It's part spin-doctoring. Politicians must manage expectations.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Andisheh Nouraee  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Barack Obama: David Dinkins Redux

Obama is much like David Dinkins, elected in 1989 as New York City's first black mayor. Dinkins, an affable Democrat, made the mistake of thinking that African-Americans were his political base. They weren't. White liberals were.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Andrew Murray Makes His Case for DA for Mecklenburg Countynew

Mecklenburg County District attorney Peter Gilchrist will be retiring after 36 years in office. Who will replace him?
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Cheris Hodges  |  01-19-2010  |  Crime & Justice

'The Lovely Bones': Book's Adaptation Certain to Divide Viewersnew

Moviegoers who haven't read the book and accept director Peter Jackson's picture on its own terms (which, ultimately, is how any artistic interpretation should be judged) will be greeted with a powerful viewing experience.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Matt Brunson  |  01-19-2010  |  Reviews

David Childers, Bob Crawford team up for Overmountain Mennew

Both David Childers and Bob Crawford see the group Overmountain Men as a collaborative effort that will happen as long as it doesn't feel like a job. When Crawford can't perform with the band because of his obligations with The Avett Brothers, Bill Noonan will step in.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Jeff Hahne  |  01-19-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

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

What's Next for a Congressman Who Rode in on Obama’s Coattails?new

People did vie to shake his hand and share his lunch table, but having U.S. Rep. Gary Peters at a homeless shelter last week for a meeting of community group leaders wasn't exactly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for many people there.
Metro Times  |  Sandra Svoboda  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Who Should Control Rochester's Schools?new

Mayor Bob Duffy cites many reasons for wanting control over the city's schools, including decades of low graduation rates and a law that requires the city to dole out $119 million annually with no say in how that money is spent. School Board members tend to bristle at any attempted involvement by the city.
City Newspaper  |  Christine Carrie Fien and Tim Louis Macaluso  |  01-19-2010  |  Education

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

On Sheila Dixon: A Liberal's Lament for What Might Have Beennew

Perhaps my original expectations of Mayor Sheila Dixon had been so low that mere competence had moved me into her cheering section. But she'd gone beyond competence. At the very least, her administration was really good at managing public perceptions, which is a crucial skill in governing a morale-challenged city.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Tom Chalkley  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Amy Bloom's (Mostly) New Stories Look for What Matters Mostnew

Amy Bloom's new collection is a revelation of the emotional violence and loss within friendship and complicated love. Many writers would do well to heed Bloom, who can compound the very essence of a relationship in a single phrase.
New Haven Advocate  |  Nora Nahid Khan  |  01-19-2010  |  Fiction

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