AltWeeklies Wire

The Mysterious Death of a Done Nuclear Dealnew

If CPS Energy, San Antonio’s City-owned utility, took a solitary human form, it would be a headless corpse bouncing gently under a white hospital sheet on its way to the morgue.
San Antonio Current  |  Greg Harman  |  01-06-2010  |  Environment

Reduce, Reuse, 'Revolt': Michael Cera's New Flicknew

As Sinatra-loving, foreign-film-renting Oakland high-school student Nick Twisp, Michael Cera’s having his usual troubles getting laid, or for that matter even interacting normally with girls or dudes his own age.
San Antonio Current  |  Jeremy Martin  |  01-06-2010  |  Reviews

Meet the 21st Century's New Literary Movementnew

Early in the aughts, a new creative force emerged. Worldwide political events, crystallized by the 1999 Seattle WTO protests and the terrorist attacks of 9/11, energized a self-aware readership that embraced New Weird, the 21st century’s first major new literary movement.
San Antonio Current  |  Rick Klaw  |  01-06-2010  |  Books

Willamette Week's Top 5 TV Shows of 2009new

Yes, I know, it’s already 2010. I’m sure by now 2009 is now a distant memory. We’d rather forget the year that cultivated both the recession and MTV’s The City. While it’s a bit tough to summarize the best TV in a given year, as most shows run across years, these five stand above the rest.
Willamette Week  |  Ali Rothschild  |  01-06-2010  |  TV

New Year, New Momentum Give New Hope For Legalizing Cannabisnew

Paul Stanford, who runs a national chain of medical marijuana clinics, is making a new legalization push. And with the help of a professional signature-gathering company, and a political climate vastly more turned on to cannabis, Stanford hopes to attain his lifelong goal.
Willamette Week  |  James Pitkin  |  01-06-2010  |  Drugs

'The Martyrdom of a Catastrophist' is Superbnew

The Boston metal band Junius, whose superb The Martyrdom of a Catastrophist has the frustrating distinction of arriving too late to qualify for any best-of-year lists, is indeed among the more precise and scientific of recent hard rock bands.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  J. Edward Keyes  |  01-05-2010  |  Reviews

Odds & Ends Salutes 2009’s Stupidest Newsnew

Odds & Ends gives even our dysfunctional and maladjusted readers a chance to feel holier-than-thou. Sure, you might have gotten hammered last night and drunk-dialed your ex, but at least you didn't try (and fail) to run over your wife with a dumptruck like that idiot in Maine.
Weekly Alibi  |  Devin D. O’Leary  |  01-05-2010  |  Commentary

From the Hood to Higher Learning, Teen Poet Myriha Burton Steps Outnew

Only two months after penning "Flashback," Myriha Burton's first poem, the young writer found herself on stage at the eminent Apollo Theater in Harlem, reciting it once more. That wasn't even two years ago. She's since traded in her kicks for pens and local tracks for the stages across the country.
Metro Times  |  Travis R. Wright  |  01-05-2010  |  Performance

The Nooses Joe Arpaio and Andrew Thomas Hung Up Must be Cut Downnew

Sheriff Joe Arpaio and Maricopa County Attorney Andrew Thomas have defiled our town square with hanging corpses: five county supervisors, four superior court judges, two county administrators, three attorneys, an entire law firm, and (everywhere) Mexicans.
Phoenix New Times  |  Michael Lacey  |  01-05-2010  |  Commentary

Luis Gutierrez Is Close to Making It in the Art World Despite Struggling with MSnew

There's a lot about Luis Gutierrez that isn't immediately apparent. To look at the irreverent, brightly colored prayer flags, you'd never guess they were created by a man plagued by multiple sclerosis, an incurable disease that could one day make it impossible for him to paint.
Phoenix New Times  |  Malia Politzer  |  01-05-2010  |  Art

Tracking Homicides, We Learned a Few Things About Kansas City's Psychenew

Andre D. Jones, 33, was the victim of one of the metro's most disturbing murders of 2009: a quadruple homicide in Raytown whose other victims were his 21-year-old girlfriend, Precious Triplett, and her nephews, 10-year-old Amir Clemons and 7-year-old Gerard Clemons.
The Pitch  |  Justin Kendall  |  01-05-2010  |  Crime & Justice

One-of-a-Kind Short List of the 30 Most Troubled Mentally Ill in Houstonnew

Jimmy Bailey is one of Houston's 30 craziest people, according to the Houston Police Department; in February, the department's mental health unit put together a list of mentally ill people based on how many times the cops have responded to a call concerning a person and how many times a person has been hospitalized.
Houston Press  |  Paul Knight  |  01-05-2010  |  Commentary

Developing a Mathematical Model for Predicting Murders in Philadelphianew

John Toczek is rolling out a project he's calling the Analytics X Prize. It's a contest to develop a mathematical model for predicting murders in Philadelphia, something the Police Department could use to best deploy its resources.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Brian Howard  |  01-05-2010  |  Crime & Justice

'Death By Oboe': Fiction Contest '09 Winnernew

From the Judge: Death By Oboe invites us into a complete, quirky and tangible world. It isn't self-indulgent, but doesn't hesitate to linger over odd, honest details like the jostling of a roomful of porcelain figurines — a moment both physically present and emotionally revealing.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Jessica Penzias  |  01-05-2010  |  Original Work

Some Choice Literary Adaptations at This Year's Sundance Film Festivalnew

Though the overwhelming majority of Sundance titles are wholly original creations, there are a few literary adaptations scattered through the programming. Here’s a look at five books-turned-Sundance films to give you a taste of what you might be in for.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Scott Renshaw  |  01-05-2010  |  Movies

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