AltWeeklies Wire

It's Mourning in Americanew

No matter what claims George Bush makes to another term now, we can't know without seeing Ohio's provisional ballots what voters here intended to say. By law, those ballots can't be counted until 11 days after the election.
The Village Voice  |  Rick Perlstein  |  11-03-2004  |  Politics

Riverfront Times Calls Election for Kerrynew

As of 1:27 p.m. CST today, Riverfront Times projects that Democratic candidate John Kerry will become the 44th president of the United States, defeating incumbent Republican President George W. Bush.
Riverfront Times  |  Mike Seely  |  11-02-2004  |  Comedy

Resurrected Skinny Puppy Shows Some Teethnew

Drug abuse has taken a catastrophic toll on Canada's legendary proto-industrial outfit. 1996's The Process was released after keyboardist Dwayne Goettel's overdose death. The surviving members, long-time friends, spent the remainder of the decade estranged.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Jeff Stratton  |  11-02-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Foxx Elevates Middling Biopicnew

Jamie Foxx, as Ray Charles, brings to this movie what the director occasionally would prefer to leave behind -- the anger and the callousness, the cunning behind the charm. If only the movie contained half as much life as Foxx, it would be something truly remarkable.
Riverfront Times  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  11-02-2004  |  Reviews

Icky, Icky, Ickynew

The filmmakers want to have it both ways: They do everything to convince the protagonist and the audience that it might indeed be OK to run off with a 10-year-old boy, then cop out just before she's about to throw away her life.
SF Weekly  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  11-02-2004  |  Reviews

Exposing Utopia's Gateway to Auschwitznew

The Holocaust hangs like a shadow over everything, but this is really more a Kurt Gerron biopic, from his days onstage to his long-awaited stint as a director. Seeing Nazism as just a passing fad, he ignored the threat to himself until it was too late.
SF Weekly  |  Luke Y. Thompson  |  11-02-2004  |  Reviews

No More Sleeping With the Enemynew

With the country deeply divided over the current presidential race—with Republican George Bush and John Kerry in a dead heat and many voters in a blind rage over their guy—political affiliation has ascended to the top of requirement lists for potential mates.
The Village Voice  |  Matthew Philip  |  11-02-2004  |  Sex

Swing States: Et Tu, New Jersey?new

With the election entering its final stretch, four states have suddenly appeared as potential wild cards. They are New Jersey, Colorado, Hawaii, and Arkansas, representing a total of 34 electoral votes.
The Village Voice  |  James Ridgeway, Laurie Agnese and Nicole Duarte  |  11-02-2004  |  Politics

Playing Doctor: A Physician Practices Based on Questionable Claimsnew

Lying on a résumé isn't a crime -- except when a doctor does it. Luckily for Edward Patrick, who may have never done the residency he claims, the Ohio Medical Board is forgiving.
Cleveland Scene  |  Thomas Francis  |  11-02-2004  |  Science

Scars and Barsnew

John Dullaghan's documentary gathers Charles Bukowski's old friends and admirers and publishers to share their tales, but most of all it lets the dead poet tell his own story in archival footage that makes him seem more alive now that he's a beloved ghost who can harm no one else, especially himself.
Dallas Observer  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  11-02-2004  |  Reviews

Dallas Mavericks Try to Build a Winning Team from Scratchnew

The Dallas Mavericks is promoting itself as a new team that since last season has become more cohesive, deeper, tougher and better defensively. This is the image they're selling. Anyone buying?
Dallas Observer  |  John Gonzalez  |  11-02-2004  |  Sports

Fashionable Retro Rock Has Jumped the Sharknew

Interpol is like the older brother to Killers, Scissor Sisters and Franz Ferdinand, the one who tipped his siblings off to "cool music."
Dallas Observer  |  Garrett Kamps  |  11-02-2004  |  Music

Rockin' in the Free World: Soundtracks for Election Night Shindigsnew

Just as you can't have a Red State Mix Tape without Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the USA," neither can you have a Blue State tape without Springsteen's "Born in the USA."
Houston Press  |  John Nova Lomax  |  11-02-2004  |  Music

Work-Life Discord Goes Off the Scalesnew

Despite the apparently enlightened corporate speak of the 1990s about the value of contented employees to the bottom line, escalating numbers of Canadians are struggling to juggle job, family, and social lives. To protect their health, employees have to learn to say no.
The Georgia Straight  |  Helena Bryan  |  11-02-2004  |  Science

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