volume 2 3
Transcription
volume 2 3
TELLING THE TALE OF EVEREST SINCE 1992 VOLUME 23 | ISSUE 39 | SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 | FREE [2] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [3] [4] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI alibi VOLUME 23 | ISSUE 39 | SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 EDITORIAL MANAGING EDITOR/MUSIC EDITOR: Samantha Anne Carrillo (ext. 243) samantha@alibi.com FILM EDITOR: Devin D. O’Leary (ext. 230) devin@alibi.com FOOD EDITOR/FEATURES EDITOR: Ty Bannerman (ext. 260) ty@alibi.com ARTS & LIT EDITOR/WEB EDITOR: Lisa Barrow (ext. 267) lisa@alibi.com CALENDARS EDITOR/COPY EDITOR: Mark Lopez (ext. 239) mark@alibi.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS: Cecil Adams, Steven Robert Allen, Captain America, Gustavo Arellano, Rob Brezsny, Shawna Brown, Suzanne Buck, Eric Castillo, David Correia, Erik Gamlem, Gail Guengerich, Nora Hickey, Zachary Kluckman, Kristi D. Lawrence, Ari LeVaux, Mark Lopez, August March, Genevieve Mueller, Geoffrey Plant, Benjamin Radford, Jeremy Shattuck, Mike Smith, M. Brianna Stallings, M.J. Wilde, Holly von Winckel PRODUCTION ART DIRECTOR: Jesse Schulz (ext. 229) jesse@alibi.com PRODUCTION MANAGER: Archie Archuleta (ext. 240) archie@alibi.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Tasha Lujan (ext. 254) tasha@alibi.com STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER: Eric Williams ewill23nm@gmail.com CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS: Ben Adams, Cutty Bage, ¡Brapola!, Michael Ellis, Stacy Hawkinson, KAZ, Robert Maestas, Julia Minamata, Tom Nayder, Ryan North, Jesse Phillips, Brian Steinhoff SALES SALES DIRECTOR: John Hankinson (ext. 265) john@alibi.com SENIOR DISPLAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE: Sarah Bonneau (ext. 235) sarah@alibi.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES: Valerie Hollingsworth (ext. 263) valerie@alibi.com Chelsea Kibbee (ext. 248) chelsea@alibi.com Laura Liccardi (ext. 264) laural@alibi.com Dawn Lytle (ext. 258) dawn@alibi.com ADMINISTRATION CONTROLLER: Molly Lindsay (ext. 257) molly@alibi.com ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE : Courtney Foster (ext. 233) courtney@alibi.com FRONT DESK: Constance Moss (ext. 221) constance@alibi.com Renee Chavez (ext. 221) renee@alibi.com EDITOR AND PUBLISHER: Carl Petersen (ext. 228) carl@alibi.com SYSTEMS MANAGER: Kyle Silfer (ext. 242) kyle@alibi.com WEB MONKEY: John Millington (ext. 238) webmonkeys@alibi.com OWNERS, PUBLISHERS EMERITI: Christopher Johnson and Daniel Scott CIRCULATION CIRCULATION MANAGER: Geoffrey Plant (ext. 252) geoff@alibi.com INFORMATION PRINTER: The Santa Fe New Mexican IN LOVING MEMORY: Doug Albin, Martin Candelaria, Michael Henningsen, Eric Johnson, Greg Medara, Mina Yamashita INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDER: Southwest Cyberport (232-7992) info@swcp.com NATIONAL ADVERTISING: Voice Media Group (888) 278-9866 voicemediagroup.com NUCITY PUBLICATIONS, INC. 413 Central NW, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102 BUSINESS HOURS: 10AM–5PM MON–FRI PHONE: (505) 346-0660 FAX: (505) 256-9651 Alibi (ISSN 1088-0496) is published weekly 52 times per year. The content of this issue is Copyright © 2014 by NuCity Publications, Inc., and may not be reprinted in part or in whole without written consent of the publisher. All rights are reserved. One copy of each edition of Alibi is available free to county residents and visitors each week. Anyone caught removing papers in bulk will be prosecuted on theft charges to the fullest extent of the law. Yearly subscription $100, back issues are $3, Best of Burque is $5. Queries and manuscripts should include a self-addressed stamped envelope; Alibi assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. Association of Alternative Newsmedia WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [5] AND ODDS ENDS WEIRD NEWS Dateline: Australia Pizza Hut is facing some backlash for a misguided “buy a pizza, get a free hamster” promotion. A Pizza Hut franchise in the suburb of Mount Waverly, southeast of Melbourne, placed a banner in its window advertising, “Buy any 10 large pizzas and get one free small animal from Pets Story.” The free pet promotion quickly blew up on social media. Commenters inundated Pizza Hut’s Facebook page with negative comments, calling it “awful” and “the most irresponsible promotion ever.” A local animal rights organization, Oscar’s Law, soon got involved and convinced the franchise to discontinue the promotion. Pizza Hut Australia says it did not condone the promotion and insists that no animals were actually given away by the store. “On behalf of Pizza Hut Australia, we once again apologize for this thoughtless promotion ever occurring and would like to reassure you all that this matter is being seriously dealt with,” the company said in a statement. for a second time that 911 is for emergencies only. Two hours later, Shaffer called 911 for a third time, saying he needed to be taken to a hospital emergency room. Officer Lewis went to Shaffer’s home and, according to his report, “asked Mr. Shaffer if he wanted to harm himself or others, and he informed me that he did not. ... He said he just wants someone to talk to because he is lonely. [Shaffer] informed me that he lied to 911 so the paramedics would show up.” Shaffer was finally arrested and ordered to the county prison after failing to post a $75,000 bond. Dateline: Pennsylvania Police in Philadelphia are looking to identify a resourceful robber who knocked over a grocery store with a banana. According to a press release by Philadelphia’s Southwest Detective Division, an unknown black male in a hoody sweatshirt entered Tejada Grocery on the evening of Sept. 16. The subject “picked up a banana from the counter and placed it inside his sweatshirt simulating it was a weapon.” He pointed the fruit at a 24-year-old female clerk, demanded money and cigarettes, and made off with “an undetermined amount of money.” Video of the incident shows the man riding off on a bicycle. The police description fails to mention whether he stole the banana as well. Dateline: Tennessee Dateline: Pennsylvania A man in Penn Township is accused of repeatedly abusing the 911 system because he was “lonely.” According to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 52-year-old Gregory L. Shaffer is charged by township police with telephoning Westmoreland County Emergency Management dispatchers three times on July 30 seeking help at his home. Shaffer told dispatchers he had fallen down the stairs and injured his neck. When emergency medical technicians arrived, they found an “intoxicated” Shaffer waiting calmly inside his home. Officer Joseph Lewis said in his report, “After Shaffer was speaking with the Rescue 6 medics, he admitted that he lied and only called 911 because he was lonely and needed someone to talk to.” Emergency personnel gave Shaffer the number for a local crisis hotline and warned him that 911 is only to be used for emergencies. About two hours after his first call, however, Shaffer called 911 again and said he was still lonely. He was warned [6] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI A Nashville man arrested for drunk driving has vowed to get revenge on the officers who arrested him by joining the Islamic State. According to a prosecution affidavit, 24-year-old Marco Antonio Dominguez was cuffed up in the back seat of a police car when he told officers, “I am going to join ISIS. When I do, you will be the first person I will kill.” Dominguez was first questioned by officers after he pulled into a gas station with his car smoking and the windshield smashed in. The officers who spoke to him reported that Dominguez “had a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage” on his breath. Police said he continued to make threats even after he had been taken to jail. He faces charges of driving under the influence, assault and leaving the scene of an accident. Interested ISIS recruiters can find Dominguez in the Davidson County Jail. a COMPILED BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY. EMAIL YOUR WEIRD NEWS TO DEVIN@ALIBI.COM. WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [7] CRIB NOTES OPINION | EDITORIAL BY AUGUST MARCH Albuquerque and the Indian Crib Notes: Sept. 25, 2014 1 Mariah Martinez is suing the city of Rio Rancho and its police department after she says her civil rights were violated during a traffic stop. Why did Rio Rancho police officer Brian Thacker initially pull Martinez over? a) She was driving erratically. b) She was speeding. c) Her registration sticker was expired. d) She flashed her high beams at the officer. 2 Last Friday at the Isleta Amphitheater, a man allegedly pulled a gun on two individuals who were trying to park. Who was the alleged gunman? a) A member of the terrorist group ISIS b) A hitman from the Zetas cartel c) A US Army Sergeant d) Ralph Cifaretto 3 After an 8-0 vote on the matter, the Albuquerque City Council sent a bill to the Mayor which if signed would require greater civilian oversight of what organization? a) The Albuquerque Police Department b) The Planning Department Code Enforcement Division c) The Brute Squad d) The US Air Force 4 Municipal employees in Albuquerque have filed a temporary restraining order against the city over a proposed _______________ they say violates unresolved union issues. a) Psychological experiment b) Pay raise c) Downsizing d) Right-wing cabal 5 What kind of meat do the predators on display at the Albuquerque Zoo favor? a) Snake b) Dragon c) Butterfly d) Horse Answers: 1) D. Martinez was pulled over for flashing her high beams and was subsequently arrested on a suspicion of DWI charge. That charge was later dismissed with prejudice. Now she is suing Rio Rancho. 2) C. Christopher Schirmer, a local army recruiter, was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after the alleged gun-pulling incident. 3) A. The proposed ordinance would institute a police oversight commission independent from the Mayor’s Office and the City Council. 4) B. Union representatives filed the restraining order against a 3-percent pay raise on behalf of about 2,000 city workers. 5) D. The Albuquerque BioPark Zoo imports more than 38,000 pounds of horse meat annually. a [8] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI Our perceptions of Native Americans needs to change BY ERIKA WURTH lbuquerque has a complicated relationship with Native Americans. It’s a city where tourists and residents will watch what is deemed traditional Native American culture, such as dancing or feasts on neighboring reservations. But it’s also a place where, when I first moved into my studio, my lovely, incredibly kind neighbor whom I’d befriended told me that the only Native Americans she knew besides me were the ones she saw on reservations or the ones she saw on the street who were drunk and homeless. She said this without any malice whatsoever and despite the fact that we were sitting in a restaurant surrounded by Natives who were neither drunk, nor homeless. It’s strange how some folks in Albuquerque see Natives in general, especially when you consider how many of us are not homeless, no more drunk than anyone else and not living on reservations. As a novelist who writes about homeless Native people, it’s important to me to keep them visible. At the same time, it’s awful to see how single-faceted the perception of Natives in our town is. A number of years ago, I took a cab ride with a man who once lived in Albuquerque. When I mentioned that I currently lived there, he began angrily listing all the times he had seen Natives drunk Downtown and how he thought the reason it was blocked off on the weekends was because of them. It was hard to understand his reasoning when there were so many other explanations. What can be said about drunk, homeless Natives? Because we all know they exist, and they exist in a lot of places. One thing we can say is that they’re being beaten to death. Recently two homeless Navajo men who were quietly minding their own business were killed in Albuquerque by a couple of teenagers who have since been revealed to have attacked more than 50 homeless people. And the way these men were killed was utterly brutal. A third man thankfully got away, and the teenagers are standing trial. But this kind of thing is not a surprise when you consider that the commonplace feeling for Natives in Albuquerque is that they are drunk and homeless, and therefore a problem and a scapegoat. I asked Beverly Singer, a professor in Native American Studies at the University of New Mexico, about this issue. Her frustration was similar to mine: “[Albuquerque] is surrounded by the Native Pueblo communities, but there’s little to no encounter or shared interests between non- A Erika Wurth PHOTO COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR There are Native people in this city and outlying areas of all kinds … And those people dancing at the Pueblo or living on Central have lives outside of those roles too. They are people. Native residents of Albuquerque with Natives. ... What is so strange about Albuquerque is that it is a meeting place for numerous major Native American organizations such as IHS and NCAI and other forums. Then of course the city benefits enormously from the largest Powwow, Gathering of Nations, when over 30,000 Natives come to celebrate and fill up the UNM Pit Arena to dance and be together, as it brings in millions in revenue for the city. The average citizen of Albuquerque does not partake, and I think they act like it’s just an Indian thing.” What I deeply love about Albuquerque is that because of the surrounding Pueblos, the not-so-distant Navajo reservation and because many Natives like myself have come here to do art of various kinds, there are many opportunities to interact with contemporary Native artists. I have encountered many non-Natives who are part of this scene, who appreciate and facilitate it, like Diahndra Grill, whose JustWrite program runs workshops in prisons for folks with an interest in poetry, including many Native American people. Or take, for example, Don McIver whose “Sunday Chatter” program ties music to the written word and has hosted many a Native writer including myself. What troubles me is that outside the arts scene, some folks in Albuquerque continue to perceive that the “good” Natives, who do nice, recognizably Native things from a safe distance, are on the reservation, while the “bad” Natives are the ones living on the streets in the city, drinking. What’s missing from this perception are actual Natives, people who go out for a few glasses of wine with their friends or maybe have a quiet beer or two by their television after work; the ones working right by you in your office or construction site or laboring over their next novel or riding on the bus next to the tourist who is busily studying the brochure on Native American dancing and planning her trip to the nearest Pueblo. These people live on reservations, and they also live off of them. Recently I took a trip to Santa Fe with another writer. It was bittersweet because I was leaving Albuquerque yet again, and this was a goodbye of sorts. My friend and I went on the Rail Runner. There was me, a mixedNative person, a few Navajo people, Latinos, a couple of Pueblos and various other New Mexico residents all sitting together and mainly staring at our smartphones. The word multicultural is one I often find cheesy and inadequate. But it’s something that institutions, communities and often entire nations strive for. And would it hurt if Albuquerque and its residents worked a little harder toward it too? If folks were willing to say, you know, actually, you’re wrong, friend-of-mine-whojust-made-a-generalizing-statement: There are Native people in this city and outlying areas of all kinds, not just the ones you see dancing during feast days, not just the ones you see on Central. And those people dancing at the Pueblo or living on Central have lives outside of those roles too. They are people. Overall, this city is multicultural. We just have to do a better job of recognizing it. That day on the train, I thought a little bit about the city, about the violence that occurs there, about the beauty. And as we were speeding up toward Santa Fe, we stopped at one of the Pueblos, and the conductor asked for the passengers to please respect the people on the reservations. And I teared up because there is not one other place on Earth that I would hear this. Not one. a Erika T. Wurth’s novel, Crazy Horse’s Girlfriend, was released by Curbside Splendor in September. She teaches creative writing at Western Illinois University. She was raised right outside of Denver and is Apache/Chickasaw/Cherokee. Do Your Homework. Do you spend all kinds of time online? Wouldn’t it be nice to have local, friendly support when you need your devices to work the way you want them to? When you need to get to your mail or your files from anywhere, Southwest Cyberport is right here for you. SWCP is New Mexico’s Largest Home-Owned Internet provider, with plans starting at $7 a month. New Mexico’s Expert Internet Service Provider since 1994 Call 243-SWCP or visit SWCP.com for details WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [9] OPINION | ¡ASK A MEXICAN! BY GUSTAVO ARELLANO ear Mexican: One of the things I have found enjoyable and profound is the use of language by Chicanos, mexicanos and MexicanAmericans. Humor and a sardonic sense of history, in my view, are encapsulated in many everyday expressions. Two examples I can think of are the use of huey (or perhaps buey) and rollo. In the first case, perhaps buey (ox) is a bitterly ironic reference to the term huey tlatoani, “ruler of MexicoTenochtitlan,” I read about in Fifteen Poets of the Aztec World by Miguel LeónPortilla. In the second case, I’ve heard young Chicanos use the word rollo for conversation or dialogue, perhaps seeing themselves as seated Aztecs uttering word-scrolls. What do you think? D is a different rola, on the other hand: In other words, it also comes from the Spaniards via the Latins and has nothing to do with the Aztec codices. Then again, I think you’re mishearing the young Chicanos because I’ve never heard them use rollo to describe a conversation but have heard them say rola more than not. Then again, maybe I’m hanging out with too many chilangos as of recent ... ear Mexican: Why is it that Mexican putos can only cry when drunk out of their minds? And always use the lame excuse because they can last longer in the cama! When you’re young, I understand, but nearing your sixties? Give me a break! And yes, these are real big mamadas! Back in the day the mujer fell for this crap! And they wonder why we don’t stay in a relationship for years because it slips from the cama to thinking you belong in the kitchen 24/7 ... vamos a la chingada. D —Chicana que no se Deja ser Chingada —Cuauhtémoc’s Cousin Dear Wab: I agree that Mexican Spanish is a magnificent thing, and you forgot to throw in caló, albures and double-entendres to our roll call of linguistic desmadre. But your folk etymologies are a bit off. Buey (or güey and wey) derive from the Latin bovis, the term for an ox. As I explained in one of the first ¡Ask a Mexican! columns ever, Latin cultures consider the ox to be the dummy of the animal kingdom the same way gabachos think of an ass, so the Aztecs (and Central Americans, for that matter) got that insult from the Spaniards. Huey, on the other hand, meant “exalted” in Nahuatl when referring to the Aztec king, and while the capacity of Mexican Spanish humor is almost limitless, no one ever thinks of Montezuma when calling someone a pinche güey, even if he was a pinche güey. Rollo Dear Chicana Who Won’t Allow Herself to Get Fucked Over: The best response to this came from ranchera legend Vicente Fernández at a concert I once saw him at in Anaheim. Borracho out of his mind, Chente began crying onstage. “I’m not crying, güeyes,” Chente roared as he crooned the José Alfredo Jiménez bar burner “Tu Recuerdo y Yo.” “My eyes are sweating!” You know how it goes with hombres: That whole machismo front is a farce. And the only thing that brings it down is the bottle ... and maybe the death of their rooster. a Ask the Mexican at themexican@askamexican.net, be his fan on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @gustavoarellano or ask him a video question at youtube.com/askamexicano! BY RYAN NORTH [10] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [11] Community Calendar THURSDAY SEP 25 ALBUCREEPY DOWNTOWN GHOST WALK Albuquerque’s newest and creepiest walking tour of haunted Downtown locations. Hotel Andaluz (125 Second Street NW). $18-$22. 8-9:30pm. 240-8000. alibi.com/e/110869. CREDIT AND FORECLOSURE INTERVENTION Extensive insight into foreclosure prevention and credit issues with instructor Gabby Gabaldon. Greater Albuquerque Habitat for Humanity ReStore (4900 Menaul NE). 10-11am. 265-0057. alibi.com/e/110859. GIRLS’ NIGHT OUT: PAMPERED BY PINK Enjoy health and wellness, a spa, jewelry vendors, mini-manicures and massages, a Dillard’s fashion show, raffle and more. Hotel Albuquerque (800 Rio Grande NW). 5:30-8pm. 222-8736. alibi.com/e/111896. JEMEZ MOUNTAIN ELK FESTIVAL This free, four-day event celebrates New Mexico’s second largest elk herd which makes the Jemez home. Valles Caldera National Preserve (18161 New Mexico 4, Jemez Springs). 9am-5pm. (505) 661-3333. alibi.com/e/109097. MIDDAY MADNESS TOASTMASTERS Practice speaking and leadership skills in a safe, supportive environment. Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce (115 Gold SW). One-time membership fee. Noon-1pm. 255-2034. alibi.com/e/105145. RECOVER INTERNATIONAL A self-help/support group for those who suffer from depression, panic/anxiety attacks, phobias, bipolar disorder or anger issues. Central United Methodist Church (201 University NE). 7-9pm. 508-4847. alibi.com/e/106496. THE SOUTHWEST NORTH AMERICAN REGION: AN INCIPIENT ECOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC HEURISTIC A presentation by Dr. Carlos G. Vélez-Ibáñez from Arizona State University. UNM Hibben Center (University of New Mexico). 4-5:30pm. alibi.com/e/110631. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS LIBRARY TOUR Tour Albuquerque’s oldest public library. Special Collections Library (423 Central NE). Noon. 848-1376. alibi.com/e/97492. STORYTIME Thirty-minute program of stories, songs, poetry, puppets, jokes and finger plays for ages 3-6. Esther Bone Memorial Library (950 Pinetree SE, Rio Rancho). 1pm. 891-5012. alibi.com/e/108970. THURSDAY NIGHT FIBER FEVER Work on your knitting, crochet or other fiber projects in the company of likeminded fiber enthusiasts. South Valley Public Library (3904 Isleta SW). 5-6pm. 877-5170. alibi.com/e/106109. VIVA LA LATINA: MY PATH TO BEING ME Rebecca Avitia, Executive Director of the Hispanic Cultual Center, speaks on her journey in finding herself. UNMValencia (Academic Building, Lecture Hall, Los Lunas). 1:30-2:30pm. 925-8600. alibi.com/e/93188. WORKERS’ COMPENSATION UPDATE SEMINAR Discover how your practices may be impacted with changing workers’ compensation case law. State Bar Center of New Mexico (5121 Masthead NE). $369. 8:30am-4:30pm. (866) 352-9539. alibi.com/e/105845. ¡SALUD Y SABOR! A monthly event that brings an international culinary experience to the heart of Albuquerque. Featuring the cuisine of Veracruz, Mexico. National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street SW). 5:25-7:30pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/111501. SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FIESTA Featuring an array of food and wine-related events, including tastings and seminars. Multiple Venues (Sanfa Fe, Santa Fe). Prices vary. alibi.com/e/111112. WINE TASTING: PINOT NOIR Each guest receives three generous tastes as well as an appetizer prepared especially for this event. Slate Street Café (515 Slate NW). $20. 5pm. 243-2210. alibi.com/e/111906. FRIDAY SEP 26 ALBUCREEPY DOWNTOWN GHOST WALK $18-$22. 8-9:30pm. See 9/25 listing. BARRE FITNESS Thin your thighs, carve your calves, lift your bum, sculpt your arms, and tighten your abs in this intense 55-minute Barre class. Form Studio (3001 Monte Vista NE). $15. Noon. 918-7684. alibi.com/e/105801. BEGINNERS BREAKDANCE Learn the foundations of the original hip-hop dance from dancers with over 15 [12] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI years of experience. Versatile Styles Dance Studio (4817 Central NE). $10. 10-11am, 6-7pm. 933-2199. alibi.com/e/106783. BEGINNING AFRICAN DANCE African dance for beginners taught by Rujeko Dumbutshena. Rhythm Dance Company (3808 Central SE). $12-$60. 5:30-7pm. (718) 427-0421. alibi.com/e/106841. CALVIN HORN AUTISM LECTURE: STAYING SAFE WITH ASPERGER SYNDROME Dr. Holliday Willey shares her experiences regarding adolescents and adults with Asperger Syndrome. Marriott Pyramid (5151 San Francisco NE). $50, FREE for attendees with ASD. 8:30am-3:30pm. 272-4715. alibi.com/e/109492. CRITICAL MASS MONTHLY BIKE RIDE Get on your bike and ride on the last Friday of every month. Duck Pond (The University of New Mexico). 6:30pm-midnight. alibi.com/e/84335. FRIDAY NIGHT GATHERING VIP Meet entrants and stars of the automotive world while viewing vintage aircraft, racing cars and speed record holders. Santa Fe Municipal Airport, Hangar K (121 Aviation, Santa Fe). $125. 5pm. 955-2900. alibi.com/e/110330. A GOOD YARN If you enjoy knitting, crocheting or other needle craft, join this drop-in stitch group. Taylor Ranch Library (5700 Bogart NW). Noon. 897-8816. alibi.com/e/98848. JEMEZ MOUNTAIN ELK FESTIVAL 9am-5pm. See 9/25 listing. MANAGING STRESS WITH HERBS Class discusses how herbs can help manage physical manifestations of stress. The Source (1111 Carlisle SE). $28. 6-8:30pm. 228-2356. alibi.com/e/103368. RACING LEGENDS Indy 500 racers recount their career highlights in their own words, along with a display of their memorable cars. Santa Fe Municipal Airport, Hangar K (121 Aviation, Santa Fe). $20. 1pm. 955-2900. alibi.com/e/110328. SITE COLLEGENITE Students can experience free tours of SITElines: Unsettled Landscapes, as well as food trucks and more. SITE Santa Fe (1606 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe). 5-8pm. (505) 989-1199. alibi.com/e/111509. ANNUAL WHOLE ENCHILADA FIESTA Event includes food, a parade, live music, a carnival, roller derby, a car show, arts & crafts and more. Multiple Locations (Las Cruces, Las Cruces). $10-$30. 4-11:30pm. alibi.com/e/111834. SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FIESTA Prices vary. See 9/25 listing. SATURDAY SEP 27 16TH ANNUAL MERCADO ANTIGUO Enjoy music, family performances, animals and a traditional arts mercado. Casa San Ysidro (973 Old Church, Corrales). 9am-5pm. (505) 898-3915. alibi.com/e/111733. 2014 NMSEA SOLAR FIESTA This specialty trade show brings homeowners together with sustainability experts to develop plans to save on home energy costs. CNM Workforce Training Center (5600 Eagle Rock NE). 10am-5pm. alibi.com/e/111821. 2014 SOUTHWEST REGIONAL SOCIALISM CONFERENCE Join in to learn about Albuquerque’s growing and vibrant Socialism movement. N’MPower (136 Washington SE). $10-$50. 9am-5pm. 268-2488. alibi.com/e/111161. 4TH ANNUAL NIGHT UNDER THE STARS Fundraising event includes solar viewing through the day, stargazing at night, a silent auction, artworks and more. Rainbow Park (301 Southern SE, Rio Rancho). 4-10pm. alibi.com/e/110350. 5TH ANNUAL COMPANY’S COMIN’ All residents and business owners are encouraged to get outside and clean up for a few hours. Anderson-Abruzzo Balloon Museum (9201 Balloon Museum NE). 9am-noon. alibi.com/e/110773. ABQ DEATH CAFE A chance to increase awareness of death with a view to helping people make the most of their (finite) lives. Swiss Alps Bakery (3000 San Pedro NE, Suite F). 2-4pm. 265-7215. alibi.com/e/109394. ALBUCREEPY DOWNTOWN GHOST WALK $18-$22. 8-9:30pm. See 9/25 listing. ALBUQUERQUE INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL Featuring entertainment, a kids zone, a photo booth, a climbing wall, food vendors, artisans and a car show. New Mexico Veterans Memorial (1100 Louisiana SE). 10am-5pm. alibi.com/e/110771. ALL THAT GLITTERS A catered, fun-filled, dress-up affair for those who love jewelry and gems. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science (1801 Mountain NW). $35. 6-10pm. 294-7545. alibi.com/e/103523. BAD TOUR See various sites from the hit AMC show “Breaking Bad.” ABQ Trolley Co. @ Hotel Albuquerque at Old Town (800 Rio Grande NW). $65. 1-4:30pm. EVENT | PREVIEW Ring That Bell! Ring That Bell! Sepia-toned reruns of the classic, boardingon-burlesque television show Petticoat Junction might be the closest most of us have been to a real, high-powered, piston-pumping, steam-powered train of yesteryear. Here’s your chance to get up close and personal to a real live locomotive, courtesy of New Mexico Steam SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 27 Locomotive & Railroad Historical New Mexico Steam Society’s open house Locomotive & Railroad Society this Saturday, Sept. 27, 1833 Eighth Street NW from 9am to 4pm at alibi.com/e/111732 1833 Eighth Street NW. 9am to 4pm The Society’s mission is to restore a Baldwin 4-8-4 Steam Locomotive, AT&SF No. 2926 to its full, operational glory by fall 2015. On Saturday experience nearly a decade of meticulous restoration (thus far) to get this little engine that could back on the tracks. When you’re not gawking the train, with its highly polished black steel, valves and pistons performing various mechanical duets, learn about the history of the railroad in New Mexico by knowledgeable aficionados, and listen to live music by the Territorial Brass Band, Los Radiators and Holy Water & Whiskey. Bring the kids along for face painting, operational model trains, free food and drink, and yes, of course, ring that bell! (Marya Errin Jones) a 240-8000. alibi.com/e/110370. BEGINNERS BREAKDANCE $10. 1-2pm. See 9/26 listing. BERNCO OPEN SPACE PRESENTS: GREEN DESIGN Learn some of the elements of green design based on observations in the wild. Bachechi Open Space (9521 Rio Grande NW). 9-11am. alibi.com/e/98709. BORN TO RUN Enjoy the beautiful Bosque of Albuquerque with a 5K/1-mile run/walk, and support the oldest pro-life organization in New Mexico. Sagebrush Community Church (6440 Coors NW). $20-$35. 7:30am-7pm. 922-9200. alibi.com/e/104952. COMPOSTING WITH WORMS (VERMICOMPOSTING) Learn how to use red worms to turn organic waste into high quality compost. Los Volcanes Senior Center (6500 Los Volcanes NW). 10am-noon. 929-0414. alibi.com/e/105841. CORRALES HARVEST FESTIVAL A beautiful fall weekend full of activities including a pet parade, hip-hop dancing, hands-on art projects and more. Corrales Recreational Center (500 Jones, Corrales). $2-$5. 8:30am. alibi.com/e/111709. ELIZABETH WATERS TRIBUTE GALA A gourmet reception and panel discussion honoring Elizabeth Waters, the founder of the UNM Dance program. Carlisle Gym, Performance Space (1 University of New Mexico). $50. 5-7pm. 277-4332. alibi.com/e/111535. GRAND OPENING OF CALIBERS’ NEW LOCATION Take the family and join the fun with an exotic car show, free food, hourly prizes, special guests and more. Calibers Shooters Sports Center (9320 Coors NW). 10am-4pm. alibi.com/e/111908. HANDS-ON BIKE MAINTENANCE: FIX A FLAT Bike techs share tips and tricks for fixing a flat, changing your bike tube and getting back on the go. Albuquerque REI (1550 Mercantile NE). $20-$40. 11am. 247-1191. alibi.com/e/107838. HUMANIST SOCIETY OF NM MONTHLY SPEAKER MEETING September’s topic is “What is Secular Buddhism?” by Roy Moody. Special Collections Library (423 Central NE). 10am-noon. 848-1376. alibi.com/e/110390. JEMEZ MOUNTAIN ELK FESTIVAL 9am-5pm. See 9/25 listing. NATIONAL HUNTING AND FISHING DAY All fishing folks are invited to head out for a day of fishing, picnicking and hiking. No license required. Tingley Beach (1800 Tingley SW). 7am-7pm. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/98710. NEW MEXICO CHILE BIKE TOUR Guests take to the streets of Albuquerque to explore the flavorful red and green chiles for which New Mexico is famous. Routes Bicycle Tours and Rentals (404 San Felipe NW, #B1). $45-$50. 10:30am-2pm. alibi.com/e/111909. A NIGHT FOR LIFE A fundraising dinner and silent auction with guest speaker Alex Schadenberg from the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition of Canada. Glory Christian Fellowship (2417 Wyoming NE). $30. 6-8pm. alibi.com/e/102842. OUT OF THE DARKNESS A community walk for the American Foundation of Suicide Prevention’s signature fundraising campaign. Hoffmantown Church (8888 Harper NE). 9am. alibi.com/e/108627. PEACE CENTER YARD SALE Peruse clothing, jewelry, treasures, trinkets and more. Albuquerque Center for Peace and Justice (202 Harvard SE). 9am-3pm. 268-9557. alibi.com/e/110574. ROSE EXHIBITION Enjoy the beauty of roses in this annual event, presented by the Albuquerque Rose Society. ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden (2601 Central NW). Included with admission. 9am-5pm. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/100443. SEEK & ZINE BICYCLE SCAVENGER HUNT Ride your bike, make a mini zine in one hour with two or three of your friends, and raise a little coin to help keep ABQ Zine Fest free. Tannex (1415 Fourth Street SW). $5 per team. Noon-5pm. alibi.com/e/111922. SOLAR TELESCOPES Observe the sun safely without hurting your eyes with special, filtered telescopes, weather permitting. Open Space Visitor Center (6500 Coors NW). 11am-2pm. 897-8831. alibi.com/e/111551. STEAM LOCOMOTIVE OPEN HOUSE Event includes live music, lectures, face painting, toy trains, free hot dogs and popcorn, and more. New Mexico Steam Locomotive & Railroad Society (1833 Eighth Street NW). 9am-4pm. 934-9010. alibi.com/e/111732. See preview box. STEAMPUNK SPECTACULAR 3 Join a scavenger hunt, have your fortune told, play some games and peruse the merchant’s row for garb, gear and gadgets. Mine Shaft Tavern (2846 State Highway 14 N, Madrid). $15. Noon. 507-9879. alibi.com/e/111511. SUNPORT TUG & RUN Event includes a 5K fun run/walk, an airplane pull, fun family activities, live music, food trucks and more. Albuquerque International Sunport (2200 Sunport SE). 8am. alibi.com/e/110368. TARANTULAS Spiders the size of doughnuts. Where are they going? What are they doing? Find out on this creepy jaunt through the hills. Cerrillos Hills State Park (Santa Fe County Road 59, Cerrillos). $5 per vehicle. 3-5pm. 474-0196. alibi.com/e/110894. TRIPLE A MMA IX Natalie Roy takes on Nohime Dennison, and Andres Quintana fights Javier Minjarez. Camel Rock Casino (17486 US 84-285, Santa Fe). $25-$60. 7-10pm. 508-0876. alibi.com/e/110374. VALLE DE ORO NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE OPEN HOUSE AND 2ND BIRTHDAY PARTY Learn about the refuge’s history and future while partaking in free cake and ice cream, live music, tours, games and activities. Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge (7851 Second Street SW). 9am-noon. alibi.com/e/110849. YOGA SATURDAYS: BIKE IN COFFEE Kundalini yoga uses breath, sound and movement to strengthen the nervous system, increase flexibility and build intuition. Old Town Farm (949 Montoya NW). $8-$25. 9:30am-2pm. alibi.com/e/110777. ANNUAL WHOLE ENCHILADA FIESTA $10-$30. 11am-11:30pm. See 9/26 listing. SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FIESTA Prices vary. See 9/25 listing. SOUTH VALLEY CHILE FIESTA AND ARTS MARKET Enjoy over 10 craft booths, chile roasting, live music, kids activities, a chile cook-off contest, a salsa competition and more. South Valley Gateway Park (100 Isleta SW). 10am-5pm. alibi.com/e/101561. SUNDAY SEP 28 16TH ANNUAL MERCADO ANTIGUO 9am-5pm. See 9/27 listing. Community Calendar continues on page 14 WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [13] Community Calendar continued from page 13 AFRICAN DANCE CLASS Intermediate African dance for dancers with some experience in any style. Enchantment Dancing Ballroom Studio (337 San Pedro NE). $12-$15. 4-5:30pm. (718) 427-0421. alibi.com/e/106858. AKI MATSURI 2014: ANNUAL JAPANESE FALL FESTIVAL Event includes martial arts demonstrations, taiko drumming, Japanese dancing and more. National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street SW). $5. 10am-5pm. 565-2185. alibi.com/e/101228. ASPCA COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIP PET HEALTH FAIR Residents in 87105 receive free services for their dogs and cats. Pat Hurley Park (3828 Rincon NW). 8am-noon. 764-1164. alibi.com/e/111736. CAN YOU SEE US NOW? This bicycle parade for traffic safety travels down Route 66 with full police escort at a speed slow enough for cyclists of all ages and abilities. University & Coal SE (Albuquerque). 1-3pm. alibi.com/e/111737. COMPANION ANIMAL RESCUE EFFORT A forum presented by Sherry Gold and Sharon Jonas that speaks of the link between animal abuse and domestic violence. First Unitarian Church (3701 Carlisle NE). 11am-noon. 265-9136. alibi.com/e/111504. CORRALES HARVEST FESTIVAL $2-$5. 8am. See 9/27 listing. DRAG QUEEN BINGO BRUNCH New Mexico AIDS Services and The Dolls host this event with great food and Bingo with a twist (or a braid or bouffant). No costumes required. Scalo Northern Italian Grill (3500 Central SE). $25-$30. Noon-3pm. 938-7120. alibi.com/e/111506. INTRODUCTION TO CAMP COOKING In this hands-on field course, instructors teach you how to build a camp kitchen, design a menu and prepare tasty, nutritious meals. Carolino Canyon (10900 Park Access, Tijeras). $45-$65. 10am. alibi.com/e/111813. JEMEZ MOUNTAIN ELK FESTIVAL 9am-5pm. See 9/25 listing. JENNIFER JACOBSON READS TAROT Partake in a reading with Jennifer Jacobson and her Soul Cards. Bookworks (4022 Rio Grande NW). $10 for a 10-to-15-minute session. 1pm. 344-8139. alibi.com/e/111792. MY DOG & ME DIABETES AWARENESS SUNDAY Paws to People presents this community outreach event that brings attention to diabetes in both humans and canines. Montgomery Park (Comanche & Pojoaque). 1-3pm. alibi.com/e/111826. NEW MEXICO DAHLIA FESTIVAL Event includes viewings of submitted dahlias and horticulture-judged presentations. Albuquerque Garden Center (10120 Lomas NE). 1-4pm. 821-5757. alibi.com/e/107236. ROSE EXHIBITION Included with admission. 9am-5pm. See 9/27 listing. SANDIA LAKES FALL CAR SHOW An assortment of classic, semi-classic and newer cars, trucks and bikes, a rock climbing wall, food trucks, beer trucks, music and fishing. Sandia Pueblo (Sandia Village, Sandia Village). $1-$3, FREE for children under 4. Noon-5pm. alibi.com/e/111912. SANTA FE CONCORSO Featuring a world-class assemblage of cars, motorcycles and bicycles, ranging from the 1900s to the latest exotics. The Club at Las Campanas (132 Clubhouse, Santa Fe). $25-$125. 10am. (800) 241-9400. alibi.com/e/110402. ANNUAL WHOLE ENCHILADA FIESTA $10-$30. 11:30am-6pm. See 9/26 listing. SANTA FE WINE & CHILE FIESTA Prices vary. See 9/25 listing. MONDAY SEP 29 BEGINNERS BREAKDANCE $10. 10-11am, 6-7pm. See 9/26 listing. GRANT WRITING WORKSHOP A workshop sponsored by UNM Continuing Education. UNM Continuing Education Building (1634 University NE). $899. 8:30am-5:30pm. 277-6025. alibi.com/e/106438. HERBALISM SERIES 1 Learn how herbs can treat many acute and chronic illnesses including respiratory infections, digestive illnesses and more. The Source (1111 Carlisle SE). $135. 6-8pm. 228-2356. alibi.com/e/103362. TUESDAY SEP 30 CASINO/CUBAN-STYLE SALSA AND RUEDA DE CASINO This rich form of salsa dance is influenced by Cuban son, rumba, swing dance, mambo, cha-cha and more. National Hispanic Cultural Center (1701 Fourth Street SW). 6pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/111811. [14] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI GRANT WRITING WORKSHOP $899. 8:30am-5:30pm. See 9/29 listing. INTRO/BEGINNING BALLET AFRIQUE: CONTEMPORARY FUSION DANCE Naturally aerobic, basic African dance blended with accessible and graceful ballet/modern/jazz accents. Maple Street Dance Space (3215 Central NE). $12-$15 sliding scale. 5:30-7pm. 366-4982. alibi.com/e/106447. MYSTERIES OF THE UNCONSCIOUS A monthly meeting of the minds to discuss what’s really going on in the murky depths of the unconscious. North Domingo Baca Multigenerational Center (7521 Carmel NE). FREE, RSVP required. 6:45-8:30pm. 332-8677. alibi.com/e/111930. ROBO TASK FORCE AFTER SCHOOL PROGRAM An afterschool robotics club for grades 3-7. ¡Explora! (1701 Mountain NW). $195-$230. 4-5:30pm. 224-8300. alibi.com/e/109594. RUDOLFO ANAYA INDUCTION ABQ RIDE inducts literary icon Rudolfo Anaya onto its Wall of Fame. Alvarado Transportation Center (100 First Street). 11:30am-1:30pm. 724-3100. alibi.com/e/111739. WEDNESDAY OCT 1 AMATEUR TELESCOPE MAKING/MAINTENANCE Take in a telescope for assistance, begin a telescope from scratch or just ask questions. Manzano Mesa Multigenerational Center (501 Elizabeth SE). 7pm. 275-8731. alibi.com/e/111913. BEGINNERS BREAKDANCE $10. 10-11am, 6-7pm. See 9/26 listing. BEGINNING BELLY DANCE Course is designed for students to grow at a measured pace while learning the fundamentals of belly dance. Maple Street Dance Studio (Alley Entrance) (3215 Central). $10 per class. 5:35-6:25pm. 453-9934. alibi.com/e/111275. CARMENCITA’S FITNESS FIESTA ZUMBA Carmencita makes you work with fun and challenging cumbia, salsa, merengue and other fitness dance moves. Rhythm Dance Company (3808 Central SE). $8-$9. 5:30-6:30pm. 250-6146. alibi.com/e/80563. CELEBRATE YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Have lunch with journalists and authors who have set the standard for reporters to obtain access to government records. Embassy Suites Hotel (1000 Woodward NE). $60-$4,000. 11:30am-1pm. alibi.com/e/111832. DANCING FOR BIRTH This prenatal exercise class combines gentle dance moves that feel great before and during labor. Inspired Birth and Families (6855 Fourth Street NW). $10, FREE for first class. 5:30-6:45pm. 850-3425. alibi.com/e/111716. FREE FAMILY NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM See the Wonder of Learning exhibit, and participate in hands-on activities and interactive tours. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science (1801 Mountain NW). 5:30-7pm. 841-2802. alibi.com/e/111502. GRANT WRITING WORKSHOP $899. 8:30am-5:30pm. See 9/29 listing. HORTICULTURE VOLUNTEER TRAINING Increase your plant knowledge, practical gardening skills, and learn great gardening tips from the garden staff. ABQ BioPark Botanic Garden (2601 Central NW). 9:30am-noon. 768-2000. alibi.com/e/98819. KABOOK! A story and activity program for children in grades 1-5. Esther Bone Memorial Library (950 Pinetree SE, Rio Rancho). 3-4pm. 891-5012. alibi.com/e/111831. MANUFACTURING DAY CELEBRATION Fourteen Albuquerque and Rio Rancho companies lead public and private tours of their facilities. Multiple Locations (Albuquerque). alibi.com/e/111959. MOMS MOMMIES ON MONDAY CANCER SUPPORT A child-friendly support group meeting twice monthly for moms with cancer. People Living Through Cancer Office (3411 Candelaria NE). 10-11:30am. 242-3263. alibi.com/e/74416. READ TO THE DOGS Children can head to the library and practice their reading with trained therapy dogs. East Mountain Library (1 Old Tijeras, Tijeras). 1-2pm. (505) 281-8508. alibi.com/e/106072. REID MIHALKO’S NEGOTIATING SUCCESSFUL THREESOMES Join world renowned sex and relationship educator Reid Mihalko of ReidAboutSex.com for this R-rated, fun-filled workshop. Self Serve (3904 Central SE). $25/person, $40/pair. 7:30-9pm. 265-5815. alibi.com/e/110348. SPIRITUAL ASTROLOGY Norwegian astrologer Per Henrik Gullfoss presents this lecture. Flying Star Café (723 Silver SW). $15. 7-9pm. 225-5001. alibi.com/e/105966. INDIAN BREAD Oven bread demonstration, baked fresh in the museum’s horno. Maxwell Museum of Anthropology (500 Redondo West NW). $5. 11am-3pm. 277-4405. alibi.com/e/111812. a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [15] ARTS | FeATuRe THEATER REVIEW BY LISA BARROW Love That Green Skin You’re In With a technicolor design, musical hook and LOL-worthy dialogue, Wicked has been celebrated by pop culture—if not always by critics—since it debuted on Broadway a decade ago with Kristin Chenoweth and Idina Menzel in the starring roles. The story turns The Wizard of Oz inside out and upside down: “Good” becomes insufferable, “evil” happens to be misunderstood, and politicians fail to rise to every possible occasion. That makes Wicked a postmodern romp worthy of anyone who’s ever looked askance at their grade-school history lessons after reading some Howard Zinn. Wicked Runs through Sunday, Oct. 5 Tuesdays through Thursdays 7:30pm; Fridays 8pm; Saturdays 2 and 8pm; Sundays 1 and 6:30pm popejoypresents.com, 925-5858 Tickets: $57.50 to $150; in-person lottery for $25 orchestra tickets available 2.5 hours before each performance This incarnation of Oz reveals the Wicked Witch of the West’s schoolgirl friendship with Glinda the Good, detailing how their hot-andcold relationship leads to the events so unjustly distorted in the famous story. The current touring production opened at Popejoy (203 Cornell NE) to a full and visibly thrilled house. Emma Hunton plays Elphaba, the green-skinned outcast with an extraordinary magical talent, while Chandra lee Schwartz threatens to steal the show as the intolerably twee, unrepentantly popular Galinda (who’ll later change her name in an act of conspicuous selflessness meant to impress a boy). I guffawed with the whole audience every time she squealed, flipped her hair and mispronounced a word. (My favorite, though, was her “Congratulotions” banner.) The land of Oz is plunged into upheaval as talking animals become personae non gratae. Elphaba’s love for her history teacher Dr. Dillamond, goatily embodied by Tom Flynn, keeps her from going along with the crowd. It’s a serviceable if not exactly subtle plot. (You can almost hear the refrains: When they came for the talking goats, I said nothing because I was not a goat …) What you shouldn’t expect from Wicked is an airtight plot. The ending, especially, defies both logic and logistics. (How did Elphaba—? Why exactly is Fiyero—? The Cowardly Lion because huh—? Never mind.) And the music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz contain just the kind of heavy-handed exposition that’s okay in a musical and not any other form of storytelling. Personally I found those elements clunky (though I’m sure plenty of superfans happily listen to the Grammy-winning original cast recording every night before bedtime). Also, critics sometimes cast Wicked as a story of female empowerment, but if that’s so, why does Madame Morrible (an exquisite Alison Fraser) meet her grim fate while the Wizard just flies back home? What has to be one of the keys to Wicked’s ongoing popularity, though, is its ability to appeal to multiple senses. The sets designed by Eugene Lee are a dazzling amalgam of steampunk aesthetic, cartoonish exuberance and world-building eye candy—just check out that golden, mechanical bobblehead employed by the Wizard as his disguise. The single set element conveys everything both terrifying and ridiculous about him. Susan Hilferty’s gem-tone costumes, with their bustles, lacings, asymmetry and movement, dazzle over and over again. Despite clocking in at nearly three hours, Wicked consistently turns up fresh pleasures from moment to moment—whether you like sarcasm or sincerity, dancing denizens or flying monkeys, this is an over-the-top spectacle that’s well worth experiencing. a [16] Bob Odenkirk: “I like to make people laugh. Like really crack up.” PHOTO BY SHARON ALAGNA We’�re All a Bunch of Silly Billies Bob Odenkirk on writing, weirdness and A Load of Hooey BY GENEVIEVE MUELLER f you see Bob Odenkirk on the street, try to restrain yourself. Since being cast in the award-winning “Breaking Bad,” “People yell out ‘Saul!’ at me, like I’m an object,” says Odenkirk. “That feels weird. But I get it too. If you’re part of something as big and impactful as ‘Breaking Bad,’ people can’t help kind of seeing you as some kind of object that suddenly materialized in front of them out of the ether.” It’s taken Odenkirk about five years to write and assemble the essays compiled in A Load of Hooey, his new book out nationally on Oct. 7. He comes to Bookworks (4022 Rio Grande NW) Sept. 27 for an early book release—copies of both Hooey and Hollywood Said No! (coauthored with Brian Posehn and David Cross) will be for sale. For Odenkirk a lot has changed in the past five years. Hooey reminds the world that this dramatic actor and director got his start in comedy and absurdist storytelling. Naturally many fans associate Odenkirk with “Breaking Bad” and the upcoming “Better Call Saul” on deeply emotional levels, although Odenkirk’s career is expansive and varied. “That feels weird to me, though,” says Odenkirk. “Every actor is just a person doing their job, and if they’re lucky the material marries up with their talents and limitations to be ‘good.’” It’s only recently that Odenkirk has made the switch to more dramatic acting parts. He started as an improviser, then moved to sketch with his comedy partner David Cross on “Mr. Show with Bob and David.” “I thought of myself primarily as a writer who acted I SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI Bob Odenkirk reads from A Load of Hooey Saturday, Sept. 27, 1pm Bookworks 4022 Rio Grande NW bkwrks.com, 344-8139 sometimes and sometimes directed. But lately I have felt both challenged and rewarded as an actor,” he says. “One reason might be that I have only recently been getting cast into dramatic shows and films. Even though I am given some comedy, I think I feel that as an actor I am a better presence and contributor surrounded by weightier situations.” Although he’s taken on these weightier roles for the past few years, A Load of Hooey marks a return to Odenkirk’s comedy-writing roots. Hooey (McSweeney’s; hardcover; $20) is a delightfully absurd collection of comedic essays with satirical elements. The collection has silly essays like “My Education, or, the Education of a Me, or, I Not Dumb,” where Odenkirk writes that his education on the streets “taught [him] very little algebra and absolutely no organic chemistry.” The book also includes the dark political satire “Hitler Dinner Party,” a one-act play in which the guests discuss what Hitler might do after the World War II thing and decide that he “pulled a real boner” going into war like that. Odenkirk also works elements of his improv background into Hooey. “Initially, you are improvising your way through a character voice and/or situation,” he notes. “All writers are improvisers. The difference is, they don’t immediately have an audience sitting right there watching. But the ‘Yes, and …’ basics of improvising are necessary when writing the first draft of anything.” The “Yes, and …” approach is a tenet of improv acting. The goal is to accept the reality of what’s occurring in the moment and then add to it. This is especially evident in “Hitler Dinner Party” with a chorus of guests who constantly raise the stakes and push boundaries. “I like to make people laugh. Like really crack up. When that happens, that makes me proudest,” says Odenkirk. “Cleverness is all well and good, and a grinning nod of the head can be nice, but a good, honest, surprised laugh is best.” And Hooey shines in this way. Nestled between the essays are short pieces called “Famous Quotes—Unabridged” with such quotes as, “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants. When I have failed miserably, that, too, was on the shoulders of giants—giant fuckups, that is.” Odenkirk attributes this gem to Sir Issac Newton. Odenkirk is gearing up for a brief book tour in which he’ll read, take questions, and “there even might be singing,” he says, “but since it’s me, you can’t rightly call it singing—not in the traditional sense of there being a melody and notes to it.” The genius of Odenkirk’s comedy, whether in his book Hooey or his improv and sketch, is its subtlety and seamlessness. Yes it’s absurd— at times it’s even dark and piercing—but mostly it’s essentially human and embedded with an innocent charm. “If anything ties my comic writing together, it is pointing out what a bunch of silly billies we all are,” says Odenkirk. Each essay seems to outdo the one before it—more absurd, more irreverent and way goofier. Humans need the reminder: They are seriously silly. a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [17] Arts & Lit Calendar EVENT | PREVIEW THURSDAY SEP 25 WORDS BOOKWORKS Porter and Ike Stockton: Colorado and New Mexico Border Outlaws. A reading and signing with writer Michael R. Maddox. 7pm. 344-8139. alibi.com/e/111786. DANE SMITH HALL, University of New Mexico Book Reading. Local poet Richard Vargas and novelist Erika T. Wurth read from their recently published books. 7-9pm. 401-7342. alibi.com/e/111512. THE SOURCE Fixed and Free Poetry Reading. Open mic readings as well as featured poets, each reading for about 15 minutes. Donations accepted. 7-9pm. 401-8139. alibi.com/e/70926. STAGE AUX DOG THEATRE The Jammer. Written by Rolin Jones, the play resurrects the greatest of American entertainments: the roller derby. Runs through 10/5. $20-$22. 8pm. 243-0596. alibi.com/e/108515. THE MAIN EVENT LOL Comedy Show 4. Comedic performances by Curt Fletcher, Black Mike, Keith Breckenridge and more. $5-$8. 8pm. 359-0195. alibi.com/e/109525. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER When the Stars Trembled in Rio Puerco. Directed by Shebana Coelho, this performance tells the oral history about the Rio Puerco Valley and the ranching families that lived there. Runs through 9/28. $15-$18. 7:30pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/111723. POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. Play delves into the life of a young girl who’ll eventually become the Wicked Witch of the West. Runs through 10/5. $57.50-$150. 7:30pm. 925-5858. alibi.com/e/100585. See “Theater News.” THE STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Thursday Night Laughs. Featuring three nationally touring stand-up comedians: Jay Lafarr, Alex “KOOLAID” Ansel and Curt Fletcher. $10. 7:30pm. 771-5680. alibi.com/e/105959. TRICKLOCK PERFORMANCE LABORATORY Big Love. The play follows 50 brides who arrive at a villa on the Italian coast, seeking refuge from their 50 grooms-to-be. Runs through 10/4. $18-$20. 8pm. alibi.com/e/111899. SONG & DANCE CROWNE PLAZA ALBUQUERQUE 23rd New Mexico Dance Fiesta. One of New Mexico’s biggest competitive, instructional and performance dance events, featuring workshops, performances and more. Prices vary. 7pm. 539-0036. alibi.com/e/111798. LEARN 516 ARTS Artist/Curator Talk. A talk with visiting artist Floyd D. Tunson and visiting curator Blake Milteer. 6pm. 242-1445. alibi.com/e/111894. UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO Crecer a Golpes: Cuarenta Años de Allende y Pinochet. Find out what has become of Latin America 40 years after the rise and fall of the Chilean dictatorship with author Diego Fonseca. 4-5pm. (915) 276-9220. alibi.com/e/111348. FILM KIMO THEATRE House of Frankenstein. Meet Count Dracula, the Wolf Man and Frankenstein’s monster in this classic starring Boris Karloff. Part of the Friday Fright Nights series. $5-$7. 7-8:15pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/111323. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER Alamar. In Pedro González-Rubio’s lyrical docudrama, a 5-year-old boy takes a trip with his father to Chinchorro Reef in Quintana Roo. 7pm. 246-2261. alibi.com/e/111521. FRIDAY SEP 26 ART METROPOLIS COMIC ART GALLERY The Art of Fighting 2014. Featuring over 50 international artists, a full tournament schedule featuring prizes, special events and guests. 7pm. alibi.com/e/110427. See preview box. WEEMS ART GALLERY The Retro Challenge 2014. New Mexico artist Dee Sanchez created 150 paintings in 150 days for $150 each for this special show and sale. 4-9pm. 293-6133. alibi.com/e/111350. STAGE ADOBE THEATER Nickel and Dimed. Written by Joan Holden, the play follows a middle-aged, middle-class woman struggling to make ends meet. Runs through 10/5. $12-$15. 8pm. 898-9222. alibi.com/e/95253. AUX DOG THEATRE The Jammer. $20-$22. 8pm. See 9/25 listing. BOX PERFORMANCE SPACE AND IMPROV THEATRE Oh, Susana! This comedy revue takes a look at what it truly [18] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI Fight the Good Fight Go on the offensive for a worthy cause this weekend with The Art of Fighting, a threeday gaming tournament and art exhibit raising money to combat childhood congenital heart disease. Kick off the battle royale Friday, Sept. 26, at Metropolis Comic Art Gallery (1102 Mountain NW) with an art opening at 7pm featuring works inspired by our favorite games, from Street Fighter to Mortal Kombat. Local talent as well as artists from comic art and gaming houses like Udon and Skullgirls unveil paintings, drawings and mixedFRIDAY media works SEPTEMBER 26 capturing the Metropolis Comic Art excitement of comic Gallery art and characters 1102 Mountain NW from popular titles. alibi.com/e/110427 Check the adorably 7pm stylized superhero renderings of Christopher Uminga, high-class My Little Pony interpretations by Sara Richard and much more. The event continues with a gaming tournament pitting world-champion special guests against Burque’s own heroes for prizes from big-name sponsors. Saturday night’s festivities include an East-vs.-West Albuquerque grudge match to be streamed live at twitch.tv/nmism. And on Sunday, partake in the warrior sounds of “The Music of Smash” live performance at noon. Last year the inaugural event raised over $4,000. All proceeds go to March of Dimes and Save Babies Through Screening Foundation. For more info and tournament details, viddy metropoliscomicart.com and nmism.com/aof. (Ian Wolff) a means to be a citizen of the 47th state. $10. 7-8:15pm. alibi.com/e/111359. Also, THE SHOW. Live comedy and improv. $8-$10. 9-10pm. alibi.com/e/111360. Also, Comedy? High energy, fast-moving and hilarious, Comedy? is Albuquerque’s alternative comedy troupe. $6. 10:30pm-11:45am. 404-1578. alibi.com/e/65092. FOUL PLAY CAFE, Sheraton Uptown Spirits of Suspicion. Dinner theater special about a woman trying to solve her husband’s murder that pays comic tribute to the Thin Man movies. $56.50. 7:30-9:30pm. 377-9593. alibi.com/e/105869. KIMO THEATRE Outside Mullingar. Written by award-winning playwright John Patrick Shanley, this romantic comedy follows the relationship between Rosemary and Anthony. $2-$40. 7:30-9pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/110334. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER When the Stars Trembled in Rio Puerco. $15-$18. 7:30pm. See 9/25 listing. POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. $57.50-$150. 8pm. See 9/25 listing. TRICKLOCK PERFORMANCE LABORATORY Big Love. $18-$20. 8pm. See 9/25 listing. UNM’S EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE, Center for the Arts As Five Years Pass. A deeply personal play that fuses memories from Federico García Lorca’s childhood with images from his imagination. $10-$15. 7:30-9pm. 277-4332. alibi.com/e/110673. THE VORTEX THEATRE Picasso at the Lapin Agile. Written by Steve Martin, the play outlines a conversation between Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso at a bar. Runs through 9/28. $15-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. 247-8600. alibi.com/e/95244. SONG & DANCE CROWNE PLAZA ALBUQUERQUE 23rd New Mexico Dance Fiesta. Prices vary. 7am. See 9/25 listing. Arts & Lit Calendar continues on page 20 WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [19] Arts & Lit Calendar continued from page 18 GUILD CINEMA Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920). The Invincible Czars, an Austin, Texas-based musical group, play their new score to the classic film live in the theater. $8. 10:30pm. 255-1848. alibi.com/e/112397. See “Reel World.” RODEY THEATRE, Popejoy Hall From the Horse’s Mouth: Magical Tales of Real Dancers. A triumphant dance theater production conceived and directed by Tina Croll & Jamie Cunningham. $8-$20. 7:30-9:30pm. 277-4332. alibi.com/e/111533. LEARN SANTA FE UNIVERSITY OF ART AND DESIGN, Santa Fe Ancient Art, New Images. A lecture with fresco painter and university alumnus Frederico Vigil. 7pm. (877) 732-5977. alibi.com/e/111819. SATURDAY SEP 27 WORDS BOOKWORKS A Load of Hooey. A reading and signing with Bob Odenkirk, aka Saul Goodman of “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul.” 1pm. 344-8139. alibi.com/e/111790. See “Arts Feature.” PAGE ONE BOOKSTORE Exo. A reading and signing with science fiction author Steven Gould. 3-4:45pm. 294-2026. alibi.com/e/109657. RUDE BOY COOKIES The Essential Gluten-Free Cookie Guide Book. A reading and signing with gluten-free food blogger Brianna Hobbs. 2-4pm. alibi.com/e/111461. TORTUGA GALLERY A Happening for Peace Love and Understanding. 100K Poets for Change and Things in Light present readings and performances by Larry Goodell, Lisa Gill, Albino Carrillo and more. $3 suggested donation. 7:30-10pm. (836) 668-1270. alibi.com/e/112040. TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK ABQ Slams City Championship. Albuquerque’s best spoken word battle to represent the Duke City at the Individual World Poetry Slam Championships. 6-9pm. 243-6752. alibi.com/e/111807. TREASURE HOUSE BOOKS, Old Town Paloma and the Dust Devil at the Balloon Festival and more. Marcy Heller signs a collection of her children’s books. 1-3pm. 242-7204. AFRICAN AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, Expo NM Albuquerque Ukekopelli Festival. All-day workshops with nationally touring instructors Lil Rev, Hiedi Swedberg, Daniel Ward, Sid Hauseman and Washtub Jerry on ukulele. $50 and up. 974-0084. alibi.com/e/110658. FILM APERTURE CENTER, MESA DEL SOL Movies on the Mesa: Despicable Me 2. Take a blanket and some chairs for this free screening. Food and brews on hand. 5pm. 452-2600. alibi.com/e/111836. See “Reel World.” NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER The Real Rio Puerco. A video presentation/Q&A with folk historian Nasario Garcia. 2pm. 724-4771. alibi.com/e/111519. SUNDAY SEP 28 WORDS BOOKWORKS Wilderness. A reading and signing with writer Debra Bloomfield. 3pm. 344-8139. alibi.com/e/111793. TREASURE HOUSE BOOKS, Old Town A Short & Happy Guide to Financial Well-Being. A reading and signing with writer Sherri Burr. 1-3pm. 242-7204. ART METROPOLIS COMIC ART GALLERY The Art of Fighting 2014. Noon. See 9/26 listing. STAGE ADOBE THEATER Nickel and Dimed. $12-$15. 2pm. See 9/26 listing. AUX DOG THEATRE The Jammer. $20-$22. 2pm, 6:30pm. See 9/25 listing. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER When the Stars Trembled in Rio Puerco. $15-$18. 2pm. See 9/25 listing. POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. $57.50-$150. 1pm, 6:30pm. See 9/25 listing. THE STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Thunder From Down Under. See some dynamic dance routines, barely there costumes, state-of-the-art lighting and chiseled abs. $20-$50. 7pm. 867-0000. alibi.com/e/110405. UNM’S EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE, Center for the Arts As Five Years Pass. $10-$15. 2pm. See 9/26 listing. THE VORTEX THEATRE Picasso at the Lapin Agile. $15-$22. 2pm. See 9/26 listing. SONG & DANCE CENTRAL FEATURES Central Features Grand Opening Exhibit. Featuring works by Indiana-based Petronio Bendito and an installation of sculptures by Jami Porter Lara. 5-8pm. 243-3389. alibi.com/e/110684. THE LA UNDERGROUND Graffiti Street Art Fest. Original artworks, prints and photos for sale by some of the best graffiti and street artists from around the world. 6-10pm. 246-9455. alibi.com/e/111918. MADRID MAIN STREET, Madrid The Wounded Healer. A special cultural opening featuring a triumvirate of local art, music and writing, featuring painter James Hayes, Jim Almand and more. 4-8pm. METROPOLIS COMIC ART GALLERY The Art of Fighting 2014. 10am. See 9/26 listing. RICHARD LEVY GALLERY Journey To Wilderness Opening Reception. A selection of large-scale photographs from the Wilderness series by Debra Bloomfield. Runs through 10/24. 6-8pm. 766-9888. alibi.com/e/105767. CROWNE PLAZA ALBUQUERQUE 23rd New Mexico Dance Fiesta. Prices vary. 9am. See 9/25 listing. THE KOSMOS Chatter Sunday: Other Worlds. Featuring music by Serenata of Santa Fe, Gail Springer (soprano), Elena Sopoci, Michael Shu (violin) and more. $5-$15. 10:30-11:30am. 307-9647. alibi.com/e/111313. OSCAR HUBER MEMORIAL BALLPARK, Madrid Madrid Blues Fest. The New Mexico Jazz Workshop provides an afternoon of blues. $15-$20. 2-6pm. alibi.com/e/110778. TANNEX JAHA+LOU. A touring collaboration between two queer witch priestesses who weave sound, textile and a sacred art installation to facilitate group healing. $8-$20 sliding scale. 7pm. (971) 222-6461. alibi.com/e/111754. See “Show Up!.” STAGE WORDS ADOBE THEATER Nickel and Dimed. $12-$15. 8pm. See 9/26 listing. AUX DOG THEATRE The Jammer. $20-$22. 8pm. See 9/25 listing. BOX PERFORMANCE SPACE AND IMPROV THEATRE Oh, Susana! $10. 7-8:15pm. Also, THE SHOW. $8-$10. 9-10pm. See 9/26 listing. EFFEX Bigger, Better, Wetter: A Pornotopia Fundraiser. Event features burlesque performers Holly Rebelle, Rex Starchild and Nikkii Fixx, and a performance by the Albuquerque Aerialist Collective. $10. 7pm. 265-5815. alibi.com/e/111532. FOUL PLAY CAFE, Sheraton Uptown Spirits of Suspicion. $56.50. 7:30-9:30pm. See 9/26 listing. NATIONAL HISPANIC CULTURAL CENTER When the Stars Trembled in Rio Puerco. $15-$18. 7:30pm. See 9/25 listing. POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. $57.50-$150. 2pm, 8pm. See 9/25 listing. TRICKLOCK PERFORMANCE LABORATORY Big Love. $18-$20. 8pm. See 9/25 listing. UNM’S EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE, Center for the Arts As Five Years Pass. $10-$15. 7:30-9pm. See 9/26 listing. THE VORTEX THEATRE Picasso at the Lapin Agile. $15-$22. 7:30-9:30pm. See 9/26 listing. BOOKWORKS Tin House. Albuquerque writer and provocateur Mike Smith reads from his new piece in the fall 2014 Tin House “Tribes” issue with music and projections. 7-8pm. 344-8139. alibi.com/e/106873. CROWNE PLAZA ALBUQUERQUE 23rd New Mexico Dance Fiesta. Prices vary. 7am. See 9/25 listing. KIMO THEATRE The Wind. The Invincible Czars, An Austin, Texas-based quartet, play their original score to this classic silent film. $15. 7-9pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/110375. See “Reel World.” RODEY THEATRE, Popejoy Hall From the Horse’s Mouth: SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI LEARN ART SONG & DANCE [20] Magical Tales of Real Dancers. $8-$20. 7:30-9:30pm. See 9/26 listing. TUESDAY SEP 30 STAGE POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. $57.50-$150. 7:30pm. See 9/25 listing. SONG & DANCE ST. JAMES TEAROOM An Evening of World Class Jazz. A performance by jazz trumpeter J. Kyle Gregory. $60. 6:30-8:30pm. 242-3752. alibi.com/e/111810. WEDNESDAY OCT 1 STAGE POPEJOY HALL, UNM Center for the Arts Wicked. $57.50-$150. 7:30pm. See 9/25 listing. LEARN GUERRILLA PHOTO GROUP Open Studio Play Time. A creative collaborative for models, photographers, stylists, makeup/hair artists and clothing designers. 5:30pm-midnight. 681-7471. alibi.com/e/89605. SOUTHWEST WRITERS OFFICE, Carlisle Executive Suites Strangeness: Writing Science Fiction, Fantasy and Worlds on the Bias. A six-week writing challenge with author Betsy James, featuring assignments designed to find your stories and set them in motion. $240-$290. 5:45-7:45pm. 830-6034. alibi.com/e/107112. FILM KIMO THEATRE Taxi Driver (1978). See Martin Scorsese’s classic film starring Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster. Part of the De Niro Done Right film series. $5-$7. 7-9pm. 768-3544. alibi.com/e/110912. a Unof f i c ial B al loo n Fi es ta G ui d e and Be st of Bu rqu e rest au r an t s Every October, thousands of tourists flood into Albuquerque from all over the world to witness the dazzling spectacle of balloons filling our high desert skies. There to meet them is the Alibi’s annual Unofficial Balloon Fiesta Guide, the definitive source for everything related to Albuquerque’s biggest tourist attraction. While in town, these tourists will quickly learn our city is a food lover’s paradise. Every year the Alibi celebrates the heavenliness of our local cuisine with its massive Best of Burque Restaurants, released a week after the Fiesta Guide issue. In this issue we unveil our reader’s votes on the finest eating establishments this city has to offer—everything from the tastiest dim sum to the finest filet mignon. Keep your business in the minds of our 205,000* readers by placing ads in both of these hugely popular issues. Unofficial Balloon Fiesta Guide on stands oCtoBer 2 ad deadline Fri, sept. 26 Best of Burque restaurants on stands oCtoBer 9 ad deadline Fri, oct. 3 Call 346-0660 to reserve ad spaCe WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [21] FOOD | restaurant review MEDITATIVE MEAL BY AMELIA OLSON Burgers and Abrasive Drummers Things I felt while eating a cheeseburger at Gecko’s Like so many days before today, I am sitting on the same wooden bench I once sat on as an interested and impatient 23-year-old waiting for a date that my friend blindly set me up on. There is music playing on the radio that makes very little sense to me. Though it’s easy to imagine how the lead singer found his growling voice and abrasive drummer. I picture him, 27, and really into an ocean sport—probably surfing. I imagine him as an openly emotional person who probably smokes weed and wears those metal studded belts. What he lacks in humility he makes up for in inclusiveness. I imagine him practicing all the time with his abrasive drummer. Maybe his abrasive drummer is along for the ride, all the while thinking the band won’t go further than Santa Cruz. I think of the complexity and late night studio sessions and movement and exchange of money involved in getting this music out into the world, only for me to be slightly annoyed by it. How ungrateful we can be as humans, discarding the sounds and people and clothes that just don’t make the cut. What a gift to be able to choose anything at all. �“rock”�and Brews The Giant Soft Authentic Bavarian Pretzel. Don’t get your hopes up; we have a really good photographer. Kiss Army Department of Veterans Affairs opens new assembly hall at intersection of Montgomery and Hell BY JESSICA CASSYLE CARR Rock & Brews Gecko’s Bar & Tapas 3500 Central SE (Nob Hill) 262-1848, geckosbar.com Hours: 11am-last call Monday through Sunday Price Range: $4-$12 tapas and entrées Vibe: Patio and lots of dogs Vegetarian and vegan options: Yes Extras: Dogs get free bacon, free Wi-Fi, TVs I order a half pound cheeseburger ($9) without a bun because I have a gluten allergy, or at least a sensitivity, or maybe it’s just a madeup explanation for an always hurting stomach from the unbearable anxiety being a human can bring on. When I order no bun, I worry that the server thinks I am on a diet. I don’t know why I don’t want her to think I am on a diet; I feel equally stupid saying I “avoid gluten.” This makes me annoying. This makes me the type of person who thinks they’re better. This makes me the type of person who is going to question every aspect of the bill, only to leave a 10percent tip and some snotty advice below my signature. But I’m not like that, and so I let her believe I’m on a diet. This makes ordering fries that are battered and crisped in grease very confusing for the diet thing, and also for the gluten thing. I bet the abrasive drummer has dietary restrictions. A lot of sensitive people do. Maybe all the people who have dietary restrictions are actually just the most sensitive people in existence. I think about science and how they conduct food allergy tests with tiny strips of things that itch on your back. What a profoundly strange, and surprisingly romantic, way to discover your enemy. Strap them to your back and wait it out. Whatever leaves a mark—that’s it. My cheeseburger and I contemplate who made these benches. Where the wood is from. Who chopped it. If “Amanda + David” are, in fact, together forever, as their carving exclaims. People slowly pour in, tired and thirsty from their jobs. I wonder what all their allergies are. If they know Amanda and David. If they are Amanda and David. And how the abrasive drummer is spending his early afternoon. a [22] PHOTOS BY ERIC WILLIAMS • ERICWPHOTO.COM or those who consider themselves gourmands, most chain restaurants lack the cultural cachet of small-scale, local operations and are a frivolous use of precious gastrointestinal real estate. A visit to one of these establishments is usually out of familial or occupational schmobligation, being stuck in an airport or on an interstate, or an attempt to study society’s lowest common denominator ... or derive condescending pleasure from it. Much insight into our civilization and many jokes can be squeezed from the analysis of a Cheddar Bay Biscuit, a Never Ending Pasta Bowl, a Southwestern Egg Roll, a Bloomin’ Onion or a Triple Chocolate Meltdown. Excessively covered in the local news and subsequently buzzed about amongst the citizens of Albuquerque, Rock & Brews is a newcomer to the world of mainstream food, dreamed up by veterans of mainstream music: The Demon (Gene Simmons) and Starchild (Paul Stanley) of KISS. These are two of the glam rock gods behind the most spectacularly ridiculous stage shows of the ’70s, the greatest non-live live album of all time and, now, the Backstage Burger and the Beast of Birden Chicken Sandwich. The restaurant chain, which emerged in Southern California in 2012, has rapidly expanded to eight frothy locations including one near the intersection of Montgomery and San Mateo—a socially fragmented part of town bogged down with enough commercial strips and parking lots to make anyone want a mind-altering refreshment. I pilgrimaged to Rock & Brews on the second Saturday night of September. After one of the abundant, exceedingly friendly, lanyardwearing staff informed my companion and I about the 45-minute wait, we bided our time and took inventory of the atmosphere. The lofty ceilings and communion between indoor and outdoor space, picnic-style seating and F SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI 4800 Montgomery NE 881-4248 rockandbrews.com Hours: 11am to 11pm Sunday through Thursday 11am to 12am Friday and Saturday Vibe: McRocanrol Makeup: Bring your own Rock and roll: ‘Till about 11, and party on Saturdays if you can find a babysitter. Extras: Play area; general sense of discomfort The Alibi recommends: The Launchpad copious oversized flat screen televisions lend a Las Vegas-meets-Texas steak house-meetssports bar feel. The walls are emblazoned with an exuberant, large-scale collage of the most obvious figures in rock from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s—The Beatles, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, etc. Women are represented by Joan Jett, Blondie and Fleetwood Mac in the dining room, with Janis Joplin hiding out in a bathroom stall. Jimi Hendrix is the only black man I spotted on the walls. This narrow, clumsy, erstwhile, historically inept context of rock, defined by Rock & Brews as mostly white baby boomer males with multi-platinum albums, aggravated me immediately. The “November Rain” video played behind the bar, and its New Mexicodesert-filmed aerial guitar solo scene calmed my nerves. Later at our picnic table on the patio, we were sandwiched between a multi-generational family and a group of non-conforming conformist young adults. The patio boasts spectacular views of the Payless ShoeSource, Chick-fil-A and the Ross Dress for Less. It is also equipped with a play area for children. You see this operation, which is founded upon the institution of rock and roll—which is traditionally intertwined with sex, drugs, Satan worshiping and other hedonistic activities—touts itself as a family-oriented restaurant. At this point my head was about to explode, but not from the paradoxes posed by the Rock & Brews concept. Instead my ailment was the result of a collection of discordant, high-pitched squeals ringing from the play area. Once my friend and I were set up with waters and brews selected from a vast array of draughts and bottles, we set out to decide what “Opening Acts” to order. We selected the Hatch Green Chile Mac ‘N Cheese ($9.99) and the Giant Soft Authentic Bavarian Pretzel ($8.99, plus $1.79 to add Bier Cheese). The small dish of overcooked pasta arrived glued together with a flavorless sauce and garnished with approximately a fourth of a cup of bright green, chopped chile. The pretzel tasted like it came from a nearby gas station rather than Bavaria, and the spicy sweet mustard that went with it possessed a distinctly radioactive flavor. The bier cheese was unangenehm. Though I’d made up my mind to order the “VIP Salad” called Paint It Blackened Salmon Caesar ($14.99) and maybe an “Any Way You Want It” “Front Row Pizza” ($8.99 to $16.99), the poor performance of the “Opening Acts” combined with the persistent shrieking in the play area left me not too excited to go crazy with KISS. Plus, I don’t think it’s too much to ask for a cloth napkin and a seat back to lean on when paying $14.99 for a salad. We got our check and left to the sound of some desolate Sheryl Crow song. At this particular time and place, rock and roll really was dead (kind of like it was in the 1983 “Lick It Up” video). Being that there are plenty of folks here with conventional palates, I predict that Rock & Brews will do great in Albuquerque. For the rest of us, the niche this place purports to fill is already occupied by any of the many local breweries, music venues and food trucks (and various combinations thereof). The La Cumbre drafts at Sister have more thunder. a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [23] Chowtown a rotating guide to restaurants we like suggest a restaurant or search for more at: w alibi.com/chowtown These listings have no connection with Alibi advertising Jukebox Jams and Live Music DOWNTOWN ANODYNE • $ 409 Central NW, 244-1820 [BAR] This upstairs home-away-from-home noir bar is full of dark corners and framed paintings of poodles. A jukebox, mood lighting and tuckedaway booths let you take in the atmosphere while remaining autonomous. No matter what social clique you belong to or what your beverage of choice is, the staff at Anodyne makes sure you get it fast. It only takes a few visits before the bartenders know what you want before you even ask for it. BLACKBIRD BUVETTE 509 Central NW, 243-0878 • $$ [BAR AND GRILL/PUB] Brainchild of local band The Dirty Novels, the old home of Pearl’s Dive has been appropriately rock ’n’ rolled with excellent music, black-clad waitresses and a cool look. There are an impressive number of draft and bottled microbrew beers, which are fan-freakingtastic on the back patio. While Blackbird recently shut down its kitchen (RIP best sweet potato chips in town), they are still one of the best places in Albuquerque to see an awesome live show and never pay a cover. BURT’S TIKI LOUNGE 313 Gold SW, 247-2878 • $ [BAR] Back from the dead (and boy are we happy about it!) Burt’s still has the old Burt’s charm. Which is to say, it’s a little rough around the edges, but still one of the city’s finest places to wet one’s whistle, take a food truck break outside and listen to live music. SISTER 407 Central NW, 242-4900 • $ [BAR] The cavernous, ground-floor counterpart to Anodyne, Sister is a space tailor-made for happenings. This is a perfect spot for enjoying a quiet dip into the vast draft beer selection with your comrades after work or boogying to the multitude of live bands that occupy its stage nearly every night. I-25 CORRIDOR of beer styles brewed right on the premises, one of which will almost certainly fill your specific craving. In addition to the cold taps, one or two of the beers are often available from the cask. As you sip, play a game of pool upstairs, scratch under your well-behaved pet’s collar, listen to the frequent live music, and chat with the alwaysfriendly fellow beer-lovers. There’s no house menu, but it seems like a food truck or two is always parked right out front to serve hungry drinkers. NOB HILL CELLAR BAR AT ZINC 3009 Central NE, 254-ZINC (9462) • $$$ [AMERICAN] Zinc is a delightfully renovated historic space in Nob Hill, reborn as an upscale restaurant serving elegant American food with noticeable French inspiration. Downstairs the wine bar attracts a younger crowd for drinks and music. The happy hour menu, wines by the glass and prices are the best around. MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION 3201 Central NE, 255-2424 • $$ [AMERICAN] While sometimes toting a party-hard crowd, Monte Vista showcases a diverse group of live musicians. Drinks are affordable, and the beef there is grass-fed, New Mexico-grown and steroid and antibiotic-free, and the cooks at Monte Vista deserve praise for what they do with it. The freshly ground burgers are juicy and big, the steak frites hit the spot, and the music will get you out of your seat. SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL 3500 Central SE, 255-8781 • $$$ [ITALIAN] The surprising thing about Scalo is that it’s simultaneously more fancy and less expensive than you’d think. It’s just as breezy and classy as ever in its high-ceilinged dining room. All of the bottles on the wine list are half-price on Monday nights, and there’s free, live music in the bar. SHADE TREE CUSTOMS AND CAFE 3407 Central NE, 200-0777 • $$ If you’re into meat and motors, you should check this place out. The back half of the building is reserved for customizing motorcycles, while the front half is a rollicking restaurant with a great beer selection and a stage for lively music. The menu revels in heavier fare like burgers and fried chicken. Stop by in the morning for the best-tasting breakfast in Nob Hill. [DELI/SANDWICHES] TWO FOOLS TAVERN 3211 Central NE, 265-7447 • $$ [BAR AND GRILL/PUB] Deep-frying may well be a Scottish national pastime, pursued with the same extremist zeal as soccer hooliganism and pub patronage. Sink your teeth into one of the breaded and fried items Two Fools Tavern offers and you’ll understand why. This British Isles-style pub is the brainchild of successful restaurateur Tom White (Scalo and Il Vicino). Highlights include perfect fish and chips, buckets of beer, scads of Scotches and Saturday and Sunday brunch with, of course, live Celtic music. ZACATECA’S TACOS & TEQUILA 3423 Central NE, 255-TACO (8226) • $$ LA CUMBRE BREWING CO. 3313 Girard NE, 872-0225 • $ [BREWERY] This micro brewery features a variety [MEXICAN] Zacateca’s is an upscale taco-andtequila concept, the new baby of Mark Kiffin, whose Santa Fe restaurant The Compound is KEY: $ = Inexpensive $8 or less | $$ = Moderate $8 to $15 | $$$ = Expensive $15 to $20 | $$$$ = Very Expensive $20 and up [24] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI SHADE TREE CUSTOMS AND CAFÉ ERIC WILLIAMS • ERICWPHOTO.COM The STC (Southern Tasty Chicken) dinner renowned for its ingredients and artistry. His Pacific rock cod taco is perfectly browned on the outside, juicy on the inside and oozing with glorious fish grease. With the addition of coleslaw and habanero salsa, this is not the taco of anyone’s abuelita. Toast her health with a three-mescal sampler, which comes in terra cotta dishes. Often features live music. you’re stuffed. Be sure to sit in the bar section and take advantage of their jukebox to take in the full mood and energy of this Albuquerque gem. UNIVERSITY 66 DINER 1405 Central SE, 247-1421 • $ NORTH VALLEY VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE 6855 Fourth Street NW, 341-0831 • $$$$ [STEAKHOUSE] Vernon’s is a swanky underground spot for good eats and high times, delivered speakeasy-style. The dining room is walled with lustrous, ebony adobe, and the tables are clothed in crisp, black and white linens. By the glass or bottle, there’s plenty of quality hooch. The menu is classic steakhouse stuff, with beef tournedos in a silky demiglace, fresh fish and a damn fine veal Oscar. Check out the Black Diamond Lounge to take in the fancy cocktails and live music. OLD TOWN ST. CLAIR WINERY & BISTRO 901 Rio Grande NW, 243-9916 • $$ [AMERICAN] St. Clair Vineyards has been operating this bistro to local acclaim since 2005. Two patios and a spacious front, specialty wines and a well-stocked gift shop bring wine festival flair to thirsty Burqueños year-round. Enjoy a glass of Pinot Grigio, and enjoy live music Thursday-Saturday. SOUTHEAST CERVANTES RESTAURANT & LOUNGE 5801 Gibson SE, 262-2253 • $$ [NEW MEXICAN] Ah, Cervantes. It represents Albuquerque as we like to think of it: unbound by trends, adorned in velvet paintings, sometimes sketchy but mostly just full of good people. Its 1970s-style dining room is the perfect backdrop for ordering timeless homecooked New Mexican food and eating until [DINER] Step back in time for old-fashioned diner food, juke box oldies and atmosphere with a New Mexican twist (incarnate in the hotand-spicy Frito pie). The real stars in this place, though, are the awesome frozen desserts. They run the gamut from mammoth banana splits to 99-cent teeny-weeny hot fudge sundaes. The milkshakes come in almost any flavor combination you can think of and are some of the creamiest, most lip-smacking concoctions around. Voted Best Milkshakes for 2013. BRICKYARD PIZZA 2216 Central SE, 262-2216 • $$ [PIZZA] Brickyard Pizza is known for fast slices and beers on the cheap. It’s the only full bar directly across from UNM, making it the prime watering hole for your post-theater and postor pre-class needs. Grab a pie, sip on a beer, and be sure to check out their open mic on Tuesday nights, which undoubtedly hosts the city’s most hiddenly talented folks. CARRARO’S PIZZA AND ITALIAN RESTAURANT & JOE’S PLACE 108 Vassar SE, 268-2300 • $ New Shows, New Lineup, More Laughs, More Insight [PIZZA] In the front, it’s a standard restaurant laid out with a small bar and big window facing the street. Travel a short way through a blacklit hall and enter the kind of divey neighborhood hangout this city needs more of, complete with TVs, a jukebox, blacklight alien posters, a ping pong table, air hockey and arcade games. Though the entire menu is available no matter where you choose to spend your time, you can’t go wrong with the twistycrust pizza. Its foundation is really more braided golden bread than crust, and it’s available by the slice or the pie. a Your new program schedule is available at KANW.com KEY: $ = Inexpensive $8 or less | $$ = Moderate $8 to $15 | $$$ = Expensive $15 to $20 | $$$$ = Very Expensive $20 and up WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [25] REEL WORLD FILM | revIew BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY Showcase showdown The New Mexico Film Office has announced it’s looking for work to spotlight in the annual New Mexico Filmmakers Showcase. The Film Office will begin accepting entries on Friday, Sept. 26, and will close on Friday, Nov. 21, at 5pm. There is no charge to submit an entry, and the showcase is open to all New Mexico residents. According to the NMFO, this event “not only gives local filmmakers the chance to see their work on the big screen, but also gives the general public the opportunity to experience all of the creative talent within the state.” A panel of industry judges will evaluate the films in eight categories—from sci-fi/fantasy to comedy to animation. The winning films will be screened on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2015, at the Jean Cocteau Cinema in Santa Fe. Other entries will be shown on Sunday, Jan. 25, on a firstcome/first-served basis. Entry forms are available now at nmfilm.com. Can you still be a poster child for something at this age? Love Is Strange Older couple opts for marriage, ends up out on the street in quietly emotional love story Czar wars Austin’s Invincible Czars, a “classically minded klezmer, waltz, funk, polka and heavy metal” group, will be coming to Albuquerque this weekend to perform not one but two live movie scores. On Friday, Sept. 26, the band will be at Guild Cinema (3405 Central NE) performing their updated score to the 1920 silent film classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The film, starring the legendary John Barrymore, is considered by many to be the first American horror film. The Czars’ “minimal, spooky, slow and foreboding” soundtrack will be performed live starting at 10:30pm. All seats are $8. The very next night, the invincible ones will be heading down to Albuquerque’s KiMo Theatre (423 Central NW) to perform a live, original score for 1928’s The Wind. The film, starring Lillian Gish, is considered one of the last great films of the silent era. Gish plays an innocent young girl who moves from her childhood home to her cousin’s isolated ranch out on the Western prairie where family tensions and an inhospitable environment combine to drive the poor lass mad. Tickets for the KiMo show are $15. Doors open at 6:30pm. Show starts at 7pm. For more details go to guildcinema.com, kimotickets.com or invincibleczars.com. Despicable screening Mesa Del Sol’s “Movies on the Mesa” series continues this Saturday, Sept. 27, at Aperture Park (5700 University SE). The park will open to families starting at 5pm for face painting, a jump house and assorted food trucks. At dusk you’ll be able to watch the animated comedy Despicable Me 2 on the park’s giant outdoor screen. Blankets and chairs are encouraged. This event is free and open to the public. For more info go to mesadelsolnm.com. a [26] BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY Love Is Strange T he incredibly empathetic indie drama Love Is Strange accomplishes a deft sleight-of-hand trick. It takes a contentious, hot-button issue (gay marriage) and uses it as the basis of a patient, everyday drama that feels cool as a cucumber. There’s no loud preaching here, no hysterics, no agenda driving the narrative. Small, compact and loaded with unexpected emotional impact, Love Is Strange provides the simplest and most direct proof (as if we needed any) that gay marriage should be accepted, celebrated and then promptly ignored like every other American institution. Filmmaker Ira Sachs has made a name for himself writing and directing a series of films focusing on love and marriage, most of them from a homosexual perspective (The Delta, Forty Shades of Blue, Married Life, Keep the Lights On). His films have always been smart, evenhanded and refreshingly realistic. His is not the work of an activist hoping to change minds. It’s the work of a quiet observer trying to capture exactly what he sees in front of him. Love Is Strange is his most self-assured and instantly accessible work to date. John Lithgow (The World According to Garp, “3rd Rock from the Sun”) and Alfred Molina (Spider-Man 2, Frida) star as an older gay couple living in New York City. A cuter, happier couple you could not find. They’re smart. They’re artistic. They wear suits. Heck, you might even describe them as “boring.” (What more homogenizing accolade could an aging gay couple hope for?) Ben (Lithgow) is a retired painter SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI Opens Friday 9/26 Written and directed by Ira Sachs Starring John Lithgow, Alfred Molina, Marisa Tomei Rated R living on a pension. George (Molina) is a music teacher working at a private Catholic school. The two have been together for 29 years. So when they decide to get married, it’s no big deal. Really. Their friends are happy, and there’s a little ceremony. But these two have been together for three decades. Marriage doesn’t change the formula a whole lot. For them, anyway. To certain other people, though, marriage is a big deal. Once the archdiocese gets wind of George’s nuptials, problems sprout up. The school he’s been employed at for years can stomach a quiet, conservative homosexual. But a flagrantly married one? Not so much. With George’s job gone and Ben’s income fixed, the couple suddenly have trouble maintaining their New York lifestyle. No longer able to afford their condo and bedeviled by New York’s labyrinthine real estate laws, George and Ben find themselves temporarily homeless. After some squabbling among family and friends, it’s decided that the most efficient thing for the couple to do is split up for the time being. Ben will go live with his nephew (Darren E. Burrows—good old Ed from “Northern Exposure”). And George will shack up with a couple of gay cops whose couch is free. George and Ben try their best to secure a new home together, but even with government assistance, it’s a difficult task. (Honestly, the film may cause you to think less about gay marriage and more about the economic insanity of trying to live in New York.) Time drags on for our happy couple, causing increasing friction among all parties involved. Ben starts to wear on the nerves of his nephew’s wife (Academy Awardwinner Marisa Tomei) and teenage son (Charlie Tahan, Blue Jasmine). George, meanwhile, starts to feel like the odd man out in a household full of young party people. Love Is Strange doesn’t waste its time crafting a complicated story. It simply introduces us to its characters and drops them into an uncomfortable situation. Lithgow and Molina bring decades’ worth of acting skill to their roles—which mostly means they never spend a moment “acting.” A couple who have lived together for three decades don’t need a lot of dialogue, and this film’s leads speak volumes with their silences and small gestures. Love Is Strange isn’t the kind of film that underlines its important sentences. It doesn’t craft monologues. There are no unnecessary emotional flourishes. It’s content to linger in the moment, however long that moment might be. As a result, it never feels less than perfectly authentic. For some, of course, the film may be too gentle, too small of scale. But for all its reserved humor, understated humanity and polite sentiment, Love Is Strange is an intimate, wonderfully grownup tale of modern marriage. It’s a gay love story that earns itself the highest accolade—it makes the key adjective irrelevant. a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [27] TELEVISION | IDIOT BOX #sitcom, #topical “Selfie” on ABC BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY W ith TV losing viewers every day to cell phone videos and “freemium” iPad games, networks are fighting back—mostly in lame ways, like tacking hashtags on to shows (“#CandidlyNicole,” “#RichKids of Beverly Hills”) in hopes of tricking people into thinking they’re ... what? Tweets? I don’t honestly know. So it’s surprising it’s taken this long for someone to come up with a TV show that full-on revels in today’s climate of YouTube celebrities, Snapchat sexting and ASMR videos (they’re a thing, look them up). “Selfie” is ABC’s winkingly self-aware new sitcom about fame and success in the internet age. The show stars former “Doctor Who” companion Karen Gillan as Eliza Dooley. Eliza is a successful pill-pushing saleswoman at a major pharmaceutical company. She’s also an internet star with a quarter million Twitter and Facebook followers who hang on her every duckface selfie and “What I had for lunch” Vine. Vapid, selfabsorbed and basically unaware of anything that doesn’t take place on her cell phone screen, Eliza has set herself up for a very big fall—which occurs when an airplane flight, a cheating lover and two large airline sickness bags conspire to reward her with an #EpicFail. Since those who live by the sword are condemned to die by it, Eliza instantly becomes an internet laughing stock, the butt of a thousand cruel memes. But she spots her salvation in Luddite, social media-hating coworker Henry (John Cho from Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle and Star Trek). Henry works in marketing, and he’s a wizard at rebranding dangerous or useless products. Surely he can do something to THE WEEK IN SLOTH THURSDAY 25 “How to Get Away with Murder” (ABC 9pm) Viola Davis (The Help) stars as a criminal defense professor who makes her students solve crimes. Presumably for extra credit. “Jokers Wild” (truTV 8pm) Sadly, not a remake of the old TV game show, but some kind of reality/sketch comedy show in which the hidden camera pranksters of “Impractical Jokers” share a “comical look at their personal lives.” FRIDAY 25 “Transparent” (Amazon.com streaming anytime) Amazon gets into the “must see TV” business with this winning dramedy about a parent (Jeffrey Tambor from “Arrested Development”) who decides rather late in life to switch genders. SATURDAY 27 “Saturday Night Live” (KOB-4 10:30pm) The awesomesauce Chris Pratt, recently catapulted to the A- [28] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI rehabilitate Eliza’s shattered digital rep. If that sounds suspiciously like the plot to My Fair Lady (and by extension Pygmalion), that’s because it is. “Selfie” probably wouldn’t work as a computer-age knockoff of the familiar tale if it weren’t so upfront about it. The main characters are named Eliza and Henry, after all. And the show is obviously hyperconscious of the world we now live in. Thankfully the nonstop monsoon of multimedia references is delivered with just enough snark that it doesn’t feel like some unwelcomingly incomprehensible Subreddit category. “Selfie” is written and executive produced by Emily Kapnek, who created the occasionally snappy ABC series “Suburgatory.” “Selfie” has much of the same manic energy, and when the show is firing on all cylinders, it works. Gillan and Cho are sharp performers, and they do some good work here. Gillan, swallowing as much of her English accent as she can, is deft at occasionally letting her guard down and showing the insecurities underneath her character’s oblivious bravado. Cho, meanwhile, isn’t afraid to sacrifice a bit of dignity and admit his character is a judgmental workaholic. It’s a decent setup, with both characters needing one another. Corny as it might sound, the pilot successfully imparts the moral that “being friended is not the same thing as having friends.” But the big question is whether this premise is worthy of a weekly series. Two years from now, will Henry still be trying to teach Eliza the value of putting down your cell phone and actually talking to people? Or will the show outlive its usefulness like an online Bitcoin exchange? a “Selfie” premieres Tuesday, Sept. 30, at 7pm on KOAT-7. list thanks to Guardians of the Galaxy, hosts the season premiere. SUNDAY 28 “Thank God It’s Thursday on ABC!” (KOAT-7 1pm) If you’re a huge fan of Shonda Rhimes, I guess that’ll be your mantra. This season her new show “How to Get Away with Murder” joins her old shows “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Scandal.” For now Rhimes (who else) gets you all pumped for the upcoming Shonda-fest. “Once Upon a Time: Storybrooke Has Frozen Over” (KOAT-7 6pm) Get ready to get really, really excited, Disney freaks. The characters from “Frozen” are coming to “Once Upon a Time” this season! Here’s an hourlong teaser—followed by the hour-long actual show. “Family Guy” (KASA-2 8pm) The Griffin family shows up in Springfield for a gimmicky crossover with the cast of “The Simpsons.” MONDAY 29 “The iHeartRadio Music Festival” (KWBQ-19 7pm) Is it me, or does one of these show up every month on The CW? I mean, how much Ariana Grande can we realistically take? TUESDAY 30 “Manhattan Love Story” (KOAT-7 7:30pm) Analeigh Tipton (from “America’s Next Top Model”) and Jake McDorman (ABC Family’s “Greek”) star in this new rom-com. The only thing that keeps it from being completely generic: You can hear the main characters’ inner monologues nattering away in their heads. That’s not gonna get old. “Happyland” (MTV 12am) This “soaplike” comedy-drama centers around a young woman named Lucy Velez, who has spent her entire life growing up at a theme park called Happyland. Her fairy tale-obsessed mom has played the character of Princess Adriana for nearly 20 years, and Lucy will do anything not to follow in her footsteps. But will the handsome and charming son of the park’s new owner change our gal’s summer plans? WEDNESDAY 1 “Stalker” (KRQE-13 9pm) The only thing CBS loves more than crimes is sex crimes. So here’s a new police procedural about detectives who investigate “stalking incidents—including voyeurism, cyber harassment and romantic fixation.” Maggie Q (“Nikita”) and Dylan McDermott (“The Practice”) star. “Death Valley” (CMT 9pm) CMT adds this docu-reality(ish) series about redneck rebels living in “one of the most treacherous places on Earth.” a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [29] FILM | CAPSULES BY DEVIN D. O’LEARY OPENING THIS WEEK The Boxtrolls From the makers of Coraline and ParaNorman comes this whimsically imaginative, stop-motion-animated toon about a young orphan raised underground by cave-dwelling, trashcollecting trolls. Based on the children’s novel Here Be Monsters! by Alan Snow. Ben Kingsley, Nick Frost, Richard Ayoade and Tracy Morgan provide voices. 97 minutes. PG. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century 14 Downtown, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Closed Curtain In the midst of a government-imposed 20-year ban on filmmaking, acclaimed Iranian new wave filmmaker/political rebel Jafar Panahi (The White Balloon) takes up the writing/directing mantle for this story of a screenwriter hiding out in a secluded house by the sea. His exile is broken one night by the arrival of a young woman fleeing from the authorities. Refusing to leave, she takes refuge in the filmmaker’s house, upending his isolation. In Farsi with English subtitles. 106 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Guild Cinema) Down By Law Tom Waits, John Lurie and Roberto Benigni star in Jim Jarmusch’s quirky, deadpan, low-down-arty 1986 comedy about a trio of inmates at a Louisiana prison who escape their crowded cell, but not one another. Double-featured with Stranger Than Paradise. 107 minutes. R. (Opens Tuesday 9/30 at Guild Cinema) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920) John Barrymore stars in this early, silent film version of Robert Louis Stevenson’s horror classic. Austin-based instrumentalists The Invincible Czars will be on hand for this one-time-only showing to provide a live, original score. 49 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Guild Cinema) The Equalizer The popular, but mostly forgotten 1980s TV series starring Edward Woodward as an elderly, ass-kicking former intelligence agent gets a reboot courtesy of actor Denzel Washington and director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day, Olympus Has Fallen). Washington is a tough guy with a mysterious past who volunteers to protect a young girl (Chloë Grace Moretz, Kick-Ass) from ultraviolent Russian mobsters. 131 minutes. R. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century 14 Downtown, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Fifi Howls From Happiness This Iranian documentary profiles provocative artist Bahman Mohasses, the so-called “Persian Picasso.” Though his works dominated pre-revolutionary Iran, the aging artist now finds himself lost in exile. Filmmaker Mitra Farahani hunts down and interviews the reclusive artist in an Italian hotel room, revealing as much about her own artistic process as her subject’s. In Persian with English subtitles. 96 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Guild Cinema) God Help the Girl My Old Lady Dolphin Tale 2 Lucy A middle-aged American loser (Kevin Kline) inherits an apartment in Paris, but it comes with a hitch—an elderly tenant, played by Maggie Smith. Our penniless protagonist camps out in a spare room while figuring out what to do with the property and finds himself regularly abused by his tenant’s mean daughter (Kristin Scott Thomas). An tartly enjoyable if stagebound directing debut (at age 75) from veteran playwright Israel Horovitz (dad to Beastie Boy Adam Horovitz). 107 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century 14 Downtown, High Ridge) Winter, the handicapped dolphin who starred in the inspirational family film about her own life, returns in an even more fictionalized sequel. Here, marine biologists at an aquarium in Florida rescue an even cuter baby dolphin named Hope. Morgan Freeman, Ashley Judd and Harry Connick Jr. are the non-dolphin stars. 107 minutes. PG. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) French filmmaker Luc Besson (La Femme Nikita, Leon: The Professional, The Fifth Element) gets back into the swing of action filmmaking with this monumentally strange, and epically silly sci-fi flick. Scarlett Johansson stars as a woman tricked into becoming a mule for an experimental drug. When the bags of illegal chemicals in her stomach break open, she instantly and mysteriously gains all the superpowers in the universe by using 100 percent of her brain. We’re talking Jackie Chan, all of the XMen and Neo at the end of The Matrix combined. Naturally she employs these powers to get revenge on the bad people. Given that she can control all of time and space, there’s not a lot of tension. 90 minutes. R. (Cottonwood Stadium 16) Former “SNL”ers Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader star in his dramedy about estranged twins who both coincidentally cheat death on the same day, sparking a reunion and a possible mending of their broken relationship. Wiig and Hader share some effortless chemistry as our damaged-but-lovable siblings. Hader is particularly great as a gay, depressed wannabe actor. 93 minutes. R. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century 14 Downtown, High Ridge) Tom Hardy, James Gandolfini and Noomi Rapace star in this gritty little crime drama about a good-natured mook working at his cousin’s bar in Brooklyn. The place is secretly owned by the Chechen mob, though. And when some neighborhood idiots rob the joint, our protagonist (Hardy) and his cousin (Gandolfini) must find the money before the mob finds them. It’s a slowpaced affair, but it builds to a shocking climax thanks to a smart script by author Dennis Lehane (Mystic River) and some indelible character work by Hardy. Reviewed in v23 i37. 106 minutes. R. (Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, High Ridge) The Song The Giver In this chintzy musical drama, an aspiring Nashville singersongwriter’s life and marriage suffer when the song he writes for his wife propels him to stardom. Will he succumb to the temptations of fame and fortune and cheat on his wife? If you guessed “Don’t worry, Jesus will save the day,” you are correct. 112 minutes. PG-13. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century Rio) Lois Lowry’s much-loved teen lit sci-fi novel finally makes it to the big screen. In a futuristic dystopia—seemingly without war, pain, suffering, differences or choice—a young man(Brenton Thwaites) is chosen to learn from an elderly man (Jeff Bridges) the true pain and pleasure of the “real” world. Note to all future dystopian leaders: Get rid of the teenagers. If YA literature is any indication (Hunger Games, Divergent, Matched, Delirium, Unwind, The Maze Runner), two photogenic teenagers in love will invariably bring down your society. 94 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema) The Skeleton Twins Stranger Than Paradise Writer-director Jim Jarmusch blipped his way onto the indie film radar with this near-classic 1984 comedy about a self-styled hipster (singer John Lurie) who gets a surprise visit from his pretty, 16-year-old cousin from Hungary and ends up undertaking a strange road trip across America. Minimalist but oddly compelling. Double-featured with Down By Law. 89 minutes. (Tuesday 9/30 at Guild Cinema) Winchester ‘73 James Stewart stars in this acclaimed 1950 Western about a prized rifle that passes from one ill-fated owner to another. Anthony Mann (T-Men, Raw Deal, The Naked Spur, The Glenn Miller Story, El Cid) directs. 92 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Saturday 9/27 at Guild Cinema) STILL PLAYING As Above/So Below In this archaeologically minded supernatural thriller, a group of explorers descends into the skeleton-filled catacombs below Paris, only to come face-to-face with their own fears made real. If you’re a “found footage” completist, you might be the audience for this low-budget mixture of Lara Croft: Tomb Raider and The Descent from the Brothers Dowdle (The Poughkeepsie Tapes, Quarantine, Devil). 93 minutes. R. (Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Boyhood Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh star in this classic 1939 adaptation of Margaret Mitchell’s Civil War romance. This year is the 75th anniversary, by the way. That’s as good an excuse as any to see it on the big screen—courtesy of the fine folks at Turner Classic Movies. 238 minutes. (Opens Sunday 9/28 at Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Filmmaker Richard Linklater (Slacker, Dazed and Confused, Before Sunrise) spent 12 years—off and on—shooting this coming-of-age tale. Instead of being gimmicky, the film is comfortingly real and quietly observational. We simply watch as Mason (Ellar Coltrane) grows from age 5 to age 18 and experiences all that life throws at him. His parents (Patricia Arquette and Ethan Hawke) are divorced, and he drifts from video games to ogling lingerie catalogues to dealing with awful stepparents to navigating high school. The free-flowing narrative never tries to impose a “story” on the proceedings—and yet it’s never dull. Instead, it’s a lesson in regression for audiences as they recall all the funny, sad, rough, joyous, confusing moments that make up pre-adulthood. 165 minutes. R. (Century 14 Downtown, High Ridge) Kill Your Darlings Cantinflas Daniel Radcliffe stars as Beatnik poet Allen Ginsberg in this biopic about the young author’s first meeting with soon-to-be icons Jack Kerouac (Jack Huston) and William Burroughs (Ben Foster) at Columbia University in 1944. The men are united as much by their literary ambitions as a murderous act on the part of a sexually ambiguous pal. Radcliffe is stellar as the insecure writer navigating the usual coming-of-age tropes—alongside a double dose of homosexuality and homicide. 104 minutes. R. (Opens Thursday 9/25 at SUB Theater) Óscar Jaenada stars in this Spanish-language biopic about beloved Mexican comedy star Cantinflas. In English and Spanish with English subtitles. 106 minutes. PG. (Century 14 Downtown) Stuart Murdoch, lead singer and songwriter of the celebrated indie band Belle and Sebastian, writes and directs this musical romance about an emotionally troubled girl (Emily Browning, Sucker Punch) who starts writing songs, hooks up with a pair of mopey musicians and starts a band. 111 minutes. Unrated. (Opens Saturday 9/27 at Guild Cinema) Gone With The Wind Love Is Strange Reviewed this issue. 94 minutes. R. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century 14 Downtown, High Ridge) Más Negro Que La Noche In this silly Mexican horror flick, a young party girl moves into her deceased aunt’s mansion. Spooky stuff ensues. This is a (3D!) remake of Carlos Enrique Taboada’s classic 1975 Mexi-chiller of the same name. In Spanish with English subtitles. 100 minutes. R. (Opens Friday 9/26 at Century Rio) The Drop The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Them After a flashy showing at Sundance, filmmaker Ned Benson took his films The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Him and The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Her and cut them into a single, (slightly) more conventional narrative. In whatever incarnation, Rigby relates the story of a couple (Jessica Chastain and James McAvoy) who break up in the wake of their baby son’s death. She tries to jump off the Brooklyn Bridge, moves in with her parents and goes back to school. He buries himself in his work at a struggling bar/restaurant. There’s some serious ACTING (in all capitals) going on here. Supporting cast includes Isabelle Huppert, William Hurt, Ciarán Hinds and Bill Hader. But the whole affair seems a little too high-minded and “constructed” to really get to the heart of the matter. 122 minutes. Unrated. (Century Rio) Guardians of the Galaxy Marvel Comics’ superhero movies take off in a different direction, heading into outer space for this buoyantly comic, endlessly entertaining sci-fi romp. A band of misfits, criminals and brash adventurers is conscripted into saving the galaxy when a powerful alien warlord comes looking for a weapon of cosmos-threatening proportions. Cult filmmaker James Gunn (Tromeo and Juliet, Dawn of the Dead, Slither, Super) writes and directs. Chris Pratt (“Parks and Recreation”), Bradley Cooper (The Hangover), Zoe Saldana (Star Trek) and Lee Pace (The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey) star. 121 minutes. PG-13. (Century Rio, Century 14 Downtown, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, High Ridge, Cottonwood Stadium 16) The Hundred-Foot Journey After the untimely death of their matriarch, a brokenhearted Indian clan wanders Europe looking for a place to open up their family restaurant. They end up in an impossibly picturesque French town where Papa (Om Puri) decides to hang up his shingle across the street from a Michelin Star restaurant. Gifted young chef Hassan (Manish Dayal) falls in love with the rival sous chef (Charlotte Le Bon), while Papa starts up a love/hate relationship with the fancy French restaurant’s uptight owner (Helen Mirren). This is exactly (exactly) the sort of semi-exotic foodie romance you would expect from the director of Chocolat. Reviewed in v23 i32. 122 minutes. PG. (High Ridge, Cottonwood Stadium 16) If I Stay Capitalizing on the beautiful tragedy of The Fault in Our Stars, this romantic drama adapts another weepy teen lit hit. Young Mia Hall (Chloë Grace Moretz, Kick-Ass) is on the edge of adulthood, about to go off to Juilliard to study music. But a tragic car accident kills off her parents and leaves her in a coma. An out-ofbody experience leaves our gal wandering around watching friends and family gather at the hospital and drifting freely through her memories. Now she must decide if she should wake up and get on with her life or just kick the bucket. 106 minutes. PG-13. (Cottonwood Stadium 16, Century Rio) Into the Storm We’ve had found-footage horror films (The Blair Witch Project et al), found-footage monster movies (Cloverfield), found-footage cop movies (End of Watch), found-footage superhero films (Chronicle) and found-footage kids’ films (Earth to Echo). So why not some found-footage disaster porn? Into the Storm takes the basic plot of Twister, throws in some handheld camera and adds a whole bunch more CGI destruction. It comes to us from the director of Final Destination 5 and the writer of Step Up All In. 89 minutes. PG-13. (Cottonwood Stadium 16) Let’s Be Cops Damon Wayans Jr. and Jake Johnson (still hanging out off the set of FOX’s “New Girl”) are a couple of struggling pals who decide to dress up as cops for a costume party. Mistaken for real police officers, and afforded respect for the first time in their lives, the two decide to keep up the charade. Unfortunately a collection of real-life mobsters and dirty detectives put our dressed-up dogooders in mortal danger. Yes, it’s as silly as you’re thinking. 104 minutes. R. (Cottonwood Stadium 16, Century 14 Downtown, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio) Magic in the Moonlight Woody Allen’s 44th film is a lightweight charmer. Colin Firth plays a professional magician and debunker who travels to Southern France (circa 1920) to expose a fraudulent spiritualist. Our hero is shocked to find the charlatan is a wide-eyed American cutie (Emma Stone). Even more shocking, he can’t figure out her tricks. Could it be that she actually has the ability to speak to the dead? The outcome of this period romcom is never remotely in doubt, but the cast is quite likable, and the setting is lovely to look at. Reviewed in v23 i33. 97 minutes. PG-13. (High Ridge) The Maze Runner More post-apocalyptic YA teen lit hits the big screen. In this adaptation of James Dashner’s hit book trilogy, a mind-erased teen (Dylan O’Brien, “Teen Wolf”) is dropped into a community of “runners” trapped inside a deadly, monster-filled, impossible-toescape maze. Why? Just wait two more movies and you’ll find out. 120 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) No Good Deed Taraji P. Henson (“Person of Interest,” Think Like a Man) and Idris Elba (“Luther,” Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom) class up this twisty domestic thriller about a suburban wife and mother who finds her home invaded by a dangerous escaped convict. 84 minutes. PG-13. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Überproducer Michael Bay (Bad Boys, Armageddon, Transformers) has his grubby fingerprints all over this unnecessary reboot of the classic comic book/cartoon series. The special effects are a major upgrade, but the story—scarred by all the usual overworked, underwritten tropes of modern screenwriting—takes a lot of liberties with the original. It’s not a travesty, but it’s probably not what fans want either. 101 minutes. PG-13. (Century 14 Downtown, Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) This Is Where I Leave You Middle-of-the-road talent Shawn Levy (Cheaper By the Dozen, Night at the Museum, Date Night, Real Steel) directs this dramedy about a dysfunctional family (Jason Bateman, Tina Fey, Adam Driver, Corey Stoll) brought together by their secret-stealing author of a mother (Jane Fonda) to sit shiva in their childhood home after their father passes away. The story (based on a novel by Jonathan Tropper) doesn’t plow any new ground. It’s your standard “crazy clan gets the skeletons out of the closet, cries, hugs and makes up” tale—right down to the requisite pot-fueled confessional scene. But the cast is filled with comic ringers, and script generates its emotions in a mostly organic manner. 103 minutes. R. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) Tusk Kevin Smith (Clerks, Dogma, Red State) writes and directs this year’s most WTF? film experience. This wildly uneven splatstick horror comedy finds an obnoxious podcaster (Justin Long, Live Free or Die Hard) kidnapped by an elderly Canadian seaman (Michael Parks, Kill Bill) who wants to do unspeakable things to the poor guy. Parks saves the day her with his quiet menace, but certain other cast members (who will remain nameless) are extremely freaking silly. If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like if someone combined The Human Centipede with a Bob and Doug McKenzie sketch, here’s your answer. Reviewed in v23 i38. 101 minutes. R. (Century Rio) A Walk Among the Tombstones Liam Neeson, still in tough old man mode, stars as Lawrence Block’s literary private detective Matthew Scudder in this adaptation of the 10th Scudder novel. Jeff Bridges played the character once before in 1986’s nonstarter 8 Million Ways to Die. In this one our alcoholic ex-cop hero is hired by a drug kingpin to find out who kidnapped and murdered the guy’s wife. This is gritty, streetpounding. old-school noir. 113 minutes. (Rio Rancho Premiere Cinema, Century 14 Downtown, Century Rio, Cottonwood Stadium 16) a FULL SELECTION OF CAPSULE REVIEWS AT ALIBI.COM. [30] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI FILM | TIMES wEEk oF FrI. SEpT., 26-ThurS., ocT. 2 CENTURY 14 DOWNTOWN Lucy Fri-Thu 11:45am, 2:05, 4:30, 6:50, 9:35 100 Central SW • 1 (800) 326-3264 ext. 943# Gone With The Wind Sun 2:00, 7:00; Wed 2:00, 7:00 Love Is Strange Fri-Sun 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15, 9:50; MonThu 12:00, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15 My Old Lady Fri-Sun 1:35, 4:15, 7:00, 9:35; Mon-Thu 1:35, 4:15, 7:00 The Skeleton Twins Fri-Sun 12:35, 3:00, 5:25, 7:50, 10:15; Mon-Thu 12:35, 3:00, 5:25, 7:50 The Equalizer Fri-Sun 1:25, 4:30, 7:35, 10:40; Mon-Thu 1:25, 4:30, 7:35 The Boxtrolls Fri-Sun 11:40am, 4:40, 9:40; Mon-Thu 11:40am, 4:40 The Boxtrolls 3D Fri-Thu 2:10, 7:10 Cantinflas Fri-Sun 1:45, 4:35, 7:05, 9:45; Mon-Wed 1:45, 4:35, 7:05; Thu 1:45, 4:35 This Is Where I Leave You Fri-Sun 11:50am, 2:35, 5:10, 7:45, 10:20; Mon-Thu 11:50am, 2:35, 5:10, 7:45 The Maze Runner Fri-Sun 1:40, 4:25, 7:25, 10:10; Mon-Thu 1:40, 4:25, 7:25 A Walk Among the Tombstones Fri-Sun 1:55, 4:45, 7:30, 10:30; Mon-Thu 1:55, 4:45, 7:30 The Drop Fri-Sun 3:55, 10:25; Mon-Thu 3:55 No Good Deed Fri-Sun 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:40, 10:20; MonThu 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:40 Boyhood Fri-Thu 12:15, 6:45 Let’s Be Cops Fri-Sun 12:10, 2:45, 5:20, 7:55, 10:35; MonTue 12:10, 2:45, 5:20, 7:55; Thu 12:10, 2:45 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Fri-Sun 11:45am, 2:20, 4:55, 7:35, 10:05; Mon-Thu 11:45am, 2:20, 4:55, 7:35 Guardians of the Galaxy Fri-Sun 1:30, 4:20, 7:20, 10:15; Mon-Thu 1:30, 4:20, 7:20 GUILD CINEMA 3405 Central NE • 255-1848 Fifi Howls From Happiness Fri-Mon 3:30, 8:15 Closed Curtain Fri-Mon 6:00 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920) Fri 10:30 Winchester ‘73 Sat-Sun 12:00 God Help the Girl Sat 10:30 Down By Law Tue-Thu 5:00, 9:15 Stranger Than Paradise Tue-Thu 7:15 HIGH RIDGE 12910 Indian School NE • 275-0038 Love Is Strange Fri-Sun 12:40, 3:50, 7:00, 10:10; Mon-Thu 12:40, 3:50, 7:00 My Old Lady Fri-Sun 12:45, 3:55, 7:30, 10:35; Mon-Thu 12:45, 3:55, 7:30 The Skeleton Twins Fri-Sun 1:10, 4:15, 7:40, 10:40; MonThu 1:10, 4:15, 7:40 The Drop Fri-Sun 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 10:10; Mon-Thu 1:05, 4:05, 7:05 Boyhood Fri-Thu 1:00, 6:50 Magic in the Moonlight Fri-Sun 12:35, 4:10, 7:10, 10:05; Mon-Thu 12:35, 4:10, 7:10 The Hundred-Foot Journey Fri-Sun 12:45, 4:00, 7:20, 10:30; Mon-Thu 12:45, 4:00, 7:20 Guardians of the Galaxy Fri-Sun 12:30, 3:45, 7:15, 10:30; Mon-Thu 12:30, 3:45, 7:15 MOVIES 8 CENTURY RIO I-25 & Jefferson • 1 (800) 326-3264 Gone With The Wind Sun 2:00, 7:00; Wed 2:00, 7:00 Más Negro Que La Noche Fri-Sat 2:05, 7:50, 12:01am; Sun-Thu 2:05, 7:50 Más Negro Que La Noche 3D Fri-Sat 11:05am, 4:55, 10:45, 11:15; Sun-Thu 11:05am, 4:55, 10:45 The Song Fri-Thu 1:10, 4:10, 7:10, 10:10 The Equalizer Fri-Sat 11:20am, 12:50, 2:40, 4:20, 6:00, 7:40, 9:20, 11:00, 11:30; Sun-Thu 11:20am, 12:50, 2:40, 4:20, 6:00, 7:40, 9:20, 11:00 The Boxtrolls Fri-Sat 12:35, 3:15, 5:55, 8:35, 11:40; SunThu 12:35, 3:15, 5:55, 8:35 The Boxtrolls 3D Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:50 The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Them Fri-Thu 11:40am, 5:30 Tusk Fri-Thu 11:00am, 1:45, 4:35, 7:30, 10:15 This Is Where I Leave You Fri-Sat 12:00, 1:25, 2:55, 4:15, 5:50, 7:00, 8:40, 10:00, 11:25; Sun-Thu 12:00, 1:25, 2:55, 4:15, 5:50, 7:00, 8:40, 10:00 The Maze Runner Fri-Sat 11:15am, 12:05, 12:55, 1:40, 2:25, 3:15, 4:05, 4:50, 5:35, 6:25, 7:15, 8:00, 8:45, 9:35, 10:25, 11:05, 11:50; Sun-Thu 11:15am, 12:05, 12:55, 1:40, 2:25, 3:15, 4:05, 4:50, 5:35, 6:25, 7:15, 8:00, 8:45, 9:35, 10:25 A Walk Among the Tombstones Fri-Thu 11:00am, 12:20, 1:50, 3:20, 4:55, 6:20, 7:55, 9:25, 10:50 The Drop Fri-Thu 11:50am, 2:45, 5:40, 8:30 No Good Deed Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:10, 4:40, 7:05, 9:30 Dolphin Tale 2 Fri-Thu 12:40, 3:55, 6:50, 9:50 As Above/So Below Fri-Thu 11:45am, 2:35, 5:00, 7:35, 10:35 If I Stay Fri-Sat 1:20, 4:25, 7:20, 10:20; Sun 11:05am; Mon-Tue 1:20, 4:25, 7:20, 10:20; Wed-Thu 11:05am The Giver Fri-Thu 2:50, 8:50 Let’s Be Cops Fri-Thu 11:25am, 2:20, 5:20, 8:05, 10:55 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Fri-Thu 11:10am, 1:55, 4:45, 7:25, 10:15 Guardians of the Galaxy Fri-Thu 1:15, 4:30, 7:45, 10:40 COTTONWOOD STADIUM 16 Cottonwood Mall • 897-6858 Gone With The Wind Sun 2:00; Wed 7:00 The Equalizer Fri-Thu 12:10, 3:45, 7:00, 7:30, 10:00, 10:30 The Boxtrolls Fri-Thu 2:15, 7:10, 9:35 The Boxtrolls 3D Fri-Thu 11:45am, 4:45 This Is Where I Leave You Fri-Thu 11:40am, 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 10:05 The Maze Runner Fri-Thu 12:00, 1:00, 3:00, 4:00, 6:45, 7:30, 9:50, 10:20 A Walk Among the Tombstones Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:40, 7:10, 10:00 No Good Deed Fri-Thu 12:00, 2:15, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 Dolphin Tale 2 Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:10, 4:50, 7:30, 10:10 As Above/So Below Fri-Thu 11:50am, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 If I Stay Fri-Thu 11:35am, 2:10, 4:45, 7:20, 9:55 Into the Storm Fri-Sat 12:15, 2:35, 4:55; Sun 7:15, 9:50; Mon-Tue 12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:50; Wed 12:15, 2:35 Let’s Be Cops Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:00, 4:30, 7:10, 9:55 The Hundred-Foot Journey Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:30, 6:50, 9:45 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Fri-Thu 12:45, 3:30, 6:35, 9:30 Guardians of the Galaxy Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:15, 7:05, 9:55 4591 San Mateo NE • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1194 Sin City: A Dame to Kill For Fri-Thu 12:40, 6:40 Sin City: A Dame to Kill For 3D Fri-Thu 3:40, 9:40 Chef Fri-Thu 3:30, 10:15 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes Fri-Thu 12:30, 7:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 3D Fri-Thu 3:50, 10:10 Hercules Fri-Thu 11:20am, 4:40, 7:20 Hercules 3D Fri-Thu 2:10, 10:00 Step Up All In Fri-Thu 7:40, 10:30 Earth to Echo Fri-Thu 11:05am, 1:40, 4:20, 6:50, 9:30 Tammy Fri-Thu 11:40am, 2:20, 5:00, 7:50, 10:20 Maleficent Fri-Thu 11:10am, 4:30, 7:10 Maleficent 3D Fri-Thu 1:50, 9:50 Transformers: Age of Extinction Fri-Thu 11:30am, 6:30 How to Train Your Dragon 2 Fri-Thu 11:00am, 2:00, 4:50 MOVIES WEST 9201 Coors NW • 1 (800) Fandango, express # 1247 Sin City: A Dame to Kill For Fri-Thu 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 Sin City: A Dame to Kill For 3D Fri-Thu 7:45, 10:25 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes Fri-Thu 12:30, 3:40, 6:50, 10:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 3D Fri-Thu 1:15, 4:25 Hercules Fri-Thu 12:05, 5:15, 10:25 Hercules 3D Fri-Thu 2:40, 7:50 Earth to Echo Fri-Thu 12:00, 5:10, 10:20 Maleficent Fri-Sun 12:00, 2:35, 5:10; Mon-Thu 12:00, 2:35, 5:10, 7:45, 10:20 Maleficent 3D Fri-Thu 1:50, 4:25, 7:00, 9:35 Transformers: Age of Extinction Fri-Thu 12:05, 3:45, 7:25 How to Train Your Dragon 2 Fri-Thu 2:30, 7:40 RIO RANCHO PREMIERE CINEMA 1000 Premiere Parkway • 994-3300 The Equalizer Fri-Thu 12:00, 3:05, 6:20, 9:35 The Boxtrolls 3D Fri-Thu 1:40, 6:40 The Boxtrolls Fri-Thu 11:10am, 4:10, 9:10 This Is Where I Leave You Fri-Thu 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 8:10, 10:50 The Maze Runner Fri-Thu 11:20am, 12:35, 2:10, 3:30, 5:00, 6:25, 7:50, 9:25, 10:40 A Walk Among the Tombstones Fri-Thu 11:15am, 2:05, 4:55, 7:45, 10:35 No Good Deed Fri-Thu 1:15, 3:35, 5:55, 8:15, 10:35 Dolphin Tale 2 Fri-Thu 11:10am, 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 10:00 The Giver Fri-Thu 11:30am, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Let’s Be Cops Fri-Thu 12:15, 2:50, 5:25, 8:05, 10:40 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Fri-Thu 12:10, 2:40, 5:20, 7:55, 10:30 Guardians of the Galaxy 3D Fri-Thu 1:05, 4:10, 7:15, 10:20 Guardians of the Galaxy Fri-Thu 12:05, 3:10, 6:25, 9:20 SUB THEATER UNM (Student Union Building Room 1003) • 277-5608 Kill Your Darlings Fri-Sat 6:00, 8:30; Sun 1:00, 3:30 22 Jump Street Tue 8:00; Wed 4:00, 7:00; Thu 3:30 Manhattan Short Film Festival Thu 7:00 WINROCK STADIUM 16 IMAX & RPX 2100 Louisiana Blvd. NE • 881-2220 Please check alibi.com/filmtimes for films and times. a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [31] MUSIC | ShoW Up! GET LIT BY AUGUST MARCH Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones New bio explores fallen rock star’s life and death Brian Jones played guitar. As a founding member of a band he named The Rolling Stones, Jones was also a gifted multi-instrumentalist. He deeply dug the blues and played them with uncommon virtuosity, but he couldn’t write pop songs. This profound problem contributed to his estrangement from his bandmates as their popularity waxed worldwide in the mid 1960s. Joyce Manor Jenstar Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones Bird Is the Word Paul Trynka Viking Press hardcover biography $28.95 At the tender age of 27 and forced from the Stones in 1969, Jones ended up dead in a swimming pool on an estate once owned by the author of Winnie the Pooh. He left behind at least five children and a haunting enigma that was often overshadowed by the continual rise and sustained success of his former cohorts. The Guitar Magazine founder and rock journalist Paul Trynka explores Jones’ life and death in frightening detail—and with occasionally devilish sympathy—in his forthcoming book Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones. Trynka avoids the hagiography common in many rocanrol history texts by presenting the story of Brian Jones in a foreboding but clinical fashion that draws the reader into the sometimes sordid, always fascinating life lived by a member of The Rolling Stones. The first chapter, titled “Secrets and Lies,” is an examination of the town of Cheltenham, a small city on England’s border with Wales. There, as a youth, Jones grappled with issues ranging from the secretive military activities of his father to his own overwhelming sexuality—in a town as known for its conservative bourgeois presentation as its brothels and gambling pits. Following equally foreshadowing Chapter 2, “Crossroads,” Trynka hops aboard the speeding freight-train-to-hell that Jones created with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. Throughout the narrative the author acts as observer. He neither glorifies nor denigrates the sometimes wanton subcultural proclivities of a youthful R&B band on the rise. Instead, Trynka seems both omniscient and detached, relying on anecdotes of the people, musical instruments and animals that filled Jones’ life with substance and conflict. The only truly critical arguments in this work come at Jagger’s and Richards’ expense. Every chapter title in this book has dark connotations, which one supposes is symbolic of the effect Jones had on himself and the world around him. This extensive biography is far from depressing or sensationally satanic. Trynka offers compelling insights into the guitarist’s mind and character by relating tales ranging from his first romanticized excursions into the blues of Robert Johnson in the late ’50s to early ’60s to his search for Bou Jeloud, a mythical Pan-like dancer, in the mountains of Morocco as the end of his life neared. The mystery that was Brian Jones was compounded by his untimely death. Trynka employs a thoroughly researched afterword to present the plethora of conspiracy theories surrounding the musician’s demise and openly suggests that the revisionism of Jagger and Richards has contributed to Jones’ neglect in the rock pantheon; aside from their own Stygian affiliations, that’s something that will probably land The Glimmer Twins a stint in hell. a [32] Four flight-ready concerts to fuel your fall BY AUGUST MARCH ou’ll be riding by, bareback on your armadillo/ You’ll be grooving high or relaxing at Camarillo/ Suddenly the music hits you/ It’s a bird in flight that just can’t quit you/ You’ve got to come on, man, and take a piece of Mr. Parker’s band.” —“Parker’s Band,” Steely Dan “Y Charlie Parker ain’t playin’ the Duke City this week. He’s busy swooping ’round the boundless universe, impressing various forms of deity with the sounds emanating from his mighty, fluttering and angelically winged horn. Back here on Earth though—and more precisely in Burque—the concert-going possibilities remain top-flight, dig? Whether you walk, bike or drive to the gig of your choice, this week’s musical offerings are guaranteed to provide a lift. Maybe you’ll even wanna fly afterward. Friday On the evening of Friday, Sept. 26, prodigal Burque bassist James Whiton plays a homecoming concert at Sister (407 Central NW). Whiton spent the past 17 years far from here—relentlessly touring, jamming with George Clinton, recording a Grammynominated album with Tom Waits and searching for a place to land. With cred that stretches back to his stint with local legends Apricot Jam and parents noted for their substantive contributions to our city’s musical culture, Albuquerque seems the perfect place for Whiton’s continued sonic sojourn. His new project Solo Loop Bass Madness focuses on the intersection of electronic manipulation, monster chops and the upright bass. Whiton’s known for his sublime sense of melody, a rarity among members of the socalled rhythm section and a force that propels his output past tradition and into innovation. Le Chat Lunatique, a gruff, gooey hot jazz quartet known for hanging tunefully around our moonlit alleyways since the early aughts, contributes to the welcome home bash. Local burlesque troupe La Cage aux Folles provides sensual visual accompaniment throughout. All this can be part of your Friday flight plan for SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI just $7. Buckle up at 8pm, and prepare for takeoff at 9pm. Saturday Set the controls for the heart of the sun by visiting Launchpad (618 Central SW) on Saturday, Sept. 27. SuperGiant and Black Maria will be there, playing music that will make you forget all about the avian diversity of jazz, leaving a piquantly sludgy and riotously rocking-tasting space beverage in its stead. Beguiling yet brutal in presentation—like the star we currently orbit—SuperGiant possesses a soulful aspect that puts the band parsecs ahead of the homogenous brigade of stonerrock bands lumbering toward Andromeda. With SuperGiant on deck, leaving the solar system is easy, but prepare to have your soul disassembled and your skull crushed by the immense gravitational forces of Black Maria upon arrival. Gordy Andersen, Brian Banks and the rest of this crew of urban spacemen have existed for years in the lighteating realms just past an awesome, churning event horizon, so be ready, earthlings. Black Maria’s sound really is like the thick smoke from an unquenchable, planetdevouring fire. Andersen’s guitar sensibilities reside somewhere between Mars and Jupiter, and the rest of the combo is no less extraplanetary in execution and cohesion. Doomsayer Hounds Low begins the night’s journey to the edge of the universe. Entry will run you $7, and the thrusters activate at 9:30pm. Sunday Starships, electric guitars and mind-altering chemicals aren’t always necessary ingredients for flight—earthly, interstellar or otherwise. You can test this hypothesis yourself on Sunday, Sept. 28, at The Tannex (1417 Fourth Street SW) with a sliver of the moon serving as a guiding light. Experimentally witchy collaborative duo JAHA+LOU consists of Jenstar and Lou LaMotte and incorporates textile making, installation-art aesthetics and resonant vocalization to engender healing and self-actualization. JAHA+LOU appears in Barelas on their Autumnal Equinox Pentacle Tour, a series of community events spread out as an offering to life in six western cities. Designed as a sober, contemplative event that blends music, art and healthy introspection, this straight-edge but earthy ritual connecting time and space starts at 7pm. Admission is scalar; a monetary offering between $8 and $20 grants one access to this celebratory rite. Bring a nourishing dish to share at the post-ceremony potluck. Tuesday With all its cosmic appeal, space can still be a lonely place. And reentry can be a bitch. Thank goodness for pop-punk. The genre’s glammy, grounding groove may yet prove a balm to those overexposed to the void surrounding us. Torrance, Calif., pop-punk band Joyce Manor touches down at The Gasworks (2429 Quincy NE) on Tuesday, Sept. 30. Emo-inflected with hints of early Weezer buoying their floating capsule, Joyce Manor tours in support of their major label debut on Epitaph Records, Never Hungover Again. Joyce Manor’s growing repertoire of tunes focuses on strictly human concerns, punctuated with plaintive singing and ringing riffage; the group represents the flip side of fellow Califas rockers FIDLAR and Wavves. Even though Manor’s sound ain’t heavy, their attention to emotion and melody has a decidedly interesting effect on the youth of this nation. They’re kinda like Descendents without the snark. Joyce Manor writes songs you can sing triumphantly while they wheel the astronauts away to temporary quarantine. This all-ages show begins at 7pm, and admission is a cool $10. Now it’s really autumn, and there are birds everywhere. Some of them are winging their way homeward. Others have loosed their earthly bonds in search of other worlds, trading wings for rockets. A couple of them drift ritualistically by the waxing moon, while a fourth flock carries the youthful emotive energy of the ocean as they make their way across the continent. Make like a bird— whether the swift in your dreams or the crazy roadrunner that perches on those dusty Marshall stacks haunting your back porch— and follow the music. a Music Calendar THURSDAY SEP 25 BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Fractal Frequencies with Kate Star Cherry • trance, dance • 10pm • FREE BLACKWATER MUSIC This One’s For America Tour: Traitors • Dealey Plaza • Genocide District • Perplexity • deathcore, experimental • Vale of Miscreation • 7pm • $8-$10 DIRTY BOURBON Nathan Dean and the Damn Band • 9pm • $5, FREE for ladies EMBERS STEAKHOUSE, Isleta Casino Acoustic Essence • 6pm • FREE FIRST TURN LOUNGE, Downs Racetrack and Casino Service Industry Night featuring DJ Mister E • 9pm • FREE IMBIBE THROWBACK with DJ Flo Fader • 9:30pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD Mark Battles • rap • 8pm • $15-$35 LOW SPIRITS Red Elvises • BaBa • folk, rock • 9pm • $10 MARBLE BREWERY Felix y los Gatos • Americana, Creole funk • 7pm • FREE MARCELLO’S CHOPHOUSE Karl Richardson • 6:30pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Marilyn Hubbert • 6pm • FREE MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION Alex Maryol • blues, rock • 8pm • FREE NICKY V’S NEIGHBORHOOD PIZZERIA B-Man & the MizzBeeHavens • rock • 6:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL, Santa Fe Robin Holloway • jazz, cabaret • 6pm • $2 PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party on the Patio: Joanie & Combo Special • 6pm • $10 SANDIA RESORT & CASINO Santana • classic rock, Latin • 8pm • $75-$100 SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Le Chat Lunatique • dirty jazz • 9pm • FREE SISTER Merchandise • Lower • Bigawatt • noise, rap • 9pm • $5 SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Foxygen • indie, rock • Dub Thompson • 7:30pm • $18 • Sabroso Thursday • 9pm ST. CLAIR WINERY & BISTRO Jazz Brasileiro • bossa nova • 6pm • FREE TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK pLOUD Music Series: Youngsville • country, folk • 8pm • FREE TRIPLE SEVENS, Isleta Casino Karaoke • 7:30pm • FREE VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Lori Michaels • jazz • 6pm • FREE WINNING COFFEE CO. Open Mic • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO Direct Divide • 9:30pm • FREE FRIDAY SEP 26 AFRICAN AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, Expo NM Albuquerque Ukekopelli Festival Concert: Sid Hausman & Washtub Jerry • Heidi Swedberg and the Sukey Jump Band and more • 7pm • $10-$20 • ALL-AGES! THE BARLEY ROOM Split Decision • classic rock • 9pm • FREE BIEN SHUR Kari Simmons Group • 9pm • FREE BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Low Life Happy Hour with DJ Caterwaul • 6pm • “Leftover Soul” with DJ Leftovers • 10pm • FREE BOOKWORKS Wildewood CD Release Party • 7pm • FREE BURT’S TIKI LOUNGE Blister Unit • Bathhouse • Hanta • stoner rock • 9pm • $5 CARAVAN EAST Samuel D. Band • country • 5pm • $5 COOLWATER FUSION RESTAURANT Jill Cohn • indie, jazz • 6pm • FREE THE COUNTY LINE BBQ Los Radiators • folk, blues • 6:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! DAMN BAR, Rio Rancho Vinyl Tap • classic rock • 9pm DIRTY BOURBON Nathan Dean and the Damn Band • 9pm • $5 DRAFT STATION Frankly Scarlet • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! DUEL BREWING, Santa Fe 50 Watt Whale • pop, rock • 7pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! EMBERS STEAKHOUSE, Isleta Casino Troupe Red • 6pm • FREE THE FUSION KINGS HOOKAH LOUNGE, Rio Rancho Rodney Rush aka “Combo” • rap, hip hop • Echoes Of Fallen • death metal, grindcore • 7pm • $6 • ALL-AGES! HYATT REGENCY TAMAYA RESORT, Santa Ana Pueblo Tracey Whitney • jazz, soul • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! IMBIBE The Woohabs • smooth blues • 6pm • DJ Rotation • 10pm • FREE ISLETA AMPHITHEATER Mechanical Bull Tour: Kings of Leon • rock • Young the Giant • indie, rock • Kongos • alternative • 7pm • $33 and up KELLER HALL, UNM Frederic Mompou • Paula Swalin • soprano • Fred Sturm • piano • 7:30pm • $5-$12 • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD Metalachi • heavy metal, mariachi • DJ Breathalyzer • 9:30pm • $12 LOUNGE 54 @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo The DCN Project • funk, soul • 9pm • FREE LOW SPIRITS Let It Grow • Mondo Vibrations • reggae, rock • 9pm • $5 MARBLE BREWERY The Porter Draw • alt.country, Americana • 5pm • Odd Dog • classic rock • 7pm • FREE MARCELLO’S CHOPHOUSE Karl Richardson Duo • 6:30pm • FREE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Paw & Erik • bluegrass • 5pm • Karaoke Kamikaze • 8pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Gene Corbin • Americana • 1:30pm • The Clik • 6pm • FREE MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION Rudy Boy • surf, blues • 9pm • FREE M’TUCCI’S KITCHINA Shane Wallin • soul, pop • 8pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! OLD TYME SHOP AND ICE CREAM PARLOR, Tijeras Open Jam Session • 6:30pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! OUTPOST PERFORMANCE SPACE Matana Roberts’ ANTHEM Quartet • 7:30pm • $10-$15 PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL, Santa Fe David Geist • cabaret • 6pm • $2 PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party on the Patio: Le Chat Lunatique • dirty jazz • 6pm • $10 SANTA FE SOL, Santa Fe Rock en Español: Agua Bendita • Metafora • Refugio Clandestino • 9pm • $10 SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Charlie Christian Project • jazz • 8pm • FREE SHERATON UPTOWN HOTEL Live Music & Drink Specials • 6pm • FREE SISTER James Whiton • La Cage aux Folles Burlesque • Le Chat Lunatique • dirty jazz • 9pm • $5 • See “Show Up!.” THE STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Vegas Night: DJ Que • 9pm • $5 for women; $10 for men ST. CLAIR WINERY & BISTRO Combo Special • 6:30pm • FREE STONE FACE TAVERN Mystic Vic Blues Band • 8:30pm • FREE THE STUMBLING STEER Boulevard Lane • 7pm • FREE TLUR PA LOUNGE, Sandia Resort and Casino Rhythm Nation • 9:30pm • FREE TORTUGA GALLERY Temporary Tattoos • folk • 9pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! TRIPLE SEVENS, Isleta Casino Brushfire • 9:30pm • FREE VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Chava • R&B • 7:30pm • FREE WAREHOUSE 21, Santa Fe KGZR Benefit: CRTTRZ • math rock • Solar One and D-Sik • hip-hop • Direct Divide • indie, rock • The Sticky • funk • 7pm • $5-$10 • ALL-AGES! ZIA-BERNALILLO FARMERS MARKET, Bernalillo Cowboy Scott Connor • 4pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! blackwatermusicabq.com Thursday September 25 TRAITORS DEALEY PLAZA GENOCIDE DISTRICT PERPLEXITY VALE OF MISCREATION SHOW @ 7PM • $8 PRE SALE $10 DOS 109 4th Street NW FOURTH AND CENTRAL (505) 269-9591 SATURDAY SEP 27 BIEN SHUR Kari Simmons Group • 9pm • FREE BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Willy J Duo • Americana • 6pm • The Glass Menageries • Shitty and the Terribles • garage, punk • Melanthius • 10pm • FREE CARAVAN EAST Black Pearl • variety • Al Hurricane & Al Hurricane Jr. • Latin, Spanish • 5pm • $10 THE COOPERAGE Nosotros • salsa • 9:30pm • $7 DIRTY BOURBON Nathan Dean and the Damn Band • 9pm • $5 DOWNTOWN GROWERS’ MARKET The Green Billies • 9am • FREE • ALL-AGES! GOLD HOUSE The Funeral and the Twilight • fuzz, rock • Uranium Worker • Javelina • Evening Kings • 8pm • $5 • ALL-AGES! GRAVITY NIGHTCLUB Foam-Tasmic • 8pm • $10 HISTORIC EL REY THEATER Onyx • hip-hop • 8pm • $10-$20 HOTEL ANDALUZ Party Like it’s 1999 • 8pm • FREE IMBIBE Ryan Shea • 10pm • FREE THE JAM SPOT Slum Life • 7pm • $10 LAUNCHPAD SuperGiant • stoner rock • Black Maria • stoner rock • Hounds Low • 9:30pm • $7 • See “Show Up!.” LAZY LIZARD GRILL, Cedar Crest Odd Dog • classic rock • 7pm • FREE LEGENDS THEATER @ ROUTE 66 CASINO Get The Led Out: The American Led Zeppelin • 8pm • $10-$35 LOMA COLORADO MAIN LIBRARY AUDITORIUM, Rio Rancho Mad About Music • 2pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! LOUNGE 54 @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo The DCN Project • funk, soul • 9pm • FREE LOW SPIRITS J. Scott G’s Big 40th Birthday Party! • 8pm Music Calendar continues on page 34 WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [33] SONIC REDUCER BY AUGUST MARCH My Brightest Diamond This Is My Hand (Asthmatic Kitty) How wonderful it is to have a contemporary musical landscape chockfull of virtuosic female voices: Des Ark, tUnEyArDs, St. Vincent, Laura Marling and, of course, Shara Worden aka My Brightest Diamond. An operatically trained multiinstrumentalist from a musical family—who counts Sufjan Stevens among her former colleagues—Worden bears all the hallmarks of brilliance; her new album This Is My Hand is further proof. Ten songs tackle the gestative and tangible as part of the creative process. The drumline coursing through “Pressure” is a departure from Worden’s more effluent sound but still in keeping with her grandiose sensibilities. “This Is My Hand” is a portrait of the artist unashamed. “Shape” would be a perfect tune for a kindergarten class to sing in a circle during music time. Worden’s elastic alto shines like a jewel throughout. One of the year’s best. (M. Brianna Stallings) Perfume Genius Too Bright (Matador Records) Have you ever heard the peculiar American idiom “that dude’s like, a total perfume genius?” No? Me either. But I have heard Perfume Genius, the project of Jet City singer-songwriter Mike Hadreas. His latest recording Too Bright— titled after what humans from Seattle say when exposed to even minimal amounts of sunlight—is an ironically dark yet compelling concoction of pop and prog-inflected tuneage. Crushingly seductive and anthemic, the album’s first single “Queen” wrestles with the silvery, synthetic soul of “Grid” and the rest of this crazy-good album for supremacy; the immediate result may include listeners hitting the replay button compulsively ever after. The production quality, songwriting and lush arrangements make for a genuinely surprising and richly musical experience. In his mad evolution from maker of sad, spare songs to deep dissembler of rock tropes, Hadreas pushes his artistic volume knob up to 11. And you should too. (August March) Purling Hiss Weirdon (Drag City Records) Speaking of records to play at high volume while attempting to defy the laws of gravity, there’s always the latest from Pennsylvania power trio Purling Hiss. Weirdon is a completely rocked-out affair capable of reversing the Earth’s axis and other grand, transformative geological phenomena. Album opener “Forcefield of Solitude” is a deceptively plaintive song that guitarist and singer Mike Polizze uses as staging area for the psychedout, sometimes humorous and always deeply informed riffage that follows. Polizze wears his heart and more notably, his influences, on his sleeve; but the diversity of work here—from the weird, wired blues of “Reptili-A-Genda” to the pop-punk of “Airwaves”—gives depth to his vision of guitarist as arhat of both the absurd and the sublime. The lumbering closer “Six Ways to Sunday” just adds lava to the quake triggered and magnified by each preceding track. (August March) a [34] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI Music Calendar continued from page 34 MARBLE BREWERY AMRC Brewfest!: 7 Bands • 1pm • FREE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Night Train • blues • 3pm • Hot Honey • southern folk, rock • 7pm • FREE MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras 2 Mile Train • 1:30pm • Paradox • 6pm • FREE MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION Jade Masque • Latin, reggae, rock • 9pm • FREE NEW MEXICO STEAM LOCOMOTIVE & RAILROAD SOCIETY Los Radiators • folk, blues • 9am • FREE • ALL-AGES! PRANZO ITALIAN GRILL, Santa Fe David Geist & Julie Trujillo • 6pm • $2 PUEBLO HARVEST CAFÉ Party on the Patio: Baracutanga • Latin, folk fusion • 6pm • $10 THE RANGE CAFÉ, Bernalillo Jody Vanesky & Groove Time • 7pm • FREE SCALO NORTHERN ITALIAN GRILL Todd and the Fox • indie, folk • 9pm • FREE SIDELINES SPORTS GRILLE & BAR deLuX • 9pm • FREE SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Bella Gigante • 8pm • $10 • Making a Fire CD Release Party: Brian Mayhall • 10pm • $7 SPIRIT ABUSE Los Angeles Composers: Liam Mooney and Michael Winter with Death Convention Singers • 9:30pm • $5 THE STAGE @ SANTA ANA STAR, Bernalillo Luxe: DJ Andy Gil • 9pm • $5 for women; $10 for men ST. CLAIR WINERY & BISTRO Swag • jazz, blues, Motown • 6:35pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! STONE FACE TAVERN Flashback • variety • 8:30pm • FREE THE STUMBLING STEER Ravin Hill • rock, soul • 7pm • FREE TLUR PA LOUNGE, Sandia Resort and Casino Rhythm Nation • 9:30pm • FREE TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK In The Mix: Live DJs • 9pm • FREE TRIPLE SEVENS, Isleta Casino Brushfire • 9:30pm • FREE VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Sina Soul • R&B • 7:30pm • FREE VICK’S VITTLES “We Can Duet” Live Music • 5pm • FREE ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO The Lost Mesa Swamp Kings • 9:30pm • FREE SUNDAY SEP 28 BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Sexy Sunday featuring Wae Fonkey • 7pm • FREE CHILDREN’S GRIEF CENTER OF NEW MEXICO Concert Corazon: Patty Stephens and the Brazil Project • 1pm • $20, FREE for children under 12 • ALL-AGES! CORRALES GROWERS’ MARKET, Corrales The Squash Blossom Boys • bluegrass, folk • 9am • FREE CORRALES RECREATIONAL CENTER, Corrales Los Radiators • folk, blues • 1:30pm • $5 • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD Butcher Babies • Anti-Mortem • BlindDryve • alternative metal • Inhuman Hands • metal • 7:30pm • $13 LOW SPIRITS Red Light Cameras • indie rock • Charlene Yi • 8pm MARBLE BREWERY Kitty Jo Creek • bluegrass, jazz • 3pm • FREE MARCELLO’S CHOPHOUSE Tony Rodriguez Duo • 6:30pm • FREE MINE SHAFT TAVERN, Madrid Gene Corbin • Americana • Connie Long & Willow Doug • folk, rock • 3pm • FREE TRACTOR BREWERY WELLS PARK I’LL Drink To That: Sara Roman • Xian Bass • David Maile • Vincent Lewis and more • 4pm • FREE VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE MONDAY SEP 29 BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Whiskey Business Karaoke! • 9pm • FREE CORRALES BISTRO BREWERY, Corrales B-Man & the MizzBeeHavens • rock • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! LAUNCHPAD Sham 69 • Total Chaos • Brassknuckle Boys • punk, oi! • We Are The Revenants • 9pm • $10 MARCELLO’S CHOPHOUSE Open Piano Night • 6:30pm • FREE SUNSHINE THEATER Fitz and the Tantrums • neo soul, indie • 8:30pm • $23 • ALL-AGES! VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE TUESDAY SEP 30 BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Jason & the Punknecks • Americana, punk • 9:30pm • FREE CARAVAN EAST Joe Mark Angelo • country • 5pm • FREE, ladies night EVENT | PREVIEW The Mule Still Kicks Ass Legendary blues-rock jam band Gov’t Mule gallops into Sunshine Theater (120 Central SW) on Tuesday, Sept. 30, for an all-ages celebration of Southern rock. A staple of every music fest that matters, the Mule has collaborated with a wide, impressive range of artists including Grace Potter, Elvis Costello and Myles Kennedy. The group’s signature sound combines Crosby, Stills & Nash’s “Southern Cross” and Bob Seger’s “Turn the Page” with a hearty dose of deep-fried blues. Two decades into the game, Gov’t TUESDAY Mule’s haunting, SEPTEMBER 30 lonesome guitar melodies and funky Sunshine Theater 120 Central SW jam-sesh style still alibi.com/e/110842 effectively and 8pm unpretentiously showcase these wildly talented musicians. Warren Haynes’ deep, gravel-strewn voice vibrates the very soul. Alongside drummer Matt Abts, keyboardist Danny Louis and bassist Jorgen Carlsson, Gov’t Mule can (and will) rock you all night long. Expect to hear songs from their latest (16th!) double-LP Shout!, plus epic tracks like “Banks of the Deep End,” “Beautifully Broken” and “Lola Leave Your Light On.” This gloriously gritty gathering kicks off at 8pm, and presale tickets are $29. What’s not to love? (Renée Chavez) a GASWORKS Joyce Manor • rock, punk • The Exquisites • Drifter • 7pm • $10 • ALL-AGES! • See “Show Up!.” IMBIBE College Night with DJ Automatic & Drummer Camilo Quinones • 9pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD Yellowman • I. Conscious • reggae • 9pm • $17 MOLLY’S BAR, Tijeras Exit Zero Country • 6pm • FREE SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe The Reggae/World Beat Party • 9pm SUNSHINE THEATER Gov’t Mule • Southern rock • 8pm • $29 • See preview box. VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE ZIA DINER, Santa Fe Bluegrass Jam • 6pm • FREE • ALL-AGES! ZINC WINE BAR & BISTRO Sweet & Lowdown • jazz duo • 8pm • FREE WEDNESDAY OCT 1 BLACKBIRD BUVETTE Poetry ‘n Beer • 7pm • FREE DIRTY BOURBON Latin Sin Wednesdays with DeeJay Louie • 6pm • FREE EMBERS STEAKHOUSE, Isleta Casino Los Amigos • Latin, jazz • 6pm • FREE HISTORIC EL REY THEATER The Bounce Bus Tour: Will Sparks • Joel Fletcher • Timmy Trumpet • electronic • 8:30pm • $10-$13 HOTEL CASCADA The Tracey Whitney Trio • 6pm • FREE LAUNCHPAD 10 Year Anniversary Tour: Senses Fail • posthardcore • No Bragging Rights • To The Wind • Knuckle Puck • 7:30pm • $16 • ALL-AGES! LOMAS-TRAMWAY PUBLIC LIBRARY Temporary Tattoos • folk • noon • FREE LOW SPIRITS Lumpz One! • Sublmnl Rnsons • hip-hop • Kron Jeremy • hip-hop • Cryogenik Styles • 9pm • FREE MARBLE BREWERY Cafe Bomba • Caribbean • 6pm • FREE MONTE VISTA FIRE STATION Blues Jam with The Memphis P. Tails • 8pm • FREE SKYLIGHT, Santa Fe Metalachi • heavy metal, mariachi • 8pm VERNON’S HIDDEN VALLEY STEAKHOUSE Bob Tate • solo piano • 6pm • FREE WAREHOUSE 21, Santa Fe The Bash: Open Mic/Jam • 5pm • FREE a WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [35] What�’s the latest on whether zinc cures colds? straight dope | advice from the abyss by cecil adams Okay, Cecil. Sixteen years ago, at the end of a column about whether zinc lozenges cure the common cold, you wrote: “Today you don't hear much about vitamin C as a cold cure. I'll bet you a jumbo box of Contac that the same thing happens to zinc.” Did you win the bet? Did you lose? We’re left hanging here. —sbunny8, from the Straight Dope Message Board You were left hanging because I was left hanging— nobody took my bet. Too bad; I could have used that Contac. The zinc vs. colds controversy, while it hasn’t petered out altogether, hasn’t made much progress and is nowhere near a firm conclusion one way or another. But you know me: I like to bring closure to the great questions of our time. While that’s not easy in a field as squishy as medicine, I’ve come up with a methodology to get things off the dime. You’ve heard of meta-analysis? I take it to the next level: meta-meta-analysis. Meta-analysis may be crudely described as the study of studies. Meta-meta-analysis is studying studies of studies. Meta-analysis uses sophisticated statistical techniques to tease out conclusions from a confusing mess of data. Meta-meta-analysis is simpler: It relies on eye-rolling, wisecracks and snark. Enough buildup. Let’s get to work. 1) To recap: The claim, first bruited by George Eby in 1984, was that a zinc lozenge held under the tongue would alleviate cold symptoms in as little as two hours. Eby is an interesting individual. He’s not a physician, but rather is head of the George Eby Research Institute in Austin, Texas. His home page, at coldcure.com, displays a GIF of a rippling American flag and a photo of himself holding a bottle of the zinc lozenges he sells. Zinc isn’t the only metal he’s taken an interest in; he also believes magnesium will cure depression. 2) Despite his lack of marquee cred, Eby and his zinc claims have been taken seriously by the medical research establishment. By his own reckoning, as of 2010 there had been “14 double-blind, placebocontrolled, randomized clinical trials” of zinc cold cures, which “produced widely differing results with ... one-half showing success and the remainder showing failure.” 3) You or I might be discouraged by results like that. Not Eby. He drew a distinction between ionic—that is, chemically reactive—zinc and chemically bound, nonreactive zinc. His conclusion? We’ll get to that. First an aside. 4) From what I can make out, the ionic-vs.-bound business arises largely from a drawback of ionic zinc: It tastes unbelievably gross. (Remember: You’re supposed to hold the lozenges under your tongue.) My assistant Una, who has tried them—I assure you I didn’t put her up to this—offers the following testimony: “The kind with ionic zinc taste so dreadful I can't use them due to nausea.” To improve the taste, many formulations on the market now bind the [36] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI zinc to glycine or citric acid. As we’ll see, this may not be the best idea. 5) Mere experimentation having proven little, researchers then turned to meta-analysis and other methods of reviewing multiple studies. The idea, to oversimplify: Trends not apparent in numerous small studies may jump out when the numbers are viewed in aggregate. Obvious problem: Many small piles of crap pushed into one big one don’t thereby become research gold. Various techniques are used to winnow junk data, but the outcome can be like the late Bowl Championship Series: You can see what they were going for without necessarily buying the result. On to those reviews: 6) Caruso et al (2007) started with 105 zinc studies and pruned them down to the 14 the team deemed scientifically valid. Conclusion: Zinc lozenges and nasal sprays did nothing; zinc nasal gel couldn’t be ruled out. 7) Back to Eby. Based on his 2010 review of 14 studies (mostly the same ones; you’ll recall seven said aye, seven nay), he claimed the deciding factor was the proportion of ionic zinc: The more a given dose had relative to total zinc, the better it fought colds. Eby is (unsurprisingly) big on lozenges, but he thinks the ones using bound zinc, which include most of those currently out there, are worthless. Corollary, based on Una’s experience: For zinc to cure what ails you, it has to make you sick. 8) Hemilä (2011) looked at 13 of the studies—seven oui, six non. But Hemilä proposed his own explanatory variable: The effective zinc preparations had a dose of at least 75 milligrams. 9) Singh and Das (2011) performed what’s known as a Cochrane systematic review of 15 studies. They offered no judgments about dosage, formulation or other such minutiae. They just declared (well, not “just”—the Cochrane method is quite rigorous): Zinc is effective. 10) Zinc advocates may now chirp: Multiple reviews (sorta) agree—zinc (maybe sometimes) works! My meta-meta-conclusion: When reviewers looking at the same basic data come up with three different ideas about the right way to use the stuff (more zinc! ionic zinc! possibly zinc nasal gel!) ... well, let's be charitable. There’s plenty of room for doubt. Send questions to Cecil via straightdope.com or write him c/o Chicago Reader, 350 N. Orleans, Chicago 60654 WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [37] Free Will Astrology | Horoscopes by ERIKA A vision of beauty, your Montessori smile. Every day begins a new with you. You are a mess of gorgeous chaos. “Nobody keeps any of what he has, and he is only a borrower of bones.” THE GIRL FROM WESTPHALIA There once was a girl from Westphalia, with amazingly large genitalia, those flaps are, by gum! plus-size and then some!.. They can smother and lead to heart failure! SEXY MAINTENANCE GUY AT ATRIA You were helping a resident. The way you spoke to them was more sincere than anything I have ever heard. We looked at each other in an indescribable way. I know you felt it as strong as I did. It was love at first sight. If time would have allowed, I would have taken you at that moment. I can’t get you out of my mind! ARIES (March 21-April 19): It’s no secret. The wealthy one percent of the population has been getting progressively wealthier. Meanwhile, the poor are becoming steadily poorer. I’m worried there is a metaphorically similar trend in your life. Am I right? If so, please do all you can to reverse it. Borrow energy from the rich and abundant parts of your life so as to lift up the neglected and underendowed parts. Here’s one example of how you could proceed: For a while, be less concerned with people who think you’re a star, and give more attention to those who accept and love your shadow side. He don’t chase ‘rainbows’, He don’t need good times— Gray days rolling in—then you see him you’re horny—go ahead—’cause you need him; He’ll wear you scent on his face; and his memory you’ll never erase; when you need an unselfish lovercall the Muffin Man right over...” SEXY BEAST....FEEL THE FAN BABY And when your lips met mine, I felt the earth below me melt away and all time stopped for that moment. I knew this smile would never leave and my life was complete. You consume my heart and every thought, yet, I cannot get enough of you. I am fascinated by you, infatuated with you. I hunger for your taste, laugh, and the feel, of your soul touching mine. You are amazing Dale! “I SAW YOU” IN CHICAGO?? For anyone who knows Chicago life well … Can you direct me to what may be Chicago’s equivalent (I know there are probably several) to Alibi’s “I Saw You”? YOUR STUFF HAS BEEN SOLD! 5 years engaged, you ended with a phone call, 7 years wondering. 1-1-14 you came back, apologies, promises, I had loved you, still did: even with your limp, service dog, drama, helped you move here, put together perfect love nest, happy, plan to move in together soon, 7-16 mom was dying, you slept with your landlady—1 time?, I forgave you! not over til we’re over you said, go focus on mom, I was in Lubbock, mom died: no you at all, back to ABQ 8-25, you moved, phone broke? silence since 8-14, why? LEWIS BLACK Robert and Daniel, I waited at the bar after the show to buy you guys a drink. Very disappointed you didn’t show. “DO YOU KNOW THE MUFFIN MAN?” “Now Muffin Man don’t like sunshine; Albuquerque 505.268.6666 FREE CODE 3079 For other local numbers call 1-888MegaMatesTM [38] Thank you so much! ALL I WANTED TO KNOW … All I ever wanted to know was WHY? I bought a home based on your stated desires and plans, went to Santa Fe to look at rings, I told my family all about you, and then you inexplicably stopped taking my calls and turned on me. I’m an adult. I know how to ‘let go’. After everything we had been through, and all the time, love-making and intimacy we had shared, all I wanted was to know WHY? May G_d, the Universe, Karma, Fate, etc. deal with you the way you dealt with me. WARNING HOT GUYS! www.MegaMates.com made 24/7 Friendly Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2013 PC LLC Dating Easy I recently met someone visiting from there. But knucklehead me didn’t set up a way to reconnect before going our separate ways. I know, just slap me, haha. Albuquerque 505.268.1111 FREE TO LISTEN & REPLY TO ADS! FREE CODE: Weekly Alibi For other local numbers call 1-888-MegaMates 24/7 Friendly Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2013 PC LLC SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI www.MegaMatesMen.com TM 2508 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “I choose a lazy person to do a hard job,” says Bill Gates, the world’s second-richest man, “because a lazy person will find an easy way to do it.” That’s good counsel for you right now, Taurus. You’d be wise to get in touch with your inner lazy bum. Let the slacker within you uncover the least stressful way to accomplish your difficult task. According to my analysis of the astrological omens, there is no need for you to suffer and strain as you deal with your dilemma. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): If you don’t identify and express your conscious desires, your unconscious desires will dominate your life. I will say that again in different language because it’s crucial you understand the principle. You’ve got to be very clear about what you really want, and install a shining vision of what you really want at the core of your everyday life. If you don’t do that, you will end up being controlled by your habits and old programming. So be imperious, Gemini. Define your dearest, strongest longing, and be ruthlessly devoted to it. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004) was an influential French photographer, a pioneer of photojournalism who helped transform photography into an art form. In 1986 he was invited to Palermo, Sicily to accept a prize for his work. The hotel he stayed in seemed oddly familiar to him, although he didn’t understand why. It was only later he discovered that the hotel had been the place at which his mother and father stayed on their honeymoon. It was where he was conceived. I foresee a comparable development on the horizon for you, Cancerian: a return to origins, perhaps inadvertent; an evocative encounter with your roots; a reunification with an influence that helped make you who you are today. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): With expert execution, musician Ben Lee can play 15 notes per second on his violin. Superstar eater Pete Czerwinski needs just 34 seconds to devour a 12-inch pizza. When Jerry Miculek is holding his rifle, he can get off eight crack shots at four targets in a little more than one second. While upside-down, Aichi Ono is capable of doing 135 perfect head spins in a minute. I don’t expect you to be quite so lightning fast and utterly flawless as these people in the coming weeks, Leo, but I do think you will be unusually quick and skillful. For the foreseeable future, speed and efficiency are your specialties. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): As the makeup artist for the film Dallas Buyers Club, Robin Mathews had a daunting task. During the 23 days of shooting, she had to constantly transform lead actors Matthew McConaughey and Jared Leto so that they appeared either deathly ill or relatively healthy. Sometimes she had to switch them back and forth five times a day. She was so skillful in accomplishing this feat that she won the Academy Award for Best Makeup and Hairstyling. Her budget? A meager $250. The film was a shoestring indie production. I’m naming her your inspirational role model for the next few weeks, Virgo. I believe that you, too, can create magic without a wealth of resources. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “I am a seed about to break,” wrote Sylvia Plath in her poem “Three Women.” That’s how I see you right now, Libra. You are teeming with the buoyant energy that throbs when a seed is ready to sprout. You have been biding your time, gathering the nourishment you need, waiting for the right circumstances to burst rob brezsny open with your new flavor. And now that nervous, hopeful, ecstatic moment is about to arrive. Be brave! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The English verb “cicurate” is defined as “to tame or domesticate” or “to make mild or innocuous.” But it once had an additional sense: “to reclaim from wildness.” It was derived from the Latin word cicurare, which meant “to bring back from madness, to draw out of the wilderness.” For your purposes, Scorpio, we will make cicurate your theme, but concentrate on these definitions: “to reclaim from wildness, to bring back from madness, to draw out of the wilderness.” In the coming weeks, you will be exploring rough, luxuriant areas of unknown territory. You will be wrangling with primitive, sometimes turbulent energy. I urge you to extract the raw vitality you find there and harness it to serve your daily rhythm and long-term goals. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “You can exert no influence if you are not susceptible to influence,” said psychologist Carl Jung. Extrapolating from that idea, we can hypothesize that the more willing and able you are to be influenced, the greater your influence might be. Let’s make this your key theme in the coming weeks. It will be an excellent time to increase your clout, wield more authority and claim more of a say in the creation of your shared environments. For best results, you should open your mind, be very receptive and listen well. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Congratulations, Capricorn. Your current dilemmas are more useful and interesting than any that you have had for a long time. If you can even partially solve them, the changes you set in motion will improve your entire life, not just the circumstances they immediately affect. Of the several dividends you may reap, one of my favorites is this: You could liberate yourself from a messed-up kind of beauty and become available for a more soothing and delightful kind. Here’s another potential benefit: You may transform yourself in ways that will help you attract more useful and interesting dilemmas in the future. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Alan Moore is the British author who wrote the graphic novels Watchmen and V for Vendetta. He is now nearing completion of Jerusalem, a novel he has been working on for six years. It will be more than a million words long, almost double the size of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, and 200,000 words bigger than the Bible. “Any editor worth their salt would tell me to cut two-thirds of this book,” Moore told the New Statesman, “but that’s not going to happen.” Referring to the author of Moby Dick, Moore adds, “I doubt that Herman Melville had an editor. If he had, that editor would have told him to get rid of all that boring stuff about whaling: ‘Cut to the chase, Herman.’” Let’s make Moore and Melville your role models in the coming week, Aquarius. You have permission to sprawl, ramble and expand. Do not cut to the chase. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): For a long time, an Illinois writer named ArLynn Leiber Presser didn’t go out much. She had 325 friends on Facebook and was content to get her social needs met in the virtual realm. But then she embarked on a year-long project in which she sought face-to-face meetings with all of her online buddies. The experiment yielded sometimes complicated but mostly interesting results. It took her to 51 cities around the world. I suggest we make her your inspirational role model for the coming weeks, Pisces. In at least one way, it’s time for you to move out of your imagination and into the real world. You’re primed to turn fantasies into actions, dreams into practical pursuits. HOMEWORK: WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE EXCUSE? TRY NOT TO SAY IT OR THINK IT DURING THE COMING WEEK. REPORT RESULTS TO TRUTHROOSTER@GMAIL.COM. Go to realastrology.com to check out Rob Brezsny’s expanded weekly audio horoscopes and daily text message horoscopes. The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at (877) 873-4888 or (900) 950-7700. Classified classifieds@alibi.com (505) 346-0660 ext 258 w SEE PHOTOS AND MORE ONLINE AT ALIBI.COM Handyman Services 7 STAR - COOLING ELECT. NO MELTING! GET AC - AFFORDABLY! Electrical Install included at little to no cost. All Air Cond. and Elect. Services Mike Bell / Owner www.AlbuquerqueElectricians.n et www.AbqAirConditioning.com 505-332-8965 w Seminars/Workshops COMPANION ANIMAL wRESCUE Companion Animal Rescue Effort Forum September 28th, 2014 11am12pm Memorial Hall 3701 Carlisle Blvd NE, Albuquerque Presented By: Sherry Mangold, APNM Education Director & Senior Cruelty Case Manager Sharon Jonas, APNM CARE Program Coordinator Animal Protection of New Mexicoâs (APNM) Companion Animal Rescue Effort (CARE) is a network of safe havens for the animals of domestic violence victims in New Mexico. CARE empowers individuals to leave abusive environments by providing temporary housing for companion animals, livestock and exotic animals. This Forum is your opportunity to learn about the signs of abuse and to become aware of The Link between animal abuse and domestic violence. You will meet Sophie, an Italian Greyhound, who with her owner fled their abuser after both had been stabbed multiple times. Sophie shares her story throughout the state. We will inform you about requesting assistance from CARE and the work CARE does for the animals and their families. APNM provides training about CARE and The Link between domestic violence and animal abuse to law enforcement, social services providers and concerned citizens. In addition, APNM provides humane education in schools throughout the Albuquerque, Santa Fe and Los Lunas school districts. This Forum is free and requires no RSVP. For more information contact Margaret Keller mikeller1@comcast.net Musicians Wanted/Available BASS PLAYER NEEDED Experienced bass player who can sing needed for popular ABQ Classic Rock band. 266-7591 Southeast NEAR SAN PEDRO AND ZUNI Very nice! 601 San Pedro SE. Small Studio -$435.00,includes utilities. William H. Cornelius, Real Estate Consultant 243-2229 w Downtown DOWNTOWN 1 Br. 1120 Lead wSW and 1304 Silver SW - $535.00 + g&e. Laundry on site. William H. Cornelius, III Real Estate Consultant 243-2229 University BUENA VISTA & GOLD Studios - $455.00. Plus gas and electric. 3 left. William H. Cornelius, III Real Estate Consultant 243-2229 w UNM/CNM Stanford and wSilver. Studio - $465.00 plus G&E (some dogs OK) William H, Cornelius, III Real Estate Consultant 243-2229 UNM/CNM 1617 Gold SE: Studios$425;1 br. $520. Utilities paid. William H. Cornelius, III Real Estate Consultant 2432229 UNM/CNM 1 br. 508 Sycamore SE -$650 + G&E (some dogs okay).506 Sycamore SE 1 br. + G&E $595 Small 1 br. 506 1/2 Sycamore SE $495 + G&E. William H. Cornelius, III Real Estate Consultant 243-2229 w w Houses for Rent ELEGANT 2BR NEAR NOB HILL Wonderfully updated w 2BR/1BA/1100SF. Hardwood floors, 1-car garage, WD, Dishwasher. NOW REDUCED to $1150 per month plus utilities. Sorry no pets. Call Carolyn at Chocolate Properties 505-3319049 view at www.DarlingPuebloStyle.com BRUNI/KARR AGENCY Many fine homes available. All areas, all price ranges. Call for faxed lists. www.brunikarr.com. No Fees. 2960726. Gigs/Show Flyers DISC JOCKEY 4 HIRE THUMP! a Party with DJ McDubz (505)804-0021 djmcdubz@hotmail.com Entertainment SCAVENGER HUNT wSCAVENGER HUNT, Saturday, Sept. 27th, 10AM to 2PM, 1103 Texas N.E. Take a selfie at ABQ landmarks. $10 a car. Announcements NEW WEB SITE The Ultimate Community For Swinging Seniors. seniorsgonewild.org For more info email toeentertainment@yahoo.com JOHN V. KEMM http://johnvkemm.com/ Resources & Referrals in place. Great for counseling or alternative practitioner. Call 505934-2055 Northwest SHARE & SAVE Looking for healing practitioner to share space (massage, acupuncture, reiki etc.). $300 a month includes utilities. Call(505)459.0025 Houses for Sale Office Space Northeast OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT $300 Per Month,spacious office with large shared waiting area and kitchenette with communityminded mental health providers. South Valley WEST MESA CHARM, $112,500 3 BR, 2 BA with backyard access & lots of updates. Stacked stone, sunroom & more! 820 Estancia Dr NW, MLS #823972, 505994-8198 Body & Soul Licensed Massage TENSE? UPTIGHT? STRESSED OUT? Want to truly relax? Massage by Carol is the answer. 250-1198. LMT 596.$60/hr. Mon-Sat, 8am-8pm. Shower facilities available. NEW TO ALBUQUERQUE! LI’S ASIAN MASSAGE Centrally located near Downtown/University/Sunport 123 Yale SE (corner of Gold/Yale) Hours 9:30am 9:30pm, $30/hr 505-2002949 LMT #7362 Shower facility available Parking validated before 5pm BEAUTIFUL ORIENTAL MASSAGE 8210 La Mirada NE Ste. 400. Call 505-332-3339 LMT Lic. #5694. Metaphysical TAROT READINGS Donation based Tarot readings. Discover the unseen energies influencing your life! Call Eric @505-2063494 Self-Help/Workshops OUT OF CONTROL? Are you struggling with COMPULSIVE SEXUAL BEHAVIOR and WANT HELP? Call (505)510-1722 or visit www.abqsaa.org Employment Employment INDIVIDUALS NEEDED TO PARTICIPATE IN MOCK JURY TRIAL October 2, 2014 at 9:30 am to 2:00 pm at downtown law office. Each person will be paid $50 and lunch will be provided. Participants must be over age 18 and will be required to answer a short questionnaire and confidentiality agreement. Please contact mrmontoya@rothsteinlaw.com for more information. DEMOCRATIC CANVASSER Help the Democratic Party of w New Mexico elect progressive candidates in 2014! We need canvassers 20 hours/week. $10.10/ hour! Contact Amy at 505-288-4739 or amy.deitchler@nmdemocrats.org NOW HIRING GIRLS FOR ARTISTIC NUDE MODELING. Must be 18-45 years old. No exp nec. Completely confidential, and safe. Start Making Money Today! 505-242-3775. Opportunities SMOKERS NEEDED University of New Mexico College of Pharmacy is currently investigating a medication for smoking cessation. The study involves quitting twice for 20 hours (the two 20-hour quit periods are separated by 1 week) and pays $250. If you are able to quit for this time period and would like to participate in a clinical study, please contact us at (505) 925-0783. EXPERIENCED CAREGIVERS Helping Hands is seeking experienced, mature caregivers to assist our elderly clients in their homes, located in ABQ & SANTA FE. Duties include but are not limited to personal care, mobility by Matt Jones Across Real Estate Apartments for Rent “From Z to A”—such a short trip. Place your ad: alibi.com 1 Chow’s chow, perhaps 5 Western loop 10 Dr. Frankenstein’s gofer 14 Canal to the Red Sea 15 First name in b-o-l-o-g-n-a 16 Florida city, familiarly 17 He plays Tom Haverford on “Parks and Recreation” 19 Sent a quick note online 20 Verb finish 21 [Your comment amuses me] 22 Reuben’s home 23 Item in a nest in barn rafters 26 All over again 28 Madhouse 29 1970s soul group The ___-Lites 30 Long time period 32 High school wrestling team equipment 34 Nutella flavor 37 Ward, to the Beav 38 Persian poet Khayyam 39 Put into law 42 Altar exchanges 45 0, in soccer scores 47 Superhero in red and yellow 49 Downloadable show 53 Number in the upper left of this grid 54 “Born Free” rapper 55 “Ceci n’est pas ___ pipe” (Magritte caption) 56 Film on ponds 58 Like an infamous Dallas knoll 60 Academic period 62 Ms. Thurman 63 Made it into the paper 64 Acapulco assent 65 Second man to walk on the moon 70 Sneaker problem 71 John on the Mayflower 72 Party with glow sticks and pacifiers 73 Gram’s nickname 74 Put up with 75 Ogled Down 1 Blind ___ bat 2 Light, in La Paz 3 JFK Library architect 4 Harriet’s husband 5 Too far to catch up to 6 Total jerk 7 Teatro alla ___ (Milan opera house) 8 Asian wrap 9 The Who’s “Baba ___” 10 “The same place,” in footnotes 11 Wednesday’s father 12 American wildcat 13 They’re all set to play 18 Broadway backer 23 Cuatro y cuatro 24 1980s duo 25 Country singer-songwriter who wrote hits for Merle Haggard 27 2000s Iraq war subject, briefly 31 Cloister sister 33 Inbox stuff 35 “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” author Carle 36 Work on your biceps? 40 Comedian Margaret 41 Amount equal to a million pennies 43 Ending for psych 44 One-horse carriage 46 Vegas headliner? 48 Born to be wild? 49 Dons, as clothes 50 New York silverware city 51 Goes diving, casually 52 Ruckus 57 Miata maker 59 “Open” author Agassi 61 Actress Sorvino 66 “Your Moment of ___” (“The Daily Show” feature) 67 Sliver of hope 68 “___ got a golden ticket...” 69 “Stupid Flanders,” to Homer ©2014 Jonesin’ Crosswords LAST WEEK CROSSWORD ANSWERS “Follow the Directions”—it’s all about where. This week’s answers online at alibi.com. assistance, transfers, companionship, meal prep, transportation, light housekeeping, etc. Employment Requirements: The ability to pass a National Background Check, Current Drivers License and Auto Insurance, Reliable Transportation, and a Working Phone Number with Voicemail.Please call Erika @ (505) 366-2348. SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY. OVER 205,000 READERS and growing! The Alibi’s readership knows no bounds! Call 3460660 ext. 221 to place an ad. House For Rent Corrales Heights, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, f/p, washer dryer, sunroom, 2 car garage (electric), central air and heat. Easy access to Corrales, 528 and walking paths, great neighborhood. $1050 month plus util. Call Pam Harris at PQuail to see this beautiful rental 350-4503 WEEKLY ALIBI SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 [39] alibi BILLBOARD TO PLACE YOUR AD CALL (505) 346-0660 OR VISIT ALIBI.COM $ WE PAY CASH FOR $ DIABETIC TEST STRIPS 505-859-3060 PAST LIFE REGRESSION CREATIVE MIND HYPNOTHERAPY 353-646 FREE HYPNOSIS SESSION AFFORDABLE PARALEGAL SERVICES! Document Prep, court filing, notary, LLC formation , Name Change, Small Claims, Civil Answer, Business Licence etc! 505-307-5286 southwestparalegalsolutions@gmail WEB DESIGN, PHOTOGRAPHY & GRAPHIC DESIGN STAN ALEXANDER, M.Ed., C.Ht. 884-0164. Rabbitworks - Sharon Myers 505/286-1691 www.rabbitworksnm.com WWW.YOURGLOVESOURCE.COM BULLFIGHTING ACTION Motion Picture need CAST & CREW THERE IS PAY - No Exp Needed Apply in Person M/S 11am - 8pm 505 266-0580 / 4014 CENTRAL AVE., SE, ABQ, NM 87108 CASH FOR YOUR CAR OR MOTORCYCLE! Needing repairs, No Problem! Call Kenny, 362-2112. Find us on Facebook MENDY LOU PSYCHIC. Sexaholics Anonymous 12 Step Recovery 899-0633 www.sa-abq.org Palm Reading & Tarot. 139 Harvard SE. 239-9824. www.mendylou.com EVOLUTION PIERCING 4517 Central Ave. NE, 255-4567 www.evolutionpiercing.com Voted Best of Burque! [40] SEPTEMBER 25-OCTOBER 1, 2014 WEEKLY ALIBI WE TRANSFER FILM, VINYL, TAPES TO DIGITAL HIGHEST QUALITY/BEST SERVICE/LOCAL ROLLING R PRODUCTIONS 505-268-8341 ERIC WILLIAMS PHOTOGRAPHY On location portraits, headshots, publicity photos. ERICWPHOTO.COM • 505-269-8493