The Best of flickr
Transcription
The Best of flickr
1 2 3 4 5 inside this is sue the sundance kids 11 the BEST of flickr the best of photographs on flickr.com coffee attacks! 14 22 god or nature? 29 political: brand power 32 public displays of art 34 M.Ward 42 top picks from this years sundance film festival the health benefits of coffee and the myths surrounding it a realistic view about the origin of the universe the power of creating a brand name to make the sell - namely the stimulus NYC transit authority has a history of supporting large installations of artisis the indie folk songwriter doesn’t particulary like the lime light - he doesn’t mind it either notes from the editor b-movies the microbrew view recipies from the road unsigned bands fun gizmos instruments of destruction pub games cityscape: NYC events calendar 6 8 17 19 21 39 49 50 51 55 63 the goons who run this outfit Meet the staff of SFTF. They like to pretend they’re pretty cool, but you can judge for yourself. Nick Marx Editor-in-Chief & Design Editor Nick is from the small town of Corning in upstate New York- no one really knows where that is, somewhere near Canada is what most people tend to think. He enjoys writing music, and while “The Fridge” has taken over his life, he enjoys participating in beer drinking and whiskey drinking - any kind of drinking for that matter. Nick has worked for a Fortune 500 corporation as well a small publishing house. Favorite activities include napping and sleeping. He misses New Zealand where he studied for 6 months, but will find new adventures while teaching english in Thailand after he graduates. Nick is a Communication Major and Photography Minor at Loyola College in Maryland. He also thinks writing in the third person is weird. Nick is one of eight children where all but two (himself included) went to the University of Notre Dame. He claims he’s over it - damn Irish. Laura was born in Brooklyn, but spent most of her life growing up in Colts Neck, NJ, not too far from Belmar and Point Pleasant. She graduated from Loyola College in Maryland in 2009 with a B.A. in Journalism. Band of the Moment: The Script Food of Choice: Eggplant Parmesan Beer Preference: Woodchuck Amber Favorite TV Show: Anything Food Network What you don’t know: Back when pop superstardom ruled the airwaves, Laura, her sister and two friends thought they could be the next Spice Girls. They danced around in platform shoes, writing and singing songs, and preaching “girl power” to anyone who would listen. Lucky for the rest laura stagliano of the world, she quickly grew out of this phase. The only problem: She managing editor forgot to destroy the video evidence. Jenna wilson promotions director Jenna hails proudly from the state of New Jersey, where she swears that it doesn’t all smell like garbage. When she’s not thinking about The Fridge, she enjoys dark chocolate, cuddling with puppies, watching the greatest show on television- Entourage, and drinking obscene amounts of coffee. An avid Blue Devils fan, you might not want to go near her during March Madness. After graduating from Loyola College in Maryland this spring, she hopes to bring peace and love to everyone in the world, or maybe just in the nearest vicinity of her. megan gillen advertising director matt kiebus business manager Matt is from Westfield, NJ is a communications major with a specialization in journalism. He loves House Party 1-4, the Temptations, and anything deep-fried. His favorite beer is Schlitz. He likes cool unique sneakers, fitted hats, movie trailers, new music, baseball on summer nights, pick-up basketball on outdoors courts, buying retro replica sports jerseys on Ebay, Bruce Springsteen, wayfarers, Tanqueray, and writing. He one day aspires to grow a great beard. When he was sixteen Scarlett Johansson asked him if he wanted to “go steady with her.” He politely declined. His response was, “I’m not a man who settles down.” Megan Gillen is originally from Philadelphia, PA. Her favorite activities involve drinking Carlsberg, watching the Philadelphia Phillies dominate, and checking out what is Straight from the Fridge. She loves to travel the world, and dreams of one day moving back to Copenhagen, Denmark, where she studied abroad and made herself look like a fool trying to learning the Danish language. After graduating from Loyola College in Maryland with a major in Advertising, Megan plans to work with the MLB and soak in the summertime. 7 editor’s note W ell look at you- one of the smart folks who decided to give Straight From the Fridge a go around. Well its a deciscion that you won’t regret, because we are unlike any other magazine out there. There is something in common between you and this magazine- we appreciate the finer things in life, but we’re not assholes about it. No, there’s nothing wrong with jamming out with the car radio blasting the latest Kanye or Maroon 5. We just tend to be the one who keep the windows rolled up so no one knows. We’re the type of people who have drank our fair share of PBR, Miller Lite, and Keystone in the name of a beer bong tourney. But we didn’t enjoy it- we like our brews to be made locally, taste of hops and chocolate, and be far more intoxicating than 3.5%. And if you hadn’t noticed yet, we like pretty pictures. Hell, we don’t even care if its Annie Lebovitz or your grandmother who took them, if they look great then that’s all we care about. We’re tired of the little man getting sat upon by the big man. That’s why we feature unsigned bands, artists, and bad movies. But SFTF will never be concerned with the latest fads and trendiest handbags. No, we are the one’s who start the trends. We discover the “next big thing” day in and day out. If we were around when snap bracelets made it big, we would’ve seen it coming a mile away. I would be sitting poolside in at my Mediterranean villa while my bulter served me Cristal mamossas, reaping the benefits of my snap bracelet stock portfoliio. Rather, I’m the lowly editor-in-chief of this hip magazine making far less money. ATTENTION: I do not recommend you take finacial advise from SFTF, because that would be stupid. Quite frankily, we don’t know how the world ever existed without a publication like SFTF. We are all encompassing- art, culture, food, music, film, events. They say the magazine industry is dying. Well we might be crazy, but we’re not stupid. We work hard to bring you materail not easily found on the internet. Time is bank these days and who really has the time to read 10 different magazines and browse hundreds of internet sites. My friends, thats what we here at SFTF get paid for. So look no futher than our magazine. We know your type. We are your type. So don’t be ashamed of what you like. We wouldn’t be making a magazine if you were the only one. When I tell friends the name of the magazine I work for the first thing they ask is “Is that a cooking magazine or something?” And with all the strength in my body I refrain from a reaction of the violent sort. Instead I explain to them- “Straight from the Fridge” is a saying from the jazz culture of the 1940’s that means “Cool from the get-go.” So just keep it cool kid. Real Cool. —Nicholas Marx Editor-in-Chief 8 9 10 WATC The In January every year the best independent film makers around the world gather in Park City, Utah for the largest independent film festival in the U.S., the Sundance Film Festival. Studio executives, film critics, and movie buffs find themselves at a ski resort for a prestigious but relaxed giant party that celebrates independent films. Which is quite the opposite of the Cannes Film festival in the south of France, the most prestigious film festival in the world, that takes place in May in one of the most luxurious area’s one could imagine. Sundance is a bit more American. Park City, Utah is where Quentin Tarantino debuted Reservoir Dogs and there, Kevin Smith debuted Clerks. Countless independent classics first hit the big screen at Sundance: Little Miss Sunshine, Napoleon Dynamite, Garden State, and The Blair Witch Project. Sundance began in Salt Lake City in 1978 as an attempt to bring more filmmakers to Utah. Founded by Sterling Van Wagenen and John Earle with Chairperson Robert Redford, the goal of the festival was to showcase what the potential of independent film could be. At the time, the main focus of the event was to present a series of retrospective Sundance Kids 500 days of summer One of the most talked about films of Sundance this year was 500 Days of Summer, staring Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel is a modern day version of When Harry Met Sally crossed with Annie Hall. Deschanel plays the role of an intern at a greeting card company, she had recently moved from Michigan to L.A. Gordon-Levitt is a writer for the greeting card company. She is a free spirit who believes people should live in the moment, and thinks true love is non-existent. He believes in finding his one true soul mate and is smitten by Deschanel’s character from the start. What results is 500 Days of Summer, the story of their relationship. Filmed in a non-linear structure, the movie realistically shows how sometimes relationships just don’t work out. The heartache, the giddiness, the beginning and end. Fox Searchlight purchased the film at Sundance and will release it July 17th; in what will most likely be the romantic comedy it of the summer. black dynamite Combine the badassness (yes I just created a word) of Shaft and the hilariousness of the Naked Gun’s take on cop movies, toss in a great afro/sideburn/mustache combination and you get Black Dynamite. A spoof of the entire genre of cop films, Black Dynamite takes the black “Shaft stereotype” and multiplies it by 5. Michael Jai White captures the audience from start to finish with his straight-faced hilarity, over-the-top fight scenes and ridiculous 70s outfits. Black Dynamite was purchased by Sony Pictures at the film festival and is yet to have a release date, but check out the red-band trailer online. 11 the sundance kids adventureland The trailer has the look and feel of Superbad circa late 80s, and it is no coincidence that Adventureland is director Greg Mottola’s second major motion picture. But Adventureland is not Superbad part II; it is more an ode to the late 80s and the carnival experience everyone experienced as a kid. It’s a nostalgic trip back in time, from the hairstyles to the clothes. Jessie Eisenburg plays the nerdy James Brennan who just finished his senior year in college and was ready to travel Europe for the summer before heading off to his Ivy League grad school. When graduation came along his father had to take a pay cut, forcing Eisenburg’s character to not travel Europe and find a job to help pay for college. Where he ends up is Adventureland, as someone who works at a gaming booth, a dead end menial job that is normally brain numbing. The cast of characters from Bill Hader as one of the theme park owners to Kristen Stewart as Eisenburg’s love interest help give him the real world experience the genius truly needed. It is a summer job at a place that he felt was below him, which I’m sure everyone can relate to. push: based on a novel by sapphire The big critical hit of the Sundance Film festival was Push: Based on a Novel by Sapphire. It was the winner of the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award prize for best Dramatic film. The story is about an obese 16-yearold African American girl named Precious from Harlem, who can’t read and is pregnant by her father. Oh by the way she also has an extremely abusive mother, depressed yet? Wait, I forgot to say why her mother beats her, because she feels her husband left for her daughter (she was actually raped). Did I mention she was born with Down syndrome? However terrible that sounds the film is actually about hope, and Precious’s journey to try and achieve a normal life. She knows that her first 16 years were worse than a million lifetimes, but she knows she still has a lot of life left. Through friends she meets in a diverse class of dropouts, she gains hope for the future. The film that moved both audiences and critics alike will be opening in limited United States locations on November 9th 2009. 12 films and filmmaker panel discussions; however it also included a small program of films made outside the Hollywood system, commonly known as independent films. In 1981, the festival moved to Park City, Utah. Over the following years several factors helped propel the growth of Utah/US Film Festival. First was the involvement of actor Robert Redford. Redford, a Utah resident, became the festival’s inaugural chairman and having his name associated with Sundance gave the festival great attention. Second, the festival moved from September to January. The move from late summer to mid-winter was reportedly done on the advice of Hollywood director Sydney Pollack, who suggested that running a film festival in a ski resort during winter would draw more attention from Hollywood. In 1991 the film festival was renamed The Sundance Film Festival as a tribute to Redford’s role as Sundance in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. This year was the 25th Anniversary of the festival and as per usual offered a completely new and exciting set of independent films that were quickly picked up by major motion picture studios. the sundance kids 2009 Winners Circle Grand Jury Prize: Documentary - We Live in Public Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Push: Based on a Novel by Sapphire Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Dramatic The Maid (La Nana) Grand Jury Prize: World Cinema Documentary Rough Aunties Audience Award: Documentary - The Cove Audience Award: Dramatic - Push: Based on a Novel by Sapphire World Cinema Audience Award: Documentary An Education World Cinema Audience Award: Dramatic Afghan Star Documentary Directing Award Natalia Almada for El General Dramatic Directing Award Cary Joji Fukunaga for Sin Nombre World Cinema Directing Award: Documentary Oliver Hirschbiegel for Five Minutes of Heaven World Cinema Directing Award: Dramatic Havana Marking for Afghan Star Excellence in Cinematography Award: Documentary - Bob Richman for The September Issue Excellence in Cinematography Award: Dramatic Adriano Goldman for Sin Nombre World Cinema Cinematography Award: Documentary - John De Borman for An Education World Cinema Cinematography Award: Dramatic - John Maringouin for Big River Man Documentary Film Editing - Karen Schmeer for Sergio World Cinema Documentary Editing Award Janus Billeskov Jansen and Thomas Papapetros for Burma VJ Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award: Dramatic Nicholas Jasenovec and Charlyne Yi for Paper Heart World Cinema Screenwriting Award Guy Hibbert for Five Minutes of Heaven Special Jury Prize for Originality, World Cinema Drama - Louise-Michel Special Jury Prize, World Cinema Documentary Tibet in Song Special Jury Prize for Acting, World Cinema Catalina Saavedra for The Maid (La Nana) Special Jury Prize, U.S. Documentary - Good Hair Special Jury Prize for Spirit of Independence Humpday Special Jury Prize for Acting Mo’Nique for Push: Based on a Novel by Sapphire Jury Prize, U.S. Short Filmmaking - Short Term 12 Jury Prize, International Short Filmmaking - Lies 2009 Alfred P. Sloan Prize - Adam worlds greatest dad Robin Williams revisits black comedy for the first time since Death to Smoochy and is excellent in Worlds Greatest Dad. Williams plays a failed novelist turned high school poetry teacher, but he’s not saying “Gather ye rosebuds while ye may” and no one is standing on desks saying “Oh captain my captain” ala Dead Poets Society. His character is the anti- carpe diem. His son, an I-hate-the-world-and-dress-gothic-type, accidentally committed suicide by autoerotic asphyxiation, in lay mans terms: putting a plastic bag over ones head while masturbating. (Hell of a way to go out eh?) To save his son, and subconsciously himself, embarrassment Williams sets the scene as though he hung himself and even penned his suicide note. When word spreads about the suicide and its note William’s son become posthumously popular, revered as a cult hero at the high school. With the death of his son, William’s life begins to get tremendously better. The suicide note is the first piece of his writing anyone has appreciated, as twisted as that is. Also his relationship with his girlfriend takes a turn for the better. The movie turns into Williams living a lie that spirals out of control, and as sick and perverse of an idea World’s Greatest Dad’s storyline is, it still works. Unfortunately no studio has picked up the film yet, no studio head has the brass balls to put out a movie where a father gains from his son’s accidental death. But, lets hope to see this fine black comedy and Robin Williams’s most nuanced role since RV (just kidding). 13 The Best of flickr ™ Each month we click through thousands of photographs on flickr.com. Its a great way to check out some new and emerging artists who you may not be familiar with (its also a great way to procrastinate and waste time). Here we’ve picked some of our favorites, and if you like what you see we encourage you to check out the artisit and see what else they’re up to. Some say “a picture can say a thousand words.” Well we think thats a bunch of cheesy bullshit. But these photographs are pretty f-ing cool. flickr ID: mugley flickr ID: nirvana flickr ID: thestorey flickr ID: Thomas Hawk 14 flickr ID: flickr.zak flickr ID: taylor.mcbride flickr ID: massimo flickr ID: seoul-lo flickr ID: primshee pillai flickr ID: hi my name is heather 15 16 The B-List Movies so Bad, They’re Good Rocky iv Roadhouse TagLine: The dancing’s over. Now it gets dirty. Patrick Swayze, need I say more? In a totally badass role, Swayze plays Dalton, whose reputation as a tough bouncer brings him to the roughest bar in Missouri, Double Deuce, where he kicks hick-‘hind for 114 minutes. If you want to see the dude from Dirty Dancing and his perfectly groomed mullet teach the Midwest that they should be voting Democrat, by throwing roundhouse kicks check it out. TagLine: He’s facing the ultimate challenge and fighting for his life. Patrick Swayze, need I say more? In a totally badass role, Swayze plays Dalton, whose reputation as a tough bouncer brings him to the roughest bar in Missouri, Double Deuce, where he kicks hick-‘hind for 114 minutes. If you want to see the dude from Dirty Dancing and his perfectly groomed mullet teach the Midwest that they should be voting Democrat, by throwing roundhouse kicks check it out. Weekend at Bernie’s TagLine: A lively comedy about a guy who isn’t. K-9 So have you ever hung out with a dead corpse for a weekend in the Hamptons? No? Well me neither. But I’ll tell you one thing Bernie Lomax has more fun than any posthumous person I’ve ever known. He hangs out at the beach, parties at his beachfront estate, and has sex, after he died. Now how does he do it you may ask? Well Andrew McCarthy (from brat-pack fame) and Jonathon Silverman carry around Bernie’s dead body adorned in a Hawaiian shirt and sunglasses, and make it seem as if he still has a pulse. With such a relatable and believable premise how can you miss it? TagLine: Meet the two toughest cops in town. The less talented in the Belushi gene-pool but still adequately funny James Belushi stars in Turner and Hooch part II. Wait, I’m sorry there is no relation to the two movies except a wild cop that teams up with a dog and they hate each other at first then grow close and solve crimes together. Think ScoobyDoo without the “gang” and Mystery Machine and you have K-9. 17 Tas 18 1 Te We like to drink beer....a lot. So here’s our picks for this month. Lagunita Brewery India Pale Ale Brewed In: Petaluma, CA Variety: India Pale Ale ABV: 6% Crisp, with an extremely dry hoppiness tang. Citrus-grapefruit peel taste in background that finished with a mild ripe peachy pine aftertaste. It’s made with 43 types of hops and 65 various malts that will leave you wanting more, more, and more. Troegs Dreamweaver Wheat Beer Brewed In: Harrisburg, PA Variety: Wheat Beer ABV: 4.8% Brewed In: Baltimore, MD Variety: Uber Abbey Ale ABV: 9% Uber Abbey Ale, brewed in Belgian style with approx 9% alcohol. It is a carbonated brew that’s full-bodied with a sour yet sweet flavor. It begins with a sweetness, followed by a zesty fruit flavor and ends in a fairly clean, citrus and oily taste. There’s also a bit of spiciness to it to add some bite. Magic Hat Spring India Pale Ale This has zingy and bright flavors that go down smoothly, and incorporates bananas, spices, pepper, and clove tastes. A little weight for a spring/summer ale, but is still worth a taste. I mean how many beers have bananas in them and are actually good? Just try it. Brewery Profile: Clipper City Brewery, Baltimore, MD Clipper City Brewing Company Red Sky At Night Saison Ale Brewed In: Burlington, VT Variety: India Pale Ale ABV: 6.8% This has zingy and bright flavors that go down smoothly, and incorporates bananas, spices, pepper, and clove tastes. A little weight for a spring/summer ale, but is still worth a taste. I mean how many beers have bananas in them and are actually good? Just try it. Hugh Sisson opened Baltimore’s first brewpub Sisson’s in 1989, encouraging the re-emergence of craft beer in Baltimore. In 1995, Hugh decided that it was time to leave Sisson’s and move the beers to a larger platform, so he established and developed the Clipper City Brewery .In late Fall of 1998 Clipper City merged/acquired the Oxford Brewing Company, Maryland’s first craft brewery. In 2003, Clipper City developed another brand for the beer aficionado: Heavy Seas. The Heavy Seas line represents our highest expression of the brewer’s art with very robust styles and ABVs usually in excess of 7%. Currently Clipper City Brewing produces over 14 styles of ales and lagers, is distributed in over 18 states and has won hundreds of International, National, and regional awards. 19 20 R e c ip ie s fr o m t h e R o a d : Each month our favorite bands giv e us their favorite recipies from the tou r. Qu ick , he althy, and delicious, these are bound to satis fy you appetite. This month the: Yeah Yeah Yeahs Spicy Chili For Two Serves 2 | Prep Time 0:10 | Cook Time 0:25 Ingredients 1/4 teaspoon Eden Hot Pepper Sesame Oil, or to taste 1 teaspoon Eden Extra Virgin Olive Oil 1 clove garlic, minced 1/3 cup onion, diced 1/2 cup Eden Organic Diced Tomatoes or Eden Organic Diced Tomatoes w/Onion 1 cup Eden Organic Chili Beans (seasoned dark red kidney), do not drain 1/4 cup organic bulgur 1/4 cup ground cumin 1 cup water 1 1/2 teaspoons Eden Shoyu Soy Sauce, or to taste Directions Heat oils in a saucepan, and sauté onions and garlic for 2 to 3 minutes. Add water, chili beans, tomatoes, bulgur, and cumin. Cover, and bring to a boil. Reduce the flame to medium-low, and simmer for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally so the bulgur doesn’t clump. Reduce the flame to low, add shoyu, cover, and cook for another 5 minutes. Serve. Hot Apple Rum Punch Serves 2 | Prep Time 0:02 | Cook Time 0:02 Ingredients 1 1/2 cups Eden Organic Apple Juice 1/2 cup EdenBlend 1 Tablespoon rum 1 pinch ground cinnamon Directions Whisk apple juice, EdenBlend, cinnamon, and rum together in a small pot and set over medium heat until piping hot, whisking almost constantly, about 1 minute. To prevent curdling, do not allow mixture to boil. 21 Coffee Attacks! preventing diseases one antioxidant at a time 22 I t’s seven a.m. The alarm clock is ringing, the dog is barking to be let out, and you peer through your fingers at the glaring sunlight. The morning is not your favorite time of the day. You sit up, rub your eyes and slam your hand down on the alarm clock. “It’s too early,” you mutter under your breath. “I need coffee.” Coffee has become part of many people’s daily routines. It’s the morning starter, the extra jolt, the pull-an-all-nighter cure and the catch-up-with-friends beverage of choice. In the past, coffee has been associated with some negative connotations. Drink too much, and you’ll get jittery. Your hands will shake and you’ll have so much energy, you’re not really sure what to do with it. Coffee is the culprit of stained teeth, shirt stains, and burnt tongues. It is scrutinized for the amount of caffeine found in a single cup, but what you never hear about is coffee’s rich source of antioxidants. With the health craze picking up speed and organic foods finding their way onto every grocery store shelf, new studies argue that coffee could actually be one of the best things for you. Caffeinated or not, coffee provides a significant source of antioxidants in many peoples diet. According to study leader Joe Vinson, Ph.D., a chemistry professor at the University of Scranton, “Americans get more of their antioxidants from coffee than any other dietary source. Nothing else comes close.” Most people think of fruits or vegetables when talking about antioxidants, but Vinson analyzed 100 different commonly consumed food items for their antioxidant content with coffee coming out on top by a long shot. The second largest source of antioxidants is black tea, followed by bananas, dry beans and corn, respectively. Not only does coffee have the most antioxidants, it is the most frequently consumed. Antioxidants work to rid the body of free radicals, which are destructive to DNA cells, and the potential health benefits of the ease and certain cancers, such as liver and colon. Most recently, studies have shown that coffee can help prevent type two diabetes and Parkinson’s disease. Cardiologists from the Univer“...drinking up to four sity of California studied 10 of the biggest heart disease trials cups of coffee a day reand found that there was no link duces a person’s risk of between coffee and the risk of a developing diabetes by 30 heart attack. In fact, a study that followed 27,000 women for 15 percent.” years found that drinking one to antioxidant-rich coffee seem to be three cups of coffee daily reduces an on-going list of positives. Stud- the risk of heart disease by 24 ies have found that coffee helps in per cent. the protection against heart disIn 2007, the review of 66 clini- James LaSalle lost his job 4 months ago after major company layoffs at Bank of America. He still manages to get his caffeine (and marijuana) fix. 23 cal trials concluded that coffee is not carcinogenic, and shows no links to cancer. It is believed that the cigarette-smoking typically associated with coffee drinking was to blame for the misconception of coffee causing cancer. Studies in Sweden of 59,000 women ruled out the connection of caffeine consumption to breast cancer. In Japan, 90,000 men and women were monitored for over a decade regarding their coffee consumption and the prevention of cancer. The study concluded that regular consumers of two cups of coffee daily showed half the risk of developing liver cancer than those that did not drink coffee. Many different studies show that drinking up to four cups of coffee a day reduces a person’s risk of developing diabetes by 30 percent. Lucky for you, caffeinated and decaffeinated have been proven to have the same effect. Dr. Peter Martin of the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine says, “We found that there are compounds in coffee that enhance the capacity of the liver to burn sugar much like anti-diabetic medications.” While there are always contradicting reports, recent studies have consistently praised coffee’s newly discovered health benefits. The positive effects don’t stop there. In the coming years it could be suggested that 1. Coffee is a diuretic. . Caffeine in coffee causes osteoporosis. Reason it’s not true: Adding a couple tablespoons of milk to your diet offsets the effects of the caffeine on your bones. 2 . Coffee improves your sense of well-being, happiness, energy, alertness and sociability. Reason it’s not true: Studies show that if you are not a regular coffee drinker, having the occasional cup can cause anxiety and a feeling of being unwell. s h t y m 5 about coffee Reason it’s not true: In order to be a diuretic a single beverage must contain 550 mg of caffeine. A large coffee only has 330 mg of caffeine. . Coffee increases high blood pressure. Reason it’s not true: Studies have found no link between coffee and heart attacks or abnormal heart rhythms. In fact, drinking one to three cups a day reduces heart disease by 24 percent. 3 . Coffee increases the risk of pancreatic cancer. Reason it’s not true: Studies confirmed that coffee is not carcinogenic. In other words, it is not a substance that produces cancer. 24 4 5 all athletes begin drinking coffee prior to working out, or at least in-taking caffeine. Some studies have shown that the caffeine found in your average cup of coffee could help reduce the pain of exercise. Robert Motl, a professor of kinesiology and community health at the University of Illinois, says, “Caffeine works on a system in the brain and spinal cord [the adenosine neuromodulatory system] that is heavily involved in pain processing, and since caffeine blocks adenosine, the biochemical that plays an important role in energy transfer and thus exercise, it could reduce pain.” The results of the caffeine/ exercise test were unexpected. Both regular coffee drinkers and people who did not regularly drink coffee had the same reduction in pain as a result. “The study concluded that caffeine reduces pain reliably, consistently, across different intensities, across different people, and different characteristics,” Motl concluded. And all this time you thought your coffee addiction was something you’d have to give up. There has never been a better time to continue the habit. So grab your favorite java and keep them coming. 25 26 27 T 28 K N I H K Origins of the UNIVERSE by Edwin Poché Founded in Faith or Founded on Science? Which one makes more sense? The Religious Explanation G ather round kiddies, have I got a story for you all today. It involves a young lady with golden curls, a trio of bears, and far more porridge than you’d know what to do with. Wait, no, I’m thinking of the wrong fairy tale. Let’s start over. Today’s tale actually involves a fellow with long white curls and a big bushy beard. No it’s not Ian McKellan, but you’re in the right ballpark. This gent is known as God and he is said to have created the entire universe. That may sound like a tall task for any other man, but as you may have heard God is not a man. He is an all-knowing, all-seeing, and all-powerful deity. God is capable doing anything the human mind can think up and can simultaneously be at all places in the universe. Of course, it’s interesting that out of the six billion people on this planet, no one outside of a mental ward has actually seen or heard from God. Even Bigfoot has grainy video footage. Well at first it was just God, the universe and darkness. Then one day, probably after God got tired of tripping over himself going to the cosmic kitchen to get a late night snack, God created light. Except there really wasn’t anything around to shine light on, so God spent the next six days creating mountains, oceans, clouds, trees and all forms of life. Being all-powerful and capable of anything, it sure seems like he could have done it all in one day, but he probably wanted to draw it out to make it more dramatic. Then on the seventh day God rested, because all-powerful or not, Sunday is foot- ball day and what better way to cool off after a hard week of creating than sharing a few freshly created brewskis with the Holy Ghost? Of course there are a few things that the Bible leaves out of the tale. Like it doesn’t mention on which day God invented dinosaur bones infused with aged carbon, then scattered them across the Earth like a fun little scavenger hunt for humans to find. Or, if God crafted the human body so perfectly from scratch, why did he feel the need to give us organs that have no practical use, like male nipples? So they would know when it’s cold out? Still all in all it is a fairly charming anecdote. It could use a little sprucing up, perhaps a big Hollywood movie to help modernize the whole thing. They should see if Ian McKellan is available. It just sure would be nice if there were alternative that had actual facts to support it. 29 The Scientific Explanation O k, let’s start at the beginning. Well not exactly the beginning, it’ll probably be easier if we start half a second in with the elementary particles floating in space. That first half second of how all those particles came into creation from complete nothingness is all murky business, so why bother with it. Probably not very important, but just know whatever did happen, was very very scientific. Well now these space particles instead of wandering aimlessly through the eternal abyss were all pulled together by gravity. What’s that? How does gravity work? To be honest, scientists don’t know that either. I believe the current theory involves an apple hitting some Victorian in the head. Now with all these microscopic particles being pulled into a stew and jostled against each other caused a bang that created the entire universe. Why not try and recreate this experiment at home kids? Just take a bunch of small pebbles and throw them at each other as hard as you can. See how many tries it takes to cause a cataclysmic explosion that forms into a new universe. Three tries tops. Naturally this big bang created Earth, our home. It created the Earth just the ideal size for life. It created a unique atmosphere for Earth, which without life would not be possible. It even created Earth at the perfect distance from the Sun to accommodate for both the size and atmosphere to create a climate necessary for life. It is simply 30 miraculous when you consider the million and more things that had to go absolutely right in order for life to come about scientifically. Which leads us to the question of how life actually did come about on Earth. Again, scientists are not exactly sure how it happened. They think it might have been caused by an asteroid hitting the planet. This is also how scientists believe water may have appeared on Earth, as well as how the dinosaurs mysteriously died out. It is funny how many different scientific problems can be answered with a simple giant space rock hurtling straight into the side of our humble planet. Maybe the answer to global warming has been sitting under their noses the whole time. Sure there a lot of questions left unanswered by this theory of creation. At least the parts that are there are backed up by cold, hard science. Ahhh science, proud inventors of the atom bomb, Chernobyl, and a steak knife that can chop through shoes. Certainly a field that has never been wrong in the past. Still, it sure would be nice if there were an alternative that had all the answers. 31 This stimulus is brought to you by... Brand identity is just as important to the sell as the actual product. by Andrew Gravina he panic came in the fall. As the nation prepared for a presidential election and bought more Venti Caramel Macchiatos from Starbucks, families started to concentrate on their pocketbooks. They might be the best politicians in the world, but if there are no taxpayers left to be politicking to, they’ll have to use their taxing skills in some other way, like getting China to buy more U.S. Treasury bonds. That’s why the Obama administration decided to save the U.S. economy. The first idea was to pass a stimulus and launch infrastructure improvements putting people back to work. Then they had some more Venti Caramel Macchiatos, allowed the shots of espresso to jump start their brains and came up with the perfect solution: brand power. (Read “How Venti Caramel Macchiatists Rule the World.”) Just like how Toyota is selling cars that aren’t saving the U.S. economy and how AstraZeneca is selling medications that aren’t saving the U.S. economy, last year companies through U.S. ports like Los Angeles, San Diego, Seattle and San Francisco imported over three hundred billion dollars of goods from China that aren’t saving the U.S. economy. This upset lots of people because they were losing their jobs as 32 U.S. dollars escaped oversees. This marked another time people neglected to remember that they bought the Chinese goods in the first place. Twitter users, comment below. To get taxpayers to embrace the administration’s radical solution, they decided to be the first law enforcers to brand stimulus projects. This would also allow them to show their bosses just how valuable they are — with brand new bridges. If their offering tax relief and free health care and the Republicans have nothing but Sarah Palin, I think we know who’s going to survive the next set of elections. Unfortunately, the banks they The highly designed government stimulus logo closely resembles that of President Obama’s campigh logo- a clear sign that he’ll want it known that it was his administration that would be responsible for a recovery. T gave money to first had a hard time earning the public trust. Like almost impossible. Same with the mortgage lenders and investment banks. They started to get worried when health care bills, education bills and energy bills faced some opposition. There is nothing scarier than branding a recovery and discovering that the economy is not recovering. They were starting to worry about the value of their macchiato-fueled brainchild when they had success with April 1st tax relief, as American families started to see extra money in their weekly paychecks and saw the stock market rebounding. They started going back to Starbucks and discussing, over delicious Venti Caramel Macchiatos, what kind of president Obama would be. Someone reminded them that taxpayers often forget how their money is being spent and that many of them only care when they are reminded about how its spent. They asked themselves how much it would cost to put a brand on all those projects from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Those Venti Caramel Macchiatos are strong. (See the top 10 Starbucks drinks of 2008.) They were prepared to have the president reject the idea. Instead, he came up with a cool logo. They were hoping for tacit agreement, and they were expecting it less in logos and more in Michelle Obama’s fashions and first puppy names. A fancy logo would more than justify all those Venti Caramel Macchiatos, even including the banana chocolate chip cakes they claimed on their expense reports. They quickly ac- cepted the logo on the project’s behalf, promising that they’d quickly work the 100% Americanmade, stimulus recovery logo into the marketplace in a way that everyone would notice. Then they called their pollsters to find out exactly how to approach government product placement. In addition to supplying information on what phrases, images and symbols to use, the pollsters were experts on running market research surveys like those used by advertising companies to begin a product rollout. “We wouldn’t talk about social security benefits on college campuses,” said a senior administration advisor. They were feeling pretty confident and secure until the pollster told them that they couldn’t get a spot in one of those brand power commercials. When they asked if the logo would premier better than New Coke, they were relieved to find out that New Coke’s advertising cost more than the whole stimulus. Product placement was going to do less damage to the government’s image than George W. Bush on a bad day. It was all going very smoothly until people started to see the logo on stimulus projects but had no idea what it was for. Oddly, they thought that brand power would save the economy all along. Instead, all their efforts did was teach them exactly why brands work and how hard it is to get a new one into the market. Not only does brand power work, but it takes something special to get people to love Venti Caramel Macchiatos. President Obama takes questions from the press after meeting with top economic advisers. 33 PDA is OK! (Public Displays of Art) 34 by Jenna Wilson In New York City, artists are using the subways, parks and bridges as their canvas. These gianormous installations bring tourisits to the city and help establish the city as one of the art capitals of the world. S ince the 1980’s, The Metropolitan Transit Authority’s Arts for Transit program has placed artists’ renderings in subway stations to “enhance the experience of travel” as they say. Although they may have missed rehabilitating some stations entirely (I’m looking at you Chinatown), they have welcomed various artists to showcase their work in stations all over the city. Not only do the artists have millions of people looking at their artwork everyday, but the underground city becomes renewed through contemporary art and design. Identical twin brothers Mike and Doug Starn are the first artists of the program to have their work on display in the new South Ferry Terminal. Their work, See It Split, See It Change is a $1 million installation made of glass panels depicting the comparison between branches of the trees and the format of the New York subway system. The new subway stop was opened in February with the artwork displayed from the opening day. The brothers were the first to be given the chance to collaborate with the MTA on the actual design of the station. “It’s the first time the art has been part of the process from the getgo,” Mike says. They were invited to add their thoughts about the layout and even give input regarding the placement of doors in the station. Wanting to incorporate nature into the structural and underground station, See It Split, See It Change includes glass slates with paintings of trees, echoing those found within Battery Park. Also included in the work is a mosaic of an old map of Manhattan dating back to a 1640 image of the city. “The South Ferry station is thought of as just the terminus of the 1 train. But we see it as the beginning of the city, from which everything else branches out,” Mike says. The Starn brother’s work is only a small part of the major exhibitions that have graced the cities of the world. Art on a major scale is nothing new. Exhibits have taken up entire museums, sculptures have spread across cities, and cities themselves have been regarded as works of art because of the sheer brilliance of practicality mixed with beautiful architectural style. The beauty of the world’s major metropolises brings a type of inspiration that can take an artwork to an extreme, because an artist has no boundaries for where they can take their work. With no limitations, artists can design a piece of art that may have been too large for a gallery and actually create it for a large-scale exhibition. Four years ago, Christo and Jeanne Claude famously unveiled their 26 year-in-the-making project The Gates: Central Park, New York, 1979-2005. The dates signify the amount of time it took the couple to convince the city of New York to allow them to use Central Park as their canvas. They attended 41 meetings with officials over a period of 23 years and finally were given the permission to spread 7,500 gates across the park. In the beginning of their campaign, they were met with a great deal of criticism because of the harm they thought they would do to the park and the attention they would receive just because of the size of the project. One of their proposal meetings in 2001 became heated with one attendee being quoted as saying, “Here’s an event of 27 miles of shower curtains around the park. 35 Mike and Doug Starn’s $1 million dollar installation is the first of the program to be shown on display in the new South Ferry station. Is that necessary, Mr. Cristo, to promote yourself?” Clearly, New York needed a little more time to accept this massive project overtaking the place that so many New Yorkers used every day. The timing, this time though, was right. There was a lull in the tourism numbers of New York City because of 9/11 and Mayor Bloomberg, a supporter of the arts, was in office. He was an advocate for Christo and Jeanne Claude’s work and ultimately was the reason for The Gates to be put in the park in 2005. When the installation was unveiled, Bloomberg said, “The Gates- the largest artwork in our City’s history- will draw thousands of tourists from around the globe and add immeasurably to New York City’s rich history of public art.” He also added something about the inspiring artwork, but really, what was really on his mind was the money that would be generated for the City just from the installation alone. With the massive influx of people who came to the city just to see the Christo and Jeanne Claude’s work, Bloomberg realized there was something to be made out of these public displays. Fans of the artists came from all over the world to witness this gigantic installation in the park and it was reported that $254 million was brought into the city because of the art. Now, $254 million is a hefty chunk of change. New York City’s economy was revitalized for those 16 days The Gates were up and tourism numbers skyrocketed. But you do have to ask, is it all in the name of art or is there more to it? Can the word “art” be substituted for “stunt”? Mayor Bloomberg was a supporter of the artists and of the arts, but is he more of a supporter because he knew the work would draw in millions of dollars? Probably. What mayor wouldn’t be extremely happy to generate that much money in a time when the city needed it most? With this realization this would mean that Christo and Jeanne Claude, with most of their artwork being publicly displayed and being slightly more than average sized, are really in it for the recognition and their art can not really be considered art. They are the famous “wrapping couple”, wrapping the Reichstag building in Germany, the Pont Neuf bridge in Paris, small islands in Miami and of course The Gates. Public relations would call all of these a publicity stunt and so would the rest of the world. Christo was even quoted as saying the installation of The Gates was pointless, but he worked for 23 years to try and instate it in the city. So, what is the point? Most recently, New York City tried for another public art Left: “The Waterfalls” 36 display in an unstable economy during this past summer. The Waterfalls, a controversial and complex project created by Olafur Eliasson brought about the same thoughts that The Gates did back in 2005. Learning from the past, the NYC government instated the art to revitalize tourists once again. It generated $69 million alone, but cost those living there, in particular Brooklyn, much more than that. The spray from one of the waterfalls underneath the Brooklyn Bridge caused the soil to become contaminated, resulting in possible stroke and hypertension. But, they stayed up through most of the summer, and were a success for the city, even if most saw it as another stunt for an artist. Bloomberg even pushed up the date for its opening because he wanted to make sure they would be seen in the nationally televised 4th of July fireworks displayed. This, along with the fact that Eliasson allowed the designers to light up the waterfalls once they were installed despite the fact that he refused in the beginning because waterfalls don’t naturally light up, leads to some questions about the authenticity of the project. It was his largest artwork to date, so of course he was feeling the pressure, but he strayed away from his original inspiration of a real waterfall for the bright lights and superficiality that can come from the big city. In an exhibit as big as this and The Gates, is it okay to lose a little bit of authenticity in order to achieve the kind of notoriety and success that they had? True artists would say no, it is not okay. But, money always plays a role especially when you are dealing with a public art display. All of the artists mentioned financed their own art and installations and weren’t paid for the art, but they are given the opportunity to advance their careers like they never had before. The Waterfalls brought in almost $70 million for the city of New York and made people actually want to look at the Hudson River for once. Although most people walking through the park may have thought the gates were an annoyance, or just simply tarnishing it, there is something to be said for the way in which it revitalized the city. So, while art enthusiasts are questioning the motivation for the work, I’m sure that the owners of local businesses are extremely grateful for the Christo’s work. Whether it is a mural on the side of a subway station, or a giant waterfall underneath the Brooklyn Bridge, art can take many shapes and forms. Cities are becoming the new galleries of the East Village and the best way to make a statement with a piece of artwork. It is art encased within art. From a mural on the walls of a subway to the crashing of water down a 20 foot waterfall in the middle of the Hudson River, art is being shown to the masses. It is now up to the audience to determine if it is really art, or really just an artistic stunt. In 2005, Christo and Jeanne’s “The Gates” were installed in Central Park after 23 years of persistance. In a post 9/11 slump, New York’s tourism business skyrocketed the 16 days it was on display by bringing thousands to see the exhibit. Right: “The Gates” layed out in Central Park. 37 LISTEN Top Shelf Music Code: A37QXND9 38 The Yet to Be Discovered Little bands who are beginning to make some BIG noise. There are plently of bands out there with a great sound, but lack the giant label to push them forward. In an age where nearly anything can be found on the internet, artists are able to get their name out without out the tens of thousands of dollars. These three bands show promise. They’ve more than proven themselves and have hundreds or thousands of dedicated fans already. It time to support the little guy and fight “the Man” that is the mainstream music industry. You, Me, and Everyone We Know Latest album: So Young, So Insane Listen: Party for the grown and sexy See: On tour with Forgive Durden and Anarbor during May and then they are hoping on Warped Tour in July. Instead of waiting on their big break, You, Me and Everyone We Know have learned to embrace their unsigned status and give a big “f you” to major labels. “The days of needing a label are gone for us. If and when we sign, we will look back on this knowing it was the smartest decision we ever made for this band,” says guitarist Rico Vigil. For both of their EP releases, they allowed fans to download their music free of purchase for a limited time. Party for the grown and sexy, their first EP, quickly received 30,000 downloads soon after its release. Through a few lineup changes, the band now consists of Ben Liebsch, Rico Vigil, Aaron Stern (formerly of Matchbook Romance), and Noel Milford. Their music boasts a pop punk anthem with witty lyrics proclaiming “I speak as if I’ve lived one minute/with eyes not fixed upon this screen/stalking the girls I could never fuck/ I mean, their sluts, but it seems I lack that luck.” Speaking of his music, Liebsch has said, “A lot of the stuff is a mix of what sits in the back of your head. Most of the songs are more cautionary tales then anything else. In the end we’re trying to write exciting music that’s catchy and throws you for a loop at the same time.” 39 A Million Engines in Neutral Latest album: TBR Listen: myspace.com/amillionenginesinneutral See: April 25, Bowling Green, OH with Vesta Indie band A Million Engines in Neutral, headquartered in Toledo, Ohio, bring together a mix of instruments and layers of voices to create their own experimental alternative rock sound. Made of brothers Russell and Robert Courtney, Jeffery Wynn, Steven Calmes and John “Bubba” Baker, the band began in the summer of 2006 and are in the midst of recording their first EP. Their slow-tempo songs feature collaborative group vocals accompanying traditional instruments along with some non-traditional, like a glockenspiel. Concerned with just getting their music to as many people as possible, the band is giving free downloads on their myspace pages to all of their songs. The Phenomenauts Latest album: For All Mankind Listen: All of their music is free on myspace. See: On tour throughout the U.S. in April Begin transmission: The Phenomenauts are a band brought to you from the future, or Oakland, CA. With music made up of upbeat, techno-rock, and a wardrobe that can only be from the Star Trek world, they are a one-ofa-kind band looking for as many earthlings to listen to them as they can find. The band was formed from the cover band, Space Patrol, which played on homemade instruments in the 1980’s. Known for their exciting, inventive and entertaining live shows, their music makes you want to get up and jump around, if not for them, then for science. With song titles including “Cyborg”, “Robot Love” and “Galaxy Detour”, it’s hard not to be a little bit intrigued by this Bay Area band. End transmission. 40 M.Ward 42 Matt Ward doesn’t like to be interviewed, but since it comes with the territory of being a musician he has to do it. Don’t expect to get straightforward answers though. He leaves you wondering what is truly behind his words and just how he is able to create the remarkable and progressive songs he does. He brings his broad array of talents together in his new release Hold Time, and displays his precise guitar playing, wonderful melodies and layered atmospherics. Collaborations with other artists have shown his wide range of musicality through songs with Bright Eyes, Cat Powers, My Morning Jacket, Norah Jones and Zooey Deschanel. The new disc focuses on issues like the Iraq War, spirituality and English literature, although he finds it hard to steer away from that standard L.O.V.E. topic. “It’s one of those things like God. People are going to be talking about it as long as there are people. It only makes sense; it only adds up that love is going to wind up in people’s songs,” he remarks. In wake of his newest release he agreed to sit down with us, but we were left hanging at the end of his sentences. Let’s be honest though, we dig him even more for leaving us yearning. SFTF: When you sit down to put an album together, what’s your process like? M.Ward: The process remains the same as it’s always been. Every song starts with a four track at home and an acoustic guitar. The key is to keep everything as fresh as it was when I first started. Every writer has ways or tricks of getting back to that place. For me, especially when I am traveling and I have to do the same song over and over again, more often than not it’s a question of how can I return back to the spot that inspired the original idea of a song. A lot of times it’s remembering the people that I was with, the thing I had read in some book or some newspaper article. I have learned that if I can make sure I hold on to that spark, then it will be able to fuel the song and ideally propel it to the time when I either have to record or perform it. SFTF: Your last album, Post War, seemed to be talking about the future after the Iraq war. Does your new album, Hold Time have any deeper meaning? M. Ward: I always prefer other people’s interpretations over my own, so I’m not very quick to make explicit what exactly a song or record is about. 43 In 2006 Ward and Zooey Deschanel joined forces to create the duo “She & Him.” The two toured extensively and considered it more than just a side project. SFTF: In the past you’ve worked with many of music’s most talented women. What is it about you that makes these women want to work with you? M.Ward: [Laughs] I’ve worked with just as many talented women as I have talented men, and I feel fortunate enough to have that great balance. What the draw is, though, is for other people to determine, not me. They all have a great passion for music. SFTF: Zooey Deschanel was a wonderful surprise on She & Him. And she’s back on this album, singing on “Never Had Nobody Like You” and “Rave On.” She’s got quite a distinct sound. Can you explain it? M.Ward: Her voice belongs to no time. That is a very evocative place for a listener to be. As somebody who produces records, I am more often than not aiming for that healthy confusion where listeners have 44 to ask themselves some fundamental questions: What is happening here? What is that sound? Where did this happen? When did this happen? Did this recording happen a year ago or thirty years ago? I recently heard Aretha Franklin covering God Bless the Child on the radio in San Francisco. It’s from the sixties, but it sounded like a recording that could have been made a few months ago. Certain artists have the ability to do that. Zooey is one of them. SFTF: You’re only 35, and you’ve already got an old voice in a young man’s body. What’s going to happen when you actually get old? Will your voice then become ancient, like Bob Dylan’s? Or will you pull a Benjamin Button and get younger? SFTF: You’re a bit of a collaboration maniac. A lot of artists will wait until later in their career to start collaborating. Why so much so soon for you? M. Ward: Like Dorian Gray, you mean? It’s a question I ask myself every day. It seems like I should know the answer but I don’t. M.Ward: I’ve never gone out of my way to ask to be on somebody else’s record. It’s always been a very organic creation. My favorite collaborations are the ones going on right now. I’m working on another project with Zooey. We’re in the demo process right now. I’m also working on an album with Conor Oberst SFTF: A lot of your songs have a moment that feels like release. Obviously, a lot of songwriting aims to create tension and release, but yours can feel blissful. “For Beginners,” on this album, has that aspect to it. How do you find that in the songwriting process? and Jim James, for our band Monsters of Folk. We’ve done two tours together, but the gears are moving slowly on the record. It’s still in gestation. Hopefully, it will be a bit of a beast. Discography: Hold Time 2009 She & Him Volume 1 2008 Post War 2006 Transistor Radio 2005 Transfiguration of Vincent 2003 Live Music and the Voice of Stangers 2001 End of Amnesia 2001 Duets for Guitar 1999 M. Ward: That’s a great question. I feel like if it happens, it happens accidentally. Certain things you have to stumble on to. They can’t be preprogrammed. SFTF: Your use of lyrics often has a wonderful meandering aspect to it, with lots of wordplay and double meaning. Take “Fisher of Men” from this album: “He’s got a line in the water… He’s a fisher of men…he’s got a lot on the line.” Are you sitting there with a thesaurus when you’re writing tunes? M. Ward: When I hear that song, I think about the movie The Mission a bit. It might be about a missionary. And a missionary has a lot on the line. But it all happens so fast. It happens subconsciously. So much of it is stumbled upon. Sometimes you will find yourself when you’re writing and playing guitar chords, you will be mumbling something that turns into words. try, for example, to imitate a guitar sound from Howlin’ Wolf’s great guitarist Hubert Sumlin. To try and get Hubert’s sound is an incredibly amusing challenge. And then to imagine Hubert being in a room with Chet Atkins—some impossible meeting like that—is endlessly entertaining. SFTF: Any other current projects? M. Ward: I am producing a record for a songwriter named Carlos Forster. He’s from San Francisco. I’d like to think that will come out at the end of 2009. SFTF: People have had a lot of fun labeling you—You’re a modern folk interpreter. You’re an acoustic retro whisperer. Label yourself. M. Ward: Guitarist. That’s the way I started out and that’s probably the way I will end up. SFTF: The song “Chinese Translation” on your last album seems to suggest that the answer to the big questions is just wonderful music. Am I right? M. Ward: You are right. The customer is always right. But I’ve had a lot of interpretations of that song. I think the worth of a song can be measured by the amount of interpretations you get from it. All of my favorite books and movies, you can have discussions about what they mean. Like David Lynch movies. Great songs are the same way. SFTF: You obviously draw from the past in much of your sound. But it’s also startlingly original. How do you thread that needle? M.Ward: Sometimes when I am writing a song I will have a specific sound in mind. I might 45 46 47 Y A L P 48 Y Fun GizmoS Cool Toys that You Probably Don’t Need “Ruby” Rocking Chair by Pouyan Mokhtarani Inspired by human anatomy, the “Ruby” by designer Pouyan Mokhtarani is an anatomic rocking chair that lets users experience an eternal power to control every adjacent object. The rocking chair comes with 10 liquid pillows, eight in the back that resembles the structure of abdominal muscle packs in human anatomy, while other two (a bit larger) are located at the base and looks like the hunkers muscles. Though, it wouldn’t be rational to envisage the eternal felling and comfort, until you sit on it and experience the same, but one cannot argue about its unique design that if came in production would make an entirely different furniture in your living space. Leica Digital M8 Rangefinder Camera The LEICA M8 doesn’t only look like an M - it utilizes all the benefits of the analog Leica M system for sophisticated and creative digital photography. It is the only digital camera for enthusiasts and professionals alike to incorporate the rangefinder system with its advantages of discreet and quiet operation, speed and precision. Full compatibility with nearly all M lenses means that their unique imaging performance is available for digital photography, too. The CCD image sensor has been specifically matched to the compact lens design to guarantee superlative photographic quality. The controls and functions of the digital M still concentrate on the essentials. Sony KDL-40ZX1, 40’ LCD HDTV Only 9.9mm Thin display is only 9.9mm thick at its narrowest, and 26 pounds. The display itself has only 1 HDMI port, while a wireless box can send the 120Hz, 1080p display up to 1080i images over a 5GHz channel many suspect is WHDM. That external port box will have 3 HDMI, 2 component, s-video, VGA, and even USB, mouse, and LAN port. All menus will be driven through an XMB Play station-style cross media interface. Apple iPod Shuffle The new iPod Shuffle has a VoiceOver feature, which gives the iPod the ability to “speak” song titles, artist names and playlists names. The device can “speak” in 14 languages. According to Apple, the third generation of its low-end iPod Shuffle is significantly smaller than a AA battery and it can store up to 1,000 songs. 49 InstUments of DestRuctIon Ear Splitting, Mind Blowing, and Gut-Busting, but Far Less Lethal Korg SP-250 Keyboard Korg brings a heightened level of realism and feel to its line of portable digital pianos with the new SP-250.The SP-250 provides an expanded range of expression and performance with an outstanding new stereo piano sound, which is matched to a third-generation RH3 graded action keyboard. The SP-250 Digital Piano is the perfect answer for any pianist looking for rich piano sounds and the convenience of a lightweight, portable instrument. Fender Vintage Hot Rod ’62 Stratocaster This sweet mama mixes today with yesterday for classic looks and a modern tone and feel. The classic features include vintage styling and a thin-skin nitrocellulose lacquer finish; modern features include three American Vintage Strat® single-coil pickups (with reverse-wound/reverse-polarity middle pickup), a satin-backed neck with a flatter radius and medium-jumbo frets. Looks, sounds and feel both vintage and brand-new at the same time! Marshall MG10CD Guitar Amp The mammoth road of this 10 Watt, twin channel, mini monster has to be heard to be believed! Coupled with great features like FDD, a CD input, Emulated Headphone jack and Emulated Line Out, this sturdy 1x61/2’ combo is the perfect practice amplifier. Roland TD-12SV Electronic Drums The Roland TD-12SV Electronic Drum Set offers mesh V-Pads all the way around. This electronic drum set is loaded with over 500 percussion sounds and 262 backing instruments to deliver the flexibility you need. Roland incorporates the VH-11 natural-feel floating hi-hat. An ultra realistic feel comes courtesy of features like snare/cymbal interval control that changes sound based on the speed of your strokes. The Roland MDS-12BK Drum Stand has advanced gripping clamps on the pipes and conceals cables. 50 51 PUB GAMES Tired of Beer Pomg? Three drinking games that you’ve probably never heard of. Quoits Number of Players: 2 to 4 What You Need: Quoits Board, Quoits Rings Goal: Be the first to score 61 points. The thrower stands 10 feet from the spike and throws all four rings at the spike. The second thrower then throws their four rings at the spike. Players receive 5 points for the spike, 2 points for the inner circle and 1 point for the outer circle. Players must achieve an exact score of 61 to win. If their points go over the points from the previous throws do not count. Toad in the Hole Number of Players: 2 + What You Need: Quarters, Circular Piece of Paper Goal: Be the first to count backward from 31 to 0. Place the circular piece of paper in the center of a table. Players stand 8 feet from the table and throw 4 quarters at the table. If the quarter lands cleanly on the circular piece of paper, that team scores 2 points. If the quarter lands on the table, that team scores 1 point. A team can’t throw more quarters than points they need to win the game. Shut the Box Number of Players: 2 to 4 What You Need: Dice, Pice of Paper with Boxes Numbered 1-9 Goal: Cover all boxes on the piece of paper to “Shut the Box.” Each player begins their turn with all boxes uncovered. Take turns rolling 2 dice to try to cover the different boxes on the piece of paper. For example, if the die show a 2 and a 3, box 5 can be covered or boxes 1 and 4, or 2 and 3. If all boxes less than 6 are covered, players can roll one dice. A player’s turn ends when they cannot cover any numbers on the paper. The player with the lowest score wins. A player’s score is the sum of the numbers remaining uncovered at the end of their turn. 52 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 53 EXPLORE 54 CITYSCAPE: the f i v e b u ro u g h s Being the inagural issue and all, we thought we’d give you a quick run down of the biggest and the best- New York City. Check out some of these lesser know places while visiting the Big Apple to get away from the crowds. 55 The five boroughs of New York hold a lot of adventurous sights and sounds for the average tourist. But the real New Yorker would rather spit in their own soup before spending the afternoon with a lot of picture taking, map reading, brightly dressed and over excited vacationers. The spots you’d rather be found in aren’t on the map. They’re not brightly lit P laying the with big leagues in Manhattan? Take a look outside of the city when visiting the Complete Traveller Bookstore at Madison and 35th. You’ll find their various arrays of maps, guides and books. It was put together for the traveler that knows the ins and outs of everywhere else somewhat beyond the average tourist. Sit in their lounge and skim over their century old travel and history books. After the day of mischevious adventure, head over to the Canal Room on W. Broadway. Their dim lit lounge is good for conversation 56 and the internet doesn’t hold pictures of them. They’re the places the excited vacationers pass over because they’re ‘nothing to see.’ It doesn’t matter which borough you’re in, they all hold something hidden from view. We’re just here to let you in on it- but lets keep it our little secret. Ok? and a beer, unless you’d prefer a cup of coffee. If you care to stay into the night, you’ll be around for the first gig of new groups. Those tired of the same old tune often welcome their unknown performers and unheard music. Late night in Hells Kitchen should direct you to the Galaxy Diner on 9th and 46th. Those most aware of it include neighbors and Europeans. The not so average diner has an extensive menu that makes sure to offer plenty of veggies and wholewheat options for the health conscious. Make sure to try the French Onion dip and splurge the extra $1 for fried onions. For those who reside in Staten Island, a dinner recommendation is Sapporo Sushi House. This underground little connection is a delight for the raw fish coinsure. Located in the back of the Coral Island Shopping Center, it is often frequented by the Japanese of the area. The sashimi bento comes highly recommended. After dinner, stroll over to the Snug Harbor Music Hall. Enjoy the artist of the evening or act of the night. Best of all you can buy alcohol to make the entertain- ment… more entertaining. Dominick’s Restaurant is where you want to eat in the Bronx. If you’re staying in, they’ll deliver to you. Otherwise, enjoy the cramped and menu less dining experience. The marinara and primavera are entirely worth it. After dinner, try Jackie’s West Indian Bakery for a local taste of abroad. They’ve been there for years and only continue to perfect their Indian pastries. From baklava to Rasgullas in decadent Rabdi they can be found on E 233rd. For a night out in the Bronx, try to visit the Jet Set Café. Established twenty years ago, the family owned restaurant holds a nightclub underneath. Its diverse atmosphere, extensive wine and liquor list, and continental cuisine with a Spanish twist are excellent and not to be missed. They’re located on Webster Ave. An evening in Queens should unquestionably involve dinner at Dee’s. If you’re there earlier, lunch is fine as well. The chef studied at the French Culinary Institute and has applied her knowledge to her Italian cuisine, perfecting her pizzas in every aspect. With countless specials daily the restaurant offers a homey and comfortable atmosphere. It is located on Metropolitan Avenue, directly across from the The water taxi at the South Street Seaport provide quick access across the East River from Manhattan to Brooklyn. Cinamart Movie Theater. Enjoy the newest indie craze before dining with Dee. If there is time before or after, walk down Metro Ave and venture into their various shops and boutiques. Don’t miss the antique shops either. While in the area, Water’s Edge shouldn’t be missed. Lounge on the deck and watch the ships over the Hudson during lunch. Take your appetite and make sure to order from all three courses. If not, sample the sushi option. The best way to experience your meal is to arrive and depart by way of the complimentary water shuttle. It can be found from the east 23rd St. Skyport Marina. You should be made aware that from now until early July, the Brooklyn Museum is holding an exhibition of Gustave Caillebotte’s impressionist paintings from Paris to the Sea. The exhibit is fabulous, for an afternoon in the area. For dinner out, take advantage of Dine in Brooklyn, their current restaurant week. It is the best way to sample the borough’s finest 3 course meals for $23. Café Buno Gusto is a great stop for Sunday morning brunch in a French style. Casa Pepe Restaurant is the Spanish Mexican choice for dinner. And don’t forget the new Pearl Room. Serving Brunch, Lunch and Dinner, the New American restaurant can be found on 3rd avenue and should not be missed. You can’t ask for much more on a normal day in the city, especially with a list of tourist free spots to embark upon. The dining opportunities are fabulous and the entertainment is intriguing. Find the time to spend in different atmospheres, environments and cultures, and enjoy the diversity that you can add through such a colorful city. 57 Music Festivals Music festivals are the number one place to find great music. No matter what your musical appetite, you can almost always find something you like. Plus you can’t get a better bang for your buck anywhere else, saving you money for the bottle. H.U.M.P Festival – Lexington, NC 4/10/09-4/11/09 Two days of humping! Just kidding, HUMP actually stands for Heavenly Underground Music Paradise and it is a two day festival that “steps out of the realm of reality” to showcase the talents of local musicians and artists. Camping is strongly encouraged and is included with the ticket price, and it is a BYOB event. Tickets are $15 at the gate or $12 with a donation for the 2nd Harvest Food Bank. The event begins at 5:00 p.m. on Friday with an open mic night and ends on Saturday around 11:30 p.m. Solution for Dreamers Festival – Santa Barbara, CA 4/11/09 Now in its second year, the festival brings together music in support of the Santa Barbara area non-profits and eco-friendly businesses to raise money for Heal the Ocean, a non-profit action group which works for cleaner beaches in California. The event hopes to educate and empower people to care for the earth through different kinds of mediums like music and art. Check out www.solutionsfordreamersfestival.com for more info. 58 McDowellel Mountain Music Festival– Scottsdale, AZ 4/25/09 & 4/26/09 This is the fifth year of the festival and it keeps getting larger over time. It was developed to support local children in receiving food, education and opportunities that they are not able to receive currently. The Flaming Lips, Matisyahu and Michael Franti and Spearhead headline the festival this year. Ticket prices begin at $40 per day and become more expensive closer to the day of the festival, so make sure you get them early! Unicity Performing Arts Festivals – Salisbury, MD 5/15/09 - 5/16/09 This is the fifth year of the festival and it keeps getting larger over time. It was developed to support local children in receiving food, education and opportunities that they are not able to receive currently. The Flaming Lips, Matisyahu and Michael Franti and Spearhead headline the festival this year. Ticket prices begin at $40 per day and become more expensive closer to the day of the festival, so make sure you get them early! 59 60 61 T A 62 E T D N D film festivals Houston “WorldFest - Houston’ EVENTS CALENDAR 4/17 - 4/26 Will screen 55-60 feature films and 100 Short Film Premieres within this 9 day period. There is an individual spotlight on an individual country and its films. New York City “African Film Festival” 4/2 - 5/26 Featuring directors of Africa and the diaspora it is presented at Lincoln Center, and various venues across the US. Akron “Akron Independent Music Festival” 4/3 - 4/6 An Independent Film Festival with film and video work from national and local filmmakers. Los Angeles “Short Film Festival of LA” 4/26 - 4/30 An Independent Film Festival with film and video work from national and local filmmakers. Art Exhibitions New York City San Francisco The Drawing Center, 35 Wooster St. The accumulation of information, errors of transmission, junk faxes, “fax lore,” as well as drawings and text. Gallery 16, 501 Third St. Cold Turkey will present a selection from Six Realms, a very large and diverse body of brush and ink drawings, as well as several recent paintings. “FAX” “Cold Turkey” Bruno Fazzalori San Antonio Chicago 1906 Gallery, 1906 S. Flores 4 Art Inc., 1932 S. Halsted Unit 100 Chicago, IL Philadelphia Seattle “Steve Smith” “Pulling from History: The Old Masters” Various Artisits The Print Center, 1614 Latimer St. A group exhibition bringing together the work of contemporary artists whose work has been influenced by old master prints. “Phase viii” Various Artists “Centennial International Juried Exhibition” Crawl Space Gallery, 504 E. Denny Way #1 March 28-April 26 63 64