ROCKTOBER 8 - 28, 2015 HALLOWEEN ISSUE
Transcription
ROCKTOBER 8 - 28, 2015 HALLOWEEN ISSUE
VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 #100815102815 HALLOWEEN ISSUE A PEEK INSIDE: Pie in the Sky, Scanning Death at Sleepy Hollow, The Menage Tour, Your Call is Important to Us, Fear of Dyeing, The Crow, Haunted Houses & More, Halloween for the Kids!, Turtle Time on Alabama Beaches, New Young Contributor Writes for Valley Planet : Megan Holbrook, The Greatest Calendars on Earth!!! READ THE PLANET, IT’S FREE WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM (256) 533 • 4613 ROCKTOBER 8 - 28, 2015 FAME & FORT UNE ARE C ALLING W IN $ 7 OO F REE SLO T PL AY E V ER Y 7 MINU T ES ® F RID AY S IN OC T OBER H 7 P M – 1 1P M Just play any slots using your MARQUEE REWARDS ® card. W IN Y OUR SH A RE OF $ 5,OOO F REEBE T S E V ER Y HOUR F RID AY S H 7 : 3OP M – 1 1 : 3OP M Play table games to earn entries daily. W IN UP T O $ 1OO , OOO C A SH E V ER Y HOUR S AT URD AY S H 6P M – 1 1P M Earn 150 points each Saturday from 11AM– 5PM for your lucky Big Draw numbers. 115O CASINO STRIP RESORTS BLVD. TUNICA RESORTS, MS H 1-8OO-871-O711 H HOLLY WOODCASINOTUNICA.COM ©2015 Hollywood Casino Tunica. Must be 21 years or older. Promotion valid only at Hollywood Casino Tunica. See Player Services for complete details. Gambling problem? Call 1-888-777-9696 2 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 THE VALLEY PLANET In The Planet rocktober 8 - 28, 2015 NEXT ISSUE: ROCKTOBER 29, 2015 203 Grove Ave., Huntsville Al, 35801, phone 256.533-4613 Publisher Jill E. Wood Calendar Joani Williams Graphic Design Douglas A. Lange Contributors Bonnie Roberts Elaine Nelson Ricky Thomason Jim Zielinski Tim Owen John Davis Tom Colbey, Jr. Mike Ragoza Cameron Reeder Aaron Hurd Thomas V. Ress Shawn Bailey Megan Holbrook “When you come to a fork in the road, take it.” ~ Yogi Berra THE VALLEY PLANET VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Table of Contents 3 Letter From The Publisher 3 On The Cover: Leslie Wood 4 Pie in the Sky, Mike Ragoza 4 Fear of Dyeing, Cameron Reeder 4 Haunted Houses and More!, Jim Zieliński 5 Halloween for the Kids!, Jim Zieliński 5 Turtle Time on Alabama Beaches, Thomas V. Ress 6 News of the Weird, Chuck Shepherd 7 Con Corner: Scanning Death at Sleepy Hollow, Tom Colbey, Jr. 7 “The Crow” Reboot & Passion at UAH, Tom Colbey, Jr. 8 The Menage Tour – The Lives Between the Music, Cameron Reeder 9 Free Will Astrology, Rob Brezsny 10 Music Calendar Begins 11 Music Calendar Ends 12 ReLit: Your Call Is Important To Us, Reveiw by Ricky Thomason 12 Events Calendar Begins 13 Events Calendar Continues 13 Unchained Maladies, Ricky Thomason 13 Ant Man, Cameron Reeder 14 Events Calendar Continues 15 Regional Concert Calendar 15 Events Calendar Ends 16 What Then Must We Do?, Bonnie Roberts 16 Zee’s Rocket City bEAT, Jim Zielinski 17 Where Shall We Meet?, John Davis 17 Dr. Anarcho Rx For Old Stuff That Don’t Suck: Tool 18 Music Exchange 18 To Yuno From Yunohoo 18 Stupid Sh!t People Say, Shawn Bailey 18 The Single Guy: Communi-Date, Aaron Hurd On the Cover: Leslie Wood L eslie Wood is a diverse artist whose work varies from art journaling and painting to sculpture and jewelry making. She has a bachelor’s degree in Aerospace Engineering, but after working a few years, decided to go back and take art classes. She enrolled with the University of Alabama in Huntsville and studied photography, sculpture and painting. Over the years she expanded her creative skills with numerous master led classes. She manages to combine her engineering and creative worlds together with mechanical references throughout her artwork. Her recent solo exhibitions include ‘Dreams and Reality: The Artwork of Leslie Wood’ at Carnegie Visual Arts Center and at the Evelyn Burrow Museum in Hanceville. She displays her work at several art festivals throughout the year including Panoply Arts Festival and Monte Sano Art Festival and on her website at www.lesliewoodarts.com. Her art journaling has been published numerous times including three articles in 2015 in Somerset Studios ‘ART Journaling’ magazine. She teaches various classes throughout the year at her recently renovated log cabin studio in Lacey’s Spring, Alabama. Her latest art journaling class is ‘Day of the Little Deads’, in which she is teaching both online at https://coursecraft. net/c/dayoflittledeads and at her studio. She has also been selected to teach with a group of 26 other international mixed media artists and art journalists in Wanderlust 2016, A Year Long Journey in Mixed-Media and Art Journaling: http:// www.everything-art. com/Wanderlust/. Her work can also be found on Facebook at lesliewoodart and on Twitter and Instagram @lesliewoodarts. W elcome to the Valley Planet’s Halloween Issue! This is our 13th Halloween Issue….oooohh, ahhhhhh! Look inside to find out the details on haunted houses, carnivals, cemetery strolls, zombies, races, dances, theatre, pumpkins, magic, adult and kids’ Halloween activities as well as all of our regular local goodies – like live music, ballet, movies, books, art exhibits, pop up parks, food trucks, etc.! Remember, if that Clown just snagged the last Valley Planet off of the stand…you can always find us online at www.valleyplanet. com where you will also find local weekly blogs not found in the printed issue and check us out on Facebook! Congratulations to our 8th Grade Winner as a new contributor: Megan Holbrook! Send your submissions to freelance@valleyplanet.com. Fig Leaf Costume Adorer, Jill E. Wood Megan Holbrook is a local 8th grader who wins a spot in the Valley Planet with her response below: “E very issue of the Valley Planet provides great entertainment news. I’d look forward to it even more if there were additional reviews about books, movies, or TV shows aimed at young adults. For example, my favorite TV show is Once Upon a Time. I think it’s a wonderful show filled with fairytales, magic, the search for true love, the fight between good and evil, and finding your happy ending. The show delivers many suspenseful and heartbreaking moments as well as characters that the viewer really becomes invested in. I started watching this show and could not stop until I finished every season. I binged the whole thing in a matter of weeks. The show avoids the typical cliché of the completely “good” or completely “evil” character. There’s a mixture of darkness and light in each person. The character of Rumpelstiltskin provides a perfect example of this. His arc has gone from extreme weakness to evil to a brief stint as a good man then back to evil again. His fascinating journey is just one example of the complex characters and plots in this show. Once Upon a Time is highly recommended for viewers who enjoy epic magical adventures, heartbreaking moments, and compelling love stories. I am interested in arts and entertainment newspapers that provide reviews on TV shows, movies, books, and music. With so much entertainment to choose from, a newspaper that helps me decide what’s worth checking out is one I will always want to read.” Reproduction or use without our permission is strictly prohibited. The views and opinions expressed within these pages and on the website are not necessarily those of the Valley Planet or its staff. The Valley Planet is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or art. Back issues are available for viewing on our website www. valleyplanet.com in the archives section. You may reach the Valley Planet office @ 256.533.4613 or by mail at Valley Planet 203 Grove Ave. Huntsville, AL 35801. Contact by email: info@valleyplanet.com. 256-533-4613 Valley Planet Deadline for October 29 issue is October 16. #100815102815 Letter from the Publisher Valley Planet Finds a New Young Writer in Response to Contest! Thank you for reading the fine print of the Valley Planet. The Valley Planet and valleyplanet.com are published every three weeks by J W Publications in Huntsville, AL. You can pick up the paper free all over the place or get it free on the web. Copyright 2003 by the Valley Planet, Inc. All rights reserved. THE VALLEY PLANET #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Calling all 12 to 20 year old writers and/or Cartoonists! Send in your work to the Valley Planet. Wouldn’t that look cool on your resume, “Published writer or cartoonist for the Valley Planet!”? Contact: freelance@valleyplanet.com, 256 533-4613. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 3 Pie in the Sky Fear of Dyeing T I by Mike Ragoza by Cameron Reeder here is nothing more American than pizza and beer, and also nothing more copied and served in the greater Huntsville-Madison area. Finding a pizza restaurant is not the issue, but finding a good one is. Well look no further as Pie in the Sky Pizza next to the new Target in Madison is the answer to pizza/beer lover’s prayers. I can honestly say I had one of the best pizzas ever when I dined on their Steak and Blue pizza. The pizza with thinly sliced steak (and tasty and tender steak at that) mushrooms, sweet red onions and cheese was simply delicious. The crust was thin and crispy and not soggy or overly sauced. The restaurant claims to use fresh, locally sourced ingredients as well. And though I cannot verify the source of the mushrooms and onions used on my pizza, I can easily verify the extensive collection of locally sourced microbrews they serve. My favorite Monkeynaut was on draft as were other local favorites including Yellowhammer as well as Good People Brewing from Birmingham. A great selection, and several are available by the pitcher as well. Pie in the Sky stocks a full bar with many exotic drink offerings and also a short and basic wine list. Standard pub fare appetizers are available and the restaurant also offers outdoor seating. The pizzas too come in a variety of sizes and toppings including one mammoth pizza weighing in over six pounds. That may be a little much for me but whatever size and whatever toppings you’ll be sure to enjoy any of their offerings. t was Thursday. I left work at 1 p.m. I was worried. I fretted and sweated like I did the night before my first open water dive in the Gulf. I knew I was going to be eaten by a Great White that day and become a one in a million statistic. And on Thursday, I just knew I would wind up regretting the thing that I had been planning for more than twenty years. My son had them. My daughter had them. My sister had them. So what was there to worry about? (Music from JAWS) Again, the great white. The one long shot chance that something would go terribly wrong and I would be kicking myself for the rest of my life that I could have, should have, backed out while I had the chance. I mean, what is a 54 year old man doing getting a tattoo? In my youth, it was sailors, bikers and sideshow attractions who painted their skin. South Pacific Islanders, possibly even cannibals, wore them as markings for conquests or tribal affiliations. So what the heck was I doing? For one, I just think it’s cool. And secondly, I wanted to express something permanent externally to reflect what was going on internally on the canvas of my heart. I resolved to get a lion head with the scripture reference Revelation 5:5 (there is no such biblical text as Revelations with an “s.” Sorry, personal pet peeve) which reads, “The lion of the tribe of Judah has prevailed.” I felt that this verse properly summed up the bible perfectly. Jesus wins. The End. So naturally, with something as sensitive as this topic, I didn’t want my lion head to look like either Clarence the cross eyed lion or the cowardly lion from the Wizard of Oz. Nor did I want to entertain one more comment about poor Cecil. I wanted my lion to look strong and wild like Aslan from the beloved children’s classic by C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. It was my hope that whenever anyone saw this art, not only would they see some skillful body ornamentation but also be inspired and perhaps challenged by the verse and the sentiment that it evoked. And folks, that is just what I got. My fears, again, were unfounded. The shark didn’t get me. He just gnawed on my arm a little. While I still have one more visit to finish the job, Jeb at Ink City on Sixth Avenue in Decatur was able to bring my vision to life the same way he and his crew have done for countless others. I hope that this fantastic artwork by Jeb will inspire questions that will lead to weighty and life altering conversations in the future. Haunted Houses and More! by Jim Zieliński A s Campaign 2016 roils, it’s nice to relax and spend time with beasts that can only scare, kill, and eat us. Occasionally, the costs (e.g. admission, online handling fees, parking fees) and queues may be your most terrifying experiences, so wisely budget time and moolah— NOTE: some attractions are cash only! Visit each website for varying date/time specifics. Many a pulse-squelching experience can be suffered within a two-hour radius; however, should you choose to drive beyond this, that’s beyond our purview…and perhaps beyond hope. MULTIPLE DAYS ARX MORTIS @ GHOSTHILL & ATAXIA, 4051 Highway 72, Killen, AL 35645 (256) 710-6811, www.arxmortis.com, Vinny@ arxmortis.com General: $20, VIP: $30, Ataxia: $8, Combo: $26 Located ~sixty-six miles west…if you dare…it’s said Arx Mortis will scare the YELL out of you. New in 2015: Ataxia (…Attacks Ya?) – A Laser Tag-to-the-Death with Evil Clowns! ATROX FACTORY, 404 Parkway Drive, Leeds, AL 35094, (205) 458-1393, www.atroxfactory. com General: $20 (Cash Only), Fridays/Saturdays: +$5 Cover, “Tru VIP”: $40, “Scream Pass”: $50 Enjoy “40,000 square feet of mind-blowing terror” without watching “Mike and Molly.” Arrive early, in anticipation of long lines - and possible sellouts! - on weekends. On heavy-traffic nights, 4 gates close as early as 10:45. Don’t be left out… or in. DEATH ROW, 418 Harding Industrial Drive, Nashville, TN 37214, (615) 833-1433 m.deathrowhauntedhouse.net, deathrow.tn@ gmail.com General: $15, RIP Pass: $25, Combo (Two GenAdm to any of the Four “Warner Haunts”): $30 each RIP Combo (Two “Fast Pass” Tickets to any of the Four “Warner Haunts”): $45 each This dimly lit, former prison celebrates 20 Years of Horror with major renovations coupled with the return of frightening favorites. Your self-guided submergence into the bloodbath takes you past a hospital-mortuary-prison-cemetery-inspired collection of morgue slabs, wheelchairs, cell doors, and twisted instruments employed in endless “home surgery” and torture schemes… HAUNTED HOUSE OF HORROR, 1205 Tennessee Street, Courtland, AL 35618 (256) 637-8410, www.hauntedhouseofhorror.net, info@hauntedhouseofhorror.net General: $20, Groups (20+, one transaction): $17.50, HHoH “FAST PASS”: $40 Zombie Paintball Shoot: $13, ZPS “FAST PASS”: $20, ZPS Groups: $11.00, Combo: $30 Combo “FAST PASS”: $50, Combo Groups: $26 Fun, scary excitement and adrenaline-abusing activities “Bring Your Fears to Life” at this frightfully moldering high school in historic Courtland, ~43 miles away. It’s an experience of a… deathtime. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM NASHVILLE NIGHTMARE, 1016 Madison Square, Madison, TN, (615) 752-5663, http:// nashvillenightmare.com Single: $20 – Night Terrors, Combo: $30 – Night Terrors & Horror High, “Slash Pass”: $45 – Both; Cuts down 75% of your wait time “Music City’s Monster Mash of Mayhem” turns their Night Terrors and Horror High Haunted Houses upside down, adding new perks and threats to Madison Square Mortuary, Harpo’s House of Horrors, Big Mama’s Meat Packing Plant, Cellar Dwellers, Underwood Asylum, and other Points of No Return! RUBY FALLS HAUNTED CAVERN, 1720 South Scenic Highway, Chattanooga, TN 37409 (423) 800-0566, (423) 821-2544, www.hauntedcavern.com Thursdays/Sundays: $17, Fridays: $21, Saturdays: $23 You’ll fall for this 26-story subterranean plunge to Carrion Ridge, whose denizens trust you are gluten free. Sandals, Flip-flops, or anything exposing tender toes should be eschewed, while babes in arms (unless congealed) are disallowed. SLOSS FRIGHT FURNACE, 20 32nd Street North, Birmingham, AL 35222 (205) 254-2025. http:// frightfurnace.com/, info@ slossfurnaces.com Combo (Sloss Furnace Tour, Roadkill Café, Outbreak 2), Weeknights: $20 Combo (Sloss Furnace Tour, Roadkill Café, Outbreak 2), Weekends: $24 All Hallow’s Hodgepodge #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Room: $3 Contact for Group Rates (13 or More) Sloss doesn’t pack ‘em in for nothing! Shriek yourself hoarse along the ½-mile Furnace Trail or in “Outbreak 2,” the newly expanded Zombie Obstacle Course. SUNDAY, 25 OCTOBER 2015 World Conspiracy’s Ninth Annual Zombie Walk, 2:00 p.m. – Meet-up; 2:30 p.m. – Walk Begins Clinton Street Parking Garage, Downtown, (256) 534-3198, www.worldconspiracy.org Assuming this column is legible underground: routes and directions for this family-friendly trek are shared at the meet-up. Your cost: one cat or dog food item for needy kits and pups. …And if you don’t know how zombies walk, wake a teenager at 9 a.m. and have them take out the garbage. FRIDAY, 30 OCTOBER 2015 LAS VEGAS: “Halloween Magic,” Featuring Illusionist Michael Grandinetti, 7:30 p.m. VBC - Mark C. Smith Concert Hall, 700 Monroe Street, SW, (256) 539-4818, www.hso.org $29 – $68; Group Rates Available The master illusionist will enthrall the whole family even as the HSO entertains with haunting melodies (e.g. “Night on Bald Mountain”; “In the Hall of the Mountain King”; “Harry Potter” themes) and entices with “a special surprise or two.” So there’s your one-way path into the great beyond; pull up your coffin, lie down, switch on Berlios’ “Dream of a Witch’s Sabbath” or Mussorgsky’s “Night on Bald Mountain,” and peruse Benjamin Andrew’s “Spookinite Valley” stories at www.spookinite.com... They’re somewhat grimmer than Grimm. THE VALLEY PLANET Halloween for the Kids! Seminole Drive, SW, (256) 683-5554 http://chromaddict.com, alderfer@ chromaddict.com, $25 (includes all supplies) by Jim Zieliński Imaginative goblins age 6 – 12 will decorate colorful sunsets with bats, cats, trees, and other spooky items. “Dress to make a mess,” as the 11” x 14” creations require acrylic paints. I n consideration of area waifs, we must needs address “tyke-friendly” options for the perhaps too-easily spooked. In many cases, but not all, the treats are FREE! That’s the Halloween spirit for ya. SATURDAYS MICHAEL’S @ WESTBURY SQUARE 975 Airport Road, SW, Suite B-1, (256) 8851779 Crafting activities: • 10 October: Kid’s Club® “Perler Frankenstein”; 10:00 a.m. – Noon; $2.00 • 24 October: Kid’s Club® “Pet Spider”; 10:00 a.m. – Noon; $2.00 • Halloween: Kid’s Club® “Trick or Treat Bag”; 10:00 a.m. – Noon; $2.00 WEDNESDAY, 14 OCTOBER MICHAEL’S: Wilton Kids “Very Hairy and Scary Cupcakes”; 4:00 – 6:00 p.m.; $15.00: Your kids create wild, scary-yet-edible faces while you shop! THURSDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2015 MICHAEL’S: “Last-Minute Costume Ideas” (All Ages); 6:30 – 8:30 p.m.; $16.00: ‘Nuff sed. FRIDAY – SATURDAY, 30 & 31 OCTOBER Less-Scary All Hallow’s Collage… (256) 489-3392, mfarley@hmcpl.org No Admission Charge Crafts, games, and then some are to be found at the annual party, where costumes are encouraged. THURSDAY, 29 OCTOBER HALLOWEEN PARTY 5:30 – 7:30 p.m., & PUPPET SHOW, 6:00 p.m. HMCPL – Madison, 130 Plaza Boulevard, (256) 461-0046, lwhitaker@hmcpl.org, mallen@hmcpl.org No Admission Charge All patrons are invited to wear their Halloween costumes and kids can trick or treat throughout the MPL after the puppet show. PUMPKIN FEST 9:00 a.m. – 4:45 p.m. HMCPL—Eleanor E. Murphy Branch 7910 Charlotte Drive, SW 35802 (256) 881-5620 No Admission Charge Trick-or-Treat at decorated public service desks for TWO days, ALL day: expect candy, a chance to create a make-n-take Pumpkin Craft, and a Pumpkin Scavenger Hunt! HALLOWEEN SATURDAY SPOOKTACULAR 5K RUN 8:00 a.m. & 1-MILE MONSTER RUN 9:00 a.m. Monroe Street (near Big Spring International Park) (256) 650-7063 suzanne@fleetfeethuntsville.com SATURDAY, 24 OCTOBER BOOTANICA, 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Huntsville Botanical Gardens - Children’s Garden, 4747 Bob Wallace Avenue, SW (256) 830-4447, ext. 241, thuron@hsvbg.org Adults: $12, Kids, 3 – 18: $8, Seniors, 55+: $10, Military/Student (w/ID): $10 FRIDAY, 30 OCTOBER “TRICK OR TREAT @ THE LIBRARY,” 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. & “SPOOKTACULAR PUPPET SHOW,” 4:00 – 5:00 p.m. HMCPL – Main Youth Services Department 915 Monroe Street, SW, (256) 532-5949 No Admission Charge A family- and haint-friendly day, Bootanica welcomes you in your ghoulish garb for the happening Halloween party featuring games, an 11:00 a.m. costume parade, face painting, pumpkins, DJ Steve, and hayrides through Scarecrow Trail to the Sorghum Maze. Supplies are limited. The whole family can enjoy trick-or-treating throughout the day at decorated public service desks on all three, well-stocked floors.The puppet show spotlights fun, favorite writings, e.g. “The Little Old Lady Who Wasn’t Afraid of Anything” and “The Very Busy Spider.” Pick up packets from 10:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. at Fleet Feet Sports [Valley Bend; 2722 Carl T. Jones Drive, SE; Suite B-2]. Then join Runners, Walkers, Ghosts, and Goblins of all…epochs… for this healthy, chip-timed Halloween activity, which includes a costume contest! KIDS PAINTING PARTY: “HALLOWEEN SUNSET SILHOUETTES, ” 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. Lowe Mill, ChromAddict Studio # 2025, 2211 SCI-QUEST “SPOOKTACULAR SCIENCE” HALLOWEEN GLOW PARTY 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 1435 Paramount Drive “I hear movement!” she whispers. We are thrilled that tonight we could witness the remarkable sight of dozens of baby turtles frantically erupting from the sand and madly sprinting to the protective waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Fifteen minutes after the stethoscope detected the first subterranean stirrings, the sand starts to quiver and a black pinky-finger sized head pops out. A tiny flipper appears, then another and finally a cookie-sized turtle squirts out and sprints toward the surf. Instantly, it’s as if someone yelled “GO!” and the sand comes alive with dozens of baby turtles emerging from the sand. This hatching flurry accelerates and within minutes more than sixty baby loggerheads magically pop into the moonlight. TUESDAY, 27 OCTOBER HALLOWEEN PARTY, 6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Huntsville-Madison Co. Public Library (HMCPL) – Monrovia, 254 Allen Drake Drive Turtle Time on Alabama Beaches by Thomas V. Ress W e are walking down a moonlit stretch of deserted beach on Alabama’s Fort Morgan Peninsula, when one of our group kneels and gently touches a stethoscope to the warm sand. Over the din of the crashing surf, she strains to hear a faint sound underground. She is listening to a loggerhead sea turtle nest, hoping to detect the telltale scratching of hatchlings breaking out of their shells and digging toward the surface. Loggerheads are one of Alabama’s rarest and most fascinating wild animals, giant marine turtles that weigh as much as 800 pounds and measure up to four feet across the shell. Loggerheads spend almost their entire lives in the ocean; the females touch land only to nest. On a warm summer night, a female will crawl onto a beach, dig a cavity with her hind flippers and deposit up to 150 pliable ping-pong ball sized eggs. She then fills in the cavity and lumbers back into the ocean, never to see the nest again. The abandoned eggs are incubated by Mother Nature and if all goes well - if the sun sufficiently warms the eggs, hurricanes bypass the beach and coyotes and other predators miss the nest, after about two months the eggs hatch and dozens of baby turtles miraculously bubble out of the sand and dash across the beach, dodging hungry gulls and crabs, before reaching the relative safety of the ocean. This fragile scene is repeated dozens of times every summer on Alabama beaches. Many of these beaches are on Fort Morgan Peninsula - in 2014, 80 nests were found on Alabama beaches and 42 of those were on the peninsula. Most of the nests were found by volunteers with Share the Beach, a nonprofit conservation group, who patrol the beaches during the May through August nesting season. Once they find a nest, they monitor it until it successfully hatches. One of these nests is the one we are standing over. THE VALLEY PLANET #100815102815 5K Registration: $30 Monster Run Registration: $20 (256) 837-0606 https://sci-quest.org Adults: $10 + Tax Seniors (65+)/Children (2 – 18): $9 + Tax Military: $1 off for all Active Military and Family Members in the Household Members: FREE Don’t wait for dark—explore all things “Glow” at this family-friendly Halloween party. Costumed guests also receive a 3-D glowing gift! Luminescent liquids and a Black Light Maze play important roles in the fun! TRICK-OR-TREAT @ LOWE MILL 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. 2211 Seminole Drive, SW Huntsville (256) 533-0399 www.lowemill.net No Admission Charge Celebrate the hallowed eve with three floors of decorations, costumes…and CANDY. Boo-ys and Ghouls can “tour” the historic mill, trick-ortreating at participating studios! FOURTH ANNUAL “HALLOWEEN MAIN”—MADISON 5:00 – 7:00 p.m. Main Street (256) 772-9300 www.madisonal.gov/index.aspx?mid=216 ON No Admission Charge Enjoy trick-or-treating, games, and other activities down on Main Street. Register for the Costume Parade at the Madison Chamber’s table. All times TBA. IN CLOSING: Once again, we chanced by Ayer’s Farmer’s Market [2015 Memorial Parkway, SW @ Governor’s Drive, SW; (256) 533-5667; http:// ayersfarmersmarket.com, espying a cornucopia of knife-ready pumpkins. As always, remember to sprinkle cinnamon and nutmeg on the inner lid of your jack-o-lantern…a most haunting aroma. and professionals who monitor and protect Alabama’s sea turtles we have hope that we will witness the return of sea turtles to Alabama beaches for decades to come. You can do this! If you are interested in volunteering with Share the Beach go to www.alabamaseaturtles.com. What follows is both wondrous and comical as a handful of volunteers scurry around in the dark shepherding dozens of confused and speedy critters toward the Gulf of Mexico. Evolution has conditioned the hatchlings to head toward light - which for eons was moonlight reflecting off the surf. But today artificial lighting from streetlights, condos and beach houses lures them inland, away from the surf. Volunteers repeatedly herd the babies toward the water and away from the dunes. Hordes of hungry ghost crabs lurk in the wings, hoping to snatch one of these tasty morsels. If the volunteers weren’t here, there would be a deadly feast on this beach. After more than an hour, the last of 69 hatchlings disappear into the dark surf. But the hatchlings face formidable challenges. Only a small percentage survive to maturity - some get entangled and drown in fishing nets, some choke to death on plastic bags, balloons, and other trash that they mistake for jellyfish, their favorite food, and beachfront development destroys the deserted beaches they need for nesting. But some will survive and one day the survivors will return to this same beach to lay the seed for yet another generation. Thanks to the volunteers VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 5 Cosmopolitan that her PetiteVsPlump website has so far earned her about $100,000. The Job of the Researcher Scientists at North Carolina State and Wake Forest universities have developed a machine that vomits, realistically, enabling the study of “aerosolization” of dangerous norovirus. “Vomiting Larry” can replicate the process of retching, including the pressure at which particles are expelled (which, along with volume and “other vomit metrics,” can teach the extent of the virus’ threat in large populations). The researchers must use a harmless stand-in “bacteriophage” for the studies -- because norovirus is highly infectious even in the laboratory. by Chuck Shepherd Priorities PlayStations and Xboxes, However, State-of-the-Art: A New York University Center for Justice study released in September warned that, unless major upgrades are made quickly, 43 states will conduct 2016 elections on electronic voting machines at least 10 years old and woefully suspect. Those states use machines no longer made or poorly supported, and those in 14 states are more than 15 years old. There are apprehensions over antiquated security (risking miscounts, potential for hacking), but also fear of electionday breakdowns causing long lines at the polls, depressing turnout and dampening confidence in the overall fairness of the process. The NYU center estimated the costs of upgrading at greater than $1 billion. Wait, What? In a “manifesto” to celebrate “personal choice and expression” in the standard of beauty “in a society that already places too many harmful standards on women,” according to a July New York Times report, some now are dyeing their armpit hair. At the Free Your Pits website, and events like “pit-ins” in Seattle and Pensacola, Florida, envelope-pushing women offer justifications ranging from political resistance to, according to one, “want(ing) to freak out (her) in-laws.” Preferred colors are turquoise, hot pink, purple and neon yellow. Actress Melissa Gilbert (a star of TV’s “Little House on the Prairie”), 51, announced in August that she would run for Congress from Michigan’s 8th Congressional District -- even though she is currently on the hook to the IRS and California for back taxes totaling $470,000. Gilbert, a former president of the Screen Actors Guild and member of the AFL-CIO Executive Council, promised that she (and her actor-husband) would pay off her tax bill -- by the year 2024. Men Are Simple Update: Five years after News of the Weird mentioned it, Japan’s Love Plus virtualgirlfriend app is more popular than ever, serving a growing segment of the country’s lonely males -- those beyond peak marital years and resigned to artificial “relationships.” Love Plus models (Rinko, Manaka and Nene) are chosen mostly (and surprisingly) not for physical attributes, but for flirting and companionship. One user described his “girlfriend” (in a September Time magazine dispatch) as “someone to say good morning to in the morning and ... goodnight to at night.” Said a Swedish observer, “You wouldn’t see (this phenomenon) in Europe or America.” One problem: Men can get stuck in a “love loop” waiting for the next app update -- with, they hope, more “features.” “Odette Delacroix,” 25, of North Hollywood, California, is a petite (86 pounds) model who runs an adult fetish website in which people (i.e., men) pay to watch her tumble around, bikini-clad, with “plus-size” models, up to five at a time, squashing and nearly suffocating her in “pigpiles.” “Odette” told London’s edition of 6 Police Report Relentless Wannabes: (1) Authorities in Winter Haven, Florida, arrested James Garfield, 28, with the typical faux-police set-up -- Ford Crown Victoria with police lights, uniform with gold-star badge, video camera, Taser, and business cards printed with “law enforcement.” (Explained Garfield lamely, the “law enforcement” was just a “printing mistake.”) (2) In nearby Frostproof, Florida, Thomas Hook, 48, was also arrested in September, his 14th law-enforcement-impersonator arrest since 1992. His paraphernalia included the Crown Vic with a prisoner cage, scanner, spotlight, “private investigator” and “fugitive recovery” badges, and an equally bogus card identifying him as a retired Marine Corps major. Hook’s one other connection to law enforcement: He is a registered sex offender. Buddhists Acting Out (1) Police in Scotland’s Highlands were called in September when a Buddhist retreat participant, Raymond Storrie, became riled up that another, Robert Jenner, had boiling water for his tea, but not Storrie’s. After Storrie vengefully snatched Jenner’s own hot water, Jenner punched him twice in the head, leading Storrie to threaten to kill Jenner (but also asking, plaintively, “Is this how you practice dharma?”). (2) A Buddhist monk from Louisiana, Khang Nguyen Le, was arrested in New York City in September and accused of embezzling nearly $400,000 from his temple to fuel his gambling habit (blackjack, mostly at a Lake Charles, Louisiana, casino). Oops! An official of the Missouri Republican Party apologized in September for the “thoughtless” act of using an original Thomas Hart Benton mural in the state Capitol as a writing surface. Valinda Freed and a man were exchanging business cards, and Freed, needing to jot down information on the card, placed it directly on the mural to backstop her writing. During a break in a murder trial in Lima, Ohio, in September, a jailer apparently absentmindedly locked inmate-witness Steven Upham in the same cell with the accused murderer he was about to testify against (Markelus Carter, 46). Upham was set to squeal that Carter had confessed the murder to him. Deputies soon rushed to the cell to break up Carter’s attempt, with his fists, to change Upham’s mind. (At press time, the jury was still deliberating.) Least Competent Criminals Police in South Union Township, Pennsylvania, say David Lee, 46, is the one who swiped a Straight Talk cellphone from a Wal-mart shelf on Sept. 15 (but wound up in the hospital). After snatching the phone, Lee went to a different section of the store and tried to open the packaging with a knife, but mishandled it and slashed his arm so severely that he had to be medevaced to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital in Pittsburgh (and a hazmat crew had to be summoned to clean up all of the blood Lee had splattered). No Longer Weird Stories that were formerly weird, but which now occur with such frequency that they must be permanently retired from circulation: (1) Once again, in July, despite being handcuffed (by a King County, Washington, sheriff’s deputy) and placed in the back seat of a squad car, the prisoner managed to drive off alone. Teddy Bell, 26, was apprehended a while later with the help of K-9 officers. (2) And once again (in July in Bergen, Norway) the accused was convicted of murder WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM based on a telltale Internet-search history. Police discovered about 250 computer queries such as “How do you poison someone without getting caught?” (Ultimately, the woman confessed that she killed her husband by lighting a charcoal grill in his bedroom while he slept.) From Cuba, With Love One of the remaining 116 Guantanamo Bay prisoners (a man suspected of having been close to Osama bin Laden) has a dating profile on Match.com captioned “detained but ready to mingle,” the man’s lawyer Carlos Warner told Al Jazeera America in September. Muhammad Rahim al-Afghani has relentlessly proclaimed his innocence, and Warner released a series of charming letters from his client intended to humanize him. Al-Afghani commented on Lebron James, Caitlyn Jenner, the Ashley Madison website and, for some reason, South Dakota, but with the recent publicity, Match.com appears to have suspended the account. The Continuing Crisis “Let me get this straight,” wrote an incredulous commenter in September. “(T)hose who oversee” the Matthaei Botanical Gardens in Ann Arbor, Michigan, have the park “populated with snakes that can bite and inflict serious wounds.” The remark was in response to a visitor’s having been bitten by one of at least 27 rattlesnakes loose (by design) on the grounds. (The Eastern Massasauga rattler is protected by state law.) On the other hand, the park has posted many snake warning signs, and the woman who was bitten had removed her shoes to walk in the lush grass. Aluminum Foil Makes a Comeback: (1) City officials in Tarpon Springs, Florida, scrambled in May to find an ordinance that artist Piotr Janowski might have violated when he covered two palm trees, and then three sides of his rented home, in heavy-duty aluminum foil, to the consternation of neighbors. Janowski is a graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and his work has been shown in that city’s Polish Museum of America. (2) National Forest Service officials announced success in fire retardation in August by protectively sealing a remote structure near an Idaho wildfire in multi-ply foil. (3) And then there is Arthur Brown, 78, also “successful” in having kept his house in Hermitage, Pennsylvania, free of “aliens” by sealing it in foil (although neighbors griped in September about falling property values). Latest Self-Declared Right Officials in Carroll County, Maryland, finally released a woman in August after she had been detained for 67 days -- just for declining to give her name to a traffic patrolman (who had stopped her for a broken taillight). In her idiosyncratic understanding of the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth Amendment, to “not be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against (herself)” means keeping her identity hidden from police. Eventually, sheriff’s deputies captured her fingerprints, and since they matched no outstanding warrants, she was released. Leading Economic Indicators Adam Partridge Auctioneers in Liverpool announced in September that the equivalent of $10,000 would be the starting bid on a twopound mass of whale vomit (hardened into a chunk by aging in ocean waters) picked up by a beachcomber in Wales. BBC News reported that a six-pound hunk once sold for the equivalent of $150,000; when aged into “ambergris,” the putrid waste product turns waxy and sweet-smelling and proves valuable to “high-end perfume houses.” An international property rental service recently found a seven-bedroom castle on 200 acres in Ringuette, France, for the equivalent of $2,925 a month -- which San Francisco’s KNTV immediately contrasted with the listing of a 401square-foot apartment in the city’s Lower Haight district, offered at $3,000 per month. Another French castle (six bedrooms, a pool, three-acre garden, “several lawns”) rents for the equivalent of $4,940 -- about what a three-bedroom on Collins Street in San Francisco goes for. Marie Holmes tearfully disclosed in March how the $88 million Powerball lump sum she had won would allow her to finish college and help her four kids (one with cerebral palsy). Right away, though, her boyfriend, Lamar “Hot #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Sauce” McDow, was charged with drug trafficking and needed $3 million bail, which she took care of. Then, in August, in Brunswick County, North Carolina, “Hot Sauce” was arrested again, for selling heroin, and reporters surmised that Holmes must have been the one who posted that $6 million bail. (Holmes addressed her critics on Facebook: “What Y’all need to be worried about is Y’all money ....”) Perspective Military veteran Gary Dixon, 65, has multiple medical issues, the worst of which is stage four lung cancer, which he says he got from Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. He takes from 10 to 15 meds a day, previously supplied by the Veterans hospital in Topeka, Kansas, but for post-traumatic stress and anxiety, he also smokes marijuana when he can get it. (Kansas has not legalized medical marijuana.) A recent policy change by the VA bars pain meds for marijuana users, leading Dixon to fend for himself for the meds (about $400 a month, he said), because he so badly needs the marijuana. Can’t Possibly Be True An ovipositor is the organ that inserts or receives an egg (especially from parasites like bees -- and that thing in “Alien”). A spokesperson from a startup firm called Primal Hardwere (in an August interview with Vice.com) assumes a human market for ovipositors and is now selling two hollowed-tube models at $120 and $130 (along with advice on creating gelatin “eggs” for insertion). The product, acknowledged the Primal Hardwere rep (to the wary interviewer), “can be ... off-putting” to anyone who might not “fantasize about being the willing or unwilling host of alien beings inside them.” Recurring Themes More than three-fourths of civil cases filed in the busy Tucson, Arizona, federal court in 2014 -- nearly 3,000 in a courthouse open only about 250 days a year -- were filed by one man, a prisoner named Dale Maisano, who was expressing disappointment with his health care as he serves his 15-year term for aggravated assault. Maisano said in July 2015 he was still getting little help for his valley fever, gallstones, sun sensitivity, leaky bladder and nerve problems in his feet. Update “We will not forget (rape victims). We will not abandon you.” So said Attorney General Loretta Lynch at a September self-congratulatory press conference along with Vice President Joe Biden, announcing $78 million in grants for testing rape kits that had been gathering dust for years around the country (surely allowing hundreds of rapists to have escaped punishment and some to re-offend) -- except that these victims have already been “forgotten” and “abandoned” for more than five years. Biden was vice president in 2010 when News of the Weird pointed out that Illinois was violating state law by ignoring 80 percent of its rape kits, and then in 2012 when Houston revealed it was sitting on 6,663 kits (and Detroit 11,000). (News of the Weird’s understated 2010 headline: “Things That Shouldn’t Get Backlogged”). Least Competent Criminals Pamela Downs, 45, was arrested in Kingsport, Tennessee, in July and charged with using a counterfeit $5 bill at a gas station (a bill that was merely two photocopied sides poorly glued together, with one side upside down). Downs explained as she was being cuffed, “(A)ll these other bitches get to print money so I can too.” (She told officers later that she had read “online” that “President Obama” had “made a new law” allowing people to print money if they were on a fixed income. Send your weird news to WeirdNews at earthlink dot net, and P.O. Box 18737, Tampa, FL 33679. Copyright, Chuck Shepherd THE VALLEY PLANET Con Corner: Scanning Death at Sleepy Hollow by Tom Colbey, Jr. D eath drove to Atlanta, avoiding the reserved parking spaces, to a conference room in the Sleepy Hollow production building. The Sky Zone Trampoline Park to one side, a factory distribution outlet on the other. A Hollywood built from Southern hospitality and Georgia tax credits. “Death is coming, everyone,” said Renee (Sleepy Hollow’s 2nd A.D.). The Wraith, a.k.a. Death, already had a full day: Up at 3:00AM, four hours of make-up, and film shoots all day. Finally, a 3D scanning project, Death’s passage into digital eternity (courtesy of Jeff Wilson and Vic Holt from the animation and visual effects team of 2CGVFX). Meeting with Death, I expected to be drowned in black hole absolute as dark energy mass-converted nightmare-vapors through the door frame of the conference room. With Death, I expected the creep advance, the black ocean flow-morph of ancient robes over ceiling tiles. A scythe, all Grim Reaper sexy, oscillating soul-pierce. Fiery words scrawled behind him in Language-Universal: No More Time! (The fearvision of my guilty, filthy Catholic soul.) But, what walked in the door was the six-foot frame of a youth in tights (all necrotic-chic from the chest up), and a lesson in simple elegance. “Spin.” Click. Click. Flash. The Wraith rotated on a wooden swivel-stand. “Spin.” Click. Click. Flash. By my hand, Death swiveled fifteen degrees per “spin.” Vic mumbled the spin command in intervals as he took high-res photos to be used in texturing the soon-to-be computer model of Death (for special effects shots in episode 2 premiering October 8). General body shots first. “Spin.” Click. Click. Flash. Head shots next. “Spin.” Click. Click. Flash. The spinning and clicking and flashing was the easy part for Death. The pulse-blaze machine-gunning from the scanner was next. The chances of inducing photonic shock in humans through rapid light pulsing is something in the neighborhood of, like, a quadrillion to one. But, it’s Death (from a population of Wraiths). He never sees daylight, let alone the pulse grenade of 35,000 lumens (and we’re about to blast him a quadrillion times!). “Spin.” Click. Click. Flash. THUD! Nobody seemed worried, though. If the worst was going to happen, Death (awake since the wee hours) was looking for sleep relief anyway. But, always remember: Impervious to puny human technology, Death laughs at the Light. The team’s simple triumph was the robe. Clumped and being hauled by a team of assistant Wraiths, it’s an unwieldy mass. But, once draped, the robes are Catholic-panic. Gray strips weaved in the black provide a sense of ancient cloth decay. But it starts on Death’s skin with the bone-cancerous sculptures (artistically corrupted by an aged, arthritic tinge) grafted onto, and jutting upward from, Death’s shoulders. The bony spaulders add a healthy dose of creepy when exposed through the robe’s shoulder holes, but the upward slope works as anchors, which, along with arm sleeves (hidden in the forest of cloth strips), near perfectly secures, and more evenly distributes, the robe’s weight across Death’s frame. With Death’s considerable wingspan, the result is Dark Angel Glory! I’m not saying it’d be comfy in Georgia summer heat, but the result would be worth sweating Death to the bone in the cubed hydrosheets of Southern humidity. Part of what undergirds Sleepy Hollow’s continued success must be the creativity of simple elegance. Sleepy Hollow’s third season starts soon! See for yourself. Follow me on Twitter: colbey_jr Indulge your fandom at the Deep Comics and Fig Leaf Costumes, Con Corner sponsors. Go to the Con Corner blog at ValleyPlanet.com/category/con-corner for new, weekly content! “The Crow” Reboot & Passion at UAH by Tom Colbey, Jr. T he bad guys take Shelly. Stomp. Spin. Load a kick. Roundhouse kick to one bad guy. Follow through with a punch to the other bad guy. One fluid fight scene motion. It should be realistic, so don’t look too professional. Got it? Good. Repeat. Next take. Repeat. I met the up-and-coming actor, Tyler Gallant, at a Geek Gathering panel discussion in Sheffield. Great conversations ensued, and he invited me to a test shoot to be filmed at the UAH Business Administration building where I got to witness all the kicking and punching in repeat-loop waves of faux street violence. Chase Shelly and the bad guys down the stairs. Leap on the railing. Launch a super-accelerated, force-multiplied, down-angle punch on a third bad guy. Take out bad guy. Make the physics look brutal. Got it? Good. Repeat. Next take. Repeat. Relativity Media went bankrupt. After two years of being attached to The Crow project, Luke Evans dropped out. Then, Jack Huston says no to the THE VALLEY PLANET role of Eric Draven, too. From London to Hollywood, the remake of “The Crow” has been a plague driving ailment down the road. But, passion is in the driver’s seat now. What does passion look like? It started with fandom; Tyler’s love of the dark, noir-like James O’Barr saga of vengeance from beyond. It continued with Tyler’s manager, Jason Hough, and a connection to James O’Barr. It’s furthered by, despite Tyler’s lack of Chinese blood, a doppelganger resemblance to Brandon Lee (The Crow’s first Eric Draven). Martial arts training, stuntman tips and tricks, acting skill development. An intense social media campaign garnered tens of thousands of Crow fans (many thinking Brandon Lee rose from the dead like Eric Draven). The latest gambit, a test shoot filmed at the UAH campus on September 22 with a cast and crew made up of other Crow fanatics. Get to the bottom of the stairs. It will be tough to relax, but do so, because you’re going to take a beating. Rage! Punch. Kick. Blood-scream: “Shelly!” Got it? Good. Repeat. Next take. Repeat. #100815102815 Tyler is a sniper working his field craft. The Crow reboot is clearly his singular mission, and a litany of passion’s labor is its proof. The Eric Draven morph, the cost of its transition (the man-months of support from a team of spotters) all to line up a single kill shot with James O’Barr in the crosshairs. Plus, because of Relativity Media’s legal and financial troubles, even a “yes!” may mean years of waiting. This is all or nearnothing. Even a win may not be. Success may destroy as much as failure might. He has to do it, regardless. Tyler’s effort is a story worthy of song. I’m just happy to have written some of the lyrics. Follow me on Twitter: colbey_jr VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 7 The Menage Tour – The Lives Between the Music by Cameron Reeder S tart your weekend off early with a Thursday night performance at the Tangled String at Lowe Mill on October 8 at 7 p.m. Longtime music veteran Walt Aldridge, his daughter Hannah Aldridge and David Mayfield will be serenading eager music lovers with their Menage Tour. In this interview, I wanted to do more than critique the music, which I already know is good. Instead, I wanted to find out what goes on in the artists’ heads between the music. I used a simple question and answer format for each artist and was not disappointed with the responses. Walt Aldridge: Walt, what are your expectations for this show? It is just always fun to get to share the stage with my daughter and see the progress she makes as a performer and storyteller. How would you define your style? I think my style is very much based around attaching stories to songs. I don’t think I’d even care much for the process of performing if I didn’t have a chance to connect the music to personal events and observations I’ve made or am making. I guess if folks were to describe seeing me perform they would not describe me as the guy who was a fabulous player or singer but maybe the guy with the dry sense of humor who attached it and other emotional perspective to some country songs that made their way somehow to the radio. What is your writing process? My process is unstructured now. I spend most of my time teaching at the University of North Alabama and just write a song when it really won’t leave me alone. That busy schedule and the fact that it feels by now like I have processed every experience a dozen different ways are what hinders me most. You have achieved a level of success in a field where talent is only one of many necessary ingredients. What would you still like to achieve? Hmmm. I no longer desire popularity for my songs to make some insecurity feel better like so (many) young artists. I just really enjoy the moments when something I have framed within the context of a certain piece of music or words resonates with someone enough that I see them being moved to laugh or cry or even just think in a different way. And finally, what question would you love for someone to ask you and they never do? For some weird reason I have always been able to remember from World History classes that the Magna Carta was signed in 1215 A.D. But nobody ever asks me if I know when the Magna Carta was signed.... David Mayfield: David, what are you expectations for this tour? I have always loved “In the round” style shows. I believe this format invites a storytelling vibe and it’s fun to watch the songwriters interact. I mainly came up with the idea because Hannah Aldridge kept bugging me about doing a tour, and I wanted to do something (that would allow me to) sit all night. How would you define your style? I would define my style as “Homo-Erotic-FolkRock Bluegrass” The casual listener may describe it as Egregious. What is your writing process? I usually work on lyrics and melody together, however with heavy touring I find myself working on a song while driving. Melody can change drastically by the time I get to a guitar. I’m inspired mostly by the writings of Randy Newman, Bill Monroe and evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins. What is your favorite song on the tour? I really like Hannah’s tune “Howlin’ Bones” I hope she plays that! You have all achieved a level of success in a very cutthroat field where talent is only one of many necessary ingredients. What would you still like to achieve? When I was a kid I set goals for myself, Perform on the Grand Ole Opry, David Letterman, and make a living playing music. I have accomplished all of those goals already so, I really just waiting around to die. What question would you love for someone to ask you and they never do? No one has ever asked me what it’s like to be so handsome, talented, & humble. I’d tell them: it’s a constant struggle, but I somehow find a way. Hannah Aldridge: Hannah, why do you call this the Menage Tour? Touring feels a bit like being in a traveling circus or freak show sometimes. It’s the same process except we are holding guitars. I also considered the fact that David and I both have a big sense of humor and thought it would be funny to play on the word menagerie. If you look closely at all the posters, there are tag lines about all of the artists as though we are circus acts. How would you define your style? My style is very singer songwriter oriented, but I try to push the boundaries of that with subject matter. I have heard others define it as Dark Country or Southern Rock. What is your writing process? My process is a little quirky. Typically it starts as poetry that I jot down (while) in the car or when I run across something that inspires me. There are, however, songs of mine that were written just by playing the same chords over and over. Typically the main things that inspire me are life events or day to day thoughts. I think the thing that hinders me the most is finding the time to write between tours and being a mom. What is your favorite song on the tour? I think that will depend on the lineup for the night. I look forward personally to playing Modern Day Bonnie and Clyde with my dad. What would you still like to achieve? I set new goals every year. This year my goal is to find my home in the music industry. It’s hard to get anything done as an independent artist when the “Independent” genre gets taken over by money and suits. I think I am in a good place to start on a new record. What question would you love for someone to ask you and they never do? I would like someone to ask me what place I haven’t visited that I’ve always wanted to go. My answer is Tokyo. One day soon! Facebook event info: www.facebook.com/ events/814212462027099 Websites: Hannah: www.hannah-aldridge. com, David: www.davidmayfieldparade.net, Walt: www.reverbnation.com/waltaldridge october 21 Mark C. Smith Concert Hall at the Von Braun Center Doors 7pm, Show 8pm | VonBraunCenter.com TedeschiTrucksBand.com 8 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 THE VALLEY PLANET FREE WILL ASTROLOGY October 8 - 28 © Copyright 2015 Rob Brezsny ARIES (March 21-April 19): If I warned you not to trust anyone, I hope you would reject my simplistic fear-mongering. If I suggested that you trust everyone unconditionally, I hope you would dismiss my delusional naiveté. But it’s important to acknowledge that the smart approach is far more difficult than those two extremes. You’ve got to evaluate each person and even each situation on a case-by-case basis. There may be unpredictable folks who are trustworthy some of the time, but not always. Can you be both affably open-hearted and slyly discerning? It’s especially important that you do so in the next 16 days. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): As I meditated on your astrological aspects, I had an intuition that I should go to a gem fair I’d heard about. It was at an event center near my home. When I arrived, I was dazzled to find a vast spread of minerals, fossils, gemstones, and beads. Within a few minutes, two stones had commanded my attention, as if they’d reached out to me telepathically: chrysoprase, a green gemstone, and petrified wood, a mineralized fossil streaked with earth tones. The explanatory note next to the chrysoprase said that if you keep this gem close to you, it “helps make conscious what has been unconscious.” Ownership of the petrified wood was described as conferring “the power to remove obstacles.” I knew these were the exact oracles you needed. I bought both stones, took them home, and put them on an altar dedicated to your success in the coming weeks. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): George R. R. Martin has written a series of fantasy novels collectively called A Song of Ice and Fire. They have sold 60 million copies and been adapted for the TV series Game of Thrones. Martin says the inspiration for his master work originated with the pet turtles he owned as a kid. The creatures lived in a toy castle in his bedroom, and he pretended they were knights and kings and other royal characters. “I made up stories about how they killed each other and betrayed each other and fought for the kingdom,” he has testified. I think the next seven months will be a perfect time for you to make a comparable leap, Gemini. What’s your version of Martin’s turtles? And what valuable asset can you turn it into? CANCER (June 21-July 22): The editors of the Urban Dictionary provide a unique definition of the word “outside.” They say it’s a vast, uncomfortable place that surrounds your home. It has no ceiling or walls or carpets, and contains annoying insects and random loud noises. There’s a big yellow ball in the sky that’s always moving around and changing the temperature in inconvenient ways. Even worse, the “outside” is filled with strange people that are constantly doing deranged and confusing things. Does this description match your current sense of what “outside” means, Cancerian? If so, that’s OK. For now, enjoy the hell out of being inside. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): We all go through phases when we are tempted to believe in the factuality of every hostile, judgmental, and random thought that our monkey mind generates. I am not predicting that this is such a time for you. But I do want to ask you to be extra skeptical toward your monkey mind’s fabrications. Right now it’s especially important that you think as coolly and objectively as possible. You can’t afford to be duped by anyone’s crazy talk, including your own. Be extra vigilant in your quest for the raw truth. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Do you know about the ancient Greek general Pyrrhus? At the Battle of Asculum in 279 BCE, his army technically defeated Roman forces, but his casualties were so substantial that he ultimately lost the war. You can and you must avoid a comparable scenario. Fighting for your cause is good only if it doesn’t wreak turmoil and bewilderment. If you want to avoid an outcome in which both sides lose, you’ve got to engineer a result in which both sides win. Be a cagey compromiser. THE VALLEY PLANET LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If I could give you a birthday present, it would be a map to your future treasure. Do you know which treasure I’m referring to? Think about it as you fall asleep on the next eight nights. I’m sorry I can’t simply provide you with the instructions you’d need to locate it. The cosmic powers tell me you have not yet earned that right. The second-best gift I can offer, then, will be clues about how to earn it. Clue #1. Meditate on the differences between what your ego wants and what your soul needs. #2. Ask yourself, “What is the most unripe part of me?”, and then devise a plan to ripen it. #3. Invite your deep mind to give you insights you haven’t been brave enough to work with until now. #4. Take one medium-sized bold action every day. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Galway Kinnell’s poem “Middle of the Way” is about his solo trek through the snow on Oregon’s Mount Gauldy. As he wanders in the wilderness, he remembers an important truth about himself: “I love the day, the sun . . . But I know [that] half my life belongs to the wild darkness.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, Scorpio, now is a good time for you, too, to refresh your awe and reverence for the wild darkness -- and to recall that half your life belongs to it. Doing so will bring you another experience Kinnell describes: “an inexplicable sense of joy, as if some happy news had been transmitted to me directly, by-passing the brain.” SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The last time I walked into a McDonald’s and ordered a meal was 1984. Nothing that the restaurant chain serves up is appealing to my taste or morality. I do admire its adaptability, however. In cow-loving India, McDonald’s only serves vegetarian fare that includes deep-fried cheese and potato patties. In Israel, kosher McFalafels are available. Mexicans order their McMuffins with refried beans and pico de gallo. At a McDonald’s in Singapore, you can order McRice burgers. This is the type of approach I advise for you right now, Sagittarius. Adjust your offerings for your audience. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You have been flirting with your “alone at the top” reveries. I won’t be surprised if one night you have a dream of riding on a Ferris wheel that malfunctions, leaving you stranded at the highest point. What’s going on? Here’s what I suspect: In one sense you are zesty and farseeing. Your competence and confidence are waxing. At the same time, you may be out of touch with what’s going on at ground level. Your connection to the depths is not as intimate as your relationship with the heights. The moral of the story might be to get in closer contact with your roots. Or be more attentive to your support system. Or buy new shoes and underwear. new earth F E S T I VA L Tom Bevill Center (UAH Campus) 550 Sparkman Drive AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I haven’t planted a garden for years. My workload is too intense to devote enough time to that pleasure. So eight weeks ago I was surprised when a renegade sunflower began blooming in the dirt next to my porch. How did the seed get there? Via the wind? A passing bird that dropped a potential meal? The gorgeous interloper eventually grew to a height of four feet and produced a boisterous yellow flower head. Every day I muttered a prayer of thanks for its guerrilla blessing. I predict a comparable phenomenon for you in the coming days, Aquarius. “Huntsville’s Metaphysical Event” Readers, Healers and Vendors From Around the Nation Frank “The Book Man” • Aura Camera Free Lectures Both Days (with paid admission) Oct PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The coming days will be a favorable time to dig up what has been buried. You can, if you choose, discover hidden agendas, expose deceptions, see beneath the masks, and dissolve delusions. But it’s my duty to ask you this: Is that really something you want to do? It would be fun and sexy to liberate so much trapped emotion and suppressed energy, but it could also stir up a mind-bending ruckus that propels you on a healing quest. I hope you decide to go for the gusto, but I’ll understand if you prefer to play it safe. 24th 25th Saturday: 10 am - 7 pm Sunday: 10 am - 6 pm Admission: $5 per day (under 16 free) Over 1,000 hard to find metaphysical/Spiritual/ Conspiracy, etc. books, crystals, incense, tarot cards, jewelry, mystical figurines, shirts, herbs, tapestries, essence oils, spell kits, chair massage, Aura Camera, Lectures/workshops covering topics from spirit communication to protection. Homework: Send testimonies about how you’ve redeemed the dark side to: Sex Laugh, uaregod@ comcast.net. #100815102815 Holistic & New Age Festival Please check FB a week before the show for complete Lecture List www.facebook.com/New-Earth-Festivals-543725025748849 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 9 Thursday, October 8 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Burley Boys GUADALAJARA (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Bugaboo JUNKYARD BAR & GRILL, Bike Night w/ Live Music LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie TANGLED STRING STUDIO, Hannah Aldridge/ David Mayfield THE BRICK DELI, Chad Reeves THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson Friday, October 9 AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Falcon Punch CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Milltown COPPERTOP, Branded X, Desperate Hero DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Unbroken EL HERRADURA, Edgar HALF TIME SPORTS LOUNGE, Bike Night w/ Chopper Dave HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Crush HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), The Good Doctor LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, King’s Haze LOWE MILL (CONCERTS ON THE DOCK), Debbie Bond & The TruDats/Matt Growden MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Blue Handel Band MAGGIE MEYER’S, Concert to Benefit Hope Pace w/ Sam Mcleroy, Vanessa Hill, Ugly Houses, and Black River BluesMan, and Bad Mood Hudson. MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke NICK’S RISTORANTE, Dave McConnell SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl THE BRICK DELI, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ Blondie THE STATION, Kozmic Mama THE STEM AND STEIN, Tim Cannon VOODOO LOUNGE, Dawn Osborne Band YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Whistling Dixie Saturday, October 10 AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S EAST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, John Nickel Cigar Box Tribute COPPERTOP, Lines in the Sky DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Boodading FURNITURE FACTORY, Jacob Deaton HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Crush HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Winslow Davis Brunch 11-2pm, Kent Goolsby 10-1am LAS TROJAS, Edgar LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Starr Adkins LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), Slip Jig MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, Kim Richey THE BRICK DELI, Mike Roberts Band THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Ant & Andrew Sharpe Sunday, October 11 AMENDMENT XXI, Live Blues w/ Bro Ric & the Chicken Bone Reunion Band AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Microwave Dave Blues Brunch 11-2pm LONE GOOSE, Blues Jam MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, Open Mic Blue Grass Jam VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, October 12 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Trivia/ Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Josh Allison Tuesday, October 13 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Amy McCarley COPPERTOP, Open Mic FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara 10 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Tyler AK LEEANN’S, Open Mic w/Lee MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic MVP SPIRITS, Marge Loveday SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, O’Dell Johnson Duo Wednesday, October 14 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Mike Roberts HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Flannel Umbros JEFFERSON STREET PUB, Karaoke LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey MAGGIE MEYER’S, Open Mic with DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Thursday, October 15 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Seducing Alice GUADALAJARA (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara JUNKYARD BAR & GRILL, Bike Night w/ Live Music LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson Friday, October 16 11TH FRAME, TRAPT AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke BLUE PANTS BREWERY, Blue Velvets CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Red Headed Step Child DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Space Donkeys EL HERRADURA, Edgar FURNITURE FACTORY, Jonathon Laird HALF TIME SPORTS LOUNGE, Bike Night w/ Chopper Dave HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Emily Joseph Band HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Bad Brad and the Sipsy Slims LEEANN’S, Kozmic Mama LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Marco Polo MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Dave Anderson NICK’S RISTORANTE, Full Circle SAMMY T’S , DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl SPORTS PAGE, Fuzzy Gouda TANGLED STRING STUDIO, Will Kimbrough THE BRICK DELI, 3 Hour Tour THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ Blondie THE STATION, Mono Stereo VOODOO LOUNGE, Mississippi John Doude YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Tony Purdue & The Devastators Saturday, October 17 AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S EAST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson COPPERTOP, The Moose, Fire Water Revival, Silent Monolith and Howling Giant DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Bucked Up HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Emily Joseph Band HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Winslow Davis 11am-2pm, Beasley Brothers 10pm-1am LAS TROJAS, Edgar LEEANN’S, The Real Deal LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Steady Rollers MAGGIE MEYER’S, Schatzi + The String Boffin MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SAMMY T’S,, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl SPORTS PAGE, Open Mic Blue Grass Jam THE BRICK DELI, Shaken Not Stirred THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff Sunday, October 18 AMENDMENT XXI, Live Jazz AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke COPPERTOP, Boner City, ThunderKrotch, and Call Me Bronco music cont. on pg. 11 THE VALLEY PLANET music cont. from pg. 10 EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke LONE GOOSE, Blues Jam LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), Moondust Big Band MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, October 19, Happy Birthday Calendar Girl! CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Trivia/ Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, James Irvin Tuesday, October 20 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Amy McCarley COPPERTOP, Open Mic FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Alex Dietrich LEEANN’S, Open Mic w/Lee MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic MVP SPIRITS, Marge Loveday SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, O’Dell Johnson Duo Wednesday, October 21 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Microwave Dave HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Jonathan Teas JEFFERSON STREET PUB, Karaoke LEEANN’S, Blue Handel Band LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey MAGGIE MEYER’S, Open Mic with DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Thursday, October 22 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson COPPERTOP, The Punknecks GUADALAJARA (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Jeremy Porter & Tucos JUNKYARD BAR & GRILL, Bike Night w/ Live Music LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, Dusty French THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VERTICAL HOUSE RECORDS, Pujol, Quchenight VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson Friday, October 23 11TH FRAME, The 17th Floor AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BELOW THE RADAR, Drew Richter BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Bourbon & Shamrocks DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Myerson’s Miller EL HERRADURA, Edgar FURNITURE FACTORY, Mono Stereo HALF TIME SPORTS LOUNGE, Bike Night w/ Chopper Dave HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Kozmic Mama HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Microwave Dave & The Nukes LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Permagroove MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke NICK’S RISTORANTE, Dave McConnell SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, Webb Wilder THE BRICK DELI, Rollin in the Hay THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ Blondie THE STATION, Jonathan Laird VOODOO LOUNGE, Hotel Oscar YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, Brother Rick & The Chicken Bone Reunion Saturday, October 24 AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S EAST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson COPPERTOP, Ned Van GoJosh Nolan DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Brandon Stephens HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Kozmic Mama HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Winslow Davis 11-2pm Brunch, Seminole Strut 10pm-1am THE VALLEY PLANET LAS TROJAS, Edgar LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Chopdaddy MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl SPORTS PAGE, Astronomical Blues Society THE BRICK DELI, Ben Parker Project THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff YELLOWHAMMER BREWERY, The Mad Gear Band W���� E����bo�� El�� G�e�! Sunday, October 25 AMENDMENT XXI, Live Blues w/ Bro Ric & the Chicken Bone Reunion Band AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Microwave Dave Blues Brunch LONE GOOSE, Blues Jam MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, Open Mic Blue Grass Jam VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon Monday, October 26 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Robby Eichman COPPERTOP, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Trivia/ Karaoke VOODOO LOUNGE, Josh Allison ENTERTAINMENT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT FRI SAT Tuesday, October 27 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Amy McCarley COPPERTOP, Open Mic FURNITURE FACTORY, Karaoke w/ Super Lou HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Tim Cannon LEEANN’S, Open Mic w/Lee MAC’S SPORTSBAR (ATHENS), Hitmaster D Karaoke MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic MVP SPIRITS, Marge Loveday SPORTS PAGE, Chelvis and the Bean THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey VOODOO LOUNGE, O’Dell Johnson Duo Wednesday, October 28 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Microwave Dave HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Chelvis & Da Bean JEFFERSON STREET PUB, Karaoke LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LOWE MILL (FLYING MONKEY), Rasputina with Daniel Knox MAGGIE MEYER’S, Open Mic with DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Open Mic Thursday, October 29 CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Dave Anderson GUADALAJARA (DECATUR), DJ Jammin Jeff HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Tara HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Winslow Davis Ensemble JUNKYARD BAR & GRILL, Bike Night w/ Live Music LONE GOOSE, Traci Traci Music Communion MOODY MONDAYS, Open Mic NICK’S RISTORANTE, Gus Hergert PINCHI’S 2, Hitmaster D Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, 5ive O’clock Charlie THE BRICK DELI, Josh Allison THE DOCKS (SCOTTSBORO), Trey Browder THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Dave Anderson Friday, October 30 AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte BISHOP’S WEST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Chris Simmons COPPERTOP, Jonny & The Black Frames Liberty In Embers and The Casket Kids DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Crush EL HERRADURA, Edgar HALF TIME SPORTS LOUNGE, Bike Night w/ Chopper Dave HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter & the Wolf HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Future Primitives, Van Allen Belt LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Tequila Mockingbird MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SAMMY T’S, DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl THE BRICK DELI, DJ K-Good THE HOT SPOT, Karaoke w/ Blondie THE STATION, Who Shot Lizy? VOODOO LOUNGE, Opposite Box/Halloween Bash Weekend Saturday, October 31, Trick or Treat? 11TH FRAME, Halloween Bash with Contagion AMENDMENT XXI, Upstairs DJ Elyte #100815102815 BISHOP’S EAST, Hitmaster D Karaoke CANTINA SOUTHSIDE, Halloween Something w/ Dave Anderson DIAMONDS (SEE AD PG.11), Halloween Party w/ Mr. Crowley HIGHWAY HAVEN, Karaoke HOPPER’S, Peter & the Wolf HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Winslow Davis 11-2pm, Them Damn Dogs 10-1am LAS TROJAS, Edgar LISA’S LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ KJ Aubrey LONE GOOSE, Dr. Whateva MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke MVP SPIRITS, Halloween Bash w/ Black Label NICK’S RISTORANTE, Dave McConnell SAMMY T’S , DJ Keibot, DJ Josh P, and DJ Whirl STRAIGHT TO ALE, DiscOasis, The Dawn Osborne Band THE BRICK DELI, Halloween Party w/ Trick Zipper THE STATION, Karaoke w/ Jim McGriff VOODOO LOUNGE, Go Go Killers w/ Devils Teef Halloween Bash! AMENDMENT XXI, Live Jazz Sunday, November 1 AMERICAN LEGION POST 176, Karaoke EAGLES (DECATUR), Hitmaster D Karaoke HUMPHREY’S (SEE AD PG.10), Blues Power Blues Brunch LONE GOOSE, Blues Jam MAGGIE MEYER’S, Karaoke w/ DJ Wes MOODY MONDAYS, Karaoke SPORTS PAGE, Open Mic Blue Grass Jam VOODOO LOUNGE, Karaoke w/ DJ Brandon the end!! 10/09 - UNBROKEN 10/10 - BOODADING 10/16 - SPACE DONKEYS 10/17 - BUCKED UP 10/23 - MYERSON’S MILLER 10/24 - BRANDON STEPHENS 10/30 - CRUSH 10/31 - HALLOWEEN PARTY MR. CROWLEY TRIVIA Every Tuesday – 7:30 PM & Every Friday – 6:30 PM T�� Pla�� T� B� S��� �� S�u�� H�nt������! Meadowbrook Shopping Center 11208 Memorial Parkway SW Huntsville, AL 35803 Nashville’s Jas Patrick brings his bluesy Americana magic to Humphrey’s on Oct. 15th! VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM Must Be 21 with Valid ID 11 CALENDAR OF EVENTS Thursday, October 8 Science of Imagination series is every Thursday at 10:30am at the US Space and Rocket Center. www.rocketcenter.com. Tennessee Valley’s author Randy Moses’s book All The Kids Love That Scary Stuff, will be available on amazon.com from October 1st - 31st. (See ad pg.9) Tate Farms Cotton Pickin’ Pumpkins will be open now through October 31st. $10. http://www.tatefarmsal.com. The Lyon Family Farms Pumpkin Patch and Corn Maze will be open Wednesday-Sunday through October 31st. $10. http://www.lyonfamilyfarms.com. The Exhibit Science Fiction, Science Future will be at the US Space and Rocket Center on display now through March 6, 2016.www.rocketcenter.com. Hays Nature Preserve will have Fall Hikes every Tuesday and Thursday at 9am and 2pm. 256-532-5326. “Your Call Is Important To Us” by Laura Penny. I loved this book. It could be subtitled “Everything They Tell Us Is Bulls**”. A friend recommended this book for me because he knows me well and knows my views on everything already. How many times have you been placed on terminal hold for customer service and forced to listen to Muzak murder the Rolling Stones? The recordings go something like this. “You’re call is important to us. We are experiencing unusually high call volumes at this time. All of our agents are busy now. Your estimated wait time is 25 minutes.” This is repeated until your ear falls off. This may often be circumvented by calling them again and “Please listen carefully as our menu options have changed.” (15 years ago). When you climb up the phone tree wait for the options of buying something or paying your bill. You will be surprised how not busy those people are. They usually transfer you to customer service where you wanted to go anyway. Advertising is another big lie. I just just loved when they downsized all the candy bars to the size of a postage stamp, put several of them in a bag and tell me what a great buy it is after they reduce the weight and jack up the price. Oh, and don’t forget, they are lower in calories per serving now. 12 Mention a raise in the minimum wage and the small business owners will tell you it will cost jobs because they will have to let people go. If there are managers in any minimum wage establishment that have more than the minimum number of people required to operate the job the managers are inept and should be fired. Few are spared in Ms. Penny’s tirade and no one is on the list that does not deserve to be. In fact, space limitations probably spared more. How can you have a BS list that doesn’t start with politics and politicians and government in general? She doesn’t stop there: big pharma, the media, FDA, The War On Drugs, health insurance, Why the signs are all the same and the service sucks (“Who’s Number One? THE CUSTOMER! The Wal-Mart employee cheer.) No one can mention sucky service without putting cellphone companies near the top. Ditto Cable and satellite TV and Sirius XM Radio. Big oil, the auto companies crow about how great their cars are, then kill and maim thousands because they saved forty-five cents each on ignition switches. There have been so many auto recalls in the past 10 years that the number of vehicles involved are legion: all to save a few cents here and there. BTW airbags are not a thing to cheapen to the point of deaths and maiming. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM I will say this much about the book, it is excellent, but it is going to make you so PO’d that you should keep your BP meds handy. (Review by Ricky Thomason.) #100815102815 October 8 – 11 Ruby Falls Haunted Cavern will be at Ruby Falls in Chattanooga, TN. It will be open every weekend through October 31st. www.hauntedcavern.com The Atrox Factory will be at 404 Pkwy Dr. Leeds, AL. every Wednesday - Sunday in October. $20. 205-458-1393, www.atroxfactory.com. The 35th Cullman Oktoberfest will be at 211 2nd Ave NE, Cullman, AL. 256-739-1258, http://www.cullmanoktoberfest.com/home.html. Dia De Los Muertos Altars exhibit will open at Lowe Mill and will be on display now through October 31st. Free. www.lowemill.net. The Haunted Lowry House Horrorfest Movie Series will be at the Historic Lowry House at 7:30pm every Thursday through October. 256-489-9200. The Madison Ghost Walk is from 6-8pm and meets at the Old Bandito Burrito, 208 Main Street in Madison. http://madison.huntsvilleghostwalk.com. The Scarecrow Trail will be open at the Huntsville Botanical Gardens now through October. 256-830-4447, www.hsvbg.org. There will be a Classical Drawing Class with Ann Steverson from 12:30-3:30pm in the Huntsville Art League Studio 2013. $104.50. 256-339-6432. PFLAG Huntsville Support Meeting will be at the Huntsville-Madison Library from 6-7pm. http://community.pflag.org. October 9 - 10 UAH Chargers vs. Connecticut hockey game will be at the VBC from 7-9:15pm. The Tennessee Valley Civil War Round Table will have a Civil War Presentation: Gary Waddey, Franklin, TN. “Zebulon Vance: North Carolina’s Civil War Governor”, at the Elks Club at 6:30pm. Free. www.tvcwrt.org. Doomsday at Dog Day will be at Grounds 30444 Gowan Rd, Ardmore, TN. It will be every Friday and Saturday in October. http://www.asfhaunt.com. Cynthia Horsby now through October 30th. There will be a reception on October 8th. www.mountainvalleyartscouncil.com. Companies will cut 1000 jobs and tell you it’s a good thing because “They are doing it to save more jobs.” Ms Penny names GE as one of those fast talkers. October 8 – 10 Arx Mortis @ Ghosthill & Ataxia will be at 4051 Hwy 72, Killen, AL. Tickets are $20. It will be every ThursdaySaturday through October and it will be WednesdaySunday the last week of October. 256 710-6811. www.arxmortis.com. Friday, October 9 There will be a Watercolor Class with Yuri Ozaki from 5:30-7:30pm in Studio 307 of Lowe Mill and on October 16th, 23rd and 30th. $30. 256-665-8736, www.lowemill.net. Beginning Wheel Throwing, from 6-7:30pm, is in the Design by Hart Pottery Studio 2009 of Lowe Mill. $90. It will also be on October 15th, 22nd and 29th. arabowenpottery@gmail.com. ReLit - Smokin’ Hot Reads Worth a ReKindle: Miranda Lambert’s Roadside Bars and Pink Guitars Tour will be at the VBC Propst Arena at 7:30pm. HealthWorks Farmers Market is from 7:30-12pm at the Plaza Resource Center at Huntsville Hospital. The Green Street Market is every Thursday in downtown Huntsville. Free. Thursday Night Bike Rides from 4-8pm every Thursday through Oct. meeting starts at the Green Street Market Downtown. Free. The Huntsville Museum of Art will have The Exhibit Recent Acquisitions through October 11th and Images of the Great War: The European Offensives, 1914 –1916 from the Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection through November 15th. www.hsvmuseum.org. The Shirts-n-Skirts square dance club will have dancing on the 1st & 3rd Thursdays of the month at the Dance Factory. Then, on the 2nd & 4th Thursdays at the Athens Recreation Center 256-423-4141, www.shirts-n-skirts.com. Thursday Night Swing is at the Flying Monkey Theatre from 6:30-10pm (every Thursday.) www.huntsvilleswing.com. Harmony Park Animal Safari will have self-guided tours daily 10am until sundown. 877-726-4625. 431 Clouds Cove Rd. $8 Stein and Dine at the US Space & Rocket Center Biergarten is every Thursday from 4:30-7:30pm. www.rocketcenter.com. There will be live music on the Westside Square from 5-8pm. every Thursday through October. www.downtownhuntsville.org. The Haunted House of Horror will be at 1205 Tennessee St., Courtland, AL. $20. 256-637-8410, www.hauntedhouseofhorror.net October 9 - 11 The Fanfare 2015 Quilt Show will be at the VBC East Hall, Friday and Saturday 10am-6pm and Sunday noon-4pm. Sean Starwars Woodcut Workshop will be Friday from 6:30-9:30pm, Saturday from 10am-2pm & 4-8pm, and Sunday from noon-4pm, it will be in the Green Pea Press Studio of Lowe Mill. $150. www.lowemil.net. Sloss Fright Furnace will be at Sloss Furnace in Birmingham, AL. It will be open every weekend through Oct. and the last full week of Oct. daily. $20$24. http://frightfurnace.com. The Annual Gem and Mineral Show will be at the Jaycees Community Building, Friday and Saturday 10am-6pm and Sunday noon-5pm. 256-603-3095. Fantasy Playhouse presents the play: The Snow Queen at the VBC Playhouse, Friday and Saturday at 7pm and Sunday 1:30 and 5pm. $15. www.letthemagicbegin.org. The 8th Annual SalsaAlabama Jam-A Premier Latin Event will be at the Four Points Sheraton, 1000 Glenn Hearn Blvd. http://www.salsalabama.com. Saturday, October 10 The Artist Market is every Saturday from 12-4pm at the Flying Monkey. Free. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. Michael’s at Westbury Square will have Halloween Crafting Activities every Saturday through October from 10am-noon. $2. 256-885-1779. Yoga by the River will be every Saturday in October from 9am-10am at Hays Nature Preserve. Free Sessions. http://www.hsvcity.com/greenteam/news.php. Get pumped up for Rocket City NerdCon: MAD Scientist Day 10am-5pm at the Madison Library. Free. 256-461-0046, www.hmcpl.org. Fragments: Guided Exhibition Tour with David Nuttall will be from 12-1pm at Lowe Mill. It will also be on October 17th and 24th. Free. www.lowemill.net. Running with the Goats at Belle Chevre, 18849 Upper Fort Hampton Rd, Elkmont, AL. 10K, 5K and fun run options for all skill levels of runners. 7am. http://www.active.com/elkmont-al. Homeschool Art with Tabatha will be from 12-1pm in the Huntsville Art League Studio 2013 of Lowe Mill. $82.50. It will also be on October 15th, 22nd and 29th. 256-339-6432. The 6th Annual York Rite Masquerade Ball will be at the Omega Center, 181 Import Circle at 8pm. Tickets are $30 advance, $35 at the door. There will be an After School Pottery Class from 45pm in DesignbyHart Studio 2009 of Lowe Mill. $80. It will also be on October 15th, 22nd, and the 29th. www.lowemill.net. Japanimation with Paul Rufe will be from 4-5pm in the Huntsville Art League Studio 2013 of Lowe Mill. It will also be October 15th, 22nd and 29th. $45. www.lowemill.net. Big Brothers Big Sisters of North Alabama will have the Annual Bowl For Kids’ Sake Fundraiser at Madison Bowling Center today and October 17th at Plamor Lanes. It will be from 12-2pm and 2-4pm. bbbsna.org. Punkin’ Pickin’ Extravaganza Train Ride will be at the North Alabama Railroad Museum from 11am12pm, 1–2pm and 3–4pm.$10. http://www.northalabamarailroadmuseum.com. events cont. on pg. 13 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 THE VALLEY PLANET events cont. from pg. 12 The Old Town Historic District Walking Tour will begin at 10am at 122 Walker Avenue. Free. 256-533-5723. The Mayor’s 100-Mile Walking Challenge Event will be at Ditto Landing from 10am-3pm. http://www. al.com/news/huntsville/index.ssf/2015/08/mayor_ tommy_battle_issues_100-.html. Harrison Brothers Hardware Customer Appreciation Day will be from 10am-2pm. Free. www.harrisonbrothershardware.com. Tuesdays with TED: Why you will fail to have a great career will be from 12-1pm at the Huntsville-Madison Library. www.hmcpl.org. Madison City Farmers Market is every Saturday through October from 8am-12pm at 1008 Hughes Rd, Madison. 256-656-7841. How to Do Things: Smudge Stick will be at the Huntsville-Madison Library from 6:30-8:30pm. www.hmcpl.org. Saturday Fitness Classes are in Big Spring Park from 10-11am. Free. Wednesday, October 14 Every Wednesday at 5:30pm there will be a Bike Ride starting at Bicycles Etc. www.bicyclesetc.us. Southern ReInvention is from 10am-3pm at Belle Chevre, 18849 Upper Fort Hampton Rd, Elkmont, AL. $5. 256-732-4801. The Huntsville Ghost Walk begins at Harrison Brothers Hardware at 6pm. every Saturday through October. www.huntsvilleghostwalk.com, 256-509-3940. A New Leash on Life will have dogs and cats available for adoption every Saturday from 12-4pm at Pet Smart on Carl T. Jones. www.anewleash.org. There will be a Planetarium Show every Saturday night at 7:30pm at the Planetarium. www.vbas.org. Picking and Grinning is every Saturday from 69pm at the New Hope Senior Center on Church St. 256-723-2208. The Street Food Breakfast is every Saturday from 711am at the Northside Square downtown. www.downtownhuntsville.org. There will be a Haunted Trolley Tour every Saturday through October starting at 6pm at Harrison Brothers. 256-509-3940.www.harrisonbrothershardware.com. Grown Up Coloring Party with Paul Wilm will be from 12-4pm on the 1st floor of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net. ‘The Lesser Devil’ Book Launch will be from 4-6pm in Studio 2008 of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net. Fragments: Guided Exhibition Tour with David Nuttall will be from 5-6pm at Lowe Mill and on October 22nd and 29th. It will also be. www.lowemill.net. Free. Saturday Scientist, the Science of Mummification will be at the US Space & Rocket Center at 11:30am. http://rocketcenter.com. October 10 – 11 The Rocket City Lit Fest will be at the VBC South Hall. www.rocketcitylitfest.com. Sunday, October 11 The Huntsville Museum of Art will have the exhibit The Tsars’ Cabinet: Two Hundred Years of Russian Decorative Arts under the Romanovs, through January 3. www.hsvmuseum.org. Monday, October 12 There will be a Women’s Ride (every Monday) at 5:30pm. Meet at the MSSP Biker’s Parking Lot. 256-585-0905. Merrimack Hall Performing Arts Center will have a fundraiser at BJ’s at Bridge Street from 4:30-9pm. www.facebook.com/merrimackhall. Your Yoga with Casey Beginner’s class will be Every Monday and Weds. from 6-7pm in studio 258 at Lowe Mill. casey@youryogahuntsville.com. Comedy Open Mic Night is every Monday at 8pm at Maggie Meyer’s www.maggiemeyersirishpub.com. There will be a Free Workout each Wednesday at 10am at the Oscar Mason Branch in the Oscar Mason Center, 149 Mason Court. 256-535-2249, www.hmcpl.org. Huntsville’s Polish-American Culture Club will meet Wednesdays from 7-9pm at the Good Shepherd Church. 256-653-4450, carlwoida@knology.net. The Singles & Doubles Square Dance Club meets each Wednesday night at Berachah Gym from 6– 8:45pm. 256-881-5720. Gentle Yoga classes are every Wednesday at 5:15pm and every Thursday at 11:30am at the Downtown Huntsville Library. Free. www.hmcpl.org. Michael’s at Westbury Square will have Wilton Kids “Very Hairy and Scary Cupcakes” from 4-6pm. $15. 256-885-1779. The Business of Art will be from 12:30-1:30pm in the Classroom 2008 of Lowe Mill. $20 Admission, Miriam@coachmiriam.com. Raku Pottery: Clay, Fire & Magic will be on October 14th, 21st and 27th from 1-2:30pm in DesignbyHart Pottery Studio 2009 of Lowe Mill. sarabowenpottery@gmail.com. There will be a Relay for Life Fundraiser from 5-8pm at the Yellowhammer Brewing. http://www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. Thursday, October 15 The 41st Annual Taste of Huntsville will be at the VBC South Hall with over 50 restaurant and beverage vendors participating. Tickets in advance are $30 and $35 at the door. http://huntsvillehospitality.org. October 15 – 17 The Haunted House of Horror will be at 1205 Tennessee St. Courtland, AL $20. 256-637-8410, www.hauntedhouseofhorror.net. Disney on Ice: Let’s Celebrate, will be in the VBC Propst Arena. Tickets start at $18. 800-745-3000, www.ticketmaster.com. Friday, October 16 Alright Bayou Comedy is every 1st, 3rd, and 5th Friday at 8pm at Tim’s Cajun Kitchen. $5. The Palette Pitstop will be at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 6-9pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. There will be an After Hours Sensory Night at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center from 3:30-7pm. $16. www.rocketcenter.com. The October Downtown Street Food Gathering will be from 6-9pm on Church St. www.downtownhuntsville.org. DIY Nail Polish will be from 5:30-6:30pm in T-n-T Treasures Studio 266 of the Flying Monkey. $37. 412-378-6896. Live Trivia is every Monday at Straight to Ale Brewery. www.straighttoale.com. Yellowhammer Brewery 5 Year Anniversary of Selling 1st Beer, will be at Yellowhammer Brewery. http://www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. Pottery Skills: Basic Wheel-Throwing will be from 6-7:30pm October 18th, 26th and November 2nd in DesignbyHart Studio 2009 of Lowe Mill. $80. www.lowemill.net. LearningQUEST Public Program: Nogginology: Maintaining Your Brain will be at the HuntsvilleMadison Library at 12pm. www.hmcpl.org. Tuesday, October 13 Latham United Methodist Church Farmers’ Market is every Tuesday from 3-7pm, now through October. http://downtoearthcrier.blogspot.com. Nicks Ristorante has Trivia every Tuesday night from 6-8pm.www.nicksristorante.com. West Coast Swing presented by Rocket Westies is at the Flying Monkey every Tuesday at 7pm. $10. www.RocketWesties.com Huntsville Madison Library will have Basic Genealogy every Tuesday from 4-6pm. Free. www.hmcpl.org. Painting Soft Pastels with Harriet Dobbins will be on October 13th, 20th, 27th and November 3rd in the Huntsville Art League Studio 2013 of Lowe Mill. www.lowemill.net, 256-339-6432 Beginning Wheel Throwing 1 will be from 1-2:30pm, and Beginning Wheel Throwing 2 Mugs, will be from 6-7:30pm. Both will be in the DesignbyHart Studio at Lowe Mill and offered on October 20th, 27th and Nov. 3rd. $90. www.lowemill.net. Kids Painting Party: Fall Trees will be from 6-7:30pm and on October 23rd in the ChromAddict Studio 2025 of Lowe Mill. $25. www.lowemill.net. The Rocket City Short Film Festival will be from 710pm in the Flying Monkey Theatre. $7. www.flyingmonkeyart.org. The Pizza Party Massacre 3: Chippy Lives will be from 7-11pm in the First Floor Connector of Lowe Mill and also on Oct.17th, 23rd, 24th, 30th and 31st. $10. www.lowemill.net. The Zombies will take over the Princess! It will be from 6:30-8:30pm at the Princess Theatre in Decatur. www.princesstheatre.org. October 16 - 25 The 3rd Annual Pop Up Parks will be in downtown Huntsville. www.downtownhuntsville.org. Saturday, October 17 The Autism Resource Foundation will have Cars & Coffee every 3rd Saturday of every month from 7:3010:30am at the Child Development Center, 100 Jetplex Blvd. Free. 256-656-0365, etipton@knology.net. events cont. on pg. 14 THE VALLEY PLANET #100815102815 Unchained Maladies by Ricky Thomason ong ago in a reality far, far away some decided it was wrong for children to celebrate an event based on the supernatural and became hell bent to take the fun out of Halloween. You know the ones. They fear someone, somewhere might be having fun. If they are it is a sin. L I call them the “Holyweiners.” They base their opposition on Biblical scripture. It never occurs to them that one can take the Bible and prove the moon’s a balloon or anything else one might be for or against. It is, in fact, the first supernatural book. The Bible does not mention Halloween. However, both the ancient origins of Halloween and its modern customs show it to be a celebration based on false beliefs about the dead and invisible spirits, or demons. The Bible warns: “There must never be anyone among you who . . . consults ghosts or spirits, or calls up the dead.” (Deuteronomy 18-10-12, The Jerusalem Bible) While some view Halloween as harmless fun, the Bible indicates that the practices associated with it are not. In Corinthians 1: 10, 12 the Bible says: “I do not want you to be participants with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons too.” The origin of Halloween can be traced to the ancient pagan festival Samhain celebrated by Celtic people over 2,000 years ago,” states The World Book Encyclopedia. “The Celts believed that the dead could walk among the living at this time. During Samhain, the living could visit with the dead.” However, the Bible clearly teaches that the dead “are conscious of nothing at all.” (Ecclesiastes 9:5) Thus, they cannot contact the living. Sounds like you earthly mediums will be welldone in hell. If you just have to do something to screw people out of their money and make them happy while you do it, start a prosperity gospel strip mall church. It’s a proven business model. All people have to do is be baptized as a Republican. So far, I have gleaned that ghosts and spirits are not real and one should have no intercourse with them. The exception is that you must believe in a holy ghost and holy spirit. Should anyone doubt the earthly existence of demons, I say, “Remember Dick Cheney.” Because the Celts were pagans and did the Samhain thing it follows logically that the lot of them are rotisserie roasting on spits in the depths of hell. I believe that is good enough for them, not because of Halloween, but because they invented that “River Dance” crap. You know, where the dancers have their hands super glued to their sides and hop-clop around like they are barefoot on a hot griddle. Jesus must frown on every “Christian” He saw buying tickets to see Ant Man (PG) by Cameron Reeder I scampered to The Monaco like an ant on a pheromone trail. I missed the previews, but I was there in time to get my 3D glasses and watch ANT-MAN. Bear in mind that I had lowered expectations. I will watch any superhero movie no matter how bad. Trust me, I saw both versions of The Hulk and all the Superman and Spiderman movie franchises. So this was definitely not a movie that I had tremendous hopes for. Ant Man was not a must have when I was collecting comics as a young man. Even as a kid, Ant Man was not a comic book that could easily be found in my repertoire of collectibles. Or anyone else’s for that matter. Nope. X-Men, Spiderman, Batman, and many others. But not Ant Man. VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Michael Flatley’s “River Dance.” I’ll bet He told St. Peter to “take a note” even if you only watched it on TV. It’s not only River Dancing that the Holyweiners say will send you to hell, it’s dancing of any kind. It would seem that all who dance and flop around possessed by the Holy Spirit are going to be neighbors to the Celts on a different row of hell’s spits. When God speaks to a few to anoint them with the power to make decisions as to what the rest of us may or may not do, I would ask them to remember this: If you talk to God you are praying. If God talks to you, you are schizophrenic. The phrase “devil in a blue dress” proves demons walk among us, offering rides. I am a satisfied victim of several of those, and ask Bill Clinton what color dress Monica Lewinsky wore. Some cultures believe that talking to the spirits of their ancestors is a sign of honor and respect and to do anything less is a sin. By the “real rules” of the truly saved that means not many Chinese or Japanese will be in heaven with you. By definition, Muslims are not Christian either, so they aren’t likely to make it to heaven with you either. If I understand what I hear many people rabidly profess to believe, any place sans minorities would be heaven, even here on earth. The sign stuck in the cloud beside Heaven’s gate and St. Peter’s guard shack will read (in English, of course) “Heaven Pop. 666” and some of the citizen denizens will find more joy in knowing those they hated went to hell than with their own cloud mansion on the main street of gold, which has recently been renamed Martin Luther King Blvd. Why don’t people quit trying to fix all that’s broken in our lives and work on their own? As Jonathan Edwards sang in “Sunshine” (sic) “You can’t even run your own life, I’ll be damned if you’ll run mine.” As for me, Halloween Carnival all you want and enjoy the little kiddies and their trick or treat costumes. You may have a few 24 year-olds wearing gangbanger costumes. Give them a kiddie sucker and apologize that all the beer and cigarettes are gone. Be nice, and remember to say “You’re welcome!’ especially to the ill-mannered little devils too rude to say “Thank you.” And if you get grown ones dressed as streetwalkers, when they say “trick or treat,” choose the trick. It might be a treat in disguise. But what may not have thrilled in a newsprint format then now rocks as a movie. Ant Man, starring comedic actor Paul Rudd, is a tour de force of special effects that brings the comic to life in a way that is creative and intriguing. Rudd portrays corny but lovable con man Scott Lang who must overcome his criminal background to become an unlikely hero. Supporting actors Michael Douglass and Evangeline Lilly add the right amount of Hollywood A list. Dt. Hank Pym (Douglas) and his daughter (Lilly) create a helmet and suit that shrinks Lang while increasing his strength. While armed with the helmet, he is also able to communicate with ants. At a price tag of $130 million, the investors must have wiped the sweat from their brow as the film grossed $57 million on its opening weekend. It also gets our anticipation going with a sequel trailer at the end of the credits for the lovely Lilly as The Wasp. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 13 events cont. from pg. 13 The Artsy Tots Program: Color Your World (registration required), will be at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 11-11:45am. hsvmuseum.org. There will be a Members’ Lecture with Kathy Durdin and a reception following at the Huntsville Museum of Art at 5:30pm.hsvmuseum.org. October 23 – 25 Theatre Randolph presents the classic American comedy, Harvey, by Mary Chase Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2:30pm. $5 advance and students/senior. www.showtix-4u.com. Alabama A&M vs. Jackson State will be at the Louis Crews Stadium at 1pm. www.huntsvilleurbannetwork.com. The Black Tie Charity Ball will be at 5pm at the Von Braun Civic Center. $45. priscillaadamsdumont@ hotmail.com, 256-527-5992. There will be a Contra Dance in the gym of Faith Presbyterian from 7:30-10:30pm. Lessons begin at 7pm. $8 and $6 for students. 256837-0656, www.secontra.com/NACDS.html. Paint Along: Daleks will be from 3-5:30pm in ChromAddict Studio 2025 of Lowe Mill. $35 256-6835554, www.lowemill.net. Retro Gaming & Computing Night will be at 414 Stevens Ave. in Huntsville from 4-11pm. 256-5093522, http://ml256.org/b4855. Liz Hurley Ribbon Run will be in downtown Huntsville from 7:30-11:30am. The race starts at the corner of Lowe and Adams Street. Girls’ Science & Engineering Day will be from 9:30am-2pm at the Shelby Center at UAH. www. gseduah.com The Seventh Annual “Mad Scientist Bash” will be at Sci-Quest Hands on Science Center. $35. www. sciquest.org. October 17 – 18 The Car Audio Championship will be at the VBC South Hall, Saturday from 10am-7pm and Sunday 10am-6pm. 256-533-1953. The Ballet: Unplugged featuring Carnival of the Animals will be at the VBC Playhouse. Performance times are Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2pm. http://www.huntsvilleballetschool.org. (See ad pg.12) The Halloween Show: Dr. Osborn’s Magic Laboratory will be at the Fantasy Arts Center. Performance times will be Friday at 7pm, Saturday at 2pm and 7pm and Sunday at 2pm. www.letthemagicbegin.org October 23 – 24 Criss Angel Presents The Supernaturalists at the VBC Concert Hall, Friday at 8pm and Saturday at 2pm and 8pm. 256-533-1953. October 23 – 25 The Rocket City Nerdcon will be at the HuntsvilleMadison Library, Friday from 4-9pm, Saturday from 9am-5pm and Sunday from 1-5pm. www.hmcpl.org. Theatre Randolph presents the classic American comedy, Harvey, by Mary Chase, Friday and Saturday at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2:30pm. $5 for advance. www.showtix4u.com. Saturday, October 24 The Huntsville Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. presents EMBODI Summit III: What’s on your R.A.D.A.R.? from 9am-3pm at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center. www.dshuntsville.org. The Annual Teen Masquerade Ball will be at the Huntsville-Madison Library from 8pm-Midnight. www.hmcpl.org, 256-532-5940. The Mentone Colorfest will be at Mentone Brow Park in Mentone, Alabama. https://www.facebook.com/ events/470947166406354. BOOtanica at the Garden will be at the Huntsville Botanical Garden from 10am-1pm. www.hsvbg.org. Sunday, October 18 The Maple Hill Cemetery Stroll will be from 2-4pm at 202 Maple Hill Dr. Free. 256-551-2370. Burritt on the Mountain International Heritage Festival will be from 10am-4pm. www.burrittonthemountain.com. High Gravity Tasting Experience will be at OUTSIDE OTBX from 1-6pm. www.downtownhuntsville.org The Pizza Party Massacre 3: Kids Show is rated G and will be from 4-5pm in the First Floor Connector of Lowe Mill. It will also be on October 31st. www.lowemill.net. Monday, October 19 LEGO Mania will be at Huntsville-Madison Library from 3:30-5:30pm.www.hmcpl.org. Tuesday, October 20 LearningQUEST Public Program: Winter War: Battle of the Bulge, December 1944 will be at the HuntsvilleMadison Library at 9:30am.www.hmcpl.org. Wednesday, October 21 Pub Crawl is from 5:15pm-8:30pm every 2nd Wednesday through October. The Trolley will take you to four different downtown establishments. 256-8503231, Homegrownhuntsville.com. Out Loud! Featuring Stacy Kingsley will be from 68pm in the Classroom Studio 2008 of Lowe Mill. Free. www.lowemill.net. The Artery and 1892 East will have, Art, Eats & Ales at 1892 East, 720 Pratt Ave. It will be from 6:30-9pm. https:// www.facebook.com/events/401503226713534. Thursday October 22 The Little Green Store and Gallery will have an Art Exhibit and Reception with Zara Edwards Lowry from 9am-5pm. There will also be a jewelry trunk show with Jamey Joseph from 5 – 8pm. 256-539-9699, shop. thelittlegreenstore.org. (See ad pg.11) The Tennessee Valley Genealogical Society Program: Writing and Self-Publishing a Family History book will be at 7pm at the Huntsville-Madison Library. Free. www.hmcpl.org, 256-278-5533. Michael’s at Westbury Square will have Last-Minute Costume Ideas (All Ages) from 6:30 - 8:30pm. $16. 256-885-1779. There will be a Museum Store Trunk Show with Beebs & Bess, Scarves and Accessories will be at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 2-6pm. hsvmuseum.org. October 22 – 24 The Haunted House of Horror will be at 1205 Tennessee St., Courtland, AL $20. 256-637-8410, www.hauntedhouseofhorror.net. Friday, October 23 The 2015 Pro Bono Brews will be at the Historic Huntsville Depot & Roundhouse from 6-11pm. www.probonobrews.com. There will be a Kids Drawing Party: Pets in Costume from 3-4:30pm in ChromAddict Studio 2025 of Lowe Mill. $25. www.lowemill.net. StartleFest II will be from 6pm-midnight in the Flying Monkey Theatre. $12. www.startlinglyfreshrecords.com. Cupcakes & Characters from The Nutcracker and Land of the Sweets will be at the Alabama Youth Ballet Studio. $5. www.alabamayouthballet.org. There will be a NerdCon After Party from 7:3010:30pm at the Yellowhammer Brewing. http://www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. Drop-in & Create Fabulous Fall Pumpkins will be from 11am-1pm at the Huntsville Museum of Art. www.hsvmuseum.org. October 24 – 25 The 2015 Cat Fanciers Association Cat Show will be at the Jaycee Building, Saturday from 9am-5pm and Sunday 9am-4pm. 256-536-0810. The New Earth Festival, Holistic and New Age Festival will be at the Tom Bevill Center (UAH Campus), Saturday from 10am - 7pm and Sunday 10am - 6pm. $5. https://www.facebook.com/New-Earth-Festivals543725025748849. (See ad pg.9) Sunday, October 25 World Conspiracy’s Ninth Annual Zombie Walk will begin at 2:30pm at the Clinton St. Parking Garage, Downtown. 256-534-3198, www.worldconspiracy.org. The Mayor’s 100-Mile Walking Challenge Event will be at Maple Hill Cemetery Stroll from 10am-3pm. www.al.com/news/huntsville/index.ssf/2015/08/ mayor_tommy_battle_issues_100-.html. The AMC Band will perform in conjunction with Images of the Great War at the Huntsville Museum of Art from 2-3pm. www.hsvmuseum.org. Tuesday, October 27 There will be a Halloween Party from 6-7pm at the Monrovia Library. 256-489-3392. The Haunt at the Three Caves will be from 7-11pm at the Three Caves. 256-534-5263. LearningQUEST Public Program: Winter War: Battle of the Bulge, December 1944 will be at 9:30am at the Huntsville-Madison Library. www.hmcpl.org. DIY Mineral Make Up will be from 6-8:30pm in T-n-T Treasures Studio 266 of the Flying Monkey. $65 www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. Tuesdays with TED: The Power of Vulnerability will be from 12-1pm at the Huntsville-Madison Library. www.hmcpl.org. events cont. on pg. 15 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 THE VALLEY PLANET events cont. from pg. 14 Wednesday, October 28 Dopapod w/ special guest The Nth Power will be at the VBC Playhouse at 9pm. Tickets are $15 in advance. Thursday, October 29 There will be a Family Friendly Halloween Party at the Madison Library from 5:30-7:30pm. Free. 256-4610046, www.hmcpl.org. The Squidling Brothers will be in the Flying Monkey Theatre from 8-10pm. www.flyingmonkeyarts.org. Spirits in the Garden will be at the Huntsville Botanical Gardens from 6-8pm.www.hsvbg.org. There will be a Film Presentation Icons of Power – Wrath of Tsar: Peter the Great from 6-8pm at the Huntsville Museum of Art. www.hsvmuseum.org. October 29 – 31 The Haunted House of Horror will be at 1205 Tennessee St. Courtland, AL $20. 256-637-8410, www. hauntedhouseofhorror.net. The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe presented by Grissom High School Theatre will be at Grissom High School. http://www.grissomtheatre.org. Friday, October 30 Jim Parker’s Songwriters Series will be from 6:309:30pm at the VBC Playhouse. jimparkermusic.com. Bric 5th Quarter Party will be at Lowe Mill from 911:30pm. www.lowemill.net. Barksdale. $65 www.peozee.org, chapterz1992@gmail.com. Harbor Halloween/Trunk or Treat will be at Ingalls Harbor Pavilion from 6-9pm. Admission is two canned goods. 256- 341-4835/4822, www.decaturparks.com. There will be a Halloween Bash from 3-7pm at the Alabama Constitution Village. 256-564-8100. The Kids Painting Party: Halloween Sunset Silhouettes will be from 6-7:30pm in the ChromAddict Studio 2025 of Lowe Mill. $25. www.lowemill.net. Las Vegas: Halloween Magic featuring Illusionist Michael Grandinetti will be at the VBC Concert Hall at 7:30pm. www.hso.org, 256-533-1953. October 30 – 31 The Rocky Horror Show will be live on stage at the Princess Theatre, Friday at 7:30pm and Saturday 2pm and 7:30pm. www.princesstheatre.org. Downtown Huntsville Inc. Taproom Tour will be from 5-11pm at Yellowhammer Brewing. http://www.yellowhammerbrewery.com. Trick or Treat at the Library will be from 9am-4:30pm at the Huntsville-Madison Library. There will be a Spooktacular Puppet Show from 4-5pm. www.hmcpl.org. The Zombie Kids Carnival will be at the Lowry House at 6:30pm. 256-489-9200. Dinner in the Vineyard will be at Creekside Plantation in historic Mooresville from 6:30-11pm. There will be a silent auction and entertainment by storyteller, Jerry REGIONAL CALENDAR ATLANTA October 8, In the Valley Below, Vinyl October 9, Of Monsters and Men, Chastain Park October 10, Warren Haynes, The Tabernacle October 12, Glass Animals, Buckhead Theatre October 13, Noah Gunderson, Terminal West at King Plow October 14, Korn, The Tabernacle October 16, Mac DeMarco, Variety Playhouse October 16, Halsey, Buckhead Theatre October 17, Florida Georgia Line, Aaron’s Amphitheatre October 18, Jason Isbell, The Promenade at Piedmont Park October 19, Elvis Costello, Variety Playhouse October 19, Hanson, Center Stage Theater October 20, Zedd, The Tabernacle October 20, AER, Cody Simpson, Buckhead Theatre October 22, Ricky Martin, Philips Arena October 23, Sturgill Simpson, The Tabernacle October 24, Taylor Swift, Georgia Dome October 29, Peaches, Terminal West at King Plow October 30, The B-52’s, Fox Theatre October 30, Blue Öyster Cult, Variety Playhouse October 31, Black Lips, Variety Playhouse Renaissance Theatre presents Clue! Performances will be at 8pm. 256-536-3117, www.rennaissancetheatre. net. $18. Pumpkin Fest will be at the Eleanor E. Murphy Branch from 9am-4:45pm. 256- 881-5620, www.hmcpl.org. Saturday, October 31 There will be a Walk to Defeat ALS in at Research Park at the Hudson Alpha Institute for Biotechnology. It will be at 10am. 800.664.1242, www.dsthuntsville.org. There will be a Halloween Contra Dance in the gym of Faith Presbyterian from 7:30- 10:30pm. Lessons begin at 7pm 256-837-0656, www.secontra.com/ NACDS.html. Trick or Treat will be from 4-6pm at Lowe Mill. Free. www.lowemill.net. The 2nd Annual Apple Annie 5 K Monster Dash & 1 Mile Scary Scurry will be at Athens Swan Creek Park Pavilion. Registration starts at 8am. http://www. naolweb.com/rivercityrunner/2015-Apple-Annie-5k1.pdf. The 4th Annual “Halloween on Main” will be in downtown Madison from 5-7pm. www.madisonal.gov/index.aspx?nid= Halloween Party in the Biergarten will be at Yellowhammer Brewing from 2-11pm. http://www. yellowhammerbrewery.com. The Mayor’s 100-Mile Walking Challenge Event will be a Halloween Walk at the Downtown Dog Park from 10am-3pm. www.al.com/news/ huntsville/index.ssf/ 015/08/mayor_ tommy_battle_issues_100-.html. Hikes for Tykes will be from 10am-noon at the Huntsville Botanical Gardens. www.hsvbg.org. The Sixth Annual Pink Pumpkin Run will be at the Guntersville Civitan Park, 1100 Sunset Dr. at 8am. The Spooktacular 5K Run & 1 Mile Monster Run will be in downtown Huntsville, 8am 5K, and 9am 1 Mile Monster Run. Free. 256-650-7063. Sunday, November 1 There will be a Film Co-op Monthly Workshop at the Lowe Mill at 2pm. Free. www.lowemill.net. Dia De Los Muertos Celebration will be from 38pm in the Flying Monkey Theatre. Free. www. flyingmonkeyarts.org. THE END!! Spooktacular Science Halloween Glow Party will be from 10am-4pm at Sci-Quest Science Center. www. sci-quest.org. BIRMINGHAM October 8, Rubblebucket, Saturn October 11, Danzig, Iron City October 13, Seether, Iron City October 14, Toro y Moi, Saturn October 17, Chief Keef, BJCC Concert Hall October 18, Walk the Moon, Iron City October 24, Dan + Shay, Iron City October 28, Third Eye Blind, Iron City October 29, Babes in Toyland, Saturn October 30, X Ambassadors, Saturn HUNTSVILLE October 8, Miranda Lambert, VBC Arena October 21, Tedeschi Trucks Band, VBC Arena October 28, Dopapod, VBC Playhouse NASHVILLE October 8, Chris Tomlin, Ascend Amphitheatre October 8, Aretha Franklin, Schermerhorn Symphony Center October 8, Glass Animals, Marathon Music Works October 9, Florence + The Machine, Ascend Amphitheatre October 9-10, Ben Rector, Ryman Auditorium October 9-10, Kid Rock, Carl Black Chevy Woods Amphitheatre October 10, Grace Potter, Ascend Amphitheatre October 11, Brand New, Manchester Orchestra, Ryman Auditorium October 13-14, Modest Mouse, War Memorial Auditorium October 16-17, Walk the Moon, Ryman Auditorium October 17, The Flaming Lips, Centennial Park October 23-24, Jason Isbell, Ryman Auditorium October 24, Plain White T’s, Exit/In October 25-26, Jason Isbell, Ryman Auditorium October 27, CHVRCHES, Marathon Music Works October 28, Steve Miller Band, Ryman Auditorium October 30-31, Sturgill Simpson, Ryman Auditorium November 1, The Psychedelic Furs, City Winery November 1, Sturgill Simpson, Ryman Auditorium TUSCALOOSA October 9, Alabama, Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre October 15, Jason Isbell, Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre October 16, Casting Crowns, Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre October 29, Jessica Hernandez & The Deltas, Little Willie’s THE VALLEY PLANET #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 15 Daily, she is exposed to graphic photographs of man’s ignorant, horrific treatment of helpless creatures. Jennifer Roberts pays a huge price for her compassion. sharks, gorillas, and rhinos, as well as their habitats. T his tribute spotlights an individual who takes meaningful actions every day to make life better for people and creatures around the globe, as well as here in Huntsville. She is an award-winning writer (Huntsville Times), MTV celebrity-for-a-day, and photographer whose work has been displayed at the Museum of Fine Arts in Montgomery. Her first jar of pennies saved when she was five went to the Peregrine Falcon Fund, and she went door-to-door with petitions and a collection jar to save California mountain lions. In her teens, her activism escalated. She interned with PETA; and organized anti-fur, -circus, and -rodeo protests. One windy day in November she and a friend hung a banner over I-565 that read: “Holidays Are Murder on Turkeys.” In 1995, she was interviewed by The New York Times and quoted on the cover of their “Nation” page, after she took on angry hunters and local politicians who planned an unethical hunt of Canada geese at Goose Pond Colony Golf Course in Scottsboro. She and the geese won. As an adult, this remarkable woman has carried her causes forward. She contributes to groups that support wildlife and the environment, including the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation, National Resources Defense Council, Defenders of Wildlife, International Fund for Animal Welfare, Project Coyote, Earthjustice, Cheetah Conservation Fund, African Wildlife Foundation, and Oceana. Her gifts include substantial monetary contributions, as well as hundreds of signed petitions and social media posts. She now has 2600+ Facebook followers around the globe, especially in Africa, because of her support for big cats, elephants, Zee’s Rocket City bEAT by Jim Zieliński T his Weekend: Nashville Oktoberfest [http:// thenashvilleoktoberfest.com]. Spanning several city blocks, this one comes off a bit too Americanized for my tastes, but is nonetheless enjoyable in terms of music and spectacle. Besides, walking historic Germantown is good for the soul, if not the sole. With All Hallow’s E’en scant weeks away, all minds turn to CANDY…but only stomachs turn in regards to the hässlich Butterfinger Peanut Butter Cups. This Doctor Moreauvian bastardization of two favorites is easily recreated by holding a brown candle over a PBJ and waving it back and forth. Do yourself a favor and starve, instead. Now, to something less haunting: you are enjoined to eat the pizza at Pizza Party Massacre 3: “Chippy Lives,” held at Lowe Mill [First Floor Connector; 2211 Seminole Drive, SW; (256) 533-0399; www. lowemill.net]. The third of this Showbiz Pizza/Chuck E. Cheesestyled “Family-Fun-Night-Gone-Wrong” trilogy spans six nights (16-17, 23-24, 30-31 October) with the Human-a-Matronic rock band, “Rock-oDream Supreme.” $10 shows - For Mature Audiences ONLY - occur at 8:00, 9:00, and 10:00 p.m. From 4:00 – 5:00 p.m., Saturdays, 24 October and Halloween, a G-Rated version of PPM3 is offered for $5.00 (5 and Under FREE). Come for the fun and stay forever, but you won’t have to tell the kids anything; the pizza, they’ll eat. But your treat bag’s not full, yet: for only $35 (includes a Beaker Drinking Glass), there’re more devourables to be had…on Saturday, 17 October at the Seventh Annual “Mad Scientist Bash” [SciQuest; 1435 Paramount Drive; (256) 837-0606; 16 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM #100815102815 She has fought patiently against every effort of Keystone XL in order to defend wildlife, clean drinking water, unpolluted soil, and the pristine beauty of America. She is also a contributor to Tennessee Riverkeeper and Water.org. Many gifts to friends and family have included the adoption of elephants and wolves. Thanks to this big-hearted activist who sees the Big Picture importance of protecting endangered species, I am foster parent to orphaned elephant Elkerama from the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Kenya, and a gray wolf from the NRDC. She has also adopted bats from Bat World Sanctuary, and recently saved a bat that took a wrong turn through a friend’s door. She would want you to know how important bats are to our fragile ecosystem, just like any species. Since early childhood, she has been a friend to dogs and cats. One of the original founders of Madison County’s Spay/Neuter Action Project (SNAP), she is also a contributing member of North Shore Animal League. I cannot count the number of dogs and cats she has rescued or fostered in her brief thirty-something years. Perhaps knowing they will find what they need, dogs, cats, deer, and birds arrive at her doorstep. She has helped pay for surgeries and medications for dogs, including the famous pit Khalessi; and, through Soi Dog Foundation, sponsored a billboard in Thailand to raise awareness about the gruesome dog meat trade. In 2013, she co-sponsored prosthesis for a calf named Hero. A fighter against breed-specific legislation, she pitched in for the One Million Pibble March on Washington, D.C. My activist hero has also made multiple contributions to the upcoming documentary “Gray Area: Wolves of the Southwest.” She keeps us well informed, challenging citizens to move the world forward with a cause of their own. For 8 years, she authored “Auntie Jen’s Animal Crazy,” in Valley Planet. Readers learned about endangered species alerts; local rescue/advocacy organizations; the plight of military working dogs; and ways to make Huntsville a “no-kill” community. By “interviewing” pets, her column has also made many of us laugh out loud amidst the serious conditions of the human and animal world. Her love, through activism, is not limited to animals. She assists disabled veterans and the homeless, and she advocates for the Citizens Commission on Human Rights and disaster relief charities. Now, while continuing her Five-Star, 8-year-old pet-sitting business as “Auntie Jen,” she plans to rekindle Pets Heeling Inmates’ Lives; volunteer with Operation Green Team; and promote awareness, like she does in her recent review of “Cowspiracy: the Sustainability Secret,” published at “Auntie Jen’s Animal Crazy” on Facebook. Currently, she is outlining children’s and photography books about animals. And there’s always her treasured pet family of Sharky and Bro, as well as her foster dogs. What then must we do? It is up to us to honor a life devoted to activism by taking up at least one good cause with a sense of purpose and resolve. Kudos, respect, and love to my heroic daughter, Jennifer Elizabeth. https://sci-quest.org]. Dr. Pretorius couldn’t have done it better! At this Adult Fundraiser for SciQuest - and Hydes-to-be - labcoats/costumes are optional but, really, who’d dare arrive in business casual? You wanna be the next “medical misadventure?” In order that all may celebrate, on 1 November the table will be extended to include living family and friends; food will be brought to share (no admission charge). Those interested in participating should contact Anna Sue in advance. LED-Orange’s digital light show combines with dancing, Yellowhammer Brewing, a silent auction, The Crackerjacks (Rockabilly/Surf/Blues), Prichard’s Distillery’s new signature drink, and toothsome repasts via New Orleans Lunch Box (e.g. Shrimp Étouffée, Pork Loin, Whiskey Bread Pudding, Mashed Potato Bar) for a truly electrifying evening! Things begin to bubble at 5:30 p.m. As is Cesare to Caligari, so is human will to the call of cacao - but you’d have to see this to believe it: a bevy of mine wayward cronies crowding the kitchen on All Hallow’s Eve, assembling tasty tarantulae. Here’s how Gahgee, Tam-Tam, the Chevalier, and I accomplished same: Can caramel and bobbing be far away? From 8:00 a.m. – Noon, on Halloween proper, join Athens’ “Apple Annie Monster Dash 5K” & “1-Mile Scary Scurry.” Costumes are encouraged at Swan Creek Park [beside Athens High School], where you’ll also find a Family Fun Zone (food, games, face painting, music, and a hot air balloon await!) …all hosted by the Athena League to benefit the Children’s Advocacy Center of Athens/Limestone and Joy’s House. Register at: http://www.naolweb. com/rivercityrunner/2015-Apple-Annie-5k-1.pdf. From 8:00 – 11:59 p.m., Sunday, All Saints Day, Lowe Mill hosts an El Día de los Muertos Dinner Celebration [Squeaking Tribe Studio/Flying Monkey Arts Theatre; 2211 Seminole Drive, SW; Anna Sue Courtney @ (256) 479-7863; www.lowemill. net]. This Mexican holiday commemorates death both through quiet respect and noisy fun; families commune, sharing memories of those passed on while celebrating the joy of life. The EDdlM Grand Celebration Table will be set up in the theatre, with chairs and place settings for departed loved ones. This table will serve as an ofrenda - typically a home altar bedecked with candles, photographs, festive foodstuffs, mementos, papel picado (cut tissue paper with skeletons pictured at play), and other offerings honoring the dear departed. VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 ArachnoKrispies 1 Cup Semi-Sweet Chocolate Morsels ¾ Cup Rice Krispies ½ Cup Chow Mein Noodles Plain M&M’s, W&W’s, or E&E’s Line a baking sheet with waxed paper. Place morsels in a 2-cup, microwave-safe bowl; microwave on medium (50%) for ~two minutes. Stir. Microwave an additional 20-30 seconds, if necessary; stir again. Blend Rice Krispies into smoothened chocolate. Drop by teaspoons onto the baking sheet for “spider bodies” (read cephalothorax/abdomen). Impale chocolaty cephalothorax with four “leg” noodles and properly implant M&M “eyes.” Refrigerate fifteen minutes to set, and voilà: a dozen creepy-crawlies that Peter Parker would be PROUD to date. The chill of late evokes Chai, Chocolate**, and Coffee, recalling www.needcoffee.com, John Widgett Robinson, and “32 DAYS OF HALLOWEEN”…an audio-visual paean to the season, well underway even as you read. My advice: decant Pumpkin Spice Candy Corn Latte directly onto your corneas and binge watch with resolve. **Hot. THE VALLEY PLANET Where Shall We Meet? D o you have any friends? People have cabinets full of disembodied ‘friends’ on Facebook, don’t they? I mean, do you have real friends, the kind you see in person? As a matter of fact, think about the very term, Facebook. For the most part, you never even see a face of your ‘friend’ anymore, but a picture of your acquaintance’s dog Fido, favorite booze, or football team. The only face you see might be a ‘selfie’ which is not about you, the viewer, but a validation of the lonely person in the picture. Lonely? I’d say lonely, yes. Most people on Facebook, or who live behind their computers, tend to be seeking something. What might start as an interesting scroll through ‘what’s happening’ in others’ lives becomes a daily habit. It becomes an hours-long practice; hours that could be spent with real people. What real people, you might ask? Look around you at the house. Each and every day those little kids of yours are growing into adults. Is this how you want them to remember mom and dad, the ‘backs’ which sat all the time at a computer? Or rather than sending “Praying for you” to your friend facing an operation in the hospital, why not a real visit? Do you ever wonder why your friend posts endless self-affirming notices? Happy people don’t need endless reassurance that all is well. For that matter, what about the endless rants online among your ‘friends’? You know who I mean. Cousin Bob screams because he’s mad at the immigrants. Aunt Polly bellows because she’s mad at Cousin Bob’s opinions about the immigrants. You fill in the reason, but you get my point. It is not that Cousin Bob and Aunt Polly really care enough to pound their chests about such things, it is because they feel completely voiceless. They carry on at tiresome length about some cause or complaint because they know their viewpoint means nothing in a game that’s rigged against them. What they need is a real friend. Why not go meet somewhere. I mean really meet. Ask them to see you at a restaurant, or coffee shop. Whenever I do that, I find out how genuinely happy people are to meet someone in the flesh, so to speak. The friendly get togethers go on and on, because we both experience the simple human joy of pleasant conversation. Conversation, now there’s a concept. You see, conversation is the opposite of Facebook. On Facebook the one sentence or two that passes for ‘discussion’ is just that. So, people get frustrated, and slowly they become angry. People sound mad all the time on Facebook because they are, because they know they’ll never really communicate with those at the other end of the electronic leash. You never get Dr. Anarcho’s Rx For Old Stuff That Don’t Suck: Tool - Any and all. T here are ways young dogs can teach old ones new tricks. For starters, you have to get them to sit, listen, not speak, and not play or be dead. My grand-nephew, Justin, turned me on to Tool. I had previously thought they were thrash metal head bangers with vocal effects altered to make them sound like the devil himself came from hell to sing for them. I was wrong to write Tool off so simply. The problem that vexed me to the last minute before deadline was finding a way to describe exactly what they are or where to put them. THE VALLEY PLANET Kellye McCormick, Owner Master Esthetician Licensed Barber Melissa Steelman Master Hair Design Color Specialist to explore the validity of a point, or the reason someone feels the way they do when your communication is a line from me, a counterblast from you, passing in the night. Not so with conversation in person. When you sit down with someone across from you, and talk to them, what you usually find is kindness, and even listening. What you will find is that you are remarkably happy, and wonder why you didn’t do this sooner, or more often. Conversation is a real way to make friends. In the Seventeenth Century they closed down coffeehouses because plots and conspiracies began there. People met because they knew something was wrong with the way life was, and wanted to change it for the better. Who knows what might start in a simple meeting in a booth at a coffee shop near you. This tool will stay in no one’s box. No matter what you think, they think outside of every box in which people try and place them. Hard metal? Thrash metal? Sometimes. Head bangers? Sometimes. Alternative? They’ll stay there for a little while. Art Rock? Definitely, but on their own terms. One can hear Zeppelinesque influences colored the Pink of Floyd. The thing that hooked me first was drummer Danny Carey. I am convinced this guy is an octopus who rhythms within rhythms from each of his eight tentacles. Okay, enough of that rocky road before some fundamentalists are appalled that I said “tentacles.” I don’t want to get into how big the suckers are. Suffice to say they band together to make a polyrhythmic wonder that leads and follows at the same time, or as needed. #100815102815 Mirabella mineral Makeup – gluten, mineral oil, paraben, paraffin free. Vitamins A, C, E. New Fall Collection Combine that with bassist, Justin Chancellor - who replaced original bassist Paul D’Amour in ‘95 - and it becomes a complex, syncopated marriage with drummer Carey. Now I’ve done it; that hair-like-a-horses-tail, Holy-rollin’, hypocritical old bat in Kentucky is apoplectic because both members are the same sex and married. “Oh, my GOD, Billy Bob, he is talking about their tools, tentacles and marriage.” (Shaddup you fame seeking hoe and worry about your out-of-wedlock little bastards and three exhusbands.) Enter(may as well make the rest of her day) guitarist Adam Jones, and vocalist Maynard and the sum is far greater than the whole. ics though you may want to stick a cork in the kiddies’ ears. I’d like to name a favorite Tool album, but I cannot. They have more than a handful and I like several tracks on each. I’ll take the collection and cherry pick. In short, this Tool doesn’t suck. Drummers and bassists in particular will appreciate Tool. which is not to demean or lessen guitarists and vocalists. Hey, they have real lyr- VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 17 events cont. from pg. 17 Send in your random encounters today. It’s FREE!! We are putting all the categories together since it seems like there are always more jeers than anything else!! But just to give you an idea of what the To Yuno from Yunohoos are about… I Saw you: but you didn’t catch my name, You saw me or you think you were seen: Cheers: Pay your respect to those who deserve it and of course Jeers: Frustrated? Tell us all about it. Thankfully, we don’t know who you are! To send in your FREE ad 1. Keep your word limit to 40 words. No names, just initials if you want. 2. Meet the deadline. 3. Get it to us: Put “To Yuno from Yunohoo” in the subject line of the email and send to classifieds@valleyplanet.com. The Valley Planet Music Exchange is FREE to any individual (not businesses) looking to buy, sell, trade or find bandmates. You get a headline and 3 lines of text for FREE! Please call (256) 533-4613 or email your ads to classifieds@valleyplanet.com. Two awesome basses for a great price! This package also includes a hardshell case (valued at $100 alone), a set of Ernie Ball Cobalt Slinky strings, three single GHS strings, a strap, and two Fender guitar gig bags. Perfect for beginners (or a parent trying to buy for multiple kids) or someone looking for a couple of good backup or inexpensive gigging basses. Asking $400 for all, 2564315130 Professional musician seeking to rent space for live music rehearsal, price and terms negotiable. References available upon request. Chris 256-541-9118 Stupid Sh!t People Say by Shawn Bailey I ’m a 44 year old white dude. I’ve lived in trailer parks as a child, one block away from the projects for my adolescent years, and back to tiny houses and trailer parks in my 20’s. They weren’t always pleasant. I remember a block party one night at the intersection of my street where there were well over a 100 men getting drunk and fighting. I was 12 at the time. My father called the cops and when the police arrived and stepped out of their cruisers, the crowd told them to get the f@ck back in their cars and leave. They did. I’ve lived in houses with faulty heating systems, which meant it was cold when you went to sleep, and below freezing when you woke up. I would jump out of bed and kneel in front of the heater, lighting it quickly as I shook from the cold, and then racing back to the covers until the house warmed enough to actually get up. I could give more examples, but if you’ve been poor, you get the gist. Now picture this. I finally start making enough money to get out of those environments, and since I have two children, I move to a nice, middle-class neighborhood. Things are nicer and safer there. I don’t have to lock doors and I’m not worried about the well-being of my children when they walk down the street. But then I realize that the neighborhood I moved into is predominately black. So . . . I move back to the trailer park. When people ask me why I would do such a thing, I say “I left because I love white people.” And you would say . . . what? Hopefully, you would stare at me like the idiot racist I would be and say something like WTF are you talking about? Apparently, if you are a big magazine like The Atlantic, you would hire me and let me spread my diseased logic to as many people as possible. I’m talking about Ta-Nehisi Coates. My first introduction Ta-Nehisi Coates was on NPR. After listening to part of the interview, I picked up a copy of The Atlantic and read his article Letter to My Son. I am still dumbfounded at his popularity. Of course, I live in a state where 1.6 million people voted against taking racist language out of our ridiculous constitution. So there are idiots everywhere. 18 Madonna: for crisakes, no one wants to see you in your Depends and your pointed bra pointed at the floor. Enough already you old bat. Former fans Multi-inst’ist/vocalist seeks guitarist/harmonicist/singer named Danny, 65, from Madison. Call/text Joe at 256-617-1395. Dr w - What is this we hear about a country music song AND dancing with the stars? Are you moonlightin? A patient Guitarist/Keyboardist/Singer seeks another guitarist and/or keyboardist, as well as a bassist who’s quick on the uptake. Ideally, should sing (well). Have drummer. For multiple different projects: Wedding/corporate gig band (covers, ‘60s-‘10s); jazz/blues/fusion; originals in ALL styles. Call/text Joe at 256-617-1395. PO’s, Property owners should put in their lease that a mower must be owned and grass must be mowed or charge them extra for a company to do it. We are all sick to death of the renters that ruin our neighborhood and PO’s that don’t care. Kayla - I thought I conquered. I know I saw. I came. Sorry. Another chance, please? CRT He was promoting his new book which I won’t bother to name. The only thing I can remember from the interview was that Coates had grown up in a sh!tty neighborhood. Then he made enough money to move into a safer neighborhood where he felt, “... more at ease than I had in any other neighborhood that I had lived in, in my life.” Then, he moved back to the sh!tty neighborhood. And his reason - Happy Birthday Little Sis! H has special kisses for you! J Joes Crab Shack should either build on the Tennessee down near Ditto or STOP showing commercials to us folks. Yummers!!!! JW, you and me, and the beach, nothing compares! LYB “I left because I love black people.” Really? You love black people so much that you place your family’s safety second in line to your love for a particular skin color? Do you think that you can pull that warm blanket of self-righteous idealism over your kid’s bodies to protect them from the dangers of living in an unsafe place? To be concise and frank, it’s a sad excuse for a father who puts his son in peril so he can revel in the color of his own skin. My favorite quote is “... the power of domination and exclusion is central to the belief in being white, and without it, “white people” would cease to exist for want of reasons.” I’m thinking Coates is using Joey quotes here. White people are, indeed, white. He appears to believe that these “white people” are somewhat mythical in nature. In fact, Coates never seems to definitively refer to whites, but instead to people wanting or pretending to be white. I can only imagine he is addressing other black people, as white people would have no reason to want to be white. In fact, the only time he talks of white people is when mentioning slavery or some other egregious crime of white on black. His disdain for people with the same skin color wanting to “be white” is palpable. I can only imagine it’s a self-concocted guilt or shame that manifested itself when he attempted to “be white” himself by moving his family into a decent neighborhood; an intense fear of appearing in some way “white.” To me, this letter to his son is as poisonous as any white supremist’s hateful indoctrination of their children. Like Coates, when a paternally inspired fear or hate for another skin color is set upon you in early years, there is no questioning it. It becomes your truth. It spreads from there like a blight to others, a cancerous ignorance concerning everyone who is different from you. And even if you break those idiot chains, it’s a long, hard and doubt-filled road to a truth that’s tainted at the very least. I endangered my family because I love black people. B*tch, please. WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM The Single Guy: Communi-Date by Aaron Hurd The scariest piece of paper on earth! W hen I was thinking about what to write about for this issue, I had several thoughts. When the editor told me the issue will cover the special Halloween season - it made me think of something scary. What is scarier to a single guy then marriage and commitment? I have admitted several times I battle with commitment issues and I am a work in progress when it comes to working through it. We all, whether we admit or not, have screamed the lyrics along with Kanye West, “We want prenup, we want prenup!” As much nonsense as Mr. West speaks, that one seemed to hit a nerve with us single folks, both male and female. He had a point. What’s funny is last time I was on vacation with the family, my dad decided to ask me what my plans are if I get married. “Will you share everything 50/50 with your wife and put her name on everything you own?” It was a random question that added to my anxiety of finding the one. “What Dad? You mean once I find a keeper… I have to decide that too?” I quickly answered without a beat, “Oh definitely a Pre-nuptial will have to be signed!” He is 65 years old, a preacher, and old school and replied, “Well, you have to take care of your family.” I agree and said “Dad today it is a different world, your own daughter is divorced - you know how it is today!? I have to protect myself.” I then thought some more and said, “I think - if I bought a house while married, I would definitely sign that with my wife and everything we get while together would be ours and I would probably give her a house or someplace to live.” He said -“Don’t you think it is a trust thing?” I replied, “Yes, but the stats on divorce are crazy dad!” #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 Drama at CVS Whitesburg….black Tundra, black Escalade – parking too close to get in driver’s seat…I vote for no more giant vehicles that can’t park OR drive without being in your lane!! J LTA - Mo’s soon - really. US H - You lost a good roommate because of a mangy dog? Lord help us. Puzzled Bob - You are lot of fun for an old fart. VPC Carey - If you don’t stop telling gross dead roadkill stories at the table I’m going to stab you with a butter knife. R Rose - You could not smell any sweeter, but your thorns sure are sharp. An Admirer Looks like all us Crimson Tide fans can sober up this year. Why oh why do they not put a few of the fudge caramels in Kraft caramels anymore?? The Wood Family Not sure what he was pulling, and as we were standing in line at Disneyland of all places! The happiest place on earth, and dad was asking me the most difficult question on earth! Thanks for the anxiety dad. It is very scary and something I sang aloud and deep down it did make me think as I was shouting and bobbing my head to the beat - “18 years, 18 years, she got one of your kids has you for 18 years”…..later on it goes on to say, “18 years, 18 years, and on her 18th birthday he found out it wasn’t his!” He also mentions in that verse the big money making’ phrase (go ahead and sing along with me), “If you ain’t no punk holla we want prenup WE WANT PRENUP! Yeah it’s something that you need to have ‘cause when she leaves yo ass she gon’ leave with half!” I mean the lyrics are scary as hell to a single guy. Who would not sign a prenup after that!? I joke, but it is a serious subject and one, as a single person, we should consider. I mean some will tell you credit score is important when it comes to relationships and you should talk about debt and bills and all before you jump into something serious. I guess you should talk about assets and all as well. I feel that if a woman I date has accomplished a lot, purchased a home and has some assets she worked hard on before she met me - in my opinion- they belong to her. What we acquire after we marry belongs to us together and that should be negotiated and shared. Listen, my goal is to marry someone where we are together forever - till death do us part, but in today’s world - you just never know. It’s scary and a haunt that I hope does not ever come upon me, but if it does – I think my wife and I should be in agreement. I hope and pray we never have to dust off the scary, evil and haunted document because my ultimate goal is to not divorce. What are your thoughts, do you think a pre-nuptial is a smart move or a sign of mistrust? Have you experienced a divorce based where one was signed or without one? I would love to hear from you and get your thoughts - scary not scary necessary or not? Email me at aaronthesingleguy@gmail.com. THE VALLEY PLANET THE VALLEY PLANET #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM 19 right at home with a Redstone Federal Credit Union mortgage ® Redstone Federal Credit Union offers various mortgage loan products to fit your life. Visit www.redfcu.org or call one of our originators at 256-882-8500 today! Must be RFCU® member to obtain loan. Mortgages are subject to credit approval. Equal Credit Opportunity Lender. Restrictions apply. Contact us for more information. your trusted advisor 800-234-1234 • www.redfcu.org 20 WWW.VALLEYPLANET.COM REAL-5052 MortgageFam_VP_Full_0615.indd 1 #100815102815 VOLUME 13 ISSUE 14 THE VALLEY PLANET 6/26/2015 4:18:59 PM