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Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

Chicago NATO protests, May 17-22, 2012. Part 3: From the Mayor’s door, back to the streets.

Monday, June 4th, 2012

From a march on Mayor Rahm Emanual’s house in Northern Chicago in the early afternoon, we headed back to the streets of Downtown Chicago to catch up with the anti-capitalist march; along which the police tried all day to enforce seemingly arbitrary route closings violently in an attempt to, at first, keep two large marches separated, then later, to keep them heading in the direction they wanted. At one point a large crowd was kettled into an area on Michigan Avenue and brought out the horses, near an entrance to Grant park, however, once again the crowd broke the line with sheer will and mass of bodies, until late into the night. The march finally disband at its own accord after reaching a China Town train station in front of which a police town truck dropped a car which then caught on fire.

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Review of the NYC Vegetarian Food Festival

Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

John and I heard about this free event just a few days ago, but knew we had to check it out. We loaded up the car with t-shirts from the store and 600 fliers printed up for the occasion and no idea what to expect.

Arriving at around 10:30, the line wrapped all the way around to the opposite side of the block. It ended up being a 3 hour wait to get in, but with our friend Ben’s help, we took turns giving out fliers and selling the Vegetables Feel No Pain and Burger Intervention shirts as our friend Ben held our place in line. With the weather holding steady in the mid-50s, it was “a great day to wait”, as one guy on his cellphone remarked behind us.

Inside, it was crowded, but definitely not unbearably so. Honest Tea was, predictably, the first table we saw – those guys go to everything. Loving Hut had some tasty mac and cheese with buffalo “chicken” for $1 I was happy to sample. Coconut Bliss featured the best strawberry ice cream I’d ever had, and Sweet and Sara was extremely generous with all different flavors of marshmallows.

One of the most pleasant surprises about the event were how many of the vendors were smaller or local companies. I guess we expected to see the biggest players like Amy’s or Edward and Son’s next to Honest Tea, but there were plenty of companies we’d never even heard of… which was great. Who wants to drive 4.5 hours for the things you can get at any grocery chain?

I was absolutely enamored with Foodswings’ sample of mac and cheese – we chose to head there for dinner after the event (I don’t know how John and Ben were still hungry).

In the end, the things I purchased (outside of a few hot foods) were products sold at irresistibly low prices, rather than “festival rates”. I’m still nursing a huge $2 bottle of Bao Kombucha, and I scored a big bag of Nutiva hemp seeds for $8. I would have liked to see the vendors giving out coupons – in fact, I was surprised that they weren’t. Coupons play a major factor in my grocery shopping and I was hoping to score some of those upscale products for more competitive prices after the fest.

The crowd was great, everyone seemed respectful of each other. “We gave out 600 fliers,” John noted, “and I haven’t seen a single one on the ground.” And the crowd was huge – did I mention we waited 3 hours to get in? I guess they weren’t expecting that kind of turnout – let’s hope they book a bigger venue next year. It’s awesome there is so much interest in vegetarian food.

The National Day of Mourning.

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

Who is to blame that the atrocities of the past? Pine Ridge, Wounded Knee, The Little Bighorn, Small Pox, and Genocide, are all swept under the carpet while the once majestic and free roaming Natives, as well as the buffalo have been all but lost to slaughter, urban sprawl, disease, poverty and revisionist history.

As the opening prayer was beat out on the drum this Thursday in downtown Plymouth MA I wept openly. I wept juxtaposing the beautiful almost fully extinct display I was witnessing with the apathy and exclusivity of modern religion. I wept for the urban sprawl and miles upon endless miles of gas stations and fast food signs which pollute the scenery, landscape, and bodies of my friends, family, and fellow man. I wept for truth. I wept watching fat children not pay any attention at all, and that their parent’s couldn’t care less. I wept for my cousin, fighting a war which is not hers, or mine, or yours, in someone else’s back yard. I wept in painful reminder that all this was a business venture,.. (keeping in mind the pilgrims were already free in holland.) I wept for the Native American’s, once bought and sold on the very shores of “America’s Home Town” I wept for the over 5 million turkeys slaughtered around this time annually. I wept for my dead father. I wept for wasted time. I wept because I am trapped in this mortal shell and can not fly high and away from it all.

Thanksgiving was declared a National Day of Mourning in 1970 when Wamsutta was asked to read a speech at a Thanksgiving celebration to commemorate the occasion, but instead of a flowery speech peppered with niceties, he instead took a lesson from their own history books and wrote a speech chronicling a few of the atrocities committed on his people. The response? Days before Wamsutta was to speak he was told his speech was unacceptable, and he would only be allowed to read a speech of their preparation.

Wamsutta instead began a now 40 year old tradition of protest and prayer for peace on top of Coles Hill. That year they were met with the token hatred, racism, and violence which has been the Native American lot since shortly after 1620.

I began a new tradition this past Thursday; one I had witnessed from afar in my youth, now one that I will continue into my adulthood.

Do this country a favor and learn who Leonard Peltier is.

Grew Up A Screw Up.

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

wtc-cigs

The Distillery
July 10 2009

Greg Fournier
Julian Wadsworth
Isai Hencia
Morgan Hararay
Mitchell Kehe

I thought Greg was wearing a cape as we approached, but it was just the way the wind was lifting his thin black jacket, the arms of which he had draped over his shoulders as he approached in his wingtips as we rounded the corner and came up upon The Distillery, just off H street in South Boston.
“We we’re just about to go and get some pie,” said the man with the almost fully faded, if I remember correctly its condition, “Pizza” inner lip tattoo; a staple food in his diet for as long as I’ve known him, back when there was still something worth stealing from the Cape Cod or Kingston malls.
“Go walk around inside, we’ll be right back.”

It being the first art show and installation from the guys who bring you Heartthrob, the bimonthly drink and drug fueled orgy, or dance party, that becomes the Middlesex Lounge in Cambridge, I was almost, then not too surprised at all to find that, despite arriving at opening, a small crowd had already begun to gather in the small space, which made good use of the area allotted it, both allowing individual pieces to stand out on their own, while, and with clear intent, lending in the arrogate, to an overall ambiance, a sense of teamwork and collaboration which inevitably comes in the years now in which some of the contributing artists have been working , both literally and figuratively, side by side; though we had barely made it down the steps and onto the floor before Greg was back, having changed his mind, and we were heading to the flower and vegetable garden off the back of the building to catch up in the grass which I had been over charged for in the park.

Back inside, a metal ramp spiraled down the room and around a well structured Pokemon bed sheet tepee, of Julian Wadsworth’s design, inside of which a VHS tape loop of an upside down shot of that sail boat shaped building in Dubai playing on a television, on top of which sat a blister package of diet pills in variable stages of consumption throughout the night, while a pile of candy lay on the floor, maybe an irreverent invitation to any toting mother looking for a place to drop her deranged inner child.

Though superficially (save the computer generated incest pornography on the postcard sized LCD screen) an illiterate child friendly show; what, with the piled candy, blanket fort, and small mountain of stuffed toys which hopefully kept the child’s attention as mom took in the drawing above them by Greg Fournier, who, with a keen eye for ugly, took and impaled Mickey Mouse on the long diseased ravaged cock of a creature in cartoon flesh tones wearing, if I remember correctly, only wingtips; while floating to the ceiling above, and dripped in a shell of multiple colors of paint, a Teletubby hung from handfuls of party balloons.

telletubby

Perhaps Isai Hencia’s pictures would be pretty to baby, as mommy read the almost illegible, one had to imagine, stream of consciousness profanity scrawled on the space below the pages where the printer had cut off, all of which were highlighted with a strobe light, a message stipulating that everything is, or was, I suppose, intentional, taped to its top as rest on the floor.

Morgan Hararay’s computer generated visuals, to which those familiar with Heartthrob are accustomed, where represented with their gallery equivalent, I felt, by a bar-code on an otherwise empty pedestal, above which a screen hung, the pedestal as well as a CG bicycle wheel and forks spun, and would vanish off the screen if the video area of the wheel was touched in actual space. While, on the floor beside another pedestal, this one with an old television, the screen of which displayed an evolving computer generated visual image, a printer spit out screen shot after screen shot.

screen-shots

With the show over we took a walk to The Rave Cave, the after-hours space which the Heartthrob collective has kept for a few years now, and which has become quite a staple in the Boston debauchee scene; now undergone a 100 percent makeover in the just over a month since I had been last, and resembling what I could best describe succinctly as what I’d imagine both Jem and Wednesday Adams would come up with after both growing up trisexual swingers, taking a bunch of ecstasy and poppers together one night, then decided to collaborate on a party space/sex dungeon; which lent perfectly to the “What the fuck fucked childhood innocence?” theme of the entire night,…or maybe it was just that the strobe light and title of the show had gotten itself right. Either way it was all broken down by the end into good obscene fun, as the music beat like a cannon so that feet could dance as animal’s until the late hours of the early daylight morning.
Greg, Julian,Isai

our second fourth:

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

We sit in a tiny glade amongst the tall thin grass, wild blueberries, and dead scrub pines cryptically carved by tunneling insects, and still find it too difficult to feel free. The voices of weekend campers carry some indiscernable distance, a more-than-occassional plane or helicopter rips the sky overhead.

A couple and their dog trudge along a nearby path and return an unenthusiastic hello when we offer ours first, and the twinge in their faces reveals they wish they hadn’t seen us as much as we wish we hadn’t seen them.

“Everybody’s just trying to steal a piece of something majestic and dignified out here,” John says.

What could the whole landscape have looked like here, or in Europe where the majority of our respective ancestries lie, hundreds or thousands of years ago? Bigger, wiser trees, endless woods and tiny paths seemingly forever, until you heard music somewhere, and found a little village somewhere utterly remote.

“Don’t you just want to hear someone else drumming with us, way off in the distance?” I ask him.

“All the time. I want to hear music all around me, I want to play it and have it swirling around in the world with me, constantly, I want to feel it, and whenever it stops I’m like:” and hangs his head and shoulders.