Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

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AUGUST 25. CHICO MUSIC & CULTURE. FREE! FREE! FREE! MUSIC GUIDE WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT LOCAL MUSIC 8 IS STEALING WRONG? 14 6 EVENTS calendar 12 FOOD & DRINK calendar

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Back to School Music Guide | Is Stealing Wrong?

Transcript of Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

Page 1: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

AUGUST 25. CHICO MUSIC & CULTURE.FREE! FREE! FREE!

MUSIC GUIDEWHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT LOCAL MUSIC

8

IS STEALINGWRONG?

14 6EVENTScalendar

12 FOOD &DRINKcalendar

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On Main

This week at...

T

1/2 OFF WELLS9-10PM

EARLY BIRD SPECIALHALF-OFF COVER BEFORE 10PM(EXLUDES SHOWS W/ PRESALE TICKETS)

|

UPCOMING SHOWS:

9/6 Con Brion & Electric Canyon Convergence 9/11 Luminaries w/ Soul Union9/12. TALKING HEADS by Naive Melodies & Swamp Zen9/13 Funk Trek & Sofa Kings9/18 Lil' Smokies & Low Flying Birds9/19 KZFR Fundraiser: MoonAlice 9/24 Kyle Hollingsworth & Swamp Zen9/25 Indubious & Black Fong9/27 Jelly Bread with Gravy Brain

AFROFUNKEXPERIENCE

PTR20011” x 17” Poster

Adobe InDesign05/17/11 mk Paste OFA tag here.

N E W C D Never Be The Same

Afrofunk Experience

FRIDAY 8/29

SCOTT PEMBERTONTRIO W/

SATURDAY 8/30BLACK STAR SAFARI

ALLIE BATTAGLIA& THE MUSICALBREWING CO.

FRIDAY 9/5w/ DYLAN’S DHARMA

w/ PITCHBLAKBRASS BAND

DOORS OPEN AT 9PM

MYKAL ROSE& REGGAE ANGELS

THURSDAY 8/28

A L L A G E S U N T I L 1 0 P MEAT. DRINK. PLAY.

319 MAIN STREET | 530-892-2473

GREAT FOOD! LIVE MUSIC!LESSONS, LEAGUES & TOURNAMENTS!

FREEHOUR OF POOL(WITH PURCHASE)

FRIDAY25 29

LIVE JAZZ8PM

THURSDAY28 SUNDAYOPEN MIC COMEDY NIGHT - EVERY OTHER WEEKHAPPY HOUR 2-6PM M-FPOOL RATES CUT IN 1/2!

MONDAY 31

LIVE MUSIC8PM 8PM

SATURDAY30

MUDSTONE

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Take an Exotic Adventure into the morality of theft, when a brazen young man gets caught red handed by our own veteran street urchin and intrepid question-asker, Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff.

Get to know the local music scene and find out just how much there really is to choose from. We have a comprehensive list of [hopefully] every band in town, courtesy of local musician and promoter Sesar Sanchez, plus our staff weighs in on a few of our favorites.

This Week... Columns

by Bob [email protected]

Immaculate Infection

by Zooey [email protected]

Comical Ruminations

by Eli [email protected]

Productivity Wasted

by Logan Kruidenierlogankruidenier.tumblr.com

Supertime!

by Anthony Peyton PorterFrom The Edge

by Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff

Exotic Adventures in Smalltown, USA

by Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff

Exotic Adventures in Smalltown, USA

For the Funk of itScene Report

by Koz [email protected]

Kozmik Debris

PAGE 6

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PAGE 8

PAGE 4

PAGE 5

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by Amy [email protected]

Letter From the Editor

Been Caught Stealing

Hey, Music!Publisher/Managing EditorAmy Olson

[email protected]

Creative DirectorTanner Ulsh

[email protected]

Entertainment EditorAlex Light

[email protected]/submit-your-

event/

DesignersLiz Watters, Mike [email protected]

DeliveriesJoey Murphy, Jennifer Foti

Contributing WritersZooey Mae, Bob Howard, Howl, Koz McKev, Tommy Diestel, Eli Schwartz,

Mona Treme, Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff, Jon Williams, Crown, Alex

O’Brien

PhotographyJessica Sid

Vincent Latham

NerdDain Sandoval

[email protected]

AccountingBen Kirby

Director of Operations Karen Potter

Owner Bill Fishkin

[email protected]

The Synthesis is both owned and published by Apartment 8 Productions. All things published in these pages are the property of Apartment 8 Productions and may not be reproduced, copied or used in any other way, shape or form without the written consent of Apartment 8 Productions. One copy (maybe two) of the Synthesis is available free to residents in Butte, Tehama and Shasta counties. Anyone caught removing papers will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. All opinions expressed throughout the Synthesis are those of the author and are not necessarily the same opinions as Apartment 8

Productions and the Synthesis.The Synthesis welcomes, wants, and will even desperately beg for letters because we care what you think. We can be reached via snail mail at the Synthesis, 210 W. 6th St., Chico, California, 95928. Email [email protected]. Please sign all of your letters with your real name, address and preferably a phone number. We may also edit your

submission for content and space.

For 20 years The Synthesis’ goal has remained to provide a forum for entertainment, music, humor, community awareness, opinions,

and change.

210 West 6th Street Chico Ca 95928

[email protected]

Volume 21 Issue 1August 25, 2014

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4 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

Welcome Back!I can’t believe summer is already over. Seriously, I can’t believe it because it’s still hot as the dickens (the dickens, I tells ya!).

Welcome back (and welcome here-for-the-first-time), students. You didn’t miss too much over the summer (or over the course of your entire life—am I driving that distinction home too hard?), Chico is pretty nearly as you left it: bright and dry and full of music.

We decided to do something special for you this year and introduce you to the Chico we love best. Our cover feature this week is an exhaustive (exhausting?) list of every band in town, with a few of our staff favorites highlighted. We encourage you to memorize it (or hold onto a copy for reference, whatever’s easier), as you’ll see a lot of those bands popping up in our music calendar and may wonder who they are. No matter what kind of scene you’re into, Chico has something great to offer. That, on top of Bidwell Park and the Bloody Marys at Duffy’s, is what makes this place truly wonderful.

I would be remiss, however, if I didn’t offer you any of our traditional “Welcome to Chico” tips. I like to keep it pretty simple:

1. Lock your bike. Like, all the time… thoroughly, with really strong locks, and take your light and anything detachable with you. Lock it when it’s on your porch, or in your backyard, or if you’re just popping in for a second, or if you’re in a really nice neighborhood. Register it, take pictures of all the weird little scratches, write a preemptive facebook post letting people know to keep an eye out for it, treat every moment you have with it like it might be your last. Seriously, there seems to be an organized crime ring with mystical powers of invisibility here in town that uses their gift/curse primarily for stealing bikes and parts of bikes during the time it takes to blink your eyes.

2. We all know that forcing or pressuring people into sex is actually rape, but it also bears reminding that you should never have sex with anyone who isn’t sober enough to decide if this is what they want. It’s not rocket

science: if an inebriated person is all over you, the right thing to do is make sure they get home safely.

3. Watch out for your friends. Assume they’re full of crap when they say they’re good to drive or that they want to walk home or that the guy they just met is cool. Drunk people are stupid, stick together and call cabs.

4. The Donut Nook on East Ave puts out their fresh donuts at midnight and they’re the most delicious things that ever happened to your mouth. Plus you can watch them being made through this little window that makes the kitchen look like a donut-maker terrarium.

5. Don’t put giant, spray-painted signs in your yard that say “Daughter Drop off.” For one, the only people who will be laughing are your douchey bros, and they’ll laugh at anything. Ain’t nobody gonna actually drop off their daughter with you. If anything, you’re just going to make women want to stay the hell away and get a bunch of people pissed off; it’s a negative return on your investment.

by Amy [email protected]

Letter From the Editor

PET OF THE WEEK

YoshiYoshi is a young, energetic dog who would likely do best in a very active home where he can get plenty of exercise. He enjoys being around people almost as much as he enjoys running and playing! Yoshi would love to be the center of attention in your home where he can get all the love he deserves!

Now Hear This

Tanner

Liz

Tara

Dinah

Andrea

Becca

Alex

Run the Jewels - “Blockbuster Night Pt 1”

Milky Chance - “Down by the River”

Ingred Michaelson - “Can’t Help Falling in

Love”

Jonathan Coulton - “Code Monkey”

Billy Bragg & Wilco - “California Stars”

Two Door Cinema Club - “Sun”

Every Time I Die - “Roman Holiday”

SYNTHESIS WEEKLY PLAYLIST

2579 Fair Street Chico, CA 95928 (530) 343-7917 • buttehumane.org

Run The Jewels

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We pay cash for your recyclables!!CRV ALUMINUM CANS $2.00/Pound

E-WAStE! We pay 5¢ per pound for TV’s , Computers, Monitors and Laptops!!

CASH! CASH! CASH!

2565 S. Whitman Place, Chico (Corner of East Park Avenue and S. Whitman Place) 343-5500

And, as a courtesy to our customers, we’ll accept all other consumer electronics, such as fax machines, printers, VHS players, etc. as a drop-off, with no payments** Some restrictions may apply

Call for more information on getting cash for other recyclable materials.

FACEBOOK.COM/SYNTHESISCHICO 5

The movie Her was controversial in its own right, what with its heavy criticism of electronic companionship and data addiction, but featured within it was a fictional game designed by artist, animator, and developer David O’Reilly. In July, O’Reilly marketed and released a real game by the name of Mountain, and now it’s got everyone arguing whether or not it’s actually a real game. Even more than that, it’s got people debating whether O’Reilly is a sensitive genius, malicious confidence man, or just an imbecile. Although it’s been out for a while, it was only just released on Steam, and has been thrust into the spotlight that it never held beyond a curiosity ran by reviewers.

In Mountain, you are little more than a camera orbiting a large mountain floating in space. Interactivity is very low. The game advertises itself as having no controls, and in the options menu the section labeled controls has only one option: nothing. Yet that’s somewhat misleading, as the game holds little secrets like a button that has the mountain tell you what its thinking, and keys that play piano notes and unlock secrets all their own. The real appeal is not in the direct influence, however, but rather in the passive intake of the game, the lonely mountain and its sometimes silly, sometimes faux-zen thoughts, the weather and the objects that your mountain dumbly collides with in space. The lack of input yet definitive growth places Mountain somewhere between a complex screensaver and a tamagotchi.

After playing the game and reviewing its community page on Steam, I’m not as interested in the game itself as I am by the furor surrounding it. With its newfound

attention, Mountain has become the subject of a debate familiar in the world of art: “is this really anything?” The same was said about abstract art when it became new, and indeed, the same is often said by non-believers of video games with aspirations of seriousness. Many spit that Mountain is not a game, only a screensaver, but a screensaver can’t save its progress and unlock secrets. Others call it a work of art that requires a deep seated soulfulness. It has been called “uplifting,” “sad,” “more real... than anything else in my computer,” and “an existential nightmare.” Of his own creation, O’Reilly said “It can just be. Anything people discover beyond that is wonderful.”

Some find the game nothing less than hurtful, a figurehead of a bad trend of useless and vapid games devoid of challenge and spare of mechanics. That it was greenlighted and widely released on Steam, is, to the naysayers, the showing symptom of frivolous stupidity and braindead pretentiousness. For me, the game is somewhere in between: a light and lilting little game that tries to capture emotional experience but mostly just lives like a desktop pet with a habit for existentialism. I don’t know if I’m playing into O’Reilly’s hands or inspiring him or what, because his intentions are impossible to know.

Whether it dreams of being a unique piece of art, a money-grubbing scam, or a satire of what will pass for a game, it’s 99 cents and a unique little creature.

Mountain

by Eli SchwartzProductivity Wasted

BIG OPINIONS, VERY LITTLE GAME

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A Diverting Tale

I enter [Corporate Food Establishment]. Into the cool, conditioned air; into the catchy, dispiriting muzak which comes from hidden speakers; across the [Corporate Color Scheme]-colored linoleum, smooth and hard; past the posters depicting various [Corporate Food Items].

The only other customer takes her [Corporate Food Item] and leaves. It’s my turn. I order a [Corporate Food Item]. The Young Man in [Corporate Food Establishment Uniform w/flare] prepares the [Corporate Food Item], hands it to me. I hand him a twenty, ready to take my change.

But the Young Man hesitates a bit; acts a little nervous. Something about his behavior prompts me to glance at the

register readout. And that’s when I see it. The amount I owe goes briefly to $0.00 before the register opens.

He just Clear-No-Sale-d me! I know just what he’s done because I used to do precisely that back when I was a teenager. Like all the fucking time.

The move goes like this: 1) Customer hands you cash. 2) Enter amount of sale so they see it on register. 3) Say amount out loud. 4) In quick succession press Clear (which erases what you’ve wrung up) and then No Sale (which causes the register to open). 5) Make change. 6) The register is now X-dollars over. Take that money out later and spend it on 40 ozs and 20-sacks.

From the age of 14—when I ran away and lived on the streets for about six weeks—until I was 22 (I’m 35 now), I had a whole playbook of lame little scams like this one. So did pretty much all my friends. It’s how we got by. I lived in one of the wealthiest towns in California—Santa Barbara—but my friends, we were the (relatively) poor kids. Our whole attitude to the business community there was oppositional: they had

more than they needed and we had less; they wanted to extract our labor and money and we wanted to extract their goods and money. It was Us vs. Them. We had an entire underground gift economy; except that what we were giving away was our employers’. If I needed photocopies made, or CDs, or bagels, I knew who was working where.

If I needed a bite to eat, I’d go to a McDonalds and tell them that my dad and I had just came through the drive-thru and that our bag was one Quarter Pounder short. Invariably, they’d just give it to me. I didn’t even have a dad, and I certainly hadn’t just gone through the drive-thru.

I used to smuggle food out of the Soup Plantation salad bar, through the back doors, to the homeless people who hung out back there. Almost went to Juvenile Hall for that.

Of course, this sort of thing faded away. I would never dream of doing such things now. I went to college; my morals shifted; I make more money now; getting caught sounds a lot more embarrassing. But I haven’t given much thought to what I did back then, except to briefly marvel at how crazy we all were, how ubiquitous it all was.

“Hey, Clear No Sale. I used to do that all the time,” I say to the young man. He looks down, all fidgety, freaking out and, frankly, really shitty at playing it off. “No, don’t worry,” I say, trying to soothe him. “I don’t know your situation, I respect you, man. Don’t worry.” He says nothing.

I ask him for my receipt. Sure enough, it reads “$0.00.” I take my [Corporate Food Item], go home, begin consuming it. But I’m thinking about him. And I’m thinking about that alone-feeling, trying-to-survive Teenage Me. I’m thinking about what I did back then and whether it was wrong. I’m thinking I’m going to go back and see if I can interview the Young Man. And so I do. And he agrees.

“A couple of months ago I was pissed at him and I was kinda like ‘fuck him,’ the Young Man says, between bites, when I ask him about the first time. I’m treating him to burritos and beer. The “him” the Young Man is referring to is the Franchise Owner. “It was late at night. I

BITING THE HAND THAT (BARELY) FEEDS YOU

He just Clear-No-Sale-d me! I know just what he’s done because I used to do precisely that back when I was a teenager.

just did it.”

The Owner, the young man tells me, inherited the [Corporate Food Establishment], plus several other businesses. He’s a rich Trustafarian who drives around in fancy cars. He threatens his young employees, saying things like “I have a stack of resumes” and “you’re lucky to have a job in this economy.” He pays the minimum legal wage.

Now, the Young Man Clear-No-Sale-s two or three cash purchases a shift on average, pocketing an extra $20 or so. No one besides he and I know that he does it, not even The Young Man’s girlfriend. “People like having secrets,” he says.

“Is stealing wrong?” I ask the Young Man.

He takes a big breath. Exhales. “I think stealing can be one of the shittiest things people can do,” he says. “If I had to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ I’d say ‘yes.’ It’s wrong. But…morally…in this situation…I don’t care. I worry more about losing my job.” He takes a sip of beer. “It’s a gray area. In this case, I don’t think it’s wrong.”

The Young Man rents a small room. He doesn’t go out to eat. He even quit smoking weed. He scrapes by. Without the Clear-No-Sale-ing, he makes just about $1000 a month. But it’s not even really about the money, he says.

“I’m not necessarily doing it to survive,” he says. “It helps, it helps, don’t get me wrong. But I don’t like the way I’m treated. It’s making it fair, almost.”

I ask the Young Man if he’s ever been stolen from. He tells me that, once, he had a drug-addicted friend steal from him. “But that’s, like, betrayal,” he says. “That’s a whole different thing.”

“And what if the Owner were here right now, and said that what you’ve done is betrayal?” I ask him.

“I’d tell him I know it’s wrong,” he says. “But I’d also tell him he deserves it.”

Later, I call Professor Tom Imhoff, a Philosopher who, this fall, is teaching (among

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other things) Criminal Justice Ethics at Chico State. What Professor Imhoff says fits right in with what the Young Man told me.

“It’s all about respect,” Professor Imhoff says. “People who hurt other people do so because they feel they are being treated unfairly. This isn’t a justification; it’s an explanation. It’s about the way people are made. People need respect. It’s one of the most central psychological facts about us. This guy’s [the Young Man is] acting out nonviolently, because he doesn’t feel he’s being treated with respect. Respect is central to why human beings do what they do. When you look at that—all these abstract moral arguments become irrelevant to actually changing human behavior.”

This seems right to me. When I think back to my teenage thievery, I was actually a very moral (if somewhat confused) kid. I never took anything from anywhere that treated me with respect, as an equal, as a human being—or any place that couldn’t afford it. I don’t think the Young Man would either. But I perceived the entire system as being unfair; I saw businesses as seeing me instrumentally, that is, as an object for their profit. So I returned the favor.

“If you look at societies that actually take care of their people, and pay them well, we have very low rates of violence,” Professor Imhoff explains. “But in this country you’re on your own.”

But you’re not on your own, Young Man. There are all kinds of businesses that treat their employees with respect and dignity and fairness, right here in this town. There are people out there who give a fuck. Try to find

one of those jobs. Because stealing diminishes you, in some way, I think. And, one day, when you own a business, remember what you’ve learned. I know you will. But to all those business owners (and we must love them, too, because they must be the saddest and loneliest of all) who use their employees and wield power over them without consideration: like the

Professor says, “In this country, you’re on your own.”

And we can’t be on our own, we can’t. We’ve got to have each other’s backs. Because, without kindness, without respect, without each other, what, in the end, do we have?

But what about justification? What about Morality? Does the Young Man do wrong? Did Teenage-Me do wrong? Is stealing just wrong? The world would certainly be an easier place to navigate if we were to simply answer “yes.” A moral landscape of “grays” and subjective ethical calculations is a slippery one on which to find one’s footing; one’s way.

And yet, if we answer “yes,” where does that leave Robin Hood or the woman who steals bread from a child-molesting, puppy-torturing Nazi for her starving baby?

Let me answer only for myself, for Teenage-Me. I think I did do wrong. Not that my actions weren’t without justification, but that I could have done better.

He’s a rich Trustafarian who drives around in fancy cars. He threatens his young employees

by Emiliano Garcia-Sarnoff

Exotic Adventures in Smalltown, USA

Page 8: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

8 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

ALAN RIGG TRIO Jazz

ABERRANCEMetal

ALIEN HELLBOPRock ‘n’ Roll

ALLI BATTAGLIA AND THE MUSICAL BREWING CO. Funk/Rock

ALL FIRED UP Cover/Rock ‘n’ Roll

A.L.O.Electronic/Dance

THE ALTERNATORSCover/Rock ‘n’ Roll

THE AMERICAS Indie/Rock

ASTRONAUT Progressive Metal

BADGER Punk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

BANDMASTER RUCKUSRock ‘n’ Roll/Other

DJ BECCADJ/Dance

BIG MO AND THE FULL MOON BANDRock ‘n’ Roll/Jam

BIG SLIMRap/Hip Hop/R&B

BIGGS ROLLER Punk/Country

BILLY THE ROBOTElectronic/Bass/Dance

BIONIX Electronic/Beats

BLACK FONG Funk/Jam/Rock ‘n’ Roll/Dance

BLASTER DEADPunk

BLOOD CABANA Metal/Thrash

THE BLUE MERLES Country/Blues

BRAN CROWN Singer Songwriter

BORN INTO THISPunk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

BOSS 501Rocksteady/Reggae/Dancehall

BROKEN RODEOAlt Country/Singer Songwriter

CANNON AND THE LION OF JUDAHReggae

CHAD BUSHCountry / Covers

CHARLIE ROBINSON Jazz

CHEMICAL BURN Metal

CHICO JAZZ COLLECTIVEJazz

CHRIS SHADT BANDFunk/Soul/Dance

CHRISTINE LEPADO TRIO Jazz/Soul

CHUCK EPPERSON JR. BAND Rock ‘n’ Roll

CITIES Post Rock/Heavy/Shoegaze

CLOUDS OF FIREMetal/Progressive

CLOUDS ON STRINGSProgressive/Rock ‘n’ Roll

CRIMINAL WAVE Punk/Hardcore/Rock ‘n’ Roll

DANIEL VERA Singer Songwriter

DAVE ELKE Jazz/Soul/Rock

DAVID ENNIS Singer Songwriter

LOCAL BAND DIRECTORYList by Sesar Sanchez at chicobands.tumblr.comBios by Amy Olson, Alex Light, Zooey Mae, Bob Howard, and Jon Williams

AVE GRAVE

After spending nearly a decade in beloved Chico-based “home school rock” band The Shimmies, Sean Galloway has branched out on his own to develop a solo project titled Ave Grave. Carried over from The Shimmies are the haunting melodies and memorable arrangements that we’ve come to know and expect from this incredibly talented musician. Galloway’s voice is that rare, elusive breed in the vein of Thom Yorke or Jeff Buckley which boasts an expansive emotive sweep, and a smoothness that slides easily over each note. What really makes Ave Grave such a memorable sound is Sean’s ability to infuse his own personality into each song. Running through every song is a current that’s equal parts melancholy and self-deprecating humor, which is tied together beautifully with Galloway’s innate sense of musicality that’s been perfected over the years. After a year of working on his first full-length album, he’s kicking off a tour which starts at Cafe Coda on August 30. -ZM

AMAROK Doom/Heavy/Metal

Amarok are so heavy it’s almost irresponsible. With songs stretching into the 18-20-minutes-long-range, these local doomsayers liberally use Occam’s Razor to pare down heavy metal into a dread-inducing distillate. You might be aware of various heavy metal stereotypes, typically involving macho posturing, flashy guitar histrionics and mile-a-minute tempos, but Amarok have no use for such superfluity, and that’s why they are among my favorite bands to grace our local metal scene. Their live shows are almost liturgical in their solemn observance of all things slow and low, and I implore you to experience it. Be forewarned: Amarok play at volumes that literally cause shortness of breath. Earplugs are recommended. -JW

ARMED FOR APOCALYPSE Sludgy/Heavy/Metal

Local globetrotting riff peddlers Armed For Apocalypse are heroes in Chico’s metal scene. Nobody really makes it “big” forming a hyper aggressive sludge metal band around here, but Armed For Apocalypse have been repping Chico among metal heavyweights such as Crowbar and Sepultura across the country and overseas, making a name for themselves in the underground with an incendiary live show. Even if you aren’t quite partial to mosh pit shenanigans, you owe it to yourself to make it out to an Armed For Apocalypse gig. The riffs are real and Nick Harris is a spectacle behind the drum kit. -JW

BIG TREE FALL DOWNSka/Rock ‘n’ Roll/Reggae

Ska is just one of those things that you forget you love until you slam into a wall of horns at a house party, and when it’s good it can be so stupidly good. Big Tree Fall down is bright and loud and happy; they’ll remind you how easy it is to skank with a drink in each hand, and how uneven dirt under your feet can propel you around a dance floor. Strangers become friends, friends become parents and then you don’t see them as much and it feels like they’ve become strangers but that’s fine because strangers just became friends! Don’t worry about it, just go see this band. -AO

BUNNYMILK Singer Songwriter

Kelly Brown and Lisa Marie combine banjo, electric guitar, and the sweetest harmonies you’ve ever heard to create mesmerizing, haunting songs. If you had to peg them to a category, alt-country or Americana would be the closest, but they are a truly unique entity here in the Chico music scene. Brown has recently been adding loops to round out the duo’s sound, allowing their subdued style to carry in some of the town’s louder venues, but really the best thing to do at a Bunnymilk performance is shut your mouth and open your ears. Do this and you may come to realize that Bunnymilk is delicious. -BH

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DEAD MAN’S HAND Country/Rock

DEAR MISGUIDED Rock

DECADES Covers

DESCENT Post-Metal/Instrumental

DISCO CHURCH Electronic/Dance

DMJ Rap/Hip Hop

DR. BECKY SAGERS, PH.D Rap/Hip Hop

DUMPSTAR Noise/Punk

DYLAN’S DHARMA Jam/Rock

ELECTRIC CANYON CONVERGENCE Jam/Soul

ENGRAVED IN ARMOR Metal

ERIC PETER Jazz/Guitarist

ESOTERIC Rap/Metal

EVERY HAND BETRAYED Metal

FIGHT MUSIC Punk/Rock

EVIN WOLVERTON Singer Songwriter

EYERE EYES Bass/Electronic/Dance

FERA Singer Songwriter

FILTHY LUKE Singer Songwriter

SR. FRANCIS LEE HOWARD Singer Songwriter

FURLOUGH FRIDAYSRock ‘n’ Roll

GENTLEMAN’S COUP Rock ‘n’ Roll/ Psychedelic

GIANT’S IN DISGUISE Rock ‘n’ Roll

GIGANTES Pop/Punk/Metal

GORDY OHLIGER THE BANJO-OLOGIST Banjo

GORILLA X MONSOON Punk/Hardcore

GRAVY BRAIN Jam/Funk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

GUERRILLA GORILLA Punk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

HEATHER MICHELLE AND THE MAKE YOU MINES Singer Songwriter

HEARSES Doom/Noise

HIMP C Rap/Hip Hop

HOLLY TAYLORJazz/Singer

INTO THE OPEN EARTH Heavy/Metal

IRA WALKER Blues/Rock ‘n’ Roll

JAY DECAY Singer Songwriter

JBIZ Rap/Hip Hop

JEFF PERSHING BAND Jam/Rock/Blues

JOE GOODWIN Singer Songwriter

JOHN PAUL GUTIERREZ Singer Songwriter

JOHNNY AND THE BOOTLEGGERS Covers/Country/Rock

JOHNSON & MILLER Acoustic/Harmonies/Singer

JON HARTLESS Rap/Hip Hop

JORGE JONZE Rock/Punk

KYLE WILLIAMS Singer Songwriter/Soul

LAURIE DANA Singer/Jazz

LISA VALENTINE Singer Songwriter/Soul

LISH BILLS Singer Songwriter

LOGAN 5 / DAXOPHONICS EDM

LOS CABALLITOS DE LA CANCION Multi Ethnic/Dance

LOS PAPI CHULOS Latin/Dance

LYNGUNSTIX Rap/Hip Hop

MAD BOB HOWARD Rock ‘n’ Roll

THE MAKER’S MILERock/Acoustic

MAMUSESinger Songwriter

MANDOLYN MAY Singer Songwriter

MANDY JO AND THE HOLY MACKEREL Bluegrass/Acoustic/Covers

MOM AND DADNoise/Rock

MONDEGREENS Singer Songwriter/Rock ‘n’ Roll

MONTH OF SUNDAYS Acoustic/Folk

MOSSY CREEK Bluegrass/Acoustic

MOTOWN FILTHY Covers/Rock/Motown

MR. BANG Punk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

THE MUDDY SOURS Rock ‘n’ Roll

NINA LOCA Rap/Hip Hop

NORTHERN TRADITIONZ Covers/Country/Rock

NOTHING LEFT Solo/Acoustic/Punk

AUBREY DEBAUCHERY AND THE BROKEN BONES Singer Songwriter/Rock ‘n’ Roll

Ah Aubrey Pope, how I do love thee… In truth, I’ve been coming to Aubrey’s shows for over a decade, since she was a solo act, singing in tones both breathy and sweet with simple acoustic accompaniment. Over the years she’s evolved her sound, going from the aforementioned breathy and sweet to rich, throaty vocals and infectious melodies, all the while building up her army of accompaniment from the angry twang of Aubrey Debauchery & The Puke Boots to the rich and diverse sound of Aubrey Debauchery & The Broken Bones. With the addition of band members Joshua Hegg, Michael Bone, Gavin Fitzgerald, Matthew Weiner and Alex Coffin on keys, guitar, bass, violin and drums, respectively, the influences have expanded in all different directions, making their live show a veritable explosion of energetic hooks and memorable lyrics that will have you kickin’ your heels up all night and singing their tunes for days afterwards. -ZM

THE HASTA LA PIZZAS Rock ‘n’ Roll/Surf

More trashy than Grundgetta Grouch in a tube top made from a ripped up pair of BVDs, more rock than a high school garage, and more rare than a surf-riding unicorn; Hasta La Pizzas pop up out of nowhere just a few times a year to bless us with the maximum level of trashy surf rock legally allowed. The three loveable members of this band have multiple other projects, but there’s just something magical about Hasta La Pizzas. If you hear that they’re playing, get immediately off your ass and go to there. -AO

THE LOLOS Indie/Rock ‘n’ Roll

The most attractive band in town (except for Sorin. No one’s as sexy as Sorin. Nobody!) Like gypsies, they take cues from myriad styles to add unique spices to their sweet, eclectic rock songs. I haven’t seen a female drummer yet who can bring the ROCK like Kenzie Warner can. Listen to “The Style & The Substance.” -AL

ICKO SICKO Punk/Rock

It was difficult to pick a favorite out of Chico’s thriving punk scene, but special mention must be made for the hardcore punk unit Icko Sicko. You’ll likely see these piss-and-vinegar punkers tear it up at a house party or Chico’s long-running pizzeria-cum-punk/metal venue Monstros Pizza, and it’s a sight to behold. Frontman Danny Canchola is about as kinetic as punk frontmen get, and the musicians soundtracking his spitfire stories of alienation, blue-collar angst and social pathology drip with youthful vigor. -JW

Page 10: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

10 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

OFF THE RECORD Covers/Rock ‘n’ Roll

OISTERS Punk

OUTSIDE LOOKING IN Hardcore/Punk

PAGEANT DADS Rock ‘n’ Roll/Theatrical

PERSIAN SKIRTS Rock ‘n’ Roll

PERPETUAL DRIFTERS Rock ‘n’ Roll/Indie

PRESENT DAY ENTHUSIASTS Rock ‘n’ Roll

THE PUSHERSPunk/Rock ‘n’ Roll

PYRX Weed Rap

RED SKY Sludge/Metal

THE RAILFLOWERS Singers/Harmonies

RANDY MORTON Country/Singer Songwriter

RECKONING Covers/Acoustic

THE REMAINDER Rock ‘n’ Roll/Alternative

THE RESONATORS Hip Hop/Rap

ROCK RIDGE BLUEGRASS BAND Bluegrass

RYAN DAVIDSON Singer Songwriter/Punk/Irish

RUBY HOLLOW BAND Blue/Rock ‘n’ Roll/Soul

THE RUGS Rock ‘n’ Roll

SALSA BELLA Salsa

SAPPHIRE SOUL Covers

SEVERANCE PACKAGE Rock ‘n’ Roll/Punk

SHIMMIES Indie/Rock

SHE FETUS Folk/Acoustic

SHADOW LIMB Post-Rock/Metal/Math

SHANKERS Rock ‘n’ Roll/Blues/Garage/THE BEST EVER!

SICK BIRD Hip Hop/Rap/R&B

SOFA KING Funk/Rock ‘n’ Roll/Soul

SPY PICNIC Covers/Rock ‘n’ Roll

SURROUNDED BY GIANTS Post-Rock/Progressive

SWAMP ZEN Jam/Rock ‘n’ Roll

THREE FINGERS WHISKEY Rock ‘n’ Roll/Country

THICK AND THIN Americana

TODD HARRISON Solo Fingerstyle Guitarist

TOUCH FUZZY GET DIZZY Heavy/Harmonies/Metal

TROX AND THE TERRIBLES Rock ‘n’ Roll

TWISTED STRATEGIES Rock/Rap

TYBOX Rap/HipHop/R&B

UGLY AS HELL Rock ‘n’ Roll/Blues

UFO VS. NASA Rock/EDM

THE VESUVIANS Rock/Dance

WANDERERS & WOLVES Rock

WAVES OF LEVIATHAN Metal

WEST BY SWAN Indie/Rock

WOLFTHUMP Drums/Dance

YULE LOGS Christmas/Rock ‘n’ Roll/In it for the money

SURROGATE Indie/Rock ‘n’ Roll

Attending a Surrogate show has become a Chico rite of passage of sorts. At each show there’s a healthy throng of folks that crowd the stage and blissfully yell every single word to every single song. During my first Surrogate show, I was confused; how did all these people know all the lyrics? After my third or fourth show, I totally got it. These boys absolutely know how to create the songs that get stuck in your head, the songs that you find yourself upgrading to a premium Spotify account for, just so that you can keep hitting repeat on “Lovers” and “Exercise Machines.” Imagine your favorite early 2000’s indie rock band and shoegaze-y pop band had a baby, and that baby wants to make love to your earholes. That baby is Surrogate. Give it a listen, you’ll be glad you did. -ZM

SISTERHOODS Post-Rock/Indie

Another local outfit whose music is delightfully difficult to classify, Sisterhoods create a sonic, driving landscape over which songstress Nikki Sierra’s lush and powerful vocals weave and float. The sound the band creates sends shivers up the spine. The music pushes forward and upward from one wailing crescendo to the next. It is hypnotic, ethereal, otherworldly. Sisterhoods will transport you to the outer edges of consciousness and bring you back safe and sound, with your brain blasted wide-open, but otherwise more or less intact. Think DMT without the teeth-grinding, nail-biting, white-knuckle terror. -BH

PUB SCOUTS/ HA’PENNY BRIDGEIrish/Celtic/Acoustic

I’m sorry, but I couldn’t bring myself to separate Chico’s two long-running Celtic folk music ensembles, The Pub Scouts and Ha’penny Bridge. I have a soft spot for this kind of music, and I implore our incoming freshmen to find such a tender spot in your soul. The former is something of a Chico institution, soundtracking Friday’s happy hour at Duffy’s Tavern for the better part of 23 years, and the latter quickly established itself as a more-than-reliable source of charming originals and traditionals during its six years of existence, regularly gracing our annual Chico State-hosted World Music Festival as well as local venues such as Café Coda and the Chico Women’s Center, among others. -JW

PAT HULL Singer Songwriter

An acoustic singer-songwriter who spends plenty of time here, as well in Santa Cruz, as well as in New York. Listening to any of his six albums, you’ll notice first his clear-as-crystal voice, hitting notes with an angelic sensitivity. I cry sometimes when I listen to “My Flame.” -AL

BOGGJazz/Progressive

Not quite jazz in the discerning mind of the jazz enthusiast, but too good to be called anything else. See them live at Cafe Coda, and just about everywhere else, and witness the wonder of bassist Gavin Fitzgerald. You will learn the true meaning of the “bass face.” -AL

COLD BLUE MOUNTAIN Heavy/Sludge/Post - Metal

A metal band that actually does their name justice. Bassist Adrian Hammons has the fattest tone in the area. Listening to these guys is like riding the eagles through the Misty Mountains, with teeming throngs of orcs blackening the ground below. I’m trying to say it’s heavy and epic music, man. -AL

IO TORUS Progressive/Metal/Riffs

“Progressive Metal” is a thing now, and these guys are Chico bastions of the genre. Songs will run for over seven minutes, all expectations of dexterity, complexity, and technicality will be exceeded, and your mind will thusly be blown. Their singer Austin Lynx is one of the best metal vocalists ever. -AL

SORIN Metal

This is my band. It’s progressive metal. If I say anything more than that, it will be revealed how superior I think Sorin is compared to the rest of existence, so I’ll shut up now. -AL

MICHELIN EMBERS Blues/Rock ‘n’ Roll

What do you get when you combine ukelele, lap steel guitar, warbling vocals, and an archaic contraption out of the Appalachians called the gut-bucket? The answer is the Michelin Embers. Formed a few years back by Johnny Shanker to play songs under a railroad trestle, the band went through a few different line-ups before settling into the current configuration. Let’s hope they can keep it together because the band is playing and recording some mighty fine music. From one song to the next the Embers take you from foot-stomping, to reminiscing, to tear-shedding. The band calls the style of music they play “western skiffle,” but check it out yourself. -BH

Page 11: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014
Page 12: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

WE ARE LOOKING FOR CONTESTANTS TO BATTLE IT OUT IN DUFFY'S 25 YEAR ANNIVERSARY

GONG SHOW ON SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 27TH AT 8:00PM.

What's a GONG SHOW? Hungry amateurs will compete in a talent contest

that will be judged by a panel of local celebrities. If the act is so bad that the judges can't bear to watch it, they have the power to hit the gong and send the

performer or performers off the stage. If they are not gonged, they move forward in the competition where they can win incredible prizes sponsored by none other than Duffy's Tavern. We are searching for that perfect act -there is no boundary! Dance,

song, performance, strange tricks, anything goes as long as you don't get GONGED!

Performers need to sign up at Duffy's before Tuesday, September 2 at Duffy's Tavern.

337 MAIN ST.• 530-343-1745

12 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

Food & Drink

JOIN YOUR FRIENDS HERE BEFORE

'THE BUTCHER SHOP PB6J I $6.50 SHOT OF JAMESON IRISH WHISKEY WITH BOTTLE OF PBR ·

We need to drink, too!

Come see our beautiful Patio! Happy Hour 4-6: Wander Food Truck on

Tacotruck.biz and Beers on

WE OPEN AT 12:00PM MIMOSAS WITH FRESH

Closed Mon-Fri Happy Hour 12-4PM $3 Sierra & Domestic Pints

6PM -close $1 Off Pitchers

Closed $3 Sierra and Domestic Pints $ 3.50 Ka mis

ALL DAY!

Closed WING WEDNESDAY!

$2 for 3 Wings

8PM-Close $2.50 Fire Eater Shots

$5.50 DBL Bacardi Cocktails

Open 9PM Mon-Fri No Cover! Happy Hour 12-4PM

$3 Sierra & Domestic Pints

$3.50 Soccer moms $6 Dbl Roaring Vodka

Open 8PM Mon-Fri Happy Hour 12-4PM

Bartender Specials $3 Sierra & Domestic $314oz. Slushies Pints $4 20oz. Slushies

Weekend Blast Off!!

8-close $5 Blasters

Open 8PM Open at llAM

Bartender Specials $4.50 Bloody Mary $314oz. Slushies $5.50 Absolut Pep par $4 20oz. Slushies Bloody Marys

Smirnoff Promo Noon- 6PM lOPM -Close $8 / $9 SN Dom Pitchers Drink Specials, Prizes $5.50 DBL Bacardi &more! Cocktails

CLOSED lOAM -2PM $5 Bottles of Champagne with entree $4.50 Bloody Mary $5.50 Absolut Pep par Bloody Marys

Ol1~ . A~ ~~~n.., .~·~ . CHICO

Daily Happy Hour Open Mic Comedy Night $6.99 Pulled pork sand w/ from 4-7PM Every Other Week! fries or salad PBR $2.25 Everyday! Happy Hour2-6pm M-F 25 cent wings from

$1.00 off Sierra and Dom halftime 'til they're gone! Summertime Special Pitchers MONSTER MONDAY $2.50 Wells & Sierra $1.00 off PBR & Olympia SPECIALS 6PM-CLOSE Nevada Drafts during Pool Rates Cut in 1/2! BEER $3.50/4.50/5.50/6.50 Giants &A's Games! FREE Pool after lOPM

Daily Happy Hour Two Dollar Tuesdays! Chicken Strip Sand only from 4-7PM $2 PBRs $2 Tacos! $6.99 before 6 PM PBR $2.25 Everyday! Happy Hour2-6pm M-F TWO BUCK TUESDAY

$1.00 off Sierra and Dom 6-llpm Anniversary Special Pitchers $2 Rolling Rock, Olympia PB&J - Shot of Jameson $1.00 off PBR and & Single Wells w hiskey w ith bolttle of Olympia Cans $2.50 PBR, Coors and

PBR only $6.50 Pool Rates Cut in 1/2! Double w ells

Daily Happy Hour Chicken Waffle Wed.! Reuben Sand w/ fries or from 4-7PM 8 ball Tourney 6pm salad $6.99

sign-up Full Bar in Back Room Happy Hour2-6pm M-F Spm-Close Pitcher Weds, Fri & Sat Nights! $1.00 off Sierra and Dom Specials $6.50/$9.50/$13

PBR $2.25 Everyday! Pitchers $1.00 off PBR FREE Pool after lOPM and Olympia Pool Rates Cut in 1/2!

Daily Happy Hour Chico Jazz Collective Baby Back Ribs $11.99 from 4-7PM 8-midnight Philly Cheesesteak $7.99 PBR $2.25 Everyday! Happy Hour2-6pm M-F

$1.00 off Sierra & Dom 6pm-Close $4.50 Grad teas

Summertime Special Pitchers $3.50 All beer pints $2.50 Wells & Sierra $1.00 off PBR and FREE Pool after lOPM Nevada Drafts during Olympia Giants &A's Games! Pool Rates Cut in 1/2!

Daily Happy Hour Rock Out atThe DL! 10 oz. Tri-Tip Steak w/ from 4-7PM Enjoy Live Music, Fries or Salad & Garlic

Great Grub, Bread $8.99 Anniversary Special and 10 9' foottables 8pm-Close $4 Jager PB&J - Shot of Jameson Open@llam $5.50 DBL Vodka Red Bull whiskey with bolttle of All ages untill lOpm $2.50 Kamikaze shots

PBR only $6.50 FREE Pool after lOPM

Daily Happy Hour Rock Out atThe DL! Baby Back Ribs w/Salad ,

from 4-7PM Enjoy Live Music, Fries & garlic bread $11.99 Full Bar in Back Room Great Grub, 8pm-Close Weds, Fri & Sat Nights! and 10 9' foot tables $4 Single/ $6 Double

PBR $2.25 Everyday! Open @llam Jack or Captain All ages untill lOpm $3 Sierra Nevada Pints

FREE Pool after lOPM

Daily Happy Hour Free Pool with Purchase! $5.49 Grad/Garden/ from 4-7PM LOO off Sierra and Dom Turkey Burgerw/fries PBR $2.25 Everyday! Pitchers or salad

$1.00 off PBR and Bloodies $3 Well, $4 Call, Summertime Special Olympia Cans $5 Top, $6 Goose $2.50 Wells & Sierra Mimosas $2/flute, $5/pint

$6 CHEAP Beer Pitchers

FREE Pool after lOPM

TUES AUG 26 MAMMOTH TORTA MURMURS 9:30 PM I $5.00

Page 13: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

Closed

Closed

WACKY WEDNESDAYS (8-cl) DJ Party 4 different DJ's $lwells $2 calls $2 domestic bottles $6 pitchers of well drinks

Happy Hour 4 -Spm Ladies Night! 88 pm-CLOSE $5 Pabst pitchers $2 shot board $4 Moscow Mules $3 Jamo and Ginger Buck Hour 10:30 -11:30

Happy Hour 4 -Spm

FIREBALL FRIDAYS!!! SPM - Close $3 Fireball Shots $4 Big Teas $3 Coronas

Opening at Spm for so's NIGHT!! 8 pm-CLOSE $4 Sauza Margaritas $3 Ka mis $3 Shocktop & VIP pint

KARAOKE "INDUSTRY NIGHT" 8 PM-CLOSE HALF OFF ALMOST EVERYTHING!(Except Red Bull and Premium Liquors) Specials All Day!

Go Downlo BEAR-E-OKE

BURGER MADNESS! Bear Burger with fries or salad for $5.49. llam-lOpm.

Go Downlo BEAR WEAR! 1/2 off while wea ring Bear Wea r. MUG CLUB 4-lOPM

Go Downlo TRIKE RACES! Post time@ lOpm. Win T-shirts and Bear Bucks. MUG CLUB 4-lOPM

Early Bird Special BURGER MADNESS! 9-lOPM Bear Burger with fries l /2off wells or salad for $5.49.

llam-lOpm. 1/2 OFF COVER before lOPM

Early Bird Special LATE NIGHT EATS! 9-lOPM kitchen open until 1 AM l /2 offwells

LIVE MUSIC 1/2 OFF COVER before lOPM

Early Bird Special LATE NIGHT EATS! 9-lOPM kitchen open until 1 AM l /2off wells

LIVE MUSIC 1/2 OFF COVER before lOPM

J-0-ES cf~; ~Y1tf9'~ ~~!I

C: HI CO CA

Happy Hour ll-6PM 2FOR1 BURGERS ALL select bottles & drafts $3 CLOSED DAY!!

MINORS WELCOME!

$2.50 Select Sierra $3.50 Tea of the Day Happy Hour 4 - 7pm Nevada or Dom Drafts Bartender Specials $2 Kamis-anyflavor Happy Hour4-8pm $1.50 sliders and other All Day 10-Close: cheap eats!

$2 Bartender Shot Specials $3 SkwVodka Cocktails $5 Dbl Bacardi or SoCo Cocktails

All 16 oz Teas or AMF $3 $3.SO SkywVodka 1/2 OFF All Day Cocktails EVERYTHING!!!

$3.50 Tea of the Day Bartender Specials Happy Hour4-8pm

Happy Hour ll-6PM 9pm-Close Happy Hour 4 - 7pm $3 select bottles & drafts $212oz Teas

$3 20oz Teas $1.50 sliders and other $2.50 16oz Wells $2 Well, Dom Bottles & cheap eats!! All Day bartender Specials

$5 Vodka Red Bull

Select Pints $3 $3.50 Tea of the Day Happy Hour- 4-7pm Bartender Specials $5 Fridays 4-Spm Most

food items and pitchers Happy Hour4-8pm of beer are $5

$4 Sex On The Beach $3.50 Tea of the Day Hot "Dawgs" ALL DAY! $4 Sierra Nevada Bartender Specials Knightro ON TAP Happy Hour4-8pm $1 Jello Shots 7-lOPM $3 Fireball

Spm -Close: $2.50 Sierra Nevada, & Margaritas $3.50 Cuervo Margarita $3.00 Corona bottles & Corona Lt. Drafts

Progressive Night:

8- lOpm $1 Dom, Wells & Sierra Nevada Pale Ale lOpm - Close: Up $0.25 per hourtil closing

4-6PM $1 Dom Drafts $2 SN Drafts & Wells $5 DBL Captain Buck Night 8-Close $1 wells, SN Pale Ale, Rolling Rock, Dom Draft $3 Black Butte $4 Vodka Red bull

4-6PM $1 Dom Drafts $2 SN Drafts & Wells $5 DBL Captain Spm -Close $4151 Party punch 22oz. 8-9pm $1 Pale Ale & Dom.Draft Up $0.25/ hr until close

Power Hour B - 9pm 1/2 Off Liquor& Drafts (excludes pitchers) 9PM -Close $3 Pale Ale Drafts $9.75 Pitchers

Mon. -Sat. 3PM - 6PM $1 Dom. draft, $2 SN Draft and Wells Power Hour B -9PM $3 Pale Ale Drafts $9.75 Pitchers

Lounge V1pu1tra

CLOSED

Closed

Closed

Closed

Open at 9PM

BOTTLE SERVICE Now Available! Call for reservation 898-9898 Large selection of wines, sangrias and Martinis.

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Open at 9PM Large selection of wines, sangrias and Martinis.

Call To Rent For Private BURGER MADNESS! $4 World Famous Bloody Champagne Brunch CLOSED CLOSED Party Bear Burger with fries Joe llam-2pm Champagne Brunch

or salad for $5.49. $5 Premium bloodys $3 Champagne with and SPORTS! Go Down Lo llam-lOpm. your choice of vodka entree

Open 'til 2AM

THE BEACH LABOR DAY WEEKEND ~'"'-~"'ll~EN FRIDAY fr SATURDAY BPM CLOSE

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POWER HOUR 8-9PM 1/2 OFF ALL DRINKS 191 E 2ND 51, CHICO CA I 898-9898

FACEBOOK.COM/ SYNTHESISCHICO 13

Page 14: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

14 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

LONG DISTANCE REVOLUTIONARY

SHARED.CREATIONS CLOSING RECEPTION

THE IMPS

SCOTT PEMBERTON TRIO

PAGEANT THEATRE“Long Distance Revolutionary: A Journey With Mumia Abu-Jamal” tells the story of a writer and journalist who works from his jail cell. Mumia has spent 30 years in a Pennsylvania prison, 29 of them being in solitary confinement on death row. Learn the story of his controversial conviction, his battle with the American judicial system for the right to continue his journalism, and his impact on social and political dis-course throughout the world. This free screening will be followed by a Q&A with the film’s producer. 7pm

NAKED LOUNGERobert Farris can’t help but be the star of this col-laborative art show, with an illustrative flavor that’s unforgettable once you’ve seen it; each of his strange characters peer out of their frames into your soul, dude. Ty Mendoza’s mixed-media laser cut/acrylic/watercolor masterpieces and Jesse Lyon’s honest, unfeigned photography make this a beast of an exhi-bition. Refreshments, bass music, free, 7pm.

1078 GALLERYWho the hell are The Imps? I don’t know either, and I don’t know why they aren’t in this week’s local music feature (since they’re from here), and now that I’m listening to them for the first time while I write this, I realize we’ve been missing out. Or they have just been holding out on us? Fat guitar tone from the Siamese Dream days, lazy/wonderful singing, and happily predictable rock songs I can’t tear my ears away from. Go see if they’re as good when they’re live. Also featuring The Loyalists (Oakland) and Au-brey Debauchery & The Broken Bones. $5, 7:30pm.

LOST ON MAINScott Pemberton is a beast on the guitar, and I’m not sure he ever bothers to even get off the clean channel on his amp. An underrated king of the festival circuit, this guy has been #1 on the pop charts in Portland, and #4 on the Billboard Tastemaker Charts. You want to call it blues or something dumb like that, but it’s so tasteful and original that any labels fall so short of the reality that they never leave your mouth.

Wednesday, August 27th

Friday, August 29th

Thursday, August 28th

Saturday, August 30th

This Week Only...BEST BETS IN ENTERTAINMENT

SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS [email protected]

Tickets are available at LiveNation.com and select Walmart locations.Limit 8 tickets per person. All dates, acts and ticket prices are subject to

change without notice. All tickets are subject to applicable service charges.

Newspaper: synthesispublish Date: 8/18/14

art Due: 8/15CoNteNt: sta COMBO

size: 1/2 pg (4.96x9.64”)art proDuCtioN: saCha pfeifer (720) 239-3411

Page 15: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

FACEBOOK.COM/SYNTHESISCHICO 15

Ongoing Events: 25 Monday The Bear: Bear-E-oke! 9pmChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmChico Womens Club: Prenatal Yoga. 5:30-6:30pmDownLo: Pool League. 3 player teams, signup with bartender. 7pm. All ages until 10pmJanet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmMaltese: Open Mic Comedy or Mu-sic, alternates every week. Signups at 8pm, starts at 9pm. Mug Night 7-11:30pmThe Tackle Box: Latin Dance Classes. Free, 7-9pmUniversity Bar: Free Pool 6-8pmYoga Center Of Chico: Sound Healing w. Emiliano. Breathwork, Meditation, Healing.

26 Tuesday 100th Monkey: Fusion Belly Dance mixed-level class, with BellySutra. $8/class or $32/month. 6pmOpen Mic plus showcase by local musicians. 7pmChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmChico Women’s Club: Yoga. 9-10am. Afro Carribean Dance. $10/class or $35/mo. 5:50-7pm. Followed by Capoeira, $3-$10. 7:30-8:30pmCrazy Horse Saloon: All Request Karaoke. 21+DownLo: Game night. All ages until 10pmHoliday Inn Bar: Salsa Lessons, 7-10pm Janet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmLaSalles: ’90s night. 21+Maltese: Karaoke. 9pm-CloseStudio Inn Lounge: Karaoke. 8:30pm-1amThe Tackle Box: Karaoke, 9pm

University Bar: Free Pool 6-8pmWoodstocks: Trivia Challenge. Call at 4pm to reserve a table. Starts 6:30pm

27 Wednesday Avenue 9 Gallery: “Chico Icons 2014: Historic Heart & Arteries” Group Exhibition. 12-5pmThe Bear: Trike Races. Post time 10pmChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmChico Women’s Club: Afro Brazilian Dance. 5:30-7pm DownLo: Wednesday night jazz. 8 Ball Tournament, signups 6pm, starts 7pmDuffys: Dance Night! DJ Spenny and Jeff Howse. $1, 9pmThe Graduate: Free Pool after 10pmJanet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmJesus Center: Derelict Voice Writing Group, everyone welcome. 9-10:30amThe Maltese: Friends With Vinyl! Bring your vinyl and share up to 3 songs/12 minutes on the turntable. 9pm-1amThe Tackle Box: Line Dance classes. Free, 5:30-7:30pm. Swing Dance classes. Free, 7:30-9:30pmUniversity Bar: Free Pool 6-8pmWoodstocks: Trivia Night plus Happy Hour. call at 4pm to reserve a table. Starts at 8pm

28 Thursday Avenue 9 Gallery: “Chico Icons 2014: Historic Heart & Arteries” Group Exhibition. 12-5pmThe Beach: Live DJ, no cover, 9pmThe Bear: DJ Dancing. Free, 9pmChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmDownLo: Chico Jazz Collective.

8-11pm. All ages until 10pmThe Graduate: Free Pool after 10pmHas Beans Downtown: Open Mic Night. 7-10pm. Signups start at 6pmHoliday Inn Bar: Karaoke. 8pm-mid-nightJanet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmLaSalles: Free live music on the patio. 6-9pmMaltese: Karaoke. 9pm-closePanamas: Buck night and DJ Eclectic & guests on the patio. 9pmQuackers: Karaoke night with Andy. 9pm-1amUniversity Bar: Free Pool 6-8pmWoodstocks: Open Mic NightYoga Center Of Chico: Ecstatic Dance with Clay Olson. 7:30-9:30pm

29 Friday Avenue 9 Gallery: “Chico Icons 2014: Historic Heart & Arteries” Group Exhibition. 12-5pmThe Beach: Live DJ, 9pmThe Bear: DJ Dancing. Free, 9pmCafe Coda: Friday Morning Jazz with Bogg. 11amChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmCrazy Horse Saloon: Fusion Fridays, the best country, rock, oldies, 80s & top 40. Country dance lessons 9-10:30pmDownLo: ½ off pool. All ages until 10pm. Live Music, 8pmDuffys: Pub Scouts - Happy Hour. 4-7pmThe Graduate: Free Pool after 10pmHoliday Inn Bar: DJ Dance Party. 8pm-midnightJanet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmLaSalles: Open Mic night on the patio. 6-9pmMaltese: Happy hour with live jazz by Bogg. 5-7pm. LGBTQ+ Dance

Party. 9pmPanamas: Jigga Julee, DJ Mah on the patio. 9pmPeeking: BassMint. Weekly electronic dance party. $1-$5. 9:30pmQuackers: Live DJ. 9pmSultan’s Bistro: Bellydance Performance. 6:30-7:30pmUniversity Bar: Free Pool 6-8pm

30 Saturday Avenue 9 Gallery: “Chico Icons 2014: Historic Heart & Arteries” Group Exhibition. 12-5pmThe Beach: Live DJ, 9pmThe Bear: DJ Dancing. No Cover. 9pmChico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmCrazy Horse Saloon: Ladies Night Dancing. 10pm-1:30am DownLo: 9 Ball tournament. Signups at noon, starts at 1pm. All ages until 10pmThe Graduate: Free Pool after 10pmJanet Turner Museum: Inhabitable: The Sense Of City. 11am-4pmLaSalles: 80’s Night. 8pm-closePanamas: DJ Eclectic on the patio. 9pmUniversity Bar: Free Pool 6-8pm

31 Sunday Chico Art Center: National All Media Juried Exhibition. 10am-4pmDorothy Johnson Center: Soul Shake Dance Church. Free-style dance wave, $8-$15 sliding scale. 10am-12:30pmDownLo: Free Pool, 1 hour with ev-ery $8 purchase. All ages until 10pmLaSalles: Karaoke. 9pmMaltese: Live Jazz 4-7pm. Trivia 8pmTackle Box: Karaoke, 8pm

New & Exciting:26 Tuesday Duffys: Mammoth Torta, Murmurs. $5, 9:30pm27 Wednesday Sierra Nevada: Black Lillies. $17, 7:30pmPageant Theatre: Free screening of Long Distance Revolutionary, followed by Q&A with the producer. Free, 7pm28 Thursday 1078 Gallery: The Imps, The Loy-alists, Aubrey Debauchery & The Broken Bones. $5, 7:30pmArabian Nights: Electronic Music Last Thursdays w. DJ Becca. $2 be-fore 10pm, $4 after, 8pm-12amLaSalles: Happy Hour with Quasimo-fos. 4-8pmLost On Main: Mykal Rose & Reggae Angels. 9pmRowland-Taylor Hall CSUC: Inhabit-able: The Sense Of City curator’s talk & opening reception. 5:30pm29 Friday City Plaza: Mystic Roots. 7-8:30pmLaSalles: Happy Hour with Matt McBride. 4-8pmMystic Roots. 10pmLost On Main: Afrofunk Experience, Pitchblak Brass Band. 9pmMaltese: Ladybird & The Unknown Universe, Bradley Relf. $5, 9pmMonstros: West By Swan, The Soror-ity. $5, 8pmNaked Lounge: Shared.Creations closing reception. 7pmPeking: BassMint. Residents Burning Man Celebration. 9pm30 Saturday 1078 Gallery: Energy Plant Record-ing Scholarship Benefit. Sick Bird, Sofa King, Sisterhoods, Deedee Vest, Alex Brown, and more. $5-$15 sliding scale, 8pm.Cafe Coda: Ave Grave CD Release Show, ft. Aubrey Debauchery, Nyx (Berkeley), Coyote Church. $5, 8pmDownLo: Mudstone. 9pmLaSalles: Happy Hour with Russ Peters. 4-8pmLost On Main: Scott Pemberton Trio, Black Star Safari.Maltese: The Rugs, The Royal Jelly (Sac), Grumbler (SF). $5, 9pm31 Sunday Maltese: Smashed Spelling Bee. Sign up at 9pm.

EAT. DRINK. PLAY.

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LESSONS, LEAGUES AND TOURNAMENTS!

GREAT FOOD!

LIVE MUSIC!

Page 16: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

PHOTOS BY VINCE LATHAMFACEBOOK.COM/VANGUARD.PHOTOGRAPHYOn The Town

16 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

Just off Highway 70, about 50 miles east of Chico, is Belden Town: a quiet town in the foothills with a whopping population of 20. Or maybe it was 24. The town also has a habit of exploding with noise, color, and people partying by the river. This summer alone, Belden has already hosted Raindance, StillDream, and For The Funk Of It music festivals. Last weekend, For The Funk Of It brought in around 200-300 people from around the state for two days and nights of funk. The whole shabang was organized by Chico’s own Bob Backstrom and Spencer Rouse (better known as DJ Spenny on KZFR). Of course they had help from many figures behind the scenes to set the whole event off, but the festival was the brainchild of the local duo. Funk by the river up in the hills. What a simply genius plan. The location couldn’t have been better. If you’ve never been to Belden Town, put a trip down the highway on your bucket list. Your first vision as you cross the old one lane bridge is a gorgeous scene of the river, and if there’s a festival happening, probably some hippies hootin’ and hollerin’ during a swim. There’s great river access in Belden, and if you snag the right camping spot, you can find yourself sleeping on the beach.

The music was equally as incredible. True to the name, For the Funk of It was jam packed with funk bands from all around. There were

Because, FUNK… Duuh! representatives from Davis, Sacramento, Reno,

Fair Oaks, the Bay Area, and of course Chico. It was an impressive lineup for the first year of a festival. Mojo Green, Jelly Bread, Swamp Zen, The Nibblers, all made appearances with some lesser known acts (at least on my radar) such as Zuhg!, Groovincible , Big Sticky Mess, Funk Revival Orchestra, and City Of Trees Brass Band. City Of Trees was my personal favorite. Tenor sax, trumpet, trombone, and a sousaphone. Enough said. Oh, and they’re from Sac. I can’t remember the last time I was anywhere the “Brass Instrument Players” to “The Rest of Us” ratio was tipped so far towards the brass end. The highlight of the weekend was definitely when Mojo Green brought up nearly every horn player from all the other bands for “Hornageddon.” They destroyed funk classics and left the crowd begging for more. If that’s what armageddon really sounds like, I’m in.

The people at festivals are almost half the fun. It being the first year, there weren’t as many as I expected to see. But that made things really intimate. Even after only two days, I felt like I had met half the festival. Meeting the other half is just a hazy blur. Some festivals give off a shady vibe, but the opposite was true in Belden last weekend. I heard one guy even got his wallet returned by a stranger, with all the money in it too.

So, for all you newly arriving students: if you’re looking for something to do besides frat parties, setting couches on fire, or trashing the town, start with the music scene. It’s a bit more entertaining.

BY TOMMY DIESTEL

Page 17: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

PHOTOS BY VINCE LATHAMFACEBOOK.COM/VANGUARD.PHOTOGRAPHY On The Town

FACEBOOK.COM/SYNTHESISCHICO 17

by Zooey [email protected]

Comical Ruminations

Ah, that smell is in the air… the smell of keys on lanyards, shower flip-flops, and the collective anxiety of both the new students and locals (albeit for different reasons). The students are back, and as they all try to figure out the one-way streets and how 1st st. and 1st ave. differ, I’ve been watching the locals regard them with a healthy mix of apprehension and resigned acceptance.

It’s a weird time here in Chico, and everywhere else, really. Scary, depressing things are happening in Missouri, people are posting self-delighted videos online of themselves being baptized in the fresh feeling of not donating to charity (aka “raising awareness”), and in Poland, demons have finally mastered the insidious art of texting. (Cue the Bernard Herrmann Twilight Zone music). Regarding that last bit, a Polish priest named Marian Rajchel has come forward to reveal that he’s begun to receive texts from a demon he tried (unsuccessfully) to exorcise.

Rajchel was attempting to exorcise the demon from a teenage Polish girl, and became aware after the ritual was finished that it didn’t take, as now he was being contacted by Satan by text. One such message read “She will not come out of this hell. She’s mine. Anyone who prays for her will die.” After the priest responded, the devil hit him back, hard. “Shut up, preacher. You cannot save yourself. Idiot. You pathetic old preacher.” Satan really doesn’t use as many obscenities as I would have thought. His insults are a little wooden,

and to me they read much less like the prince of darkness, and more like a group of Polish priests who decided it would be funny to prank their fellow brethren. Maybe I’m wrong and this truly is Beelzebub, but he’s just new to the texting game, as the technology is a little behind in Hell. He’s probably texting from the same sort of flip phone I used in high school. It had an antennae and weighed about three pounds. I also had to dial a 10-15 digit number before dialing out. I think in the six months that I owned it, I made a total of one successful call on it, and it was to let my parents know that I’d figured out how to call out on my cool cell phone. I imagine that ol’ dastardly Lucifer was probably having the same issue. After waiting so long to be an antennae-pulling, flip phonin’ member of society, it was just too much pressure to dial that crazy long number and have to think of a good burn. Next he’ll probably have a bunch of pizzas sent to the priests house, throw some TP up outside, then rearrange the letters on his church marquee to read “priest Rajchel sux, devil rules!”

Anyway, before I sign off I’d just like to say a quick thank you to the people who sent letters with kind words, especially to DL Plummer, I appreciate the support and your continued readership!

Cyberbullied by Satan

Page 18: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

18 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

Ebola, WTF, CDC?!?

I don’t think I’ve had a decent night sleep since last Tuesday. Things are starting to get weird. Apparently a patient with Ebola may have been admitted to Kaiser in Sacramento. I’m not big into conspiracy theories, but the Ebola thing is freaking me out. It’s primarily in Africa, but now we’ve moved patients to Atlanta, Georgia. That makes no sense. If an already virulent disease becomes even more contagious, and manages to break through the constraints that, up until recently, had worked to manage the disease, then why in God’s name would we take infected patients and fly them across the world to the middle of the United States? That seems strange to me.

Ferguson

It seems strange to me that the police would gun down an unarmed man. Sadly it doesn’t seem that strange though, because it happens

with too much frequency. The reaction of the Ferguson police, toward the citizenry protesting against a pattern of abuse and corruption—that is really strange. I’m not sure they could have reacted worse than they have done, assuming their goal is not to enrage the entire community along with heavy swaths of the country.

I suppose though when you back a mad dog into a corner it goes into attack mode. But at some point the people of Ferguson must be asking the police: “Exactly who are you protecting, and who are you serving?” I’ve heard the argument made that people need to calm down and let the powers that be sort through the evidence to arrive at a conclusion. It’s level-headed and rational sounding, but when the people have completely lost faith in the “powers that be” where does that leave them?

Serve, MF’ers!

Seems Strange To Me

by Bob [email protected]

Immaculate Infection

EBOLA IN THE USA, MORE SENSITIVITY LESS CYA, AND THE FRUITLESS QUEST FOR A RESTFUL NIGHT OF SLEEP. The police, so far as I can tell, could use a few

less CYA classes and a few more “how to be a decent human being” sessions. Stop bashing protesters, shooting them with rubber bullets, and barking “STOP RESISTING!” at anybody with a pulse. We all get it, you have to cover your asses. It’s a litigious era we live in. Somewhere along the line your super-genius bosses figured out that if you pretend for the cameras that everyone is resisting arrest, then you can pretend in court that you had valid reasons for bashing people around, and you won’t find yourselves on the losing end of so many lawsuits. Hey, it’s a tough job and there are a lot of first-class idiots out there. On top of that, any one of us more or less reasonable people could get pushed over the edge and go apeshit one day. Still, if you keep widening the gap between you and us, eventually we are going to realize we don’t have all that much use for you.

On a Personal Note

My back is aflame, I can barely keep my eyes

open, and my ears itch—the right a lot more than the left. Kiki the dog is whining at me, and Trish, sound asleep, has somehow re-arranged the bedding so that there is no way I’m getting a comfortable and relaxing rest tonight. That’s okay, the couch beckons.

Page 19: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

PHOTOS BY JESSICA SID On The Town FACEBOOK.COM/SYNTHESISCHICO 19

Page 20: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

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by logan kruidenierlogankruidenier.tumblr.com

Page 21: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

FACEBOOK.COM/SYNTHESISCHICO 21

Aries Taurus Gemini Cancer Leo Virgo

Koz McKev is on YouTube, on cable 11 BCTV and is heard on 90.1FM KZFR Chico. Also available by appointment for personal horo-

scopes call (530)891-5147 or e-mail [email protected]

AUGUST 25, 2014BY KOZ MCKEV

Get you nose into your work. Seek a peaceful resolution to conflicts that arise with others. Be alright with minor victories. Use ultimate cau-tion while working. Routine can be dangerous. The new moon emphasizes service to others, charitable causes, and personal health issues. It’s cleanup time. Make order and cleanliness a priority. Wednesday through Friday looks good for romance and negotiations. The weekend might have you being led by other people’s wishes. Look out for accidents and a devil-may-care attitude on Sunday.

The beginning of a positive new start comes to you this week. The new moon allows you to take action with ease. Projects involving children or art give you a sense of pride. In fact, you find it overall eas-ier to give. Your luck is about to take a turn for the better. People around you feel a lit-tle more down to earth. Stick with your best values and healthiest diet. The weekend looks good for romance, ne-gotiations, cautious travel, and listening to open ene-mies. Be accepting of conflict as part of the human condi-tion.

Take note of your surround-ings and see how you feel about them. Mercury in your fourth house signifies a good memory and learning from history. The new moon gives you a chance to reconnect with your mother and to honor the elders and ances-tors. Wednesday afternoon through Friday looks good for discovering your fun zones, as well as engaging in creative activity. The weekend looks good for volunteer work, char-itable causes, and taking care of personal health issues. It’s also a good time to straighten up things and get organized.

The new moon in your third house signifies a time of new information, quick trips, working with your friends, and old relationships. This is a good time to write in a journal, listen twice, and do your research before jump-ing to snap judgment. Not all is how it appears to be on the surface. Domestic du-ties and family could domi-nate Wednesday afternoon through Friday. The weekend looks good for travel, love af-fairs, playtime, and creative expression. Realize the hu-man tendency to be a little bit unconscious. Slow down and practice patience.

Keep things practical and sim-ple. Be quick to praise, slow to criticize. Money issues are best addressed this week. The new moon emphasizes mon-ey, food, resources, and val-ues. Families with individuals who have unique needs are more in focus. Seek sensible solutions. Work on improving your relationship with your community at large. Enjoy singing and cooking when you get the chance. Put on a new face. Keep desire under wraps. Allow a more modest approach to living to help you to go to new places.

It’s all about you. Time to har-vest grapes, and celebrate the most earthy pleasures of abundant food and gen-tle weather. Assess your re-sources. Set a goal. Mercury in your sign gives you a clear vision. Take in the details, appreciate your senses. Be aware of things you can do to make your life better. The new moon in Virgo brings health awareness, environmental consciousness, and a willing-ness to accept the challenge of improvement. The week-end looks good for a small trip, an artistic event, or an ecological clean up.

Seek a vision. Allow yourself some alone time or down-time. Get plenty of sleep. This might be a good time to begin a dream journal. The new moon is all about your personal karma. Don’t judge it. Just work with it the best you can. Helping those in iso-lated places, like prisons and hospitals, can give you good karma. Wednesday afternoon through Friday brings you into a better emotional space with the moon in Libra. Work with family members, but try to keep things within bud-get over the weekend. Good friends can still help you.

Good people are all around you. Give thanks for them. Things move forward in your life. Demonstrate a sense of art and beauty at work. Be ready to use your personal power for good. Cautious, slow moves like a Tai Chi mas-ter at work can be your vision. Flow slowly like the broad part of a river. The new moon gives you good social con-tacts and an ability to plan for the future. The weekend features the moon in Scor-pio. Be ready to host a party or organize a gathering. Be more open and a little less guarded.

Right and wrong are things that most folks hold some sort of commonality with. Don’t lie, don’t steal, don’t sleep with your friends spouse, don’t murder or harm another human in any way. Your truth is shared universally. Look for exotic differences without judging them. Get beyond your fear factor and eat unusual food. The new moon can help your career and get you out and in the public eye more. The weekend looks good for lay-ing low, meditating, praying and paying more attention to your personal karma.

You’re in a good space where blessings and good fortune can come to you. It’s time to be more of a giver and less of a user. The new moon honors your ability to help others and to make good karma. Travel and higher education go very well with this theme. What person, place or subject makes you curious? Satisfy your hunger for knowledge. Visit libraries and bookstores. Go to different places of wor-ship. Make yourself social-ly available to do the right thing. Confront your fears. This time around you’ll find yourself victorious.

The hard news never feels good. During this period you are acutely aware of your need to go along with other people or the majority when it may not serve your practi-cal knowledge. You appreci-ate people’s differences, yet sometimes they don’t serve your best interests. The new moon brings transformation, change, dealings with other people’s property, sex, death, birth, and occult studies. There may be more to this life than what we know with the five senses. It’s time to explore those extra sensory modes of knowing.

The calm in the eye of the hur-ricane is where you’re at these days. Take advantage of this calm to make romance, en-gage in new friendships, and to hustle a good contract for yourself. The new moon em-phasizes diplomacy, giving, and viewing love as service. Accept others and accept yourself equally. You know how to be fair and thoughtful of others. The weekend looks good for travel, spiritual work and educating yourself on a deeper level. Have fun getting healthier, more organized and working with others with a common vision.

Libra Scorpio Saggitarius Capricorn Aquarius Pisces

Page 22: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014

22 SYNTHESISWEEKLY.COM AUGUST 25 2014

by Anthony Peyton PorterFrom The Edge

Pet CareSome years ago a Gentle Reader took me to task for not sterilizing a family of cats that had appeared under our deck. Not only did I not have their sexual organs removed, I even gave them water, though not food. My position at the time was that if it was my responsibility to sterilize the uninvited cats, I should also sterilize the equally uninvited squirrels, the occasional raccoon, and perhaps the possum next door. I was unwilling to maim another species and didn’t do anything, and the cats eventually moved out intact.

Spock, our late dog, was unfixed to the end. Spock’s life was no doubt affected by his whole genitals, and I have no reason to think the experience was anything but positive. I’ve certainly enjoyed having my genitals on me at all times—I think a little empathy warranted here—and I expect Spock did, too. I know he did at least once, and the puppies were stunning.

Now I’ve got this kitten, see—Hobbes. My son got him from a guy with three of them in a cardboard box at the Farmers’ Market. I’m the grownup, though, and I feed Hobbes and maintain his litter box, and it was immediately clear that if Hobbes is to have any care beyond cuddling I’ve got to do it.

My son thinks shots are unnecessary, and of course he’s right. Hobbes might do just fine with no shots. I guess that’s what my parents thought about Tag.

Oddly, I’m not crystal clear about what went on when I was nine or so, after Penny, our Cocker Spaniel, had puppies presumably sired by King, the Alpha free dog in our neighborhood. Blackie and Curly were both vicious and roamed only to the end of their chains. Anyhow, Penny whelped and I ended

up with a puppy, Tag, who was black and white and managed to look a lot like Tippy, a stuffed animal from earlier in my saga.

After several weeks Tag stopped eating, his eyes got rheumy, and the vet in Roseland said it was distemper and there was nothing he could do for Tag but put him to sleep. He said that all Tag had needed was a shot and he would’ve been all right. He never got the shot, though, and the vet said we probably picked up germs on our shoes or something and the germs made Tag so sick that it was better to kill him than let him suffer, and he was gonna die either way. We left him there on that steel table, and my father stayed while my mother and I went out and waited in the car.

Janice and I resisted inoculations for the boys for a few years, until the system wore us down, and we gave in. I think human inoculations far more likely to be vehicles for totalitarian mischief than cat shots, and I remember the heartbreak of leaving Tag on that table in that room, so I got Hobbes the recommended injections. He may be a zombie for the government, but he’ll be a healthy zombie. Sterilization is a separate issue.

I’m not ready to decide what the correct number of cats is, and I suspect that any such decision is arrogant and short-sighted. I hear that males’ spraying is fairly stinky, which sounds unpleasant and yet may be bearable. We’ll see.

Warning: I’ll be performing in the Butcher Shop theatre festival August 29, 30 and 31, 2500 Estes Road, at the end of Normal Street at an almond orchard near the creek. Look at slowtheatre.com

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THE HOROSCOPES?

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Page 24: Synthesis Weekly – August 25, 2014