Month: August 2007

  • Wisdom from the Wedge

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    On that theory that a rising tide floats all boats (to which I subscribe), I’d like to point you to a new food blog, Eat Local Challenge, which is sponsored by the Wedge Natural Foods Co-op. The point of this new site is to encourage people to get at least 80% of their food from local/regional producers, growers, and farmers. Eat Local defines “regional” as Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and the Dakotas, and it includes content from Twin Cities luminaries such as Lenny Russo, chef/owner of Heartland, a restaurant dedicated to sustainable gourmet cooking; Elizabeth Archerd, education director at the Wedge; and Beth Dooley, co-author of Lucia Watson’s Savoring the Seasons of the Northern Heartland.

    Now, as a dedicated wine and coffee drinker who’s wild about Alaskan salmon and a deep-sea fish called John Dory, I sympathize with those who might have difficulty making the pledge. But eating mostly locally is — like calling a moratorium on all those plastic bottles of French spring water — the right thing to do, for the economy and for the earth. Even sometimes, even halfway, even just as much as you can. And if you’re not into grilling pork or making blueberry cobbler, Eat Local provides a handy list of restaurants like Cafe Brenda and Restaurant Alma that can help you out with exquisite, local fare. Check it out.

  • And this other thing!

    I just received the nicest voice message from Stu Ackman, whose wife owns the lovely Galleria shop Arafina. Turns out, Arafina is hosting an interesting talk on color trends as told by Erika Woelfel, chief colorist for Colwell Colour. It’s at 1 p.m. this afternoon and 6 p.m. this evening. Oh, how lowly is me – I cannot make it if I am to see Sound Unseen‘s sole showing of Tonite Let’s All Make Love in London, a portrait of mods in 1960s London that’s bound to be bursting with eye candy.

  • Make way for the Minnie Apple

    MNfashion Weekend events have just been announced. Mark your calendars for September 19 – 23, and be sure to check the trunk shows, happy hours, and workshops by Minnesota designers (and those who love them). This is the closest thing we’ve got to our own Fashion Week, my friends. And as the local fashion community continues to grow, evolve, and exponentially improve, let’s just hope this weekend becomes an annual rite of fall. My picks from the 2007 lineup: the Minnesota Historical Society Collections tour (I got to troll through their archives a while back and it was fun, fun, fun!), the Red Shoe Clothing Company Fall Line and Website Launch (hello hip), and the Sunday afternoon fashion illustration workshop (everyone’s a poseur).

    If you’re really anxious for these affairs, then you might care to know that the Design Collective, Minnesota’s only Minnesota-only boutique, is having a sale this very weekend. Stop by to sample Minnesota-made clothing, carry-alls, and duct-tape accessories.

  • The Week Continues to Meld Movies and Music

    FILM AND MUSIC
    Dirty Country Documentary Comes to Minnesota

    DirtyCuntry.jpgOn March 14th, 2007, Dirty Country made its world premiere at the 2007 SXSW Film Festival, where it won the Audience Award. Tonight, the wacko documentary makes its Minnesota premiere, with the very subject of the documentary, Larry Pierce, in town to answer questions and even perform. That’s right, the small-town factory worker and family man will grace us with his raunchy country music. Beautiful! That’s icing on a cake. Find out whether we’re a nation of prudes or just a dirty country. Then stick around after the screening for a Q & A with Pierce and filmmakers Joe Pickett and Nick Prueher. Think you’re done? Not quite yet. Experience the real deal. Head over to the Cabooze for the after party with performances by Larry Pierce and his band, Itis.

    7:30 p.m., Heights Theatre, 3951 Central Ave. N.E., Columbia Heights; 651-644-1912; $10. After Party at the Cabooze, 917 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis; $10, but 2 for 1 with a ticket stub from the premiere.

    Digging the music and movies vibe? Don’t forget about tonight’s Sound Unseen events in Northeast Minneapolis: Tonite Let’s All Make Love in London and PDO3: Day Dream Nation at the Ritz Theater, followed by live performances by Boys and Girls and Switzerlind at the 331 Club.

    ART AND VIDEO
    Triangle of Need

    WlkrCS.jpgI love the description on this one, so I’ll let you read it yourself: “The Neanderthal, a 20th-century industrialist, Nigerian cinema, and a Florida mansion with a hodgepodge of architectural styles are some of the elements — physical and conceptual — that make up Catherine Sullivan’s new multichannel video installation. In a series of immersive image and sound environments, the piece weaves a nuanced story about evolution, class, wealth and poverty, and the inequalities in our global economy.” Wow! I love this, and I’m dying to experience an immersive image. The exhibit opens today and runs through November, so you have plenty of time to explore and re-explore it.

    Walker Art Center, 1750 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis; 612-375-7600; $10 (seniors $8, students $6, members and children free).

    FILM
    I Bury the Living

    scifi_shrews.jpgFor something a little lighter, or at least a little more fickle, enjoy the latest film in the Bell Museum’s late-50s sci-fi series. The Killer Shrews is another freaky, low-budget horror flick about a group of people trapped on an island with a whacked-out doctor. Of course, his experiments have generated some hideous beasts — shrews, to be exact. I wonder who will be going home with a giant shrew tonight. (Last week, it was a leech.)

    8:30 p.m., Bell Museum Courtyard, 10 Church St. S.E., Minneapolis; 612-624-7083; free.

    MUSIC
    One Stop Shopping

    truckstoph.jpgFirst Avenue has it going on tonight — two great shows. (Yes, great… or at least they might be fun.) Granted, they both have a separate cost of admission, but maybe you can finagle a way to get more bang for your buck. The Bangles are back and banging it out in the main room with The Bridges, another sweet mostly-girl group; and The Analog Collection will be chilling in the 7th Street Entry with The Blue Mollies, Gini Dodds, and The Dahlias. While the Bangles might be a hoot — yes, that’s the word for it — I would skip it all just to see Gini and hear that sweet, gritty voice of hers. Dodds is the real thing, folks. She’s our very own Lucinda (as if Lucinda weren’t our very own).

    The Bangles, doors at 6 p.m., Main Room, $25; The Analog Collection, doors at 8 p.m., The Entry, $5; First Avenue, 701 1st Ave. N., Minneapolis; 612-332-1775.

    Another Kind of C.K. Intimates

    ChristineKane-promo3-th.jpgChristine Kane has pretty much done it all: singing, writing, performing, teaching, leading workshops — she even holds women’s retreats in the mountains of North Carolina. Yup, this is the real stuff, people — the kind of music that sets you howling at the moon and running naked through the forest with your sisters. OK, that might actually be Marilyn Manson; and this is nothing at all like that. You get the idea, though; don’t you? This woman doesn’t just sing sweet, intimate words; she lives them. And tonight, so can you. Join her in the perfect setting for an intimate evening of song. She might be multi-faceted, but you’ll quickly see where she belongs.

    7:30 p.m., Ginkgo Coffeehouse, 721 N. Snelling Ave., St. Paul; 651-645-2647; $14.

    ON THE NET
    Things You May Have Missed

    Dr. Lonnie Smith playing at the Dakota this week

    WCCO Unplugged from the State Fair

    Hillary Clinton: The Surge is Working, Prepare for New War

    The Scritch-Scratch of Busy Little Hands

  • African Booze Tree

    Watch an assortment of animals suffer the effects of eating the forbidden fruit.

  • Gaping Void

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    Great cartoons, great philosophy, great consumer culture blog, great explorations of marketing in the digital world — all by Hugh MacLeod, at Gaping Void.

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  • Minnesota Noir

    It’s about a year old already, but just in case you missed it, the economist explores the Twin Cities’ obsession with literary gore.

  • MPR & Taxpayer Dough

    (UPDATED WITH RESPONSE FROM MPR)
    As certain as the cycle of the sun and stars is the question of how much money Minnesota Public Radio gets in state subsidies … and why.

    The issue bobbed up again in the context of Joel Kramer’s to-be-announced on-line news site. Thanks to Julie Dinger in the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library at the Capitol I can offer this
    for those of you interested in how much Bill Kling receives/snookered the Capitol Hill turnips out of this past year:

    Subd. 6.Public Broadcasting
    (a) $6,650,000 is for grants to noncommercial
    television stations to assist with the continued
    conversion to a digital broadcast signal as
    mandated by the federal government. This
    appropriation must be used to assist each
    station to complete its digital production
    facilities and interconnect with other
    Minnesota public television stations. In
    order to qualify for these grants, a station
    must meet the criteria established for grants
    in Minnesota Statutes, section 129D.12,
    subdivision 2.


    (b) $2,000,000 is for grants to Minnesota
    Public Radio to assist with conversion to a
    digital broadcast signal.

    (c) $2,461,000 the first year and $1,161,000
    the second year are for matching grants for
    public television.
    (d) $200,000 the first year and $200,000
    the second year are for public television
    equipment grants. Equipment or matching
    grant allocations shall be made after
    considering the recommendations of the
    Minnesota Public Television Association.
    (e) $17,000 the first year and $17,000 the
    second year are for grants to the Twin Cities
    regional cable channel.
    (f) $413,000 in fiscal year 2008 and $287,000
    in fiscal year 2009 are for community service
    grants to public educational radio stations.
    (g) $400,000 in fiscal year 2008 and $100,000
    in fiscal year 2009 are for equipment grants
    to public educational radio stations.
    (h) The grants in paragraphs (f) and (g)
    must be allocated after considering the
    recommendations of the Association of
    Minnesota Public Educational Radio Stations
    under Minnesota Statutes, section 129D.14.

    (i) $830,000 the first year and $190,000
    the second year are for equipment grants to
    Minnesota Public Radio, Inc.

    (j) Any unencumbered balance remaining the
    first year for grants to public television or
    radio stations does not cancel and is available
    for the second

    As it is explained to me, the one-time $2 million is for upgrading MPR to all-digital transmission, which, as you can see is something that state has been assisting all public broadcasters in doing. The $830,000 figure is another one-time grant, this time for equipment, and the $190,000 figure is more or less MPR’s normal annual equipment subsidy.

    (I’ve asked MPR for a breakdown of what exactly costs $2 million and how that is different from a one-time $830K for new equipment? When they respond, I’ll add it to this post.)

    So, MPR’s take looks pretty fat this biennium. $3.02 million. Or, spun a different way, something like … 28 cents … for every man, woman and child in Minnesota … EVERY DAMNED YEAR!!!!! Well this year and next, I mean. But never mind! I am outraged, dammit! This is beyond Halliburton! Where’s the special prosecutor?

    After that it drops back into single pennies.

    [For those lacking an ear for facetiousness, I’m making a joke here. 28 cents … a year … come on. Would you even stop to pick that up if you saw it on the ground?]

    Good lobbying help is one way that you keep your hand in the mix when the state starts doling out cash and I admit I missed the part where former Senate Majority Leader Dean Johnson has now registered as an MPR lobbyist.

    As I’ve been saying in the “comments” section, in an ideal world the State would consider funding credible start-up news ventures like those proposed by Joel Kramer and former City Pages editor, Steve Perry. Likewise, considering MPR’s extraordinary financial success you might think someone would be making a more effective argument to fund non-MPR public radio operations more and MPR less.

    But the reality is that no matter how much its blood enemies and frequent consumers, like myself, kvetch and squall about what they don’t do and how precious an attitude they take toward provocative stories, the public at large regards MPR as … well worth the comparatively modest money they get out of our pockets.

    I mean, a couple months ago I blew the equivalent of almost 15 years of my share of MPR subsidies on one copy of the National Review. And that thing burst into flames right in my hand.

    MPR spokeswoman, Christina Schmitt, replied Thursday morning, saying:

    Hi Brian,

    Thank you for being patient. State funding to MPR is used for capital purposes only; to extend, improve and maintain service outside the Twin Cities area, where the population is less dense and capital fundraising is more difficult. For example, MPR used recently appropriated State funding to install new signals in Hinckley and infrastructure improvements in Duluth, St Peter, Rochester, Worthington, Bemidji and Brainerd. The most recent appropriation will be used entirely for capital projects in greater Minnesota, including the construction of a new station to serve the Roseau / Warroad area of the state.

    In the 2007 legislative session, MPR received a one-time appropriation of $2 million for its digital conversion project. During the 2002-2003 biennium, the State of Minnesota provided a special appropriation of $7.8 million to public television for digital conversion. Though on a station-by-station basis, digital conversion for radio is less expensive than that for television, there are more public radio stations. We estimate the total cost of digital conversion for MPR stations alone will be about $6.9 million.

    MPR provides important public services to Minnesota in addition to offering multiple channels of public radio service to almost all residents. MPR is the backbone to the State’s Emergency Alert System (EAS), providing the EAS signal to all other broadcasters, including radio, television and cable stations in Minnesota. MPR also serves as the backbone to the State’s AMBER Alert System, the child abduction warning system. In addition, MPR provides the Radio Talking Book to the blind and visually impaired across all of Minnesota on subcarriers of MPR stations, which is produced by Minnesota State Services for the Blind.

  • To Shop (and Sigh) Without a Wallet

    Two great events to be aware of this week:

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    Soo Visual Arts hosts +/- (or “plusminus”) Thursday evening, an event at which locally hand-made clothing, jewelry, and household items will be available for sale and show. My picks of the lot are Labrador, a collective of local clothes-makers, and Milkypop, the pseudonym of a brilliant jewelry and clothing designer named Megan. This is the girl who stitched the white dress at left, which I own; and I am forever thankful to her for it. Although, uh, remember when I said I overcooked my Glamorama getup? I cropped out as much of the atrocity as I could. Sorry to have ruined your dress, if only for one evening, Megan …

    Second: Stephanie Lake of the Minneapolis-based Bonnie Cashin Foundation just emailed to announce a weekend rummage sale by her and her well-heeled friends Coco Iverson and Pam Mondale (that’s Ted’s wifey, I believe.) Will there be a selection of vintage Cashin, preferably that long, lime-green coat with toggle enclosures? Ms. Lake promises clothing, accessories, and decor with price tags ranging between $5 and $500. Here’s the address: 3800 France Avenue. The sale is open Friday, August 24 from 9 a.m. to noon and then 4 to 7 p.m.; on Saturday August 25, check in between 9 a.m. and noon.

    Oh, and p.s. To the chump who stole my wallet yesterday and thereby made it difficult to shop at the aforementioned events: May the commerce gods (and the fraud alert on my credit report) strike down upon thee. May bad karma pour from the heavens and land atop your kepi. May your finger get severed by the industrial zipper of my go-go-gadget CK wallet, circa 1993. Jerk!