Year: 2007

  • Light at the end of a long tunnel

    Ever since the big Garnett trade went through I’ve been debating whether to throw up a KG appreciation, an assessment of the post-KG Wolves, or both. For the past 24 hours, any Garnett piece would have been a big, mushy valentine–it may still be, when I take a crack at it tomorrow or Friday. A look at the current status of the Wolves, however, is an exercise for the head instead of the heart, and has enough contrarian aspects to be worth the snap judgments, third-guessing, and speculation that comes from assessing, two months before training camp, a young, totally jumbled team that could and should still undergo significant personnel changes between now and opening day.

    First of all, the next three or four years will either rescue or solidify Kevin McHale’s current reputation as a dreadful personnel guru. There’s plenty about McHale’s tenure to bash and ridicule, and I’ve done my share. But even if you discount the bad luck and woe stemming from the Googs and Marbury petty jealousies, the Joe Smith fiasco, the Malik Sealy death, and the Sammy and Spree snit (little of which had much to do with McHale’s lack of acumen, even the illegal Smith signing, which most Wolves insiders don’t lay at McHale’s feet), a fundamental problem with the Garnett-McHale tandem was their vast difference is philosophical styles. As a player and then GM, McHale sees the game almost totally through the prism of the painted area of the court. As he has said on numerous occasions, whoever wins the paint wins the game. The irony was that for many successful seasons, Minnesota’s style was defined by Flip Saunders and KG, who were about as paint-phobic as a plus-.500 coach and a seven-foot superstar could possibly be.

    McHale constantly preaches that there are three ways to score in the paint: feed in to a capable low-post player, penetrate off the dribble, and grab offensive rebounds. Leaving aside the fact that McHale himself has rebutted that philosophy with dunderheaded moves, from Mark Blount on down, for the past three drafts and now with the KG trade, he is reinforcing that paint mantra with a vengeance. Al Jefferson is your classic low-block presence. Randy Foye, Rashad McCants, and Gerald Green are penetrators first and foremost. Craig Smith and Chris Richard are offensive glass cleaners first and foremost, and Corey Brewer will penetrate and crash the boards much more than your average swingman.

    As a player, McHale ranks with Hakeem Olajuwon for possessing the best interior footwork in NBA history. His inability to instill much of that in a long succession of sub-mediocre Wolves’ big men is a mystery, but, speaking just about this particular facet of the game, he’s never had a diamond in the rough quite like Al Jefferson. Those who rag on Jefferson are foolish. Those, like ESPN commentator Stephen A. Smith (whose Native American name is most certainly Loud Flapping Jaw), who claim that Jefferson will suffer moving over to the more competitive Western Conference, didn’t do what one of my smart readers, Jason in San Francisco, did and break down Jefferson’s conference splits: Big Al was 15.9 ppg and 10.7 rpg in 41 games against Eastern Conference foes, and 16.3 ppg and 11.3 rpg in 28 games against the West. And because he is so low-post oriented, he already has a higher shooting percentage (51.3 for his career, 51.4 last year) and a greater share of offensive rebounds in his total boards than does Garnett.

    But I’m making what will become an all-too-frequent mistakes over the next few years, which is comparing Jefferson and KG as if it is apples to apples. Not only will Jefferson never be as talented nor as versatile as Garnett (expecting otherwise does him a great disservice and belittles KG’s legacy here), he is a much different kind of player–one who happens to mesh perfectly with McHale’s preferred style of play. That, far more than his friendship with Ainge, is why McHale pursued the Boston trade (even more than Stoudamire in Phoenix, Horford via the Atlanta pick, or Bynum in LA).

    Put simply, Jefferson is the new centerpiece of the Timberwolves. And while he will never be as valuable as Kevin Garnett, he’s nine years younger, with a very high upside, the best of a bevy of potentially gifted players who figure to grow together over the rest of this decade.

    Alongside Jefferson, I would include Corey Brewer and Randy Foye, in that order, as automatic members of new core group of Timberwolves. Without having seen Brewer play a single NBA game (a summer league tilt over the internet doesn’t count), I am pretty sure he can play NBA-caliber defense and will bust his ass to refine his overall game, which already looks to have an upside along the lines of Bruce Bowen and Raja Bell, provided he can sink that trey a little more often. Foye will probably suffer more than any Timberwolf from KG’s absence, but has a load of confidence and a season of experience at the point to help him through the rough patches. He isn’t afraid to take–and will often make–the big shot. Furthermore, Brewer and Foye are both relatively selfless, high-character guys, which figures to be a very important aspect of the new McHale-Wittman regime. Let’s hope so, anyway. In case anyone missed the huge, blinking, neon memo, the Wolves are full and total rebuilding mode, and emphasizing character and synergistic compatibility over large but selfish talent is the only sensible way to grow. And that should help make a few potentially controversial moves a lot easier to execute.

    Like, at the very least, breaking up the cancerous Ricky Davis-Mark Blount tandem–or, better yet, sending them both to another Western Conference rival. Blount, Davis and Justin Reed formed a toxic little ex-Celtics clique on the sidelines and in the locker room last season, and the since-departed Reed was finished a distant third as the main complainer-conniver-malingerer jerk of the trio. Not to put too fine a point on it, I’d renounce the rights to Mark Blount if you can’t swing the Blount for Adonal Foyle trade other smart readers here have proposed. Blount is the antithesis of the new-direction Wolves: He’s old, expensive, treats the paint like kryptonite at both ends of the floor, and has shown a pronounced tendency to lie down like a dog when the mood suits him–like, say, the 10 weeks after the all star break last season. Even if he had a dramatic change of heart and performed with the inspiration and flashes of talent (nailing jumpers and showing hard on the pick and roll) that occurred during the first half of last season, he’s a permanently bad fit robbing minutes from younger, systematically more compatible teammates. And if you played him the 5-15 minutes a game he’d otherwise merit, his attitude would either become a huge distraction and/or expose Wittman’s tough guy stance of rank hypocrisy. How many more games are you going to win in 2007-08 with Blount on roster? More games than the lessons and lasting example of his presence this year will help you lose in 2009-10?

    Davis is a thornier dilemma. First, with Garnett gone, ball-movement decision-making becomes the most pressing of the team’s many flaws; in my opinion it also happens to be the strongest aspect of Davis’s game. Add in that Davis can realistically (though still inaccurately) regard himself as a team leader this upcoming season, that he is playing for a new contract, and that his plethora of skills besides ball movement will be less redundant with KG gone, and you can see how he might be convinced to become a positive force, to the point where I shed a crocodile tear or two when he is inevitably unloaded at mid-season or when his deal expires at the end of the year.

    On the flip side, Davis could raze this ballclub more thoroughly and effectively than anyone but Jefferson (if Big Al decides he doesn’t like Minnesota, this franchise is in for a mess of hurt and apathy). Ricky’s history with the Wolves and elsewhere is that defensively he plays when he feels like it. Rotation-wise, he pouts whenever he has to sit. And when it comes to acting out, he’s not exactly passive-aggressive, as that ersatz bathroom break during the Lakers game that probably cost Dwane Casey his job attests. I’ve heard from a number of back-channel sources on the Wolves and in the media that Casey couldn’t stand coaching Davis. And anyone remotely paying attention has seen the blatant inconsistencies in effort during the 110 games or so he’s logged with the Wolves. Others might also raise the misguided triple-double mistake he made early in his career, which I regard as stupid but not as damning as his Jekyll and Hyde defense, which is just tantalizingly solid enough to generate sufficient trust to do real damage when he betrays the faith.

    Both Davis and Blount reportedly were not high on Jefferson’s favorites list when all were in Boston, which, frankly, speaks well of Jefferson’s character and judgment. If it comes to a pissing on turf match between the Bobbsey Twins and Big Al, may the younger man prevail. Ditto the potential clash between Davis and Rashad McCants, who ostensibly will be competing for playing time with Pretty Ricky and has his own contract extension to consider.

    Right now, McCants is the biggest wild card in the Wolves’s future. If he can combine the offensive game he flexed in the final six weeks of his rookie season with the generosity of spirit and defensive commitment he displayed throughout last season on both the sidelines (while recovering from microfracture surgery) and on the court, he could be a stud who joins Jefferson, Brewer and Foye as building blocks to the playoffs. If he starts hogging the ball, spacing out on defensive rotations, clapping his hands for the rock out on the perimeter and generally favoring the “born to be hated” side of tattooed duality, then he will forever be unremembered or lamented as a poor man’s JR Rider.

    The Davis-McCants conundrum gets to a literally larger and more crowded personnel issue facing the new-look Timberwolves between now and opening day: Assuming Brewer gets at least 30 minutes a night as one of your swingmen, how are the rest of the minutes divvied up in the cattle call for the other swingman spot? Are Wittman and McHale arrogant and perhaps foolish enough to think that Davis and McCants can productively co-exist, let alone florish, for even half a season? Remember, McCants venerated KG. If he’s going to suck up the enormous psychological blow of Garnett’s absence, he’s going to need the oxygen of a regular and fairly sustained stint on the court, at least 25-30 minutes a game. Does anyone think Davis can be appeased with less than 35 minutes a game (about four minutes less than he averaged last year) on a non-KG team? And we haven’t even started talking about Trenton Hassell, Gerald Green, or, if he isn’t flipped back to point guard, Marko Jaric.

    Obviously, I think hard decisions need to be made about Davis and McCants before opening day. Wittman has to tell Davis that big minutes are not guaranteed, that defensive consistency and offensive ball movement matter most, that if he is in the top three on the team in minutes he should be the team’s assist leader, the second best perimeter defender behind Brewer, and a stalwart presence in the locker room–let the points come when they come. Oh, and no shots with more than 20 seconds on the clock and no leaking out for cheap layups that more frequently produce cheap putbacks for the opposition. If and when Davis bucks the discipline, he needs to fill the Troy Hudson memorial seat at the end of the bench and not move for about a week. At the same time, Wittman needs to inform McCants that for the first three or four months of the season, his patience and perseverance are being auditioned as much as his talent; that Davis will be going via a trade before spring and that he should use the time to hone his game and be able to step in as the full-fledged two-way dynamo he is capable of becoming.

    Or, if the Wolves are really sold on McCants, peddle Davis before the season starts and begin the trial by fire with Foye at the point. Or, deal both Davis and McCants for help at point guard and center and let Marko Jaric be Foye’s ball-movement savvy backcourt mate. I’d mention Trenton Hassell, but I think the dust-up between Hassell and Wittman last season, plus the redundancy of Hassell with Brewer and the attractiveness of Hassell’s on-ball defense to a few potential contenders, combine to almost guarantee that he’ll be gone before the opening tap. There are no shortage of decisions to make, and they’re as important as leaving the blocks cleanly during a long relay race.

    For example, what about Ryan Gomes? Yeah, he was a “throw-in” on the KG trade at the last minute, and only makes $770,000 on a contract due to expire at the end of the year. He also is built like the proverbial brick shithouse–6-7, 250 pounds–is a high character guy, and started 60 games for the Celts while logging 2275 minutes, which would have put him 4th on the Wolves last year behind only KG, Davis and Blount, and ahead of Foye, James, Hassell, Jaric, etc. The guy is a curious ‘tweener along the lines of Justin Reed, only much, much better, with more beef and a hair less quickness. He’ll turn 25 on September 1, and is another reason why Trenton Hassell is going to get the short straw when it comes to assembling this roster. I couldn’t begin to tell you where Gomes will fit in, but he was very popular in Boston, which suddenly has a very exciting team in need of some glue guys, so I suggest that if the Wolves plan on keeping him when his contract expires after this year, that the seduction process begin soon and include a nice niche in the substitution rotation.

    I also don’t have a clue as to how the Wolves maximize a front line that, aside from Jefferson, locker room stalwart Juwon Howard (who needs to be kept in the mix), and the hopefully departed Blount, is comprised of a trio of undersized grinders in Craig Smith, Mark Madsen, and Chris Richard. I think Richard is better than D-league material; that Smith will continue to improve (if only because half of those unfair blocking fouls he was whistled for will be ruled charges); and that for all the guffaws about Madsen’s amateurish appearance, the guys helps more often than he hurts when thrown in for short 5-10 minute bursts.

    The bottom line on all of this is that the last three drafts and the KG trade have generated a whole bunch of really interesting pieces with which to jigsaw together a basketball team, including some draft picks and some salary cap space. It will be up to the front office, specifically Wittman, McHale, Taylor and Hoiberg, to combine these pieces in a way that creates synergy instead of chaos. I understand the cynicism toward McHale and Wittman, whose recent track records inspire opprobrium. When former Strib beat writer Steve Aschburner asked me for a projected win count during a preseason exhibition game last year, my honest but wide-berthed answer was they’d win between 28 and 40 games and miss the playoffs. A year later, two months before training camp, I’d lower those parameters to between 15 and 30 wins. But I already feel better about this team than I did about last year’s. There is young talent here; can it be meshed and molded properly? That’s a more enticing prospect to watch unfold–whether the answer is yes or no–than watching the poignant frustrations pile up for an aging superstar compelled to endure the inconsistencies of his overpaid, underachieving teammates.

    I know this post is becoming a novel, but one last thing. Just as bashing McHale and Wittman before they’ve had a chance to glisten or besmirch their clean slate serves no purpose beyond primal therapy, lamenting the delay in trading Garnett is, for me at least, 20/20 hindsight. Should the Wolves have pounced on the offer of Luol Deng, Tyson Chandler, and the #2 pick from Chicago a year ago? Yeah, it looks like it. But I see no dishonor in Glen Taylor trying to make it work for as long as possible–and at least a year longer than he should have–in deference to his loyal superstar. This is where Kevin McHale earns our scorn, in the time between the Sammy and Spree revolt and last week’s blockbuster concession to the reality that KG’s time in Minnesota was destined for a bad and sad denoument.

    I started this thing by saying that, post-trade, McHale has a chance to rebut or reinforce negative perceptions. The same is true of Garnett, albeit in much more favorable circumstances. All that talk about not stepping up and never having quality teammates are off the table beginning this season in Boston. It is a near optimal situation for the three Celtic stars, who all became accustomed to carrying their respective teams these last few years. None have ever had a teammate as good as one–let alone both–of the others. It is like toiling by yourself in the fields and suddenly being assisted by two quality workers; it gives you far more energy and inspiration than if the three of you had all started working together. I expect to see the Celts, at minimum, in the Eastern Conference finals. I expect to see the Wolves flounder for at least a year or two, but can’t help but notice the dim light at the end of a long tunnel. Just desserts, all around.

  • Damn Right, Nick.

    When he’s right he’s right, and Nick Coleman makes a spot-on point in this morning’s column. Minnesota, like much of the rest of the country, is digging itself deeper and deeper into a very serious infra-structure repair deficit, in no small part due to fear of so-called “taxpayer advocacy” groups who force/blackmail cowardly and cynical politicians into signing “no new taxes pledges” and avoiding the basic responsibilities of governance.

    When the final report is in, the collapse of the 35-W bridge may be tagged to something no one has yet imagined. Maybe Osama bin Laden did order a hit on Minneapolis. But all early signs point to garden variety, duly noted age and inadequate maintenance, both of which, you can argue are a consequence of, as Nick says, politicians’ on-going, craven attempts to govern “on the cheap.” As though the world we live in getting less and less expensive — rather than the reality that confronts the rest of us every day.

    Few reactions are more unappealing than your average “progressive” candidate tucking his tail between his legs at the thought of taking heat for making a stand for adequate funding — i.e. new taxes. Never mind it may be for some indisputably vital, relevant cause — like major infrastructure repair — which, by the way, can’t be out-sourced to China, and rattles nicely around the local, middle-class economy.

    Who and what are they afraid of, largely? Op-ed pieces in either paper? Give me a break. What they fear are the knee-jerk acolytes of mass media demagogues, people who will camp out at their intellectual masters’ microphones for hours every day and robotically fire off angry letters denouncing every peril — mostly imagined and mostly paranoid — of “big government,” the first among them being any kind of taxation (usually because of the way liberals waste money on lesser classes of citizens).

    Maybe it takes something as enormous and grotesque as the collapse of a major freeway bridge to remind this stunningly self-absorbed crowd that even their lives are imperiled by the steady rot of arteries we all depend upon, and that the last time I checked, “private initiative” has re-built very few freeways in this country.

    Anyway, nice job, Nicky Boy. Not badly written either. Although, a la any New York Times piece the Strib handles, another half-dozen editors might have tightened it up here and there.

  • Bad News Travels Fast

    My ingestion of Hurricane Charleys (vodka, mint leaves, some blue stuff, some green stuff) was rudely interrupted around 7:30 EDT last night by the first phone calls from home bringing news of the 35W bridge collapse.

    Within the first hour of coverage the familiar patterns of tragedy-reporting, both good and bad, were playing … incessantly.

    The good:

    The pictures. Chopper coverage via Twin Cities affiliates on CNN, MSNBC, and CNN Headline provided the visual basics, which pretty much amounted to one extended, “Holy shit!” This is the essential value of TV news. As in, “Let me see what has happened and I’ll figure out half the story all by myself.”

    But within the first hour the repetition — always necessary for viewers tuning in late — produced the usual unintentionally iconic images — like the big, bald, shirtless guy with a bandaged abdomen being led — apparently back and forth by first responders. Footage of the guy ran so often on cable you’d be forgiven for thinking he was the single most important survivor. (A corollary was footage of a very beefy Virginia cop running across a lawn after the Virginia Tech shootings. It ran every three minutes for hours in the early reporting.)

    With all the footage pouring in from their local “partners” you wonder why the cable channels re-re-re-run loops of the same rather more mundane stuff?

    More to that point, with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer and MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann and Dan Abrams, anchoring non-stop coverage, the cable news bible says the anchors must maintain high levels of screen time, even if, in the interest of getting a fuller first impression of the event they might be better off parceling more time to the affiliates.

    The bad:

    The inability of phone-in witnesses and experts to answer a basic question. Never mind the mistake of saying the bridge “Connects Minneapolis to St. Paul,” which CNN had up way past the point somebody could have told them otherwise. How about local news types’ inability to even offer a reasonable guesstimate of the river’s depth, a question likely on every viewer’s mind. My guess was 25-30 feet. I’ve since read a 9′ minimum channel is maintained. But when asked on CNN, one local news man instead wandered off into the design of the damn thing, about which he also knew nothing.

    Blitzer, who can flail to fill as badly as anyone, also allowed himself to be held captive by a caller who admitted he had driven over the thing 10 MINUTES before it collapsed and was buying a sandwich when it actually dropped. Who vets those calls? Why was he even on the air? Didn’t WCCO or KARE have anything fresher than that?

    One shining light of news basics was my good buddy, Jim Leinfelder, an MSNBC freelancer working the story. Jim maintained enough presence of mind to give Olbermann direct, succinct answers to questions. Thank you, my man.

    Being out of town I can’t say much about local coverage, although early e-mail and phone flow this morning is giving KSTP, Channel 5, the nod for best coverage, never mind being largely shut out from the CNN-MSNBC coverage. (KSTP’s ratings problems have never had much to do with their reporting performance.)

    Despite attempts by the usual nutballs to insinuate some kind of terror meme, the cable(rs) accepted the word of local officials that it was what it appeared to be, a structural failure. (My curiosity: What has been the effect of 40 years of de-icing chemicals on the support girders?)

  • Obento-ya

    bistro-web.jpg

    Obento-ya may be small — tiny, in fact — but the little Japanese storefront at 15th and Como Ave. S.E. offers the biggest selection of bento box meals I’ve seen locally. The 18 different varieties range from tempura shrimp to grilled mackerel, served in a lacquered box with accompaniments of white rice, green salad, Japanese potato salad and miso soup. Nearly all are $6.95-$8.95, but if you want to splurge, try the sushi deluxe bento which includes five pieces of nigiri sushi (fish on top); a six-piece California roll, and all the above accompaniments, plus spicy burdock root sautee and Japanese omelet. 1510 Como Ave. S.E., Minneapolis, 612-331-1432. www.obento-ya.com.

    The menu also features a la carte sushi, udon and soba noodle soups, and a big selection of robata , little grilled skewers threaded with anything from shrimp or octopus to morsels of chicken breast or Japanese pumpkin (most $1.50-$3). No wine or beer yet.
    (A tip of the hat to Linda Lincoln of The Bridge community newspaper, for finding it first.)

  • The Day After

    What do you do the day after a bridge collapses? Maybe just stay in. True. But it’s also the start of Fringe Festival today, and you don’t want to let fear push you around. (Respect it. Yes. But don’t let it push you around.) Here’s what you do. Regroup. Breath. Inform yourself. I’ll give you as many good links as I can find on the bridge collapse. When evening comes, let it go. Find yourself a good show (there are so many), and allow yourself to be entertained. You’ll enjoy the distraction.

    RAKING THE WEB
    Interstate 35W Bridge Collapses into Mississippi River

    I’m not going to give you links to the mainstream media sources you should be reading, but do go check them out. I have actually been pleasantly surprised so far with the quality of the local coverage. I thought WCCO, for example, offered some very nice coverage — despite what appeared to be a glitch in their signal that left a nice pink line down the left side of my screen. You should be able to get the other links at Twin Cities Daily Planet.

    Flickr Photos
    Metafilter
    Metroblogging Twin Cities
    More Metroblogging
    MNSpeak
    Blanked Out
    Captain’s Quarters
    Peace Like a River
    Eyeteeth
    American Patrol
    Twin Cities Sidewalks
    Party of Pawlenty
    Bachmann’s Statement
    Ellison on Bridge Collapse
    Daily KOS
    Wikipedia
    MPR
    Minnesota Monitor – on blogs
    Anti-Strib
    Fark Forum
    The Huffington Post
    Best Front Design

    Related (or not related) Links

    Hoan Bridge
    Silver Bridge
    Webber Falls Bridge
    Webber Falls Bridge Outrage
    Troy-Green Island Bridge
    Tobin Bridge
    Understanding a Truss Bridge

    “Oh! Ill-fated bridge of the silv’ry Tay
    I now must conclude my lay
    By telling the world fearlessly without the least dismay
    That your central girders would not have given way
    At least many sensible men do say
    Had they been supported on each side with buttresses
    At least many sensible men confesses
    For the stronger we our houses build
    The less chance we have of being killed”
    — William McGonagall

    THEATER & PERFORMANCE
    Fringe Festival

    The Minnesota Fringe Festival will open today at 5:30 p.m., as planned, despite the tragic collapse of 35W crossing the Mississippi River. Should any schedules change, they will be posted the Fringe Festival website. Alternate travel information will also be available on the website.

    See tonight’s lineup.

  • Aschburner on Garnett

    Even from the coast of SW Florida I get the feeling of KG overkill in Twin Cities media. Nothing like a blockbuster sports deal in the dog days.

    I count myself among the “fans” who pretty much ignored the Timberwolves start to finish last season. I don’t recall (TM … Albert Gonzales, Dick Cheney) listening to one turn-over of a Woofies game on radio and caught only fractions of TV games. Boredom. Ennui. Fatigue. Indifference. It’s all kind of the same thing. Even with Garnett the team wasn’t doing anything but taking a steady drift downward, and worse, they we’re taking that downward drift with what seemed to a part-time fan like me to be minimum intensity.

    I did, however, read a lot of Steve Aschburner’s stuff as the Strib’s pro basketball guy. Tight, punchy, well-sourced. Aschburner’s copy was better than any Woofies offense.

    As some of you may know Aschburner accepted a Strib buy-out offer while on a Woofes roadtrip in early March, then quickly pulled it back, only to have Strib management insist on “honoring” his original request.

    Aschburner, who was President of the Pro Basketball Writers Association when the Strib made sure he left the paper, has a piece on the Garnett deal up on sportsillustrated.cnn.co. . And this morning, another on AOL Sports.

    Says Aschburner of KG: “He was the pearl among swine, so goes the popular perception, a silk purse among sows’ ears (and other butcher cuts)… .”

    That’s about right.

    Keep it coming, Steve.

  • Junk in the Trunk

    Shopping notes: In preparation for this year’s country western-themed Glamorama event, area Macy’s stores will open their “Glam Shops” today. Look for countrified jewelry, pewter belt buckles, suede, fringe, and, of course, merchandise that pimps the event’s headliner, Big and Rich. Macy’s will even have reproduction vintage from Scully. And there’ll also be some great cowgirl kicks and spiffs from a Texas-based outfit called Junk Gypsy. (Their line includes the shredded bordello dress I’m currently coveting – it looks like Edward Scissorhands caught hold of it!) Look for the Junk Gypsy trunk show at the Minneapolis store on August 17. Also, in a couple weeks, look for the freelance Strib piece I just pulled together during my weekend trip to NYC. (No better place to unleash the snark.)

  • Taste of the Nation: Chow Down and Help Kids

    10556.jpgIf the $150 a plate gastronomic Taste of the Nation Minneapolis-Saint Paul extravaganza scheduled for September 16 at Graves 601 Hotel is a little too rich for your blood, the organizers of this year’s Share our Strength fundraiser to fight childhood hunger have a more affordable option: a $35 grazing dinner next Wednesday, August 8, at Chambers Hotel featuring eight top local chefs. The roster for next week’s event includes Steven Brown of Harry’s Food and Cocktails, Vincent Francoual of Vincent A Restaurant, Josh Nudd, Chambers Kitchen; Hector Ruiz, Cafe Ena and El Meson; Todd Stein, B.A.N.K.; Rick Kimmes of the Oceanaire Seafood Room, and Sameh Wadi, Saffron Restaurant and Lounge. The ticket price for next week’s event includes a cocktail; an eight-piece ska band will perform in the Chambers courtyard. To reserve tickets, click here.

  • Educate Yourself with Book and Film

    BOOKS & AUTHORS by Max Ross
    Release of Barack Obama’s Biography

    9780060858209.jpgSince the beginning of Barack Obama’s campaign for a seat in the Illinois Senate, David Mendell has covered Obama’s career. Now Mendell has compiled a biography of the politician, Obama: From Promise to Power, culled from his observations, as well as from exclusive interviews with Obama’s aids, adversaries, and family. Sure, it’s yet another icon of pre-pre-election buzz, but this particular one seems strangely devoid of partisanship: Mendell’s account doles out equal parts criticism and praise for Obama’s tactics, while reaching nearly as in-depth into the subject’s personal life as Obama’s own memoirs.

    FILM
    Beijing Meets Minneapolis

    n002.jpgFilmmakers and enthusiasts are invited to IFP tonight to meet fourteen delegates from the Beijing Film Academy. The delegates, all faculty of the Academy — which is internationally recognized as one of the most vital film production institutes in the world — represent various disciplines, including screenwriting, directing, scenic design, director of photography, sound recording, research, and more. Tonight’s reception will feature clips of their work, along with an opportunity to share your own work and vision with them. The group has been invited to visit Minnesota for ten days at the behest of the University of Minnesota. While they are here, they will visit the Minneapolis Institute of Arts and Walker Art Center, and attend lectures on American Cinema at the University of Minnesota.

    7 p.m., IFP MN, 2446 University Avenue West, Suite 100, St. Paul; 651-644-1912; free.

    A Remarkable Man

    RM-Ed Arms Up.jpgThe libertarians are at it again — trying to educate you, that is. This month’s movie offering is A Remarkable Man: The Ed Thompson Story, a documentary about a boxer, professional poker player, tavern owner, construction worker, and salesman, who hated politics but got sucked into it upon facing an 8-year prison sentence for paying an undercover agent $5 from a penny video poker machine. “Ed Thompson’s story is about the determination of a not-so-ordinary guy who refuses to bow to injustice, battling for both himself and others against the forces of a powerful political machine.” You really can’t go wrong with that. And kudos to the libertarians for wanting us to stand on our own two feet rather than bowing to the machine. Watch a trailer.

    7 p.m., Liberty Center, 799 Raymond Ave., Saint Paul; 651-646-8980; $5 donation with R.S.V.P.

    On the Waterfront

    malden_brando_saint_waterfront_1111522013.jpgA classic is a classic is a classic; and this is one of the best. If you haven’t seen it, go NOW. This evening’s screening of Elia Kazan’s On the Waterfront — featuring none other than Marlon Brando — will begin after a concert by Build My Gallows High, a movie trivia contest, and a short film history discussion.

    7 p.m. (movie at dusk), Steven’s Square Park; free.

    MUSIC
    Legends Take Time to Create

    Buddy_plays_2nd_time.JPG_729600497.jpgColour Revolt is playing this evening at the Varsity Theater, with Manchester Orchestra and The Deaths. This is definitely an indie rock show with a lot of potential. Maybe I’m getting old (or maybe I’m already there), but I’m somehow far more excited about the Buddy Guy show at the Minnesota Zoo. This guy is a blues legend. There is absolutely no denying the impact his music had on musicians like Hendrix, Clapton, Beck, Vaughan — the greats! This is the top of the line, folks. When it comes to blues guitar, it just doesn’t get much better. Buddy Guy has played with both the oldies and the newbies — but all of them legends of their own time. He has recorded with Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, Little Walter, Sonny Boy Williamson… the list goes on. And if that’s just not enough for you, well.. here’s a little secret: he’s also the father of a sexy young rapper named Shawnna — the first female rapper to sign with Def Jam.

    7:30 p.m, Minnesota Zoo, 13000 Zoo Blvd., Apple Valley; 952-431-9200; $39.

    HUMOR
    A Hump Day Laugh

    This is just too funny not to share. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

    And check out elastic boy.

    I suppose you’ve all seen Beyonce tumbling down the stairs already. Baby can take a fall. Damn! Maybe if she weren’t flipping her hair so hard…

  • Now on DVD: They Live by Night

    by Peter Schilling

    odonnell_livebynight_poster.jpgDirector Nicholas Ray’s first film (from 1948) has been called the most auspicious debut in American movies since Citizen Kane. Based on the dynamite Depression-era gangster novel Thieves Like Us, They Live by Night begins with the daring prison break of three men: a 23-year-old killer named Bowie and the aged, hardened criminals Chicamaw and T-Dub. Unlike the source material, Ray focuses on Bowie, who’s been jailed since he was sixteen, and his tormented relationship with the teenage girl Keechie. Ray’s instinct for troubled youth may not have been better expressed — even though he did go on to direct Rebel Without a Cause. Here, he perfectly captures the dangers of that delicate age when a person is thrust from childhood into a world where love and violence are suddenly fraught with (often deadly) significance.