WEEKLYBOISE
6 Danger on the JobWhy work-related injuries—even deaths—often go underreported
15 It Takes a VillageThink globally, party locally at the second
annual World Village Festival
22 Rock ReformLee Bains III & the Glory Fires are fight-
ing for social justice one album at a time
JUNE 8–14 , 2016 VOLUME 24 , ISSUE 51
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LOCAL AND INDEPENDENT
“All presidents want to be rock stars; but rock stars don’t ever want to be president.” CITIZEN 24
2 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
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BOISEweekly STAFF
SUBMIT Boise Weekly publishes original local artwork on its cover each week. One stipulation of publication is that the piece must be donated to BW’s annual charity art auction in November. A portion of the proceeds from the auction are reinvested in the local arts community through a series of private grants for which all artists are eligible to apply. Cover artists will also receive 30 percent of the final auction bid on their piece. To submit your artwork for BW’s cover, bring it to BWHQ at 523 Broad St. All original mediums are accepted. Thirty days from your submission date, your work will be ready for pick up if it’s not chosen to be featured on the cover. Work not picked up within six weeks of submission will be discarded.
ARTIST: Luz Camarena
TITLE: “Tinta y Sangre; Blood and Ink”
MEDIUM: Ink and acrylic/ paper
ARTIST STATEMENT: Blood and Ink is part of a collaborative work with poet Valerie Mejer. These inks are a series of interior landscapes after visiting Yosemite National Park.
WELL VERSED AND DIVERSEIf there is any theme to be divined from this week’s edition of
Boise Weekly, it’s diversity.
On Page 6, BW News Editor George Prentice exposes a dire
situation in the form of workplace safety. As the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration continues its investigation
into the deaths of two construction workers—and the injury of
a third—in a trench collapse in May, we look at another active
OSHA case and speak with a labor union representative who sug-
gests on-the-job tragedies may be more prevalent than we think.
We lighten things up a bit with with a tour of Boise Art Mu-
seum’s new exhibition on outsider art on Page 14, check in with
Lee Bains III & the Glory Fires on how their sonic fight for social
justice going (Page 22), profile a hipster-laden summer rom-com
on Page 23 and have a brief conversation with KISS’s own Paul
Stanley on Page 24.
If all that makes you thirsty, on Page 25 we publish the results
of our monthly liquor tasting—this time, delving into the sum-
mertime staple gin and tonic.
Finally, on Page 15, you’ll find a complete rundown of
everything to see, do, eat or listen to at the second annual World
Village Festival, billed as the most diverse arts and culture festival
in Boise.
Set to go down Friday, June 10 through Sunday, June 12 at
Capitol Park, the event showcases the culture and traditions of
more than 12 local ethnic communities—representing five of the
globe’s seven continents.
It’s all just part of another busy week in the City of Trees.
—Zach Hagadone
COVER ARTIST
EDITOR’S NOTE
4 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
STUNGIN A BIZ ARRE SERIES OF EVENTS IN EARLY MAY, SAMUEL BATES WAS ARRESTED BY UTAH POLICE AF TER A LOCAL T V STATION SET UP A STING TO BUST HIM FOR SUSPECTED THEF T AND SHADY ONLINE SALES DEALS. THE FOOTAGE OF THE STING WENT VIRAL, BUT IT TURNED OUT BATES, A FORMER MOUNTAIN VIEW HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT, IS ALSO WANTED IN IDAHO. GET THE FULL STORY AT NEWS/CIT YDESK.
OPINION
BOISEWEEKLY.COMWhat you missed this week in the digital world.
POTTY PROTESTProtesters in eastern
Idaho took the so-called “debate” over whether a per-son’s birth gender should deter-mine what bathroom they use to a local Target on June 4. Get the details at News/Citydesk.
FREE LUNCHThe Idaho Foodbank
kicked off its summer Pic-nic in the Park series on June 6, offering healthy lunches and the opportunity for outdoor play to kids around the Treasure Valley. Get more at News/Citydesk.
UNDERVALUEDHow valuable is a col-
lege education? According to respondents in a New York Times poll, not much. Turns out they’re wrong, at least based on real versus perceived jobless rates. More on News/Citydesk.
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BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 5
You are falling down a set of stairs. You don’t have health insurance so hoping that nothing is broken or dislocated takes on special meaning. Your boss cut your hours and your job ended up paying half of what you thought. Your dreams of getting insurance under the Affordable Care Act evaporated… again. And no, you are not one of those Obama-hating conservatives who, mid-air on the way to the concrete floor, blames the president for the potential emptying of every account in your name and the perpetual debt that will follow because what’s in those accounts is not going to be enough for this.
No. You know the Idaho legislature is respon-sible because they refused to use federally funded Medicaid to offer a bit of help to those of you who get in financial predicaments—like anyone who did not make the $11,000 annual minimum for Obamacare. Really, you’d pay for insurance if you could, but it’s absurd. By no stretch of the imagination can you stop paying rent or buying groceries every month to do that.
So yes, you hit the concrete and the universe comes to rest on your bank account, not on your shoulder, which seems oddly limp, or the throb-bing in your arm. You’re calculating this disaster and the person who comes to assist has no idea they’ve stepped into a crisis beyond broken bones or dislocated parts. You’re deciding how fucked you are, how likely it is you’ll lose your house. You’re estimating the likelihood of your homeless-ness and never seeing your cat again.
Imagine getting cancer. I mean, there’d be the diagnosis and then the calculations of how much worse slow death would be than the loss of everything you own and the pain of treatment simultaneous with knowing what you’ve spent a lifetime building would be de-materializing before you. Warm bed; kitchen where you can cook; place where maybe your children took their fist steps, spoke their first words; the place you come to when all you want is to sit in silence, to remind yourself you’re there inside that shell of a person who works long hours with little show for it but a warm fuzzy feeling of having done some-thing that matters to someone besides yourself.
Beyond that there’s being uninsured when you have children. Your kids have CHIP so they’re on Medicaid, and when you’re watching slow-mo-tion as the deer sails into the headlights and the breaks squeal—because you imagine the whole creature being sucked into your cab in a way that decapitates all of you—and going off the road in a skid seems better, or even rolling. And you do roll, several times, and the kids fly and you come-to in a field with ambulance personnel in some sort of polyester uniforms telling you to stay still.
But all you want to know is are the kids OK. And they are, sort of. They’re in the ambulance but you, the polyester-clad ones say, you have a broken neck, a c-spine injury. But still, you say, “NO. Don’t touch me. Leave me here. Take the kids. I’ll get by. Really.” And clearly they think you’re insane. You explain: “No insurance.”
They back up a bit. “We have forms for that,” the female paramedic says. But you’re not someone who believes the County Indigent Fund is a free ride. You know better. The whole of your financial existence will be encumbered. The house passed down to you from your great-grandparents will be collateral for something you’ll never make enough in your lifetime to pay off.
“Leave me here. Take the kids. I’ll get by.”“Ma’am, we can’t.”Then you’re screaming at them because now
you’re calculating what it’s like to be homeless with small children.
But, for many, it’s far simpler. It’s that daily choice between medication and food; between doing what you know you should for your health and eating. Those are hard choices. Sometimes it’s about psychotropic medications without which you don’t make great decisions anyway. Skip those for a month and it doesn’t much matter. Sure, if you had health coverage, your practitio-ner would be aware you’re off your meds.
Too many tragedies come down to the cost of medication and health.
So the concrete is there. You flew through the air and you don’t care what’s broken. “I’m fine,” you say, “Just fine.” And you have to be. You’ve contemplated getting the words tattooed: “Leave me alone. If I am broken or unconscious, leave me here. Trust me. It’s better.”
You’re too young to be one of those waiting for that 65th birthday, which means you get Medicare. You wonder if the waiting ones have let this or that go too long and, when the birthday comes and they finally do get to go to a doctor, it will be, “I’m sorry, there’s nothing we can do.”
A few months ago, Sen. Dan Schmidt turned down the free health coverage lawmakers get just for being lawmakers. I used to serve with Dan in the Senate. A good, humble man. He’s waiting until the rest of us have the liberty to break a bone without breaking our whole lives.
Sen. Schmidt, thank you. The symbolism means something to about 78,000 of us in Idaho and 33 million nationwide, where Republican legislatures have thrown us out of hospitals and clinics to make a stupid point about party politics, which, in the end, when you’re flying through the air toward concrete, you simply don’t care about.
FROM THE FAR MARGINSFalling down stairs
NICOLE LEFAVOUR
OPINION
6 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
CITYDESK
DYING FOR A JOB
Trench collapse, manure pit drowning among OSHA
Idaho probesGEORGE PRENTICE
The incidents couldn’t have been more differ-ent. One occurred in a busy Boise neighbor-hood and emergency responders swarmed to the scene. The other occurred in a dairy farm manure pit in the tiny Jerome County town of Hazelton.
In Boise, crews from the city’s fire and police departments teamed with Ada County Paramedics and the Ada County Highway District to free three men who had been buried alive in a trench collapse. In Hazelton, a dairy worker lay in the manure pit for 10 hours before his body was pulled from the scene. In the end, two of the Boise victims and the lone Hazelton victim were dead. The cases of all three are now receiving signifi-cant attention from the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
“From one angle or another, I have person-ally known a lot of people involved in Idaho work-related tragedies. It’s very personal for me,” said David Kearns, OSHA director for the state of Idaho. “When I was growing up here in Boise, I never planned on being the ‘OSHA guy.’ But it didn’t take more than a couple of investigations for me to start getting pretty preachy based on the things I’ve seen and how they have rocked communities and hurt families.”
As for the dairy worker in Hazelton, identi-fied as 37-year-old Ruperto Vazquez-Carrera, who drove his feed truck toward the Sunrise Organic Dairy Farm manure pit but never re-turned, he is one of a multitude of Idaho farm workers whose primary language isn’t English.
“It’s a real tragedy. About half of the fatali-ties we had last year involved people where English was not their first language,” said Kearns. “They’re vulnerable workers. They may fear deportation; they’re open to exploita-tion. They’re afraid of the federal government and they don’t know the difference between OSHA and ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the enforcement arm of U.S. Department of Homeland Security].”
The investigation into Vazquez-Carrera’s death is complete and is currently being
reviewed at a higher level “due to the nature of the incident,” Kearns said.
“It was a preventable tragedy—one of the worst ways I can think of dying,” he said.
In addition to triggering a federal investiga-tion, the Hazelton manure pit drowning also drew the attention of the United Farm Work-ers of America.
“After his truck submerged into the manure pit, that man’s body lay in there until the next
day,” said Indira Trejo, UFW Global Impact coordinator. “That quickly came on our radar because, in February of 2015, another dairy worker drowned in a manure pit at the River-view Ranch Dairy in Mabton, Wash.”
UFW lobbied the Washington Legislature for improved dairy safety standards, but said aggressive opposition from the dairy industry killed the proposed bill. The UFW is now pushing for a meeting with Idaho Gov. C.L.
AWAITING THE NEW (AND IMPROVED?) SATS
School’s out for the summer, but more than a few parents and students will be keeping a close eye on the mail. On Tuesday, June 14, Idaho school officials will release statewide data indicating how high schoolers performed on their Scholastic Assessment Tests.
The SATs, taken by thousands of college-bound high-school juniors and seniors, remain the benchmark for acceptance into many U.S. universities. The results for Idaho were not good in 2015, particularly in math and critical reading scores.
However, there were revisions to the 2016 SATs, including no penalties for guess-ing, a greater emphasis on word meanings and a new scoring range: 400-1600. Still, In anticipation of the June 14 results, the Ida-ho State Department of Education cautioned students and parents to avoid “using college board tests as a sole indicator of the overall performance.” ISDE officials said administra-tors should not be “using test scores as the sole basis for important decisions affecting the lives of individuals.”
Superintendent of Public Instruction Sherri Ybarra went as far as telling Idaho Education News in 2015 that she wasn’t even a fan of the “SAT Day” phenomenon, the one-day “test-athon,” touted heavily by her predecessor, State Superintendent Tom Luna. Ybarra criticized what she called the “one-size-fits-all culture” propped up by the SAT Day approach.
As for SAT administrators, they said the old arbitrary benchmark of scoring 1550 out of 1600 was “very ambitious” and “never meant to judge a person’s ability to succeed.” This year, they said, the new SAT benchmarks “reflect a more realistic picture of satisfactory performance and college readiness,” and the old SATs held students to college grade standards of As or Bs while the new SATs represent a 75 percent likelihood of a student achieving at least a C grade in the first semester.
—George Prentice
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Statewide results of the “new’ SATs are expected Tuesday, June 14.
NEWS
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 7
“Butch” Otter, reminding Gem State lawmak-ers that the most recent fatal incident at the Hazelton dairy is not an anomaly—three dairy workers around the state were killed on the job in 2013 alone.
“When the United Farm Workers started communicating via Facebook about the struggles at Washington dairy farms, we began getting a lot of communication from Idaho workers telling us to come here,” said Trejo. “And after the drowning in Hazelton, we knew we had to come.”
Trejo met with Boise Weekly in early May, after she spent several days traveling across the Magic Valley meeting workers and their families in coffee shops, restaurants, churches and living rooms. But never at a worksite.
“Are you kidding me? I would probably be shot if I set foot on a farm,” she said. “What did I hear from the workers? What did I not hear? I just talked to a farmworker who was injured on the job. Last week, he didn’t have food to eat, so he had to figure out a way to work. Even though he’s hurting on one side, he’s driving with his other hand. And as for accidents on the job? I heard about a lot of them, reported and unreported.”
Meanwhile, in Idaho’s state capital, the town is still buzzing about the May 3 trench collapse that claimed two lives and seriously injured another worker. The incident filled the television airwaves for days and had more than a few people guessing exactly what hap-pened. Owners of Meridian-based Hard Rock Construction, which employed the three men, are remaining tight-lipped about exactly what happened. The day after the tragedy the trench had already been backfilled and paved over with asphalt.
Nonetheless, the investigation into the Boise trench collapse has garnered the atten-tion of OSHA.
“I won’t tell you too much, because it’s an open investigation,” said Kearns, but agreed to provide details on trench-digging in general and the type of five-foot-deep Boise trench that collapsed in particular.
“A trench wall is almost always a dirt wall. Usually, there’s nothing to back the dirt. There are a variety of methods they can use to protect themselves. One, is to slope the walls back, 1 ½ [feet] horizontal to 1 [foot] vertical [or about 34 degrees].”
Since the trench collapse, some media reports have included speculation that the Hard Rock crew hadn’t been using any shielding, such as a trench box. That’s some-thing Kearns wouldn’t comment on.
“Without talking about this particular case, I can tell you that if you’re working in a narrow, confined space and don’t want to do that much digging, another option is to use
some kind of shielding.”When asked about OSHA’s working
relationship with Idaho employers, Kearns had some praise for a number of industries, but reserved particular criticism for one of the fastest-growing industries in the Gem State, particularly in the post-recession era: home builders.
“If I were to talk about a trade where we have some of our most difficult dealings, it would be the residential construction indus-try,” he said. “A number of general contractors want to be hands-off and have no responsi-bility. And then the subcontractors believe that they best way to stay out of trouble with OSHA is to run away and shut down the job when they see us coming. That’s pretty dan-gerous. There’s a majority… yes, I would say majority that believe that’s what it’s all about. That’s a real tragedy.”
The worst of the tragedies result in death on the job. It’s a grim reminder each May 1, when Kearns joins Idaho labor leaders to mourn those who have lost their lives in the service of others on Workers Memorial Day. This year, the names of 13 men and women were read. The causes of death included log-ging camp accidents, workers being crushed by vehicles, severe dehydration and a woman whose hair was caught and pulled her into a conveyor shaft at a Canyon County seed plant.
“Employers are required to notify OSHA within eight hours of a catastrophe. Be-ginning last year, employers are also now required to notify us of hospitalizations or amputations. That’s an area I think we saw a dramatic level of underreporting before,” said Kearns. “But sometimes we learn of something because it just broke as news and someone like George Prentice calls me and asks, ‘Can you comment on this?’ That will start an investigation, too.”
Time and again, Kearns tells anyone who will listen that nearly every accident, hospital-ization and fatality was preventable.
“They’re prevented by following basic, recognized safety rules and practices. As far as the trench cave-in, I don’t know yet if that was preventable,” he said. “But we have a six-month statute on that investigation.”
That means sometime before early Novem-ber, OSHA will come out with its investiga-tion on the Boise trench collapse. Before that, sometime around mid-August, OSHA should reveal its findings on the Hazelton manure pit drowning.
“In some cases, we may need to continue that investigation, but if we’re going to issue any citation, it has to be within six months,” said Kearns. “The public and, most impor-tantly, families deserve answers.”
NEWS
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MON 13 JUN SPIRITED! A Craft Cocktail Competition 5:30pm
TUE 14 JUN Bingo with MINERVA JAYNE!!! 8pm
WED 15 JUN WAY BACK WEDNESDAY Best of the 70’s 80’s & 90’s 9:30pm-Close
THUR 16 JUN Ladies Night 8pm-Close
FRI 17 JUN Boise Pride Bar Crawl – 6pm-Close
SAT 18 JUN PRIDE NIGHT!!! 4pm-Close
SUN 19 JUN Pride Karaoke Giveaway!!! 9:30pm-Close
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8 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
CALENDARWEDNESDAYJUNE 8Festivals & Events
BOISE WEEKLY 14TH ANNUAL BLACK AND WHITE PHOTO CON-TEST VOTING OPEN—Photography lovers, the BW’s B&W Photo Contest has gone digital, so head over to bwphotocontest.boiseweekly.com to start voting for your favorites through June 12. The winners will be printed in the June 15 issue. FREE. Boise Weekly, 523 Broad St., Boise, 208-344-2055.
On Stage
2016 SEVEN DEVILS PLAY-WRIGHTS CONFERENCE—Mc-Call’s annual orgy of theatrical creativity launches its latest season, featuring Pulitzer finalist and Tony nominee Lee Blessing and a host of rising stars and student playwrights. You’ll enjoy a series of free staged readings, plus a full slate of related
activities. Daily through June 18. FREE. Alpine Playhouse, 1201 Roo-sevelt Ave., McCall. idtheater.org.
ISF: LOVE’S LABOR’S LOST—When a king decrees his court be free
of women so he and his men may study without distraction, what could go wrong? Nothing, until a beautiful princess and her entou-rage pay a visit and put the men’s resolve to the test. Love letters gone awry set in motion a series of misadventures y. Through June 26. 8 p.m. $20-$27. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-336-9221, idahoshake-speare.org.
MEGA RAN AND ROQY TYRAID—Video game remixer Mega Ran and
rapper RoQy TyRaid bring their Bits Lines And Mics tour to The Olympic. With locals Dedicated Servers and Oso Negro. 7 p.m. FREE. The Olympic, 1009 Main St., Boise, 208-342-0176.
Workshops & Classes
SOLARIZE THE VALLEY PUBLIC WORKSHOP—The Snake River Alli-ance has teamed up with local solar installers to make it simple and affordable for home and business owners to install rooftop solar and save on energy bills. . Refreshments will be served. 6:30 p.m. FREE. Hilton Garden Inn/Eagle, 145 E. Riverside Dr., Eagle. 208-344-9161, solarizethevalley.org.
Art
37TH ANNUAL IDAHO WATER-COLOR SOCIETY JURIED MEM-BERSHIP EXHIBITION—Through June 26. 7:15 a.m.-midnight. FREE. Boise State Student Union Gallery, 1910 University Drive, Boise, 208-426-1242, finearts.boisestate.edu.
ELIZABETH HILTON: NEW WORKS—Through June 30. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Cinder Winery and Tasting Room, 107 E.44th St., Garden City, 208-376-4023, cinderwines.com.
IN APPRECIATION: NEW GIFTS TO THE BOISE ART MUSEUM—Check out a selection of recent gifts, including quilts and a print by Gee’s Bend artists Louisiana Bendolph, Mary Lee Bendolph and Loretta Pettway; ceramic works by Val Cushing, Rupert Deese, Josh De-Weese, David Hicks and Jose Sierra; and a large sculpture by Paul Vexler. Through Aug. 28. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
KAREN WOODS: THE WAY TO WILDER—Woods’ paintings of rain-soaked roads and highways situate the viewer in the front seat of a car, making it possible to experience the beauty and disorientation of travel-ing through a storm. Through Sept. 11. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmu-seum.org.
SAMUEL PADEN: THE NARRA-TIVES—Through June 30. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Evermore Prints, 780 W. Main St., Boise, 208-991-3837, facebook.com/SamuelLPaden.
TALL TALES: NARRATIVES FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION—Through April 9, 2017. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE-$6. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis Drive, Boise, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org.
TOMAS MONTANO: EVERYTHING NEEDN’T ALWAYS BE SOME-THING—Montano’s new solo exhibi-tion is a case study in how riotous color and a graffiti-esque sense of line, run through a powerful sense of equilibrium can radiate equanimi-ty and warmth. Through June 30. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Gallery Five18, 518 S. Americana Blvd., Boise, 208-342-3773, galleryfive18.com.
TVAA: CELEBRATING PIPE-DREAMS—In celebration of National PuThrough July 1. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. FREE. Boise State Public Radio, Yanke Family Research Building, 220 E. Parkcenter Blvd., Boise, 208-426-3663, treasurevalleyartist-salliance.org.
THURSDAYJUNE 9Festivals & Events
BOISE DEPOT LIVE MUSIC AND TOURS—Spend an evening at the historic Boise Train Depot and enjoy free live music outdoors by The Silver Brass (take lawn chairs), and food available for purchase from Scotty’s Dogs. Tours will be held at 5:30 p.m. and 6:45 p.m. 5:30-8:30 p.m. FREE. Boise Train Depot, 2603 W. Eastover Terrace, Boise, parks.cityofboise.org/parks-locations/parks/boise-depot.
EVENING IN THE GARDEN-BOISE HABITAT FOR HUMANITY—Spend a
fun evening in the garden and help Boise Habitat for Humanity provide housing to deserving local families. You can listen to live music, enjoy wine tasting and food while you shop some incredible deals on live and silent auction items. Tickets available at FarWest Landscape, the Habitat Restore or the Habitat of-
Bringing the world to Boise.
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVALThe World Village Festival, a diverse arts, culture and humani-
ties event, is set to kick off its three-day run in Capitol Park, Friday, June 10-Sunday, June 12.
Presented by Global Lounge, the WVF hosts multi-national performing groups representing a variety of cultures from around Idaho and the Northwest.
Through dance, music, storytelling, poetry, film and food, the WVF showcases African, Basque, Bosnian, Chinese, Filipino, Greek, Indian, Japanese, Mexican, Middle Eastern, Native American, North and South American, and Portuguese communities.
Hit up this event and you’ll feel like a globetrotter without leav-ing town.
Fri., June 10, 4-10 p.m.; Sat., June 11, 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; and Sun., June 12, 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; FREE. Capitol Park, 601 W. Jefferson St., worldvillagefestival.com.
FRIDAY-SUNDAY, JUNE 10-12
Little Red Walkinghood.
BOISE AIDS WALKAccording to the World Health Organization, by 2014, 71 million
people had been infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)—34 million had died and almost 37 million were living with the disease. The portrayal of the disease as primarily affecting intravenous drug users and members of the LGBT community has compounded its devastating impact on society.
On Saturday, June 11, join hundreds of locals for the second annual Boise AIDS Walk, a 2.5-mile trek through the streets of Boise to raise awareness of and funds for people in Idaho affected by the illness. When the last walker has crossed the finish line, there will be a raffle for goodies from My Family Tradition barbecue sauces, $150 in Flying M prizes and more.
10 a.m.; $25/person, $20/person for groups of four; FREE for children 6 and under. Flying M Coffeehouse, 500 W. Idaho St., 208-345-4320, boiseaidswalk.org.
SATURDAY, JUNE 11
Mini-movie marathon.
I48 FILM FESTIVALRight about the time this edition of Boise Weekly was going to
press, a few dozen local filmmakers were hopefully getting some shut-eye—they had just completed the round-the-clock insanity that is the i48 film competition and festival. When i48’s founders first dreamed up the idea of sending filmmaking teams on an Amazing Race-type 48-hour marathon, they thought it would fly under the radar, attracting maybe six teams—eight, tops. More than 30 teams showed up that first year and 13 years later, the teams (and films) keep coming. The end result is screenings of three bundles of films on Saturday, June 11 at The Flicks and a “Best in Show” screening, along with awards, on Sunday, June 12 at The Egyptian.
All films festival: Saturday, June 11; 12:30, 2:30 and 4:30 p.m.; $7. The Flicks, 646 W. Fulton, St., 208-342-4288. Best Of i48 and Awards: Sunday, June 12; 5 p.m.; $7. The Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., 208-345-0454, idaho48.org.
SATURDAY-SUNDAY, JUNE 11-12
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 9
fice. 6-9 p.m. $25. FarWest Garden Center, 5728 W. State St., Boise, 208-853-4000, farwestgardencen-ter.net.
MERIDIAN’S 8TH AN-NUAL PUBLIC WORKS WEEK EXPO—Enjoy
free hot dogs and popcorn as you celebrate Public Works Week with Mini Heavy Equipment Rodeo, Fire Hydrant Flushing Demo, Live Pipe Cleaning Demo, Kids Activities, Construction Equipment Show, Interactive Educational Displays and Meet-and-Greet with Public Works staff. 4-7 p.m. FREE. Meridian City Hall, 33 E. Broadway Ave., Meridian, 208-898-5500, meridiancity.org.
On Stage
COMEDIAN KEITH BARANY—8 p.m. $10. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com.
ISF: AND THEN THERE WERE NONE—A group of strangers are lured to a remote English island re-sort where they begin to meet grue-
some and untimely ends. With only the fallen believed innocent, who among them is the killer? Find out at the Idaho Shakespeare Festival through July 31. 8 p.m. $20-$75. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-429-9908, box office 208-336-9221, idahoshakespeare.org.
LED PROCESS PARTY CHAPTER 1: THIS WAY TO THE EGRESS—Join
LED for their Process Party and help them kick off the production of This Way to the Egress. You’ll have another chance to see Chapter 1 in all its glory, along with never-before-seen material; then stick around to celebrate the continued creation of this multimedia work inspired by a runaway circus monkey, which will culminate in the full-length premiere at the Morrison Center in October. 8 p.m. $16 adv., $20 door. Visual Arts Collective, 3638 Osage St., Garden City, 208-424-8297.
SPOTLIGHT THEATRE: CHICAGO—Enjoy Broadway’s longest-running American musical, a dazzling and satirical look at fame, justice and the media machine set in the
1920s. 7 p.m. $10-$12. Columbia High School, 301 S. Happy Valley Road, Nampa, 208-498-0571. spotlight-theatre.com/current-production.html.
STAGE COACH: THE GREAT AMERICAN TRAILER PARK MUSICAL—A country-rock and blues musical about ‘80s nostalgia, spray cheese, road kill, hysterical pregnancy, a broken electric chair, strippers, flan and disco. Through June 11. 7:30 p.m. $17.50. Stage Coach Theatre, 4802 W. Emerald Ave., Boise, 208-342-2000, stage-coachtheatre.com.
Literature
SELWAY-BITTERROOT FRANK CHURCH FOUNDATION: MICHAEL J. DAX—Join the Selway-Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation (SBFC) and Rediscovered Books for a reading series featuring local and regional authors that specialize in Idaho outdoors and conserva-tion. This month’s speaker will be Michael J. Dax, author of Grizzly West. Environmentalists and the timber industry do not often collabo-rate, but in the years immediately following gray wolf reintroduction in the interior American West, a plan to reintroduce grizzly bears to the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness of Idaho and Montana brought these odd bedfellows together. 7 p.m. FREE. Rediscovered Books, 180 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-376-4229, rdbooks.org.
Citizen
CAMEL’S BACK RES-TORATION PROJECT FEEDBACK MEETING—
Boise Parks and Recreation invites neighbors to provide input on the options for restoring the Camel’s Back Chute. The $115,000 project to stabilize the rapidly eroding hillside would also enhance public access and increase native vegeta-tion in the North End park. Meet in the park picnic area. 6 p.m. FREE. Camel’s Back Park, 1200 W. Heron St., Boise, 208-608-7635, parks.cityofboise.org.
FRIDAYJUNE 10Festivals & Events
BEHIND THE SCENES AT THE OLD PEN—This is your chance to explore
some buildings and cells that are normally closed to the public. Guides will be on hand in each area to answer questions and ensure the preservation of the site. This is not a handicap accessible tour. Last admission at 9:30 p.m. For ages 13 and older ONLY. 6-10 p.m. $10. Old Idaho State Penitentiary, 2445 Old Penitentiary Road, Boise, 208-334-2844, history.idaho.gov/old-idaho-penitentiary.
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Smorgasbord.
SAVOR IDAHOFor the eighth year, the Idaho Grape Growers and Wine Produc-
ers Commission will host Savor Idaho, billed as “the Gem State’s premier wine and food event.”
On Sunday, June 12 from 2-5 p.m., 900 attendees will gather at the Idaho Botanical Garden to eat and drink their way through almost 50 vendors offering wine, cider and food from around the state. Exhibitors will also be on hand to educate and entertain, including Corks 4 A Cure, House of Wine, Idaho Botanical Garden, Indulge Boise Food Tours, Payette Brewing Co., Wear Boise LLC and Winery Seekers Wine Tours.
Ticket holders receive a complimentary commemorative wine glass with which to sip their way through Idaho’s best.
2-5 p.m., $45-$65. SOLD OUT. Idaho Botanical Garden, 2355 Old Penitentiary Road, Boise, 208-343-8649. Savoridaho.org.
SUNDAY, JUNE 12
DISCOUNT OFFERS AT LOCAL RETAILERS
AND EATERIES
DISCOUNTS ON ACCOMMODATIONS AT LOCAL HOTELS
RAFFLE PRICES, GREAT MUSIC,
AND GREAT FOOD
June 18th, Noon to 6:00 PM—Ketchum, Idaho@ the Ketchum Town Square
For more details visit facebook.com/RotaryBrewfest OR sunvalleybrewfest.com
SAMPLE SOME OF THE FINEST CRAFT BEER IN THE NORTHWEST
10 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVAL—Global Lounge presents the 2016 World
Village Festival, a three-day Arts and Humanities event featuring multi-national performing groups representing Idaho’s variety of cultures, and eclectic music groups from the Northwest. This Dance, eMusic, Storytelling, Poetry, Film and Food event will showcase our community’s expanding blend of cultural arts and literature, and will invite every resident to connect with their neighbors through a rich cel-ebration of the many traditions and arts around us. 4-10 p.m. FREE. Capitol Park, 601 W. Jefferson, Boise, worldvillagefestival.com.
On Stage
BOISE WOMEN’S CHORUS: STOP AND SMELL THE ROSES—Join the BWC for an evening of inspirational and entertaining music. 8 p.m. $15. First Presbyterian Church, 950 W. State St., Boise, 208-345-3441, first-presbyterian.org.
COMEDIAN KEITH BARANY—8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $12. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com.
ISF: AND THEN THERE WERE NONE—8 p.m. $20-$75. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-336-9221, idahoshakespeare.org.
LED PROCESS PARTY CHAPTER 1: THIS WAY TO THE EGRESS—8 p.m. $16 adv., $20 door. Visual Arts Collective, 3638 Osage St., Garden City, 208-424-8297.
LIPSINC! PROUD MARYS—Kick off Pride Week by helping Idaho’s
first professional female imperson-ation troupe celebrate 19 years of unique cabaret entertainment. Vic-toria, Nikoa Mak and Martini have some surprises planned, including guest star, The Blonde Bombshell herself, Minerva Jayne. A portion of proceeds benefit Boise Pride. For more info on the 2016 Boise Pride Festival, visit. 8:30 p.m. $20. Balcony Club, 150 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-368-0405, lipsinc.net, boisepridefest.org.
STAGE COACH: THE GREAT AMERICAN TRAILER PARK MUSI-CAL—8 p.m. $17.50. Stage Coach Theatre, 4802 W. Emerald Ave., Boise, 208-342-2000, stagecoach-theatre.com.
Literature
THE OTHER IDAHOANS BOOK LAUNCH AND SIGNING—Re-discovered Books will host the launch and signing for the Boise State-published book, The Other Idahoans: Forgotten Stories of the Boise Valley. You can meet the authors and enjoy drinks and finger foods. 5-7 p.m. FREE. Rediscovered Books, 180 N. Eighth St., Boise, 208-376-4229, rdbooks.org.
SATURDAYJUNE 11Festivals & Events
10TH ANNUAL SALSA IDAHO FESTIVAL—Don’t miss the 10th Annual Sal-
sa Idaho Festival, featuring Candela Salsa band, from San Francisco. The evening kicks off with beginner lessons in Merengue, Bachata and Salsa at 9 p.m., followed by local entertainment, Candela and social dancing with DJ Giovanni. For 18 and older; full bar with ID, and food available to order. 8 p.m. $20. Knit-ting Factory Concert House, 416 S. Ninth St., Boise. 208-367-1212, salsaidaho.com.
ALL VALLEY CHAM-PIONSHIP HOT RODS AND HARLEYS SHOW N
SHINE—Join the fight against de-mentia and Alzheimer’s and scope out 250-plus hot rods and bikes. All proceeds from raffles and auctions benefit families dealing with these illnesses. To show off your ride, the fee is $10 per car/bike, plus one can of food for Idaho Food Bank. Sponsored by Idaho Chariots car club. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. FREE. High Desert Harley-Davidson, 2310 E. Cinema Drive, Meridian, 208-338-5599, highdeserthd.com.
BOISE AIDS WALK—This 2.5-mile walk starts and ends at The Flying M. All
funds raised from the walk and the raffle go to support charities helping those with HIV/AIDS. 10 a.m.-noon. FREE-$20. Flying M Coffeehouse, 500 W. Idaho St., Boise, 208-345-4320, boiseaidswalk.org.
BOISE FARMERS MARKET—9 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Boise Farmers Market, 10th and Grove, Boise, 208-345-9287. facebook.com/TheBoiseFarmersMarket.
BY WOMEN, FOR WOMEN WINE AND FASHION—Coiled Wines and Piece Unique join forces for a night filled with great wine, fashion and food by Aaron’s Alchemy Catering. Your ticket includes access to the 7 p.m. $20. Coiled Wines, 240 E. 32nd St., Garden City, 208-820-VINO. coiledwines.com/upcoming.htm.
CANYON COUNTY CO-OP 2016 SUMMER COMMUNITY MAR-KET—9 a.m.-3 p.m. FREE. Canyon County Co-op, 1415 First St. S., Nampa, 208-960-0328, canyon-county.coop.
CAPITAL CITY PUBLIC MAR-KET—9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. FREE. Capital City Public Market, Eighth Street between Idaho and Jefferson streets, Boise, 208-345-3499, capitalcitypublicmarket.com.
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MILD ABANDONBy E.J. Pettinger
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 11
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EAGLE SATURDAY MARKET—9:30 a.m.-2 p.m. FREE. Heritage Park, 185 E. State St., Eagle. 208-489-8789, cityofeagle.org.
IDAHO CITY PHOENIX DAY CITYWIDE OPEN HOUSE—On the anniversa-
ry of the 2015 Idaho City Boardwalk Fire, the community will showcase its ability to rise from the ashes and demonstrate how the community is as strong as ever. Business will have a variety of activities ranging from grand openings, live music and art to gold panning demos. Hosted by the Idaho City Chamber of Commerce. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. FREE. Idaho City, Hwy. 21, 40 miles past Boise, Idaho City, 208-392-4159, idahocitychamber.org.
IDAHO ROSE SOCIETY ROSE SHOW—Noon-5 p.m. FREE. The Aspen Room in athe Riverside Hotel, 2900 Chinden Blvd., Garden City, 208-343-1871, idahorosesociety.org.
MARY HALLOCK FOOTE DAY CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION—En-joy this day-long centennial celebra-tion of Mary Hallock Foote Day, proclaimed by Mayor David Bieter. The Boise pioneer was an author, illustrator and founding member of the Columbian Club, which was instrumental in securing a Carnegie Library in Boise. See dramatic presentations, speakers on Foote’s writing and art, displays, a historical fashion show, an old-time printing press, coloring fun, and more. Suitable for all ages. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE. Boise Public Library, 715 S. Capitol Blvd., Boise, 208-972-8200, boisepubliclibrary.org.
NAMPA FARMERS’ MARKET—9 a.m.-1 p.m. FREE. Longbranch parking lot, Front and 13th, Nampa, 208-412-3814.
WEST BOISE SATURDAY MARKET—10 a.m.-2 p.m. FREE. Art Zone 208, 3113 N. Cole Road, 208-322-9464.
On Stage
BOISE WOMEN’S CHORUS: STOP AND SMELL THE ROSES—Join the BWC for an evening of inspirational and entertaining music. 8 p.m. $15. First Presbyterian Church, 950 W. State St., Boise, 208-345-3441, first-presbyterian.org.
COMEDIAN KEITH BARANY—8 p.m. and 10 p.m. $12. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com.
ISF: LOVE’S LABOR’S LOST—8 p.m. $20-$27. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-336-9221, idahoshake-speare.org.
LIPSINC! PROUD MARYS—8:30 p.m. $20. Balcony Club, 150 N. Eighth St., Ste. 226, Boise. 208-368-0405, lipsinc.net.
MERIDIAN SYMPHONY CONCERT IN THE PARK—Celebrates the City of Meridian’s annual Gene Kleiner Day with a free outdoor concert at his namesake park. Dunkley Music Instrument Petting Zoo for children of all ages follows the concert. 6 p.m. FREE. Julius
M. Kleiner Memorial Park, 1900 N. Records Ave., near Fairview Avenue and Eagle Road, Meridian. meridi-ansymphony.org.
SESAME STREET LIVE: MAKE A NEW FRIEND—Elmo, Grover, Abby Cadabby and their Sesame Street friends welcome Chamki, Grover’s friend from India, to Sesame Street. to explore the fun of friendship and celebrate cultural similarities. 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. $18-$62. Ford Idaho Center, 16200 Idaho Center Blvd., Nampa, 208-468-1000, fordidahocenter.com.
SHERLOCK HOLMES SILENT FILM—Presented by the Capital City Kiwanis club. 7 p.m. $7-$15. Egyptian Theatre, 700 W. Main St., Boise, 208-345-0454, 208-387-1273, egyptiantheatre.net.
SPOTLIGHT THEATRE: CHI-CAGO—7 p.m. $10-$12. Columbia High School, 301 S. Happy Valley Road, Nampa, 208-498-0571, spotlight-theatre.com/current-production.html.
STAGE COACH: THE GREAT AMERICAN TRAILER PARK MUSI-CAL—8 p.m. $17.50. Stage Coach Theatre, 4802 W. Emerald Ave., Boise, 208-342-2000, stagecoach-theatre.com.
STARLIGHT: SEVEN BRIDES FOR
Art
SUREL’S PLACE SECOND BIENNIAL ART AUCTION FUNDRAISER—Don’t miss
the Surel’s Place Second Biennial Art Auction Fundraiser. There’ll be a live auction of artwork by many of Idaho’s most collected artists
and Surel’s Place visual artists, and a silent auction of art experience packages. Plus artful bites by a‘Tavola Gourmet Marketplace and dazzling entertainment by Swinging with Ellie Shaw, Sean Dahlman and a surprise celebrity guest. Proceeds support Surel’s Place program-ming. 6:30 p.m. $45. Visual Arts Collective, 3638 Osage St., Garden City, 208-424-8297, visualartscol-lective.com.
Citizen
PAINT THE TOWN—This Neighbor-Works Boise program uses energet-ic volunteers to provide low-income, senior or disabled residents a newly painted home, which revitalizes the neighborhoods in which they live. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 208-343-4065, paint-thetownboise.org.
SUNDAYJUNE 12Festivals & Events
THE BOISE FLEA—Vintage and handmade outdoor market held the second Sunday through October. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. FREE. The Boise Flea, 3017 W. State St., Boise, 208-420-7311, facebook.com/boiseflea.
IBG GARDEN TOUR 2016—Enjoy a variety of delightful private gardens in Boise. Now in its 30th year, the Garden Tour is a fundraiser for the Idaho Botanical Garden, its plants and programs. Tour maps and additional details will be emailed to ticket purchasers in early June. 10
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EYESPYReal Dialogue from the naked city
Overheard something Eye-spy worthy? E-mail [email protected]
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 13
a.m.-5 p.m. $20-$25. Idaho Botani-cal Garden, 2355 Old Penitentiary Road, Boise, 208-343-8649, idahobotanicalgarden.org.
SAVOR IDAHO—Join the Idaho Grape Growers and Wine Producers Commis-
sion for the eighth edition of Savor Idaho, the Gem State’s premier wine and food event. You don’t want to miss the chance to savor the best Idaho wineries and restaurants have to offer. Each guest will be greeted with a commemorative wine glass as you taste and sip your way through Idaho’s best. 2-5 p.m. $45-$65. Idaho Botanical Garden, 2355 Old Penitentiary Road, Boise, 208-343-8649. savoridaho.org.
On Stage
COMEDIAN KEITH BARANY—8 p.m. $10. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459, liquidboise.com.
THE FALL OF 55 FREE SCREENING—The Was-smuth Center for Human
Rights is hosting a free-to-the-public showing of Seth Randal’s The Fall of 55. In late 1955 and early 1956, the citizens of Boise believed there was a menace in their midst. On Halloween, investigators arrested three men on charges of having sex
with teenage boys. The investigators claimed the arrests were just the tip of the iceberg. They said hundreds of boys were being abused as part of a child sex ring. There was no such ring, but the result was a widespread investigation resulting in 16 men being charged. 3 p.m. FREE. Boise Public Library Hayes Auditorium, 715 S. Capitol Blvd., Boise, 208-345-0304, wassmuth-center.org/events.
ISF: LOVE’S LABOR’S LOST—7 p.m. $20-$27. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-336-9221, idahoshake-speare.org.
SESAME STREET LIVE: MAKE A NEW FRIEND—2 p.m. $18-$62. Ford Idaho Center, 16200 Idaho Center Blvd., Nampa, 208-468-1000, fordidahocenter.com.
Animals & Pets
SNIP ALMOST SUMMER BLACK DOG WALK—Join this free leisurely walk along the Boise River for all types of dogs to bring awareness to the plight of black dogs and cats in shelters, known as the Black Dog Syndrome. Meet in the grassy area near the east parking lot. Noon-1 p.m. FREE. The Ram, 709 E. Park Blvd., Boise. 208-968-1338, snipidaho.org.
MONDAYJUNE 13
On Stage
STARLIGHT: FIDDLER ON THE ROOF—8 p.m. $9-$24. Starlight Mountain Theatre, 850 S. Middle-fork Road, Crouch, 208-462-5523, starlightmt.com.
TUESDAYJUNE 14On Stage
DADPOD RECORDING: FURI-OUS7—Join Dad Pod favorites Brett Badostain, Kaz Gable and Dylan Haas for a discussion of the final film of the Fast and Furious franchise. 8 p.m. $5. Liquid Lounge, 405 S. Eighth St., Boise, 208-941-2459.
ISF: AND THEN THERE WERE NONE—8 p.m. $20-$75. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 Warm Springs Ave., Boise, 208-336-9221, idahoshakespeare.org.
Talks & Lectures
FRIENDS OF THE HISTORICAL MUSEUM BROWN BAG—Eriks Garsvo will present a history of the railroads of Southwest Idaho. The presentation will take you back in time to when the rails were the life blood of the Treasure Valley and what has become of them. Eriks has been with the Canyon County Historical society for five years and currently resides on their board and is the project manager for restoring a 1942 Union Pacific Caboose at the Nampa Depot. Noon. FREE. Washington Group Plaza, 720 Park Blvd., Boise. 208-780-5192, history.idaho.gov/events/railroads-southwest-idaho.
WEVORCE TOWN HALL: CHANGING DIVORCE FOR GOOD—Michelle
Crosby, CEO and founder of Wevorce, will lead a Town Hall Conversation, helping attendees to answer questions, define their needs and better understand the di-vorce process. Wevorce is an online platform that is changing divorce for good. This forum is free and open to the public, and will focus on those who are thinking about getting a divorce, have recently gone through a divorce or know someone who has been affected by divorce. 7 p.m. FREE. Red Lion Downtowner, 1800 W. Fairview Ave., Boise, 208-344-7691, wevorce.com.
CALENDAR
Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk.
L A S T W E E K ’ S A N S W E R SGo to www.boiseweekly.com and look un-der odds and ends for the answers to this week’s puzzle. And don’t think of it as cheating. Think of it more as simply double-checking your answers.
© 2013 Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved.
THE MEPHAM GROUP | SUDOKU
14 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
ARTS NEWS
A motorcycle built from bicycle chains and cans; a bank made of matchsticks and mirrors; a truck constructed from toothpicks, aluminum foil and cardboard; cloth dolls, papier-mache figures, furniture, fishing decoys, a birdhouse, a Balinese drum, an American flag, a crazy quilt. Individually, these items are interest-ing and good examples of skilled craftspeople. Together, however, these and several other works transcend their individual function or purpose and, in some cases, even their aesthetics, to form the “art” in Folk Art: The Drew and Katie Gibson Collection, an exhibition at Boise Art Museum on display now through Sunday, July 24.
Though maybe not as well-known as Herb and Dorothy Vogel or Kendra and Allan Daniel, the Gibsons—who spend time in both Califor-nia and Idaho—are equally passionate about art, supporting both San Jose Museum of Art and BAM, gifting artworks collected on their travels to both museums.
“They have a wonderful collection and from time to time, we ask if we can draw works from [it],” said Nicole Herden, curator of art at BAM.
“They are always very willing to let us borrow their work. They want to share their collection with Idaho. Oftentimes, sharing the work results in donations … a lot of work in this exhibition has been donated to [BAM].”
It may seem antithetical to add a ham-ster cage or a toy Pakistani jingle truck to a museum’s permanent art collection, but only if the museum’s definition of art is constrictive—something BAM’s is definitely not. Folk art has a place right next to “high” art, even though the works have completely differ-ent origins.
Folk art is “traditional” or art “learned at the knee,” meaning techniques are handed down through generations. Works of folk art often serve both form and function and, usually, folk artists have little to no formal training. The Folk Art exhibition, spread out through three of BAM’s galleries, shows the range of this style of art, which can be as elementary as a beautifully
crafted large wooden bench, chair and lamp; or as complex as a breathtaking Wixarika (or Huichol) deer sculpture, covered in thousands of colored seed beads individually and exact-ingly applied. These and many of the others pieces in the exhibition are as evocative as works considered “high art.”
“With folk art, the works in this exhibition remind us cre-ativity flourishes independent-ly of formal art training. That’s really exciting,” said Herden, who believes there’s room for every kind of art. “As a curator, I’m always wondering, ‘Why must ‘high’ art be better? Why
does society place high art on a pedestal?” Though historically, more value has been
placed on work created by trained artists, folk art started to gain more respectability (in the U.S.) in the 1930s. Since then, folk art has become more valid and, most importantly, more accessible. Now, thanks to the Gibsons and BAM, the latter is even more so.
ISF, TYNE RAFAELI MAKE LOVE’S LABOR’S LOST LOOK EASY
While the lovers in Shakespeare’s Love Labor’s Lost might be left unfulfilled, that is not the case for audiences of Idaho Shakespeare Festival’s latest production. From opening curtain through the final bow, the production is a well-paced romp through romantic absurdities and a celebration of the power of the ensemble.
As the saying goes, there are no small roles, and that is especially true in this case where in-dividually strong performances build upon and accentuate each other to create a whole even more powerful. With a cast made up of familiar ISF players and newcomers alike, the rapport between the actors is undeniable as they work together to create a performance that is in turns laugh-out-loud funny and quietly touching.
In her directorial debut with ISF, Tyne Rafaeli has successfully blended modern culture with traditional Shakespeare in a way that never feels forced or odd. Modern inclusions—whether it’s a simple vocal inflection or even a rap—enrich the source material rather than feel like they’ve been jammed in to get a laugh. Rafaeli makes good use of her cast’s talent for physical comedy and she clearly allowed the actors to have fun with their roles, which infuses the production with creative energy.
Love’s Labor’s Lost is the story of the King of Navarre and his entourage of three young lords who have pledged to dedicate themselves to academia for three years. They are not to speak or even look at women, lest they be distracted from their studies. Yeah, that doesn’t last long.
Enter the Princess of France and her ladies in waiting—who have one of the best entrances, undeniably channeling Beyonce. Surrounded by clowns, servants, scholars, a Spanish knight and a possibly Canadian constable, there are misplaced letters, mistaken identities and open mocking—the best of a Shakespearean comedy.
The refreshing combination of returning cast members and first-timers plays upon the strengths of both and Love’s Labor’s Lost is well worth the price of a ticket for longtime lovers of Shakespeare as well as anyone who just loves a good comedy.
—Deanna Darr Love’s Labor’s Lost runs through Sunday,
June 26. Idaho Shakespeare Festival, 5657 E. Warm Springs Ave., 208-336-9221, ida-hoshakespeare.org.
L-R: Unknown artists, “Bicycle and Motorcycles,” 20th century, repurposed materials; Unknown artist, “Wixarika Beaded Deer,” 20th or 21st century, beads on wood.
ISF’s Love’s Labor’s Lost: It’s a win.
ARTS & CULTURE
FOLKS NEED ARTFolk Art: The Drew and Katie Gibson Collection at BAM
highlights tradition while reexamining definitions AMY ATKINS
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Folk Art: The Drew and Katie Gibson Collection
Through Sunday, July 24. Boise Art Museum, 670 Julia Davis
Drive, 208-345-8330, boiseartmuseum.org
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W W W . W O R L D V I L L A G E F E S T . C O MJUNE 10TH-12TH
CAPITOL PARK • DOWNTOWN BOISE
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2 0 1 6 W O R L D V IF R I D A Y J U N E 1 04:00 - 4:30 DJ4:30 - 5:15 APHOR IS T (AVANT-ROCK)5:15 - 6:15 SHON SANDERS BAND ( SOUL , FUNK)6:15- 7:15 B IOTZET IK CHO IR (BASQUE
FOLK)7:15 - 8:15 ELV I CE & FR I ENDS
(AFR ICAN POP)8:15 - 10:00STEVE FULTON MUS IC (AMER ICANA)
S A T U R D A Y J U N E 1 110:00 - 11:00 DJ11:00 – 11:45 DANZA AZTECA
TONAT IUH (AZTEC DANCE )11:45 – 12:30 MARIMBA BO ISE
(Z IMBABWEAN-STYLE MAR IMBA)12:30 – 1:15 SAM MATT I SE ( COWBOY
POETRY & MUS IC )
1:15 – 1:45 SNEHA PRAKASH & CLASS I CAL IND IAN DANCE
1:45 – 2:30 BOISE CH INESE TRAD I T IONAL DANCE
2:30 – 3:00 NORMA P INTAR & THE TRAD I T IONAL MEX ICAN DANCERS
3:00 – 3:45 B IG TREE ARTS ( PERFORMANCE POETRY )
4:00 - 4:30 5678 IR I SH ( IR I SH DANCE )4:30 - 5:15 SH IM I TREE ( F LAMENCO)5:15 - 6:00 FROGS OF THE NORTH
(AMER ICANA)6:00 - 6:45 KR IS T INE NUNES
(PORTUGUESE FADO)6:45 - 7:15 CA IRO FUS ION
(BELLYDANCE )7:30 - 8:30 DWIGHT & N ICOLE (BLUES
& SOUL FROM BURL INGTON , V T )8:30 - 10:00 THOMAS MAPFUMO
(CH IMURENGA FROM Z IMBABWE)
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 17
L L A G E S C H E D U L EOFF IC IAL WORLD V I L LAGE AFTERPARTY
BY DUCK CLUB AT THE OLYMP IC W I TH DJ PSYCACHE . DOORS OPEN AT 7PM
S U N D A Y J U N E 1 29:10 - 10:45 BHAKT I YOGA F LOW
WITH MARCY M IDN IGHT11:00 - 12:15 WORLD RHYTHM YOGA
BY CELESTE BOL IN & DJ PSYCACHE12:15 - 12:30 SHADOW TA IKO
( JAPANESE DRUMS)12:30 - 12:45 ANN L IAO ( CH INESE
PEACOCK DANCE )12:45 - 1:00 JHANKAR (BOLLYWOOD
DANCE )1:00 - 2:00 MLADI BEHAR (BOSN IAN
DANCE & MUS IC )2:00 - 2:30 BALLET FOLKLOR ICO DE
BENNY MUNOZ (MEX ICAN DANCE )2:30 - 3:15 SCANDI BAND
( SCANDINAV IAN MUS IC )3:15 - 4:15 THEE CORV IDS ( CELT I C
MUS IC )4:15 - 5:30 SMOOTH AVENUE BAND
(R&B , BLUES )
F O O D V E N D O R SB E N & J E R R Y ’ SB O M B A Y G R I L LC H I N E S E F O O D B Y I D A H O
C H I N E S E O R G A N I Z A T I O ND A R J E E L I N G M O M OF A N C I F R E E ZG Y R O S H A C KJ A M M I ’ S D A W G SJ U N I O R ’ S I T A L I A N I C EK I B R O M ’ S E T H I O P I A N &
E R I T R E A N R E S T A U R A N TS H A V E S H A C KT A C O S Y T O R T A S E L P A C O T A S T E O F N I G E R I A
JEFFREY C. LOWE
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O R G A N I Z A T I O NI D A H O S H A K E S P E A R E
F E S T I V A L
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M E X I C A N C O N S U L A T ER A D I O B O I S ER E C O R D E X C H A N G ET H E R E E FT H E S A F A R I I N NS T R A N G E F O L K W I N E SV I K T I N I A R T , V I C T O R I A
M A R T I N IW H I T E C L O U D A D V E N T U R E S
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVAL KICK-OFF PARTY SPONSORS 2 8 T H B A R R E & S O U L3 6 T H S T R E E T G A R D E N C E N T E RB A G H D A D M A R K E T & B A K E R YB I G A L ’ SB O D Y W O R K S B Y F L O R AB O E X B O S N I A M A R K E T &
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E L O N S E R V I C E SE M E R A L D L A N E SE M M A D O N O H O EF A S T L A N E G O - K A R T SG O O D F L O T A T I O N SH A I R A N D N A I L D E S I G N B Y K I S H AI S H T A R M A R K E T & R E S T A U R A N TJ E D L L O Y DL I Q U I D L O U N G EL O B A F A S H I O N SM I S T E R C A R W A S HM I C H A E L S H A WM U U VN O R T H E N D O R G A N I C N U R S E R YT H E N O R T H F A C E
O ’ R E I L L Y ’ S A U T O P A R T ST R U E P A I N T B A L LP A N A C H ER E D L O B S T E RR O A R I N G S P R I N G SR U T H G R O S S AS O F I A ’ S G R E E K B I S T R OS P A M A T B O W N C R O S S I N GT H E S P R I N G S R E S O R TT R E S B O N N E C U I S I N EV I N E W I N E S H O P & L O U N G EV I P F O O T M A S S A G EZ U Z A N A Z A T L O U K A L
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WEDNESDAY JUNE 9ALIVE AFTER FIVE: WAYNE “THE TRAIN” HANCOCK—With Poke. 5 p.m. FREE. Basque Block
BEVERLY CAROTHERS TRIO—6:30 p.m. FREE. Berryhill
BLAZE AND KELLY—6:30 p.m. FREE. Highlands Hollow
CHUCK SMITH TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
GAYLE CHAPMAN—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
JEREMY STEWART—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
MEGA RAN AND ROQY TYRAID—With Dedicated Servers and Oso Negro. 7 p.m. FREE. The Olympic
SPENCER BATT—7:30 p.m. FREE. Piper
STEVE EATON—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
TYLOR AND THE TRAIN ROB-BERS—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
THURSDAYJUNE 9BEN BURDICK TRIO WITH AMY ROSE—8 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
BURGESS NORRGARD—6 p.m. FREE. Meriwether Cider
CHUCK SMITH—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
FRIM FRAM FOUR—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
LEE BAINS III AND THE GLORY FIRES—7 p.m. $8 adv., $10 door. Neurolux
MODERN BASEBALL—With Joyce Manor and Thin Lips. 7:30 p.m. $17 adv., $20 door. El Korah
ROB HARDING—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
WILSON ROBERTS—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
FRIDAYJUNE 10THE APOCALYPSE EDM NIGHT—With DJ OdieDroppingBangers, Bad Holliday, Ohbrando and StiddBeats. 9 p.m. $8 adv., $12 door. The Olympic
AUSTIN LUCAS—With Adam Faucett, Fernando Viciconte, and Bastard Kinn. 8 p.m. $10. The Shredder
BERNIE REILLY BAND—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye-Cole
BLACK MOUNTAIN—7 p.m. $15. Neurolux
BLISTERED EARTH: ULTIMATE TRIBUTE TO METALLICA—8 p.m. $10-$21. Knitting Factory
BROKEN OUTLAWS—8 p.m. FREE. Oak Barrel of Eagle, 1065 E. Wind-ing Creek Drive
COBERLY, TOWN AND DAY—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
DALE CAVANAUGH—7 p.m. FREE. The Bird Stop Coffee House, 702 Main St., Caldwell
DJ VERSTAL—11 p.m. FREE. Neurolux
DUELING PIANOS ON THE PA-TIO—6 p.m. FREE. Big Al’s
EMILY TIPTON—8 p.m. FREE. Piper
FRANK MARRA—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
HILLFOLK NOIR—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
JOHN JONES TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
KIT FOX AND TAYLOR WIL-SON—7:30 p.m. FREE. The District
MOLLY HARDIN—7 p.m. FREE. High Note
NAMPA BLUES NIGHT—Featur-ing the Boise Blues Society Blues Directors. 7 p.m. $10. Elks Lodge-Nampa
REX MILLER AND RICO WEIS-MAN—5:30 p.m. FREE. Berryhill
SEAN HATTON—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
SPENCER BATT—2 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVAL—Global Lounge presents the 2016 World Village Festival, a three-day arts and humanities event featuring multi-national performing groups representing Idaho’s variety of cultures, and eclectic music groups from the Northwest. 4-10 p.m. FREE. Capitol Park
WORLD VILLAGE PRESENTS—A multi-genre show. 10 p.m. $5. Reef
ALIVE AFTER FIVE: WAYNE “THE TRAIN” HANCOCK, JUNE 8
When he was 18 years old, Wayne Hancock won a talent contest for his songwriting and musicianship. Shortly thereafter, he joined the Marines. Four years in the Corps couldn’t knock the rock out of him and in 1995, the twangy, cowboy hat-wearing Hancock—now nicknamed “The Train”—cut his first album: Thun-derstorms and Neon Signs (Dejadisc). He has been cutting deep, old-timey country/western tracks ever since, and his songs have been covered by Hank Williams III. Hancock’s music is like some-thing from the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack crossed with boogie bop and rockabilly. It’s perfect for dancing to, which is the thing to do at Alive After Five, where Hancock will headline, with Boise’s own western band Poke opening. Don’t miss them at The Basque Block Wednesday, June 8.
—Harrison Berry
With Poke, 5 p.m. FREE. Basque Block, Grove Street Be-tween Capitol Boulevard and Sixth Street, downtownboise.org.
V E N U E S Don’t know a venue? Visit www.boiseweekly.com for addresses, phone numbers and a map.
MUSIC GUIDE
LISTEN HERE
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20 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
AUSTIN LUCAS, JUNE 10, THE SHREDDERFrequenters to local punk/metal den The Shredder might be a
little surprised going cold into Austin Lucas’ upcoming show there. With his tattoos and patch-covered denim jackets, Lucas might look the part, but he’d be an odd choice to pen with either genre.
Self-described as an “Indiana troubadour,” Lucas specializes in a warbling, sauntering, stripped-down country folk sound that feels, at times, like a combination of vintage Hank Williams crossed with Jolie Holland. His take on the style lays emphasis on stories reeled out in a voice as mournful and occasionally lonely as it is tonally true.
Touring behind his latest release, Between the Moon and the Midwest (Last Chance Records, Feb. 2016), Lucas characterized his newest work as a marriage of “traditional and cosmic country sounds with sharp, vivid storytelling.” Check and double-check.
—Zach Hagadone With Adam Faucett, Fernando Viciconte and Bastard Kinn, 8
p.m., $10. The Shredder, 430 S. 10th St., 208-345-4355, shred-derboise.com.
SATURDAYJUNE 1110TH ANNUAL SALSA IDAHO FESTIVAL—Featuring Candela Salsa band, from San Francisco, and DJ Giovanni. 8 p.m. $20. Knit-ting Factory
ABYSSINIAN FLAG—With Deep Creeps and Torn Anus. 7 p.m. $8 adv., $10 door. Neurolux
BPL SUMMER FEST CONCERT SERIES: PATTY CLAYTON AND SAM DELEEUW OF COWGIRL UP—12:30 p.m. FREE. Library at Cole and Ustick
CHUCK SMITH TRIO WITH NICOLE CHRISTENSEN—8 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
CYMRY—6 p.m. FREE. Powderhaus Brewing
DALE CAVANAUGH—7 p.m. FREE. 7 p.m. FREE. High Note
DOUGLAS CAMERON—8 p.m. FREE. Piper
DUELING PIANOS ON THE PA-TIO—6 p.m. FREE. Big Al’s
FRANK MARRA—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
JACK HALE—6 p.m. FREE. Schnit-zel Garten
JEAN CARDENO—11 a.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
KEN HARRIS AND RICO WEIS-MAN—6 p.m. FREE. Berryhill
MERIDIAN SYMPHONY CON-CERT IN THE PARK—6 p.m. FREE. Kleiner Park
OLD DOGS NEW TRIX—9 p.m. FREE. O’Michael’s
REBECCA SCOTT—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
THE RENEWING—6 p.m. FREE. Re-flections Church, 651 S. Stratford Drive, Meridian
SOUL KITCHEN—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye-Fairview
TAUGE AND FAULKNER—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVAL—10 a.m.-10 p.m. FREE. Capitol Park
YOUNGEST OF ELDERS—7:30 p.m. FREE. The District
SUNDAYJUNE 12ACOUSTIC OPEN MIC WITH CYMRY—2 p.m. FREE. Powderhaus Brewing
CLAY MOORE AND CHUCK SMITH—6 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
ECLYPSE KARAOKE NIGHT—8 p.m. FREE. Eclypse
IDAHO JAZZ SOCIETY TALENT SHOWCASE—2 p.m. and 6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
JOE PURDY—With Garrison Starr. 7 p.m. $15. Neurolux
NOCTURNUM LIVE INDUSTRIAL DJ’S—10 p.m. FREE. Liquid
SEAN TRUJILLO—11 a.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
WOH SUNDAYS—10 p.m. FREE. Reef
WORLD VILLAGE FESTIVAL—9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. FREE. Capitol Park
MONDAYJUNE 131332 RECORDS PUNK MON-DAY—9 p.m. FREE. Liquid
BLAZE AND KELLY—6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
CHEAP GIRLS—7:30 p.m. $10 adv., $12 door. The Olympic
CHUCK SMITH—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
JAMES MCMURTRY—With Forest Beutel. 7 p.m. $17 adv., $20 door. Neurolux
OPEN MIC—7 p.m. FREE. High Note
OPEN MIC WITH REBECCA SCOTT AND ROB HILL—8 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
TOM TAYLOR—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
TUESDAYJUNE 14CHUCK SMITH TRIO—8 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
ESTEBAN ANASTASIO—5:30 p.m. FREE. Chandlers
MUSIC BOX: CLASSIC COUNTRY TRIBUTE—With Kim Philley and Ned Evett. 6 p.m. FREE. Sandbar Patio
RABBIT WILDE—9 p.m. $5. Reef
RADIO BOISE TUESDAY: SOFT KILL—With Pro Teens. 7 p.m. $5. Neurolux
THE RINGTONES—8:45 p.m. FREE. Pengilly’s
RYAN WISSINGER—5 p.m. FREE. Bar 365
STEVE T AND KENT P—5:30 p.m. FREE. O’Michael’s
WAYNE WHITE—7 p.m. FREE. Sockeye-Cole
LISTEN HEREMUSIC GUIDE
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22 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
CULTURE NEWS
ROOTS ROCK REBELS
Lee Bains III & the Glory Fires rock against injustice
on DereconstructedBEN SCHULTZ
At the end of their South By Southwest 2016 set (footage is available on Youtube) Lee Bains III and the Glory Fires played “Dirt Track,” the last song from their sophomore album, Dereconstructed (Sub Pop, 2014). Bains told the crowd the song was partially inspired by the people who built and raced cars before racing became a professional sport.
“This is kind of about that,” Bains told the audience, “but it’s more particularly about independent rock music and… about people who wake up in the morning and make deci-sions to do things that are outwardly focused, that are change-focused and don’t have any commodity to them.”
Bains could have said the same about Dereconstructed as a whole. Mixing full-throttle punk and Lynyrd Skynyrd-esque Southern rock, the album’s songs rail against racism, homophobia, income inequality and other societal ills, and have earned Bains and his band some serious acclaim. The Guard-ian’s Michael Hann praised the album as “a ferociously anti-traditionalist affair,” New York Times contributor Jon Pareles wrote how Bains and his band “proudly join the Southern-rock tradition of wild-eyed music hitched to seri-ous deliberation.” The Bitter Southerner editor Chuck Reese went even further, declaring Dereconstructed “might be the most important rock record about the South ever released.”
Bains and the Glory Fires have recorded tracks for their upcom-ing third album and are working on mixes now, but they aren’t done with Dereconstructed—they’ll spend this month touring the western U.S. and Texas, including a stop in Boise at the Neurolux on Thursday, June 8.
Looking back, Bains sees Dereconstructed as laying the foundation for the Glory Fires’ identity and purpose.
“Putting that record out, I think, helped to sort of ensconce the mission of our band and the songs I’m writing in a way that’s been
gratifying,” Bains told Boise Weekly. “We’re working on a new record now, and with each one, I get excited about being able to put a body of work together. … The records can kind of be in a discourse with one another in such a way that they can actually be more significant.”
The roots of Bains’s songwriting reach back to his childhood, growing up in Birmingham, Ala. The stories and songs he learned while attending church with his family had a pro-found effect on Bains’ sense of art and culture.
“There’s something about a lot of reli-gious music and gospel music that resonated with me—and I think resonates with a lot of people—even when every other aspect of
religion and the church grated on me,” said Bains, who identifies as a Christian today. “There’s something about so much of that music that embodies… a more open, beautiful, ac-cepting, loving vision than is expressed when conver-
sation gets mired in dogma and theological embattlement.”
The vision Bains absorbed grew more sophisticated when he became involved in Birmingham’s punk and indie scenes as a teen-ager. In 2014, he told The Guardian that all-ages DIY venue Cave9 “completely changed the way I thought about music as well as art’s role in a community.” Bains went on to study at New York University, where he found inspi-
ration to make art about the South.“I went up to New York like a lot of artsy
Southern kids would hope to do to learn about the art scene, the music scene, to be exposed to different people and ideas and all that,” Bains told Rolling Stone. “But ironically, in doing that, in seeing people making art from all over the world with their own voices, what kept popping up in my mind was, ‘What is my voice? What is my cultural context?’”
Bains continues to question his current cultural context. When he talked with BW, he expressed concerns about the popularity of a certain presidential candidate.
“When Donald Trump first threw his hat in the ring, I thought that this was just gonna be some weird appeal to the far fringe of American white society—you know, like George Wallace running for president. And the fact that he is as phenomenally popular as he is—and a lot of it being around some of the most divisive and potentially violent aspects of his rhetoric—it kind of blew my mind.”
Bains isn’t alone in his feelings but, as he showed with Dereconstructed, he isn’t one to simply wallow.
“If I wasn’t pissing somebody off or mak-ing somebody uncomfortable, then I probably wouldn’t be pushing as hard as I should be,” he said. “Particularly right now, with the vitriolic climate around the presidential election—I don’t know, I guess I feel more called or emboldened to talk about some of that shit.”
SO YOU THINK YOU CAN DANCE?You can (Salsa Idaho Festival). You can also
catch an innovative dance company (LED) and read our review of another (Project Flux).
With the 2015 debut of This Side of Para-dise, LED brought brilliant dance, live music and video to the Morrison Center, Egyptian Theatre and Treefort Music Fest. The perform-ing art collaborative is set to do it again on yet another stage with a glimpse of This Way to the Egress, a multimedia work inspired by a runaway primate. On Thursday, June 9 and Friday, June 10, at Visual Arts Collective, see Chapter 1 of This Way, along with performances from past LED works. Shows start at 8 p.m. and tickets are $16 in advance, $20 at the door, available through brownpapertickets.com. More at facebook.com/LEDboise.
If you want to try your hand—and feet—at tripping the light fantastic, head to the 10th Annual Salsa Idaho Festival on Saturday, June 11, at the Knitting Factory. Beginner dance lessons start at 9 p.m. and once California based Edgardo y Candela starts playing its intoxicating sound, you won’t care who’s watch-ing. Tickets are $20 (18 and over), and more information is available at salsaidaho.com.
In dance review news, Boise Weekly Staff Writer Harrison Berry beat feet to the Esther Simplot Performing Arts Center on June 3 to catch the Project Flux 2016 performance.
Project Flux choreographer and founder Lydia Sakolsky-Basquill has said she typically appends music late in the choreography pro-cess. Often, her pieces are scored with ambient music mixed with spoken word, which was true of “navigate. auditory. system. alignment. (nasa),” which debuted June 3. “Nasa” pairs ambitious forward momentum with a tendency to reminisce. It parallels the path of dancer Evan Stevens, who began dancing three years ago. Stevens’ style is organic and explosive, and his performance in the new piece showed him interacting in unison with other dancers without backing off from his physicality.
The June 3 performance also brought back “mansion. apartment. shack. home. (mash),” which debuted in 2014, and the popular “suc-cessive. stagnant.”
With “nasa,” Sakolsky-Basquill mixes ele-ments to create something that looks (and sounds) natural: “nasa” is not a divergence for the young company; it’s a metaphor for it.
—BW Staff
Lee Bains III: “If I wasn’t pissing somebody off or making somebody uncomfortable, then I probably wouldn’t be pushing as hard as I should be.”
This Way to the Egress, LED’s newest multimedia piece, is inspired by a runaway primate.
NOISE
LEE BAINS III AND THE GLORY FIRES
With guests. Doors 7 p.m., show 8 p.m., $8 adv., $10 door. Neurolux, 111 N.
11th St., 208-343-0886, neurolux.com.
WE
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BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 23
GRETA GERWIG
NEVER GOES AWRY
The delightful actress shines in Maggie’s Plan
GEORGE PRENTICE
Pickles are sexy. Don’t take my word for it, check out Maggie’s Plan, the best comedy of 2016, thus far. And for goodness sake, refer back to Crossing Delancey, an under-the-radar romantic comedy gem from the 1980s. In both, an unassuming pickle broker (yes, there is such a thing) plays a pivotal role in the wooing of an unconventional lady—played by Amy Irving in 1988 and Greta Gerwig in 2016—who finds herself in a… well, a pickle… more often than not. OK, no more pickle talk for now. I would much rather talk about Ms. Gerwig.
I’ll tell you something I’ve never divulged before, so please do your best to keep it a secret: I keep a short list of actors and actresses who, no matter what, I would pay full admission to see in any film in which they appear. Names have come and gone from the list over the decades, but it has never grown to more than six names: three actors, three actresses. Over the
years, some actors or actresses have drifted off the list for various reasons, usually because they’ve scaled back their careers, like Albert Finney and Paul Scofield. More recently, the rarely-seen Hil-
ary Swank and the much-missed Philip Seymour Hoffman each had spots on the list. I won’t reveal all the names on my list today, but I will say Greta Gerwig has had a spot since her unstoppable breakout performance in 2010’s Greenberg. As the title character in Maggie’s Plan, Gerwig’s idiosyn-cratic goofiness lights up the screen and everything else—I wouldn’t be
surprised if her essence could power the marquee at your local cinema.
Maggie, a quintessential millennial fond of penny loafers and long skirts, thinks she can plan everything, which, when embodied by Gerwig, means she can’t manage anything: desire, love and certainly not life. Gerwig is surrounded by a brilliant cast, including Ethan Hawke, Bill Hader, Maya Rudolph and, in a particularly funny bit of business, Julianne Moore as a brilliant Danish author who sounds like Elmer Fudd.
A lot of nonsense ensues, but I won’t spoil anything, lest I compromise your enjoyment. I will offer a word of caution, though: see Maggie’s Plan sooner than later. This is one of those art-house gems that slips into theaters and disappears much too soon, leaving would-be filmgoers disap-pointed at the missed opportunity. You would be well-advised to plan ahead.
Love, sex and reproduction are run through the ringer of Brooklyn hipsterdom.
MAGGIE’S PLAN (R)
Written and directed by Rebecca Miller
Starring Greta Gerwig, Julianne Moore, Ethan Hawke, Bill
Hader, Maya Rudolph
Opens Friday, June 10, at The Flicks, 646 W. Fulton St., 208-342-4288, theflicksboise.com.
NETFLIX BUSTS THE BORDER HOPPERS
As if Netflix didn’t rule enough of the entertainment world already, the streaming giant has now reportedly cracked the elusive code whereby millions of cord-cutters “border hopped.”
Netflix boasts more than 80 million worldwide subscribers but that number would be even bigger if Netflix could capture Canadians, particularly in Toronto and Van-couver, who use a “virtual private network” or VPN in order to view
Netflix’s U.S. content. For example, the CSI franchise and critically-acclaimed European crime dramas such as Wallander aren’t available on Netflix Canada. Even Cana-dian hit TV series De-grassi isn’t available in its home country via Netflix.
The CBC recently reported Netflix has “started fiercely hunting down border hoppers,” but Netflix
executives are tight-lipped about how they’re catching the culprits.
When CBC News asked Netflix about the crackdown, the company refused to provide any details about what methods it is using and “had nothing more to say.”
Why is Netflix’s latest crackdown such a big deal?
Because, according to a report from the Convergence Consulting
Group, Canadians are even bigger cord-cutters than Americans. More important, Netflix could possibly share its anti-VPN methodology with rivals Amazon, Hulu, HBO GO and others to cut off service to the millions of Americans who utilize VPNs to access content across the globe.
Simply put, it looks like Netflix is watching us as much as we’re watching it.
—George Prentice
SCREEN EXTRA
SCREEN
STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 10TH
24 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
He’s a bestselling author, painter, philanthro-pist and a bit soft-spoken. He’s also one of the world’s premier badasses. Paul Stanley, aka Starchild, co-lead singer of KISS and co-writer of many of the band’s best-selling hits, is prepar-ing for the band’s current 35-city tour—dubbed “Freedom to Rock”—which begins in Boise on Thursday, July 7.
“Any band with money can put on a KISS show, but they can’t be KISS,” said Stanley, who spoke to Boise Weekly about his life and legend.
Is there any part of touring that you still love?
Honestly, it’s a lot like winning the lottery but complaining about having to pay taxes. Everybody should have my life. It’s everything anyone could ever dream of. All presidents want to be rock stars; but rock stars don’t ever want to be president.
To that end, do you feel some responsibility to your fans?
We have a legend to live up to and a standard that we’ve kept from the very beginning. I don’t take it lightly. This kind of stature doesn’t come without hard work. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be fun.
I’m certain I’m not the first to tell you that I could be at a KISS concert and see my kids and my parents there.
It would be pretty uncomfortable if I looked out on an audience that looked like an outing for a retirement community. That said, it’s amazing that we’ve become much like a tribe that crosses all generations. It’s still a thrill to see a neighbor, little brother or grandfather at our show. It’s the world’s largest cult and everybody celebrates their membership.
I must tell you that it was a bit of a surprise to learn in your 2014 autobiography, Face the Music, that you were born with a misshapen left ear resulting in a hearing deficiency.
Perhaps part of my quest for fame was really about my own insecurities. Those were magnified
by having a birth defect and feeling very insecure, being a little kid who was stared at or being made fun of. Face the Music ended up being a New York Times bestseller and translated into languages all over the world. I really wrote that book for my children, for them to know what it takes to succeed and for them to understand we have a choice to see ourselves as victims or to lead the life that we deserve. For me, it’s very rewarding to share with kids to know that life can be difficult but the outcome can be terrific.
Have you ever considered that KISS arrived at the exact right time in our history of popular culture?
So it seems. I guess we were needed as much as we thought. KISS started as being the band we wanted to see but never saw. As a rock fan, I felt certain things were missing from the bands I was seeing. I think there was a lack of respect, a lack of appreciation for audiences. You had bands on the stage thinking they were doing audiences a favor. I think KISS was a wake-up call, the right band at the right time to mount the attack.
And as far as your endurance—and we’re talking about more than 40 years—my sense is that KISS is an essential rock band but the makeup and pyrotechnics only amplify that.
A crappy band with a big show is still a crap-py band. We’ve seen enough of those. You’ve got to have the content. You can’t last 40 years on a gimmick. You’re only the new band on the scene just once and once that buzz dies, it’s deafening. You may end up on the cover of Rolling Stone by putting a teapot on your head; next year you’ll be serving fries.
How do you design one tour to be different from another while not being too different for diehard members of the tribe?
What are we going to do? Come out wearing red leather and hats? We’re KISS. But we try to do a better, more powerful version of what we’ve done before. It doesn’t get bigger, but it sure can get better.
PAUL STANLEY
His KISS is on Boise’s listGEORGE PRENTICE
CITIZENCOME LUNCH WITH US
Pinxtos
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available on Wednesdays
and Fridays.
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Open Mon.-Sat. 10 am-6 pm, open extended hours
on Tues., Thurs. & Fri, closed Sun.
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BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 25
There is precious little middle ground with gin. For some, it’s fightin’ booze with the power to turn an otherwise upright person into a Dickensian slum dweller. For others, it’s the apex of civility—shaken and served up with a pair of skewered olives. No matter, it’s serious stuff.
Properly mixed and sipped responsibly, gin can be the pinnacle of summertime refreshment. We tasted three gins—all from parts of the world whence one wouldn’t expect gin to hail—mixed with a healthy spritz of Fever Tree tonic water ($2.45 for a 16.9 ounce bottle) and garnished with fresh chunks of lime. Originally intended as a way for English sailors to fight malaria (hence the quinine in tonic water) and scurvy (enter: lime juice) while still keeping the seamen in high spir-its (thanks, gin), the gin and tonic is simple but also unique in its ability to tease out the delicate botanicals and complex juniper flavors native to this fickle tipple. Here’s what we tasted:
THE BOTANIST ISLAY DRY GIN, $37.95—The word “Islay” (pronounced “EYE-la”) is not one com-monly associated with gin. An island in the Heb-rides chain off the west coast of Scotland, Islay is a vaunted producer of Scotch whisky noted for its smoky, peaty single malt style. We wondered if everything carrying the name Islay smelled like the hearth of an 800-year-old pub. Turns out not. Billed as an artisanal gin of “layered complexity,” The Botanist delivers on its promise of a “seduc-tive experience.” Pot-distilled, so its aromatics and botanicals are slowly teased out in a 17-hour distillation process, this gin trades the pungency of lower-quality offerings for a velvety mouth feel
that dissolves into an play of crisp citrus and refreshing floral tones. There’s danger in seduc-tion, of course, and weighing in at 90 proof, The Botanist could wreak havoc if mishandled.
MARTIN MILLER’S GIN, $27.60—Though gin originated in the Netherlands, it was the English who made it an imperial spirit. A relatively young brand, launched in England in 1999, the eponymous distiller Martin Miller set out with the intent to craft an iconoclastic gin. Distilled in the London dry style, which imposes strict rules limit-ing additives and colorants other than water, this gin goes through two distillations—the first with a palette of five botanicals plus juniper and a small boost of lime peel, and the second with bitter orange peel, lemon and more lime peel. Miller eschews “exotic additions” that “smack more of hype than innovation.” Simplicity isn’t the only thing that sets Martin Miller’s apart. The gin is finished with Icelandic spring water. Floral and up front on the nose, this 80 proof gin carries a faint licorice note on the palate and touch of lingering sweetness. Mixed with tonic, it’s a satisfying interplay of sweet and bitter that would be tough to beat even at a higher price point.
OLD BOISE GIN, $24.95—As Islay and Ice-land aren’t noted for gin production, neither is Caldwell. Still, this is a worthy effort from Old Boise Spirits. Boasting a similar roster of botanicals to the other gins in our tasting, Old Boise throws in an entry that marks it as truly a product of the Gem State. Yes, there is potato in this gin. Clocking in at 84 proof, Old Boise comes off much stiffer on the nose and features a strong juniper aftertaste that lingers. Classic gin notes shine through even when mixed with a healthy three-parts of tonic. There is no danger of forgetting you’re drinking gin, which we think is probably a plus. Old Boise plays just fine as a G and T. However, if you want to tamp down the gin aftertaste, we suggest swapping the tonic for Fever Tree ginger ale, as the spicy-sweet ginger smooths some of Old Boise’s edges.
BOTTOMS UP:While members of our tasting panel agreed
they would purchase Old Boise over most mass-marketed gins, the winner—by the merest of mar-gins—was Martin Miller’s for its complexity sans confusion. Bonus: The price is most definitely right. The Botanist was a close second, but its smooth character would probably be best served as a martini to let its sophistication shine.
These should gin up some enthusiasm on the patio.
BOOZEHOUNDTHREE UNIQUE SPINS ON GIN
From Scotland to Idaho, these gins are winners ZACH HAGADONE
3161 E. Fairview Ave. Ste. 110 Meridian, ID208-888-5797 • thaibasilidaho.comMon -Thurs 11am-3pm, 5pm-9pmFri 11am-3pm, 5pm-10pm • Sat 12pm-10pm
2 YEAR ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!
Join us Friday & Saturday – June 10th & 11thCheers to 2 Years with A Complimentary Glass of House Wine!
*Must be 21+ years old. One Glass per person.
26 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
ACROSS1 “Shucks!”7 They might be covered on
your first day of employment13 Only a second ago20 Ones with good poker
faces?21 Charm City ballplayer22 With a leg on either side of23 Where you can find …
“jacket” or “yourself”?
25 “Yay!”26 Lentil or coconut27 Chinese philosophy28 Student’s saver29 Plus31 … “go” or “so”?37 … “anybody” or “cooking”?44 Dog holder45 A.F.L.-____46 “Over here!”47 “Aww”-inspiring
49 Muhammad’s birthplace51 Lover boy52 Like Fermat’s last theorem,
eventually53 Much appreciated54 They decide what’s fair55 Oteri of “S.N.L.”56 Material in mitochondria59 Acclaims60 Issuer of IDs: Abbr.61 Shade
62 Its material is not hard64 ____-gritty65 … “got” or “tell”?69 Result of hitting the bar?71 “The price we pay for love,”
per Queen Elizabeth II72 Goddess who gained
immortality for her lover but forgot to ask for eternal youth (whoops!)
73 Flirtatious wife in “Of Mice and Men”
76 They stand up in their bed77 Kind of gift78 Sports-team bigwig81 Cash register82 Like the installments of “A
Tale of Two Cities”83 “Ver-r-ry funny!”85 Abu ____86 Obliterate87 Suspenseful sound90 ____ Finnigan, friend of
Harry Potter91 Contraction missing a V92 Kind of verb: Abbr.93 … “two” or “face”?95 … “building” or “hours”?100 Flames that have gone
out?101 Assist in crime102 Indian spice mix107 Things you may dispense
with?110 Take over for113 … “that’s” or “special”?116 “That much is clear”117 Pays for the meal118 Stay cheerful despite
adversity119 Back entrance120 Jellyfish relatives named
for a mythological monster121 Private property?
DOWN1 Woof2 “____ your daddy?”3 River that flows south to
north4 Sets free into the world5 “Ta-ta!”6 Directional abbr.7 “____ Nox” (Mozart title
meaning “good night”)8 Greek vessel9 Enthusiastic Spanish assent10 Debt docs11 Scale12 Collection13 Chin former14 “DJ Got Us Fallin’ In Love”
singer, 201015 Women’s retro accessory16 Offensive poster17 Small bite
18 Part of the classic Chinese work “Shih Ching”
19 Puny24 “Was ____ hard on them?”30 “____ Lat” (traditional Polish
song)32 Subside33 Opposite of -less34 Paranormal35 Fine point36 Provokes37 Persian Empire founder38 Impends39 ____-Loompa (Willy Wonka
employee)40 Fictional braggart41 The “O” of B.O.42 Setting for a watch?43 “We’ll teach you to drink
deep ____ you depart”: Hamlet
48 Et cetera49 Certain racy magazines50 Lift52 “Glad that’s done!”53 Street-fair participant55 “Aww”-inspiring57 Empire State sch.58 Org. with an emergency
number61 Razz, as a speaker63 What the pros say65 Hesitates66 Default avatar for a new
Twitter user67 Reconstruction, for one68 Contraction missing a V69 From both sides, in a way70 Songs of praise73 City whose name looks like
it could mean “my friend”74 Track holder?75 A Beethoven piece was
für her
76 Win every game79 Exhilarated cry80 ____ cabbage81 “End of discussion”84 Botanist Gray85 “A man can be destroyed
but not ____”: Hemingway87 Age for a quinceañera88 “… ____ quit!”89 “The Silmarillion” creature90 Red ____94 Newspaper V.I.P. Baquet96 Pollute97 Too big for one’s britches,
say?98 Hotheadedness?99 Disposable board103 Let go104 Twinkler105 Lead-in to boy
106 Something to mourn108 Red giant in Cetus109 Cozy110 Rend111 “The Name of the Rose”
novelist112 “____ Meninas” (Velázquez
painting)113 Highest degree114 ____-Wan Kenobi115 Family docs
Go to www.boiseweekly.com and look under extras for the answers to this week’s puzzle. Don't think of it as cheating. Think of it more as simply double-checking your answers.
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NYT CROSSWORD | WORD SEARCH BY TOM MCCOY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
H E R C A B I N E D N A Q U A D SO R A A L E R O S B E E R H U N T E RL I V S I L E N C E O F T H E I A M B SA C E L A C O R N Y A I T
R E B A P O O L T R I P P YT H E V A S T E M P E R O R S T A R E RR E V I S I O N A B U T L I M OU N I D U N C E S W I T H W O L V E SS C E P T E R H A P R I P E N ES E W E R E A S Y C O O K I E T I N
G O N G W I T H T H E W I N DF L A G P O L E S O R E O E A R L SI A M I S A L A S G A S M A I NF R E N C H C O N F E C T I O N N E ET I N E E V I E M O N G O L I AH A R A S S A B E A U T I F U L M I N K
T A T T E R C R I T L I N KA N I E E R I E S I E V E
G E R M S O F E N D E A R M E N T M I XM Y H A I R L A D Y H E I N I E A N AA E O N S E R O S D C T E N D O M
L A S T W E E K ’ S A N S W E R S
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SERVICES RENTALS
208-462-5BOBwww.unclebillybobs.comMay-Sept. 2 night minimum stays.Garden Valley, Idaho – only about 1 hour to Boise!
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SERVICESCAREERS
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*A MAN’S MAS-SAGE BY ERIC*Special $30. FULL BODY. Hot oil,
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COME EXPERIENCE MASSAGE BY SAM
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ADOPT-A-PET
These pets can be adopted at the Idaho Humane Society.
www.idahohumanesociety.com4775 W. Dorman St. Boise | 208-342-3508
ARCHIE: 9-year-old, male Australian cattle dog mix. Loves to run, hike and go on walks. Will jump on people, so needs some help with manners. (Ken-nel 300 – #31447932)
MARLEY: 7-year-old, male, Labrador retriever mix. Needs a strong owner to work on manners. Great with older kids. (PetSmart Everyday Adoption Center – #31531096)
PANDA: 3-year-old, male, Chow Chow mix. Inde-pendent but affectionate. Will need to be an only pet. Likes kids. (PetSmart Everyday Adoption Center – #31441690)
GIMLET: 2-year-old, male, domestic shorthair. Laid-back, enjoys a head scratch and belly rub. Loves to lounge on laps or beds. (Kennel 17 – #31691027)
SMOKEY: 6-year-old, male, seal point Siamese mix. Cuddle bug. Loves to watch birds. Vocal and will play fetch. Needs to be an indoor cat. (Kennel 103 – #31663487)
TAUNIE: 3-year-old, female, domestic longhair. Sweet and friendly. Can get a bit mouthy. May be best with adults and pos-sibly older children. (Ken-nel 107 – #31462531)
These pets can be adopted at Simply Cats.
www.simplycats.org2833 S. Victory View Way | 208-343-7177
SMUDGE: Intensely af-fectionate, soft and snug-gly sweetheart. Come see how loving I am.
PINKIE: Polite and calm gentleman waiting to charm my way into your home.
AVA: I’m goofy, energetic and so affectionate, just waiting to have lots of fun with you.
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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Mythologist Joseph Campbell analyzed fairy tales for clues about how the human psyche works. For example, he said that a fairy tale character who’s riding a horse is a representation of our relationship with our instinctual nature. If that character drops the reins and lets the horse gallop without guidance, he or she is symbolically surrender-ing control to the instincts. I bring this to your attention because I sus-pect you may soon be tempted to do just that that—which wouldn’t be wise. In my opinion, you’ll be best served by going against the flow of what seems natural. Sublimation and transcendence will keep you much stronger than if you fol-lowed the line of least resistance. Homework: Visualize yourself, as you ride your horse, keeping a relaxed but firm grasp of the reins. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): I will provide you with two lists of words. One of these lists, but not both, will characterize the nature of your predominant experiences in the coming weeks. It will be mostly up to you which emerges as the winner. Now read the two lists, pick the one you like better, and instruct your subconscious mind to lead you in that direction. List 1: gluttony, bloating, overkill, padding, exorbitance. List 2: mother lode, wellspring, bumper crop, gold mine, cornucopia.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In his poem “Interrupted Meditation,” Robert Hass blurts out the following exclamation: “I give you, here, now, a magic key. What does it open? This key I give you, what exactly does it open?” How would you answer this ques-tion, Gemini? What door or lock or heart or treasure box do you most need opened? Decide today. And please don’t name five things you need opened. Choose one, and one only. To do so will dissolve a mental block that has up until now kept you from finding the REAL magic key.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): The following excerpt from Wendell Berry’s poem “Woods” captures the essence of your current situation: “I part the out-thrusting branches and come in beneath the blessed and the blessing trees. Though I am silent there is singing around me. Though I am dark there is vision around me. Though I am heavy there is flight around me.” Please remember this poem at least three times a day during the next two weeks. It’s important for you to know that no matter what murky or maudlin or mysterious mood you might be in, you are surrounded by vitality and generosity.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A half-dead blast from the past is throttling the free flow of your imagination. Your best possible
future will be postponed until you agree to deal more intimately with this crumbled dream, which you have never fully grieved or sur-rendered. So here’s my advice: Summon the bravest, smartest love you’re capable of, and lay your sad loss to rest with gentle ferocity. This may take a while, so be patient. Be inspired by the fact that your new supply of brave, smart love will be a crucial resource for the rest of your long life.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Five times every day, devout Muslims face their holiest city, Mecca, and say prayers to Allah. Even if you’re not Islamic, I recom-mend that you carry out your own unique version of this ritual. The next three weeks will be a favor-able time to cultivate a closer relationship with the inspirational influence, the high ideal, or the divine being that reigns supreme in your life. Here’s how you could do it: Identify a place that excites your imagination and provokes a sense of wonder. Five times a day for the next 21 days, bow in the direction of this treasured spot. Unleash songs, vows, and celebratory expos-tulations that deepen your fierce and tender commitment to what you trust most and love best.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “The road reaches every place, the shortcut only one,” says apho-rist James Richardson. In many
cases, that’s not a problem. Who among us has unlimited time and energy? Why leave all the options open? Shortcuts can be valuable. It’s often smart to be ruthlessly efficient as we head toward our destination. But here’s a caveat: According to my analysis of the astrological omens, you’re now in a phase when taking shortcuts may be counterproductive. To be as well seasoned as you will need to be to reach your goal, you should prob-ably take the scenic route. The long way around may, in this instance, be the most efficient and effective.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Truth is like the flu,” says poet James Richardson. “I fight it off, but it changes in other bodies and returns in a form to which I am not immune.” In the com-ing days, Scorpio, I suspect you will experience that riddle first hand—and probably on more than one occasion. Obvious secrets and wild understandings that you have fought against finding out will mutate in just the right way to sneak past your defenses. Unwelcome insights you’ve been trying to ignore will finally wiggle their way into your psyche. Don’t worry, though. These new arriv-als will be turn out to be good medicine.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): According to Guinness World records, the most consecutive
hours spent riding on a roller coaster is 405 hours and 40 min-utes. But I suspect that during the next 15 months, a Sagittarian dare-devil may exceed this mark. I have come to this conclusion because I believe your tribe will be especially adept and relatively comfortable at handling steep rises and sudden dips at high speeds. And that won’t be the only rough talent you’ll have in abundance. I’m guessing you could also set new personal bests in the categories of most frequent changes of mind, most heroic leaps of faith, and fastest talking.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Whether we like to admit it or not, all of us have acted like puppets. Bosses and teachers and loved ones can manipulate us even if they’re not in our presence. Our conditioned responses and pro-grammed impulses may control our behavior in the present moment even though they were formed long ago. That’s the bad news. The good news is that now and then moments of lucidity blossom, revealing the puppet strings. We emerge from our unconsciousness and see that we’re under the spell of influential people to whom we have surrendered our power. This is one of those magic times for you, Capricorn.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A few weeks ago you undertook a new course of study in the art of
fun and games. You realized you hadn’t been playing hard enough, and took measures to correct the problem. After refamiliar-izing yourself with the mysteries of innocent joy, you raised the stakes. You began dabbling with more intensive forms of relief and release. Now you have the chance to go even further: to explore the mysteries of experimental delight. Exuberant escapades may become available to you. Amorous adventures could invite you to explore the frontiers of liberated love. Will you be brave and free enough to meet the challenge of such deeply meaningful gaiety? Meditate on this radical possibility: spiritually adept hedonism.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Poet Sharon Dolin compares art-ists to sunflowers. They create “a tall flashy flower that then grows heavy with seeds whose small hard shells you must crack to get to the rich nut meat.” As I contem-plate the current chapter of your unfolding story, I see you as being engaged in a similar process, even if you’re not literally an artist. To be exact, you’re at the point when you are producing a tall flashy flower. The seeds have not yet begun to form, but they will soon. Later this year, the rich nut meat inside the small hard shells will be ready to pluck. For now, concen-trate on generating your gorgeous, radiant flower.
FREE WILL ASTROLOGY
MASSAGE COMMUNITY
BW ANNOUNCEMENTS
ART IN THE BAR 12 SEEKS YOU!Art in the Bar 12 is scheduled for
July 30th. If you’d like to partici-pate, please e-mail Ellen: [email protected].
BOISE HEMP FEST WANT YOUBoise Hempfest is scheduled for
August 13th, 2016 in Julia Davis Park and seeking sponsors, ven-dors, speakers, entertainers and volunteers. Visit: www.boiseh-empfest.org.
BOISE SCAVENGER HUNTEarly Registration discount ends
June 30th! Scavenger Hunt is Sept. 17, 2016 at JUMP (jack’s Urban Meeting Place) Registra-tion opens at 8:30 am, race starts at 10 am sharp. Gather your tribe for a race around downtown Boise! Details at BoiseScavenger-Hunt.com. Proceeds support Lee Pesky Learning Center.
IDAHO’S LD 15 OPEN HOUSEAd Copy: Get the most out of this
year’s election: stop by for beer, wine, and a snack at our Open House with Laura Metzler, Steve Berch, and Jake Ellis – West Boise’s Democratic candidates for the Idaho legislature in District
15. Meet these extraordinary can-didates at an open house at the D15 Campaign Office on June 9. Everyone is welcome. 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Thursday, June 9 at Cole Meadows, 2645 N. Cole Road, Suite K, Boise
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BY WOMEN, FOR WOMEN. WINE AND FASHIONCoiled Wines and Piece Unique
join forces in benefit of the Wom-en and Children’s Alliance Sat. June 11th. A night filled with great wine, fashion, food, and commu-
BY ROB BREZSNY
PETS
OUTDOOR & SPORTS GEAR REPAIRDrop off and pick up at Backcountry Pursuits
or Outdoor Exchange. 206.914.2852outdoorgearmedics.com
SERVICES
ADORABLET-CUP YORKIE!Male/female, 13wks old, $500 each, AKC reg. vaccinated and deworm.
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nity. Crudité provided by Aaron’s Alchemy Catering. $20 includes access to the show, meet and greet with the 2 women owners, a glass of wine, and appetizers. A portion of the proceeds that eve-ning will benefit the Women and Children’s alliance. Tickets can be purchased at Piece Unique, Coiled Wines.
BW KICKS
Hey Donald ! When you took the last chocolate chip muffin at the meeting last week, that was the last straw. You’re on my radar….. and I’m out for revenge. You’d better watch your back.
Dear construction and event plan-ners in Boise, Please pull your heads out of your asses and sort this shit out. There has to be a way to plan for road closures and lane restrictions in a way more condu-cive to helping driver’s navigate. Last Saturday was a complete shit show- and you know it.
BW KISSES
RUTH’S CHRISPlease don’t ever stop making your
beef tenderloin salad...it really is the best salad in Boise.
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ART OF THE MATTERSign up for a week long art camp
between June 20th and August 5th. Each week offers something new! Classes for kids and adults. Email: [email protected] for reg-istration and details.
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BW YARD SALE
YARD SALE SALE HERE! Call Boise Weekly to advertise
your Yard Sale. 4 lines of text and a free Yard Sale kit for an unbeat-able price of $20. Kit includes 3 large signs, pricing stickers, suc-cess tips and checklist. Extra signs avail. for purchase. Call Boi-se Weekly by 10AM on Monday to post your Yard Sale for the next Wednesday edition. 344-2055.
LEGAL
BW LEGAL NOTICES
IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF
IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF ADAIN RE: Caleb Thomas Atwood. Legal Name of child Case No. CV NC 1608862NOTICE OF HEARING ON NAME
CHANGE (Minor) A Petition to change the name of
Caleb Thomas Atwood, now re-siding in the City of Boise, State of Idaho, has been filed in the Dis-trict Court in Ada County, Idaho. The name will change to Caleb Mackenzie Atwood. The reason for the change in name is: Caleb prefers this new name. A hearing on the petition is scheduled for 130 o’clock p.m. on July 19, 2016 at the Ada County Courthouse. Objections may be filed by any person who can show the court a good reason against the name change. Date: May 16, 2016. CHRISTOPHER D. RICH, CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: DEIDRE PRICE, Deputy Clerk
PUB June 1,8,15, 22, 2016.
PEN PALS
BW PEN PALS
Sexy, Smart & funny woman seeks a pen pal and maybe more. Chris-tine Purcell #95766 1451 Fore Rd Pocatello, ID 83204.
Hi my name is Monica. I’m looking
for a penpal to keep me company while I’m down. All I want is a letter or two a week someone who likes to write. I’m 28 years old. Some things I enjoy doing is listening to old school music and watching football. My address Monica Har-rington #111287 SBWCC 13200 S Pleasant Valley Rd Kuna, ID 83634.
Hey what’s up, all you real men out
there! I’m Krystal Damon #87065 PWCC 1451 Fore Rd Pocatello, ID 83204. I’m beautiful Native Ameri-can, hazel eyes, affectionate, hu-morous. Looking for someone to help pull me through. So whatcha think is that you?
[email protected](208) 344-2055 ask for Ellen
VISIT |
E-MAIL |
CALL |
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D BOISE WEEKLY
ADULT
TED RALL
JEN SORENSENHOBO JARGON
3 bed / 2.5 bath, 2800 sqft, $1400mo rent, $219,000 buy. Possible OWC. Sauna, jetted tub, hardwood, gas fire-place, deck, fenced lawn with garden, mature landscaping, balcony, irrigation, walk to hospital, schools, park. Safe neighborhood. Pets neg.
Drive by 1091 SW 2nd Ave, Ontario. For terms call Kayla 541-745-2078, to view call Ray at 541-805-0127.
pics online, email questions to [email protected]
CLIP THIS AD
ELEGANT HISTORIC BEAUTY
HOUSING
YARD SALE
30 | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | BOISEweekly BOISEWEEKLY.COM
Taken by instagram aaron.l.eastman.
#boiseweeklypicFINDTHE ROCK CLOCK
Success oozes from Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson like sweat. Before becoming one of the biggest draws in the history of American professional wrestling, he was a player on the National Championship-winning 1991 University of Miami Hurricanes football team.
Now, he’s an ultra-charismatic movie star, with credits in blockbust-ers like the Fast and Furious franchise. In order for Johnson to pack so much excellence into his days, he has to wake early to hit the gym and flex his brain muscles so they’ll be able to remember the one-liners in his next movie. Now, you can style your itinerary just like the man himself with The Rock Clock, an alarm and goal-setting app that sends encouragement to the user. Set personal goals and get a “Yes!” or “Excellent!” from The Rock as your reward when you complete them. For non-morning people, crush your time-wasting sleep habit by setting your alarm to “Rock Time,” and the world’s only non-jabroni will rouse you from your slumber half an hour before your alarm was set to go off with jock jams, the sound of a chainsaw or mewing kittens.
—Harrison Berry
FREE. App stores like iTunes
FROM THE BW POLL VAULTHow will you stay cool this summer?
Air conditioning: 35%
Fan: 5%
Going to the pool: 15%
Going to the movies: 5%
Getting out of town: 40%
Disclaimer: This onl ine pol l is not intended to be a scien-t i f ic sample of local , statewide or nat ional opinion.
RECORD EXCHANGE TOP 10 SELLERS
1. “AND THE WAR CAME,” SHAKEY GRAVES
2. “HOLY GHOST,” MODERN BASEBALL
3. “SKIN,” FLUME
4. “I STILL DO,” ERIC CLAPTON
5. “CLEOPATRA,” THE LUMINEERS
6. “DETOUR,” CYNDI LAUPER
7. “UNTITLED UNMASTERED,” KENDRICK LAMAR
8. “GOOD TIMES,” THE MONKEES
9. “2,” MUDCRUTCH
10. “A SAILOR’S GUIDE TO EARTH,” STURGILL
SIMPSON
160,000Number of Allied soldiers
who came ashore in France on June 6, 1944, the largest amphibious
assault in history and the beginning of the invasion of Nazi occupied Europe
in World War II.
(history.com)
5Number of beachheads
established by Allied soldiers on D-Day.
(history.com)
4,413Estimated number of
U.S. and Allied soldiers who died in the June 6, 1944 D-Day assaults.
(ddaymuseum.co.uk)
4,000-9,000Estimated number of German casualties—
killed, wounded or miss-ing—on D-Day.
(ddaymuseum.co.uk)
11 MILESRough distance covered by Allied forces inland from the D-Day beach-heads by June 9-10,
1944.
(normandiememoire.com)
400,000Estimated number of
Free French fighters as of the D-Day landings.
(Encyclopedia of World War II)
2,500Estimated number of French civilians who were killed on D-Day.
(BBC.com)
57,000Estimated number of French civilians killed
by Allied bombing from 1940-1945, comparable to the 60,500 British civil-ians killed by German air
raids during the Blitz.
(BBC.com)
PAGE BREAKMINERVA’S BREAKDOWN
SUBMIT questions to Minerva’s Breakdown at bit.ly/MinervasBreakdown or mail them to Boise Weekly, 523 Broad St., Boise, ID 83702. All submis-sions remain anonymous.
DEAR MINERVA,How do I bring up fisting to a potential partner or lover?
Sincerely,—Sex Puppet
DEAR SEX PUPPET,My first inclination is to tell you, “DON’T!” I don’t mean that in
a judgmental way, because I don’t really care what kinkiness two consenting adults get up to. I say “DON’T” because you are going to need your body parts—whether you are talking about vaginal fisting or anal fisting—for your whole life. EVERY DAY FOR YOUR WHOLE LIFE! Fisting falls into an extreme category of sex and fe-tishism and, while I have no philosophical problem with the idea, it certainly isn’t my cup of tea. That said, I do worry about people and their health. Laceration or perforation of these delicate areas is a very valid concern and can lead to infections that can cause major complications and yes, even death. All sex has risk, but I want you to take into consideration your physical desire to explore this activity versus the risk that it presents. If you absolutely must do this, please take all precautions necessary including the use of latex gloves, generous use of lube and establishing a safe word. Now that I told you that, might I suggest you get with your partner and come up with individual lists of kinky interests, combine them and have a good time talking about what you are and are not interested in trying. Exploring each other’s interests is definitely fun, so make it a tantalizing date night game.
BOISEWEEKLY.COM BOISEweekly | JUNE 8–14, 2016 | 31