bar guide

Transcription

bar guide
’s third annual
bar guide
Wednesday, November 20 in b free weekly
Leading up to Thanksgiving eve – the busiest bar night of the year!
We’ll highlight Baltimore’s top watering holes, from the dive bar to the cocktail lounge.
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bthesite.com
FANTASIES
N I G H T C L U B
T H U R S D AY [oct. 31]
4TH ANNUAL
HOUSE OF HOTTIES
HALLOWEEN BASH
HELLY HELLFIRE
Adult Film Star & Acclaimed DJ
H O S T E D B Y S TA S H
Escape Artist Dai Andrews
COSTUME CONTEST
[$500 1st prize]
HELLY WILL ALSO DANCE
NOV. 1 & 2 FRI. & SAT.
S AT U R D AY [nov. 2]
BELLATOR MMA
LIVE PAY-PER-VIEW
on our new $100,000 video wall
S U N D AY [nov. 3]
98 ROCK MORNING SHOW
L I V E AT T H E C L U B
for Fantasies Football
&
$25,000
a chance to win
weekly prize
CONTEST AND CLUB ENTRY
ARE BOTH FREE
fantasiesnightclub.com
Baltimore’s HOTTEST
Entertainment for 20 years
Like us on Facebook & Follow us
on Twitter for exclusive updates!
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
The Mattress Professionals
®
EVERY
ON SALE!
SAVE 70% SAVE 60%
299
599
99 $
$
LIST
$999
Queen Set • Plush
99
LIST
$1599
Queen Set • Plush
Twin, Full and King available at similar savings
TODAYONLY!
10am-9pm
ONLY AT
ONLY AT
SLEEPY’S!
Introducing the All New
COLLECTION
SLEEPY’S!
SLEEP COOLER
Designed with new AirCool®
Memory Foam and TruTempTM
Gel to keep you comfortably
cool all night long.
Tempurature Regulating
innovation featuring
Cool Elegance
Fabric Technology
FREE DELIVERY!
48 MONTH FINANCING*
On purchases of $4800 or more made between
10/29/13 and 10/30/13 with your Sleepy’s credit card.
Equal monthly payments required for 48 months.
NO MONEY DOWN AT SLEEPY’S!
0
%
INTEREST
*Offer applies only to single-receipt qualifying purchases. No interest will be charged on promo purchase and equal monthly payments are
required equal to initial promo purchase amount divided equally by the number of months in promo period until promo is paid in full. The
equal monthly payment will be rounded to the next highest whole dollar and may be higher than the minimum payment that would be required
if the purchase was a non-promotional purchase. Regular account terms apply to non-promotional purchases. For new accounts: Purchase
APR is 29.99%; Minimum Interest Charge is $2. Existing cardholders should see their credit card agreement for their applicable terms. Subject
to credit approval. ††Subject to credit approval. Minimum monthly payments required. See store for details. All models available for purchase
may not be on display. Photos are for illustration purposes only. Not responsible for typographical errors. Previous sales do not apply.
OTHER SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE:
24 months on purchases of $2400 - $3599
36 months on purchases of $3600 - $4799††
GRAND OPENING
CATONSVILLE
6600 Baltimore National Pike
(Lotte Plaza, near Pier 1 & Panera Bread)
410-455-9123
BALTIMORE
3757 Boston St.
(Target Shopping Center)
1-800-SLEEPYS sleepys.com/onedaysale Nationwide Delivery!
MAKING THE WORLD A BETTER PLACE TO SLEEP™
410-276-0407
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bthesite.com
WHAT JUST HAPPENED
QUOTE OF
THE WEEK
FIRST-TIME VISITORS
“THE EXUBERANT BALTIMORE GIRL
QUICKLY TURNED THE HARDENED
SINGLE FARMER INTO A CANDIDATE
FOR IMMIGRATION.”
Patrick Beille describes falling in love
with his wife, Lauren Manekin, in an
email to Baltimore Sun columnist Dan
Rodricks. Beille, a former sheepherder,
moved from Paris to America, and now
brews beer in Waverly.
DIGIT
35
The number of rushing yards new
Ravens running back Bernard Scott
had last season with the Cincinnati
Bengals. Scott only played two games
last season because he tore his
anterior cruciate ligament.
EDDIE VEDDER OF PEARL JAM PERFORMS IN CONCERT AT BALTIMORE ARENA ON SUNDAY. IT WAS THE BAND’S FIRST CONCERT IN
BALTIMORE.
ALGERINA PERNA PHOTO
NEWS ROUNDUP
Anne Arundel County police busted
up a Glen Burnie massage parlor they
said was a front for prostitution
activity. After receiving complaints
about possible prostitution at a home
business publicly advertised as a massage
parlor in the 500 block of Glenbrook
Road, Anne Arundel County police vice
detectives investigated. Using a search
warrant, they entered the home on
Thursday and found two women inside.
Detectives searched the building and
discovered “evidence indicating prostitution activity,” police said in a statement.
THE BALTIMORE SUN
A Maryland man has been charged
in U.S. District Court with selling
drugs on the massive online black
market Silk Road, which was shut down
earlier this month by federal authorities.
Court documents filed on Monday
charge Jacob Theodore George IV, 32,
who allegedly used the name “digitalink”,
with selling heroin and methylone over
the sites from November 2011 to January
2012 using its encrypted servers and
digital currency. THE BALTIMORE SUN
The trial of the Baltimore County
man accused of sexually abusing seven
young female students at the Maryland School for the Deaf in Columbia
began in Howard County Circuit
Court Monday. Clarence Cepheus Tay-
lor, 38, of the 2500 block of Hallam Court
in Baltimore County, is accused of
sexually abusing seven girls between the
ages of 10 and 13 while working at the
overnight school, which is located in the
8100 block of Old Montgomery Road. THE
BALTIMORE SUN
The Orioles have not yet made an
offer to a pitching coach candidate,
according to executive vice president
Dan Duquette, but he said the team
still hopes to have a resolution this
week. The Orioles appear to be choosing
among four candidates: former Philadelphia Phillies pitching coach Rich Dubee,
Seattle Mariners pitching coach Carl
Willis, Atlanta Braves minor league
pitching coordinator Dave Wallace and
Texas Rangers bullpen coach Andy
Hawkins. THE BALTIMORE SUN
Penn State has settled the bulk of
claims by child sex abuse victims of
Jerry Sandusky in a major step to move
beyond a scandal that cost millions and
upended a once legendary football program, the university said on Monday. The
university has agreed to pay $59.7
million to 26 men in the wake of the
Sandusky’s conviction in June 2012 for
abuse, Penn State said on its website.
Claims from six other men have been
rejected or may result in possible settlements, the school said. REUTERS
bthesite.com
40%- 50% off
wool coats for him
Reg. $195-$595,
sale $117-$357.
Select styles from a famous
American designer,
London Fog®, Calvin Klein
& more. S-XXL. Shown:
H WebID 980232.
buy 1 & we’ll give 1 to charity
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October 30, 2013
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5
50% off
london fog®
for her
now through saturday, nov. 2, for every coat purchased in our
men’s, women’s, juniors’ and kids’ outerwear departments in store
and on macys.com, we’ll donate a coat** to clothes4souls, the
charity that offers hope by providing clothing to people in need in
your community.
Reg./Orig.* $200,
sale $100. Rainwear.
Misses. Shown:
H WebID 856806.
**up to 30,000 men’s, women’s and children’s coats of our choice with an
average retail value of $40-$100 ea. will be donated.
STOREWIDE SAVINGS & VALUES NOW ThROUGh TUESDAy!
red star spectacular SALE
free online shipping every day + extra 1o%-2o% off
Free shipping with $99 purchase. use promo code: save For extra savings; oFFer valid 10/29-11/5/13. exclusions apply; see macys.com For details.
now
12.99
50% off
Orig.* 49.5059.50. Dress
shirts or ties
from famous
makers.
Reg. $85-$650, sale
42.50-$325. Suits,
sportcoats, blazers,
dress pants & more.
Sportcoat shown:
H WebID 879918.
40% off
dresses
Reg. $56-$78,
sale 33.60-46.80.
From Rare Editions,
Speechless and more.
Girls' 2-16.
H WebID 1044945.
sale
39.99
twin sheet set
Reg. $70. only at macy’s.
500-thread count damask
stripes or solid colors.
Pima cotton.
H WebID 343297.
Other sizes also
on sale.
bonus platter
when you buy 2 place settings
A $201-$331 value. Over 40 patterns from
Lenox, Noritake & more.
Place settings.
Reg. $72-$200,
sale 49.99-139.99 ea.
H WebID 383214.
20% off
Reg. $200-$8000,
final cost $90-$5040.
Diamonds, 14k gold, cultured
pearls and more.
Sale ends 11/3/13. In GA,
sale prices in effect 11/1-11/2/13.
Reg. $199-$1999, sale
$159-$1599. Watches.
From left: H WebID
563582 & H 687973.
25%-40% off
sale 59.99-109.99
Reg. $39-$69, sale 23.40-51.75.
Sale in progress. From our Style &
Co., Style & Co. Denim, Alfani; & in
The Mixing Room. Misses & petites.
WebID H 1001001 & H 322068.
Women's prices slightly higher.
Reg. $69-$130. Clockwise,
from top: Madden Girl
Armie (H WebID
914524), Clarks
Stroll Valley (H 1059
149) & Nine West
Sloane (H 880559).
buy 1, get 2nd
for $10
tops, sweaters,
pants & more
bulova, citizen
eco-drive, seiko
+ extra 10% off selections
boots for her
bras
Reg. $32-$40 ea.
Maidenform®, Bali®, Warner's®,
Vanity Fair®, Playtex®, more.
Shown: Maidenform® Comfort
Devotion. H WebID 763087.
plus, use your macy's card‡ & take an extra 2o% off†
select sale & clearance apparel for him, her & kids; or, EXTRA 15% Off† all sale & clearance fine &
fashion jewelry, coats, suits, dresses, Impulse, intimates; men’s suit separates & sportcoats & select
shoes & home items; or, EXTRA 1O% Off† all sale & clearance watches and electrics & electronics.
or, use your saVings pass! †Exclusions apply, see pass.
WoW! pass
EXTRA SAVINGS oN ALL SALE & CLEARANCE APPAREL! (EXCEPT SPECIALS & SUPER BUYS)
sale
99.99
nutribullet
Reg. 159.99.
Blends nutrition-rich
foods. #NBR1201.
H WebID 728155.
%
extra
15
off
select sale & clearance apparel For him, her & kids
Extra 1O% oFF all sale & clearance Fine & Fashion jewelry, watches,
coats, suits, dresses, impulse, intimates; men's suit separates & sportcoats;
electrics/electronics and select shoes & home items
Also excludes: Everyday Values (EDV), Doorbusters, Deals of the Day, furniture, mattresses, floor coverings, rugs, electrics/
electronics, cosmetics/fragrances, men's store electronics, athletic shoes for him, her & kids, gift cards, jewelry trunk
shows, previous purchases, special orders, selected licensed depts., special purchases, services. Exclusions may differ
at macys.com. Cannot be combined with any savings pass/coupon, extra discount or credit offer except opening a new
Macy’s account. EXTRA SAVINGS % APPLIED TO REDUCED PRICES.
tExt “cpn” tO 62297 tO gEt cOupOns, salEs alErts & mOrE!
Max 3 msgs/wk. Msg & data rates may apply. By texting CPN from my mobile number, I agree to receive marketing
text messages generated by an automated dialer from Macy’s to this number. I understand that consent is not
required to make a purchase. Text STOP to 62297 to cancel. Text HELP to 62297 for help. Terms & conditions at
macys.com/mobilehelp Privacy policy at macys.com/privacypolicy
Valid 10/29-11/5/2013
clearance
all†† fine jewelry
30%-50% off
designer
menswear
50% +
10% off
samsonite
lift spinners
Reg. $320-$440,
final cost
143.99-197.99.
Expandable 21"
(H WebID 634418),
25" & 29" luggage.
One bonus per customer, while supplies last; returns must include purchased & bonus items. 2nd item at $10 must be of equal or lesser value than purchased item; returns must include purchased & free items. Reg. & oRig. pRices aRe offeRing
pRices and savings may not be based on actual sales. some oRig. pRices not in effect duRing the past 90 days. Red staR spectaculaR sale pRices in effect 10/29-11/5/2013, except as noted. *intermediate price
reductions may have been taken. ‡purchase must be made on a macy’s credit card or by a macy’s credit cardholder paying with a macy’s gift card, Rewards certificate, eZ exchange card or merchandise certificate. cardholders must present macy’s
credit card at time of purchase. ††does not include watches, designer collections, fashion jewelry or diamond engagement rings. extra savings are taken off already-reduced prices; “final cost” prices reflect extra savings; does not apply to everyday
values, super buys, specials or trunk shows. Jewelry photos may be enlarged or enhanced to show detail. fine jewelry at select stores; log on to macys.com for locations. almost all gemstones, & diamonds have been treated to enhance their beauty &
require special care, log on to macys.com/gemstones or ask your sales professional. clearance items are available while supplies last. advertised merchandise may not be carried at your local macy’s & selection may vary by store. prices & merchandise
may differ at macys.com. electrics & luggage carry mfrs’ warranties; to see a mfr’s warranty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: macy’s Warranty dept., po box 1026 maryland heights, mo 63043, attn: consumer Warranties. H enter
the Webid in the search box at macys.com to order. n3090328.
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HEARD
YOUR SAY
WHAT’S CURRENTLY THE
BEST SHOW ON TV?
I’m gonna go with “American
Horror Story: Coven” out of shows
currently airing but I can’t wait for
“Justified” to come back.
@DESULTORYVIXEN VIA TWITTER
Umm.. “The Good Wife.” Did you
see last Sunday’s episode?
@ROSWELLENCINA VIA TWITTER
Can’t get enough of “Scandal”!
ERICA BEALE VIA FACEBOOK
“Drugs Inc.” on Nat Geo. No other
program has ever shown the utter
failure of the War on Drugs so
well.
JD SARIS VIA FACEBOOK
“American Horror Story: Coven” ...
and as always, “Parenthood.”
@DRUNKOFFMYKISS VIA TWITTER
YOUR PIC
Hands down “Duck Dynasty.”
PAT GAVIN
The Apex, Baltimore’s last adult movie house, sold for $295,000 at auction this month.
“Once Upon a Time,” “Drunk
History”
RANTS
VALERIE METTEE VIA FACEBOOK
It’s between seasons, but “Veep.”
The first season they just dipped
their toes into the Potomac. Season
two, they dove in head first!
Let us know what’s on your mind — good
and bad. Tweet us your rants (remember
hash-tag #brants), tell us at facebook.com/
bthesite or email us — [email protected].
I don’t understand why The Jonas Brothers quit cold-turkey. No warning, final
album or tour. Why wait so long to make
a statement or do any kind of interview?
As a long-time fan, I understand growing
up ... we all did it, and watched them. I
just feel that they weren’t real, that they
had this in mind for awhile and waited
too long to announce the break-up. We
need closure.
@HOLAITSTATI VIA TWITTER
Why is it that when you buy french fries
from fast food or sub shops, the potato is
just about cooked out of the skin? I hate
that.
RODNEY L TATE VIA FACEBOOK
MICHELLE ROULEAU KERSEY
VIA FACEBOOK
LAURIE BROWN VIA FACEBOOK
THE JONAS BROTHERS ANNOUNCED THEIR BREAK-UP ON TUESDAY. GETTY
I get fed up with Raven fans saying:
The city of Baltimore has five NFL
championships. Let me educate all
of you brainless Raven fans: The city
of Baltimore is not an NFL team,the
Baltimore Colts’ three championships have NOTHING to do with
the Ravens’ two Super Bowls.
CADILLAC GLENN VIA FACEBOOK
Some people doesn’t realize that
it isn’t funny or nice to repeatedly
bump the chair ahead of you and
people in the front can feel you
bump and ruining the whole movie
watching experience.
VAKUL KUMAR MORE VIA FACEBOOK
I hate when you have a doctor’s
appointment set at 10, but you aren’t
seen until 11, 11:30!
DARTANYAN JOHNSON VIA FACEBOOK
“VEEP.” HBO
NEXT QUESTION
Grab your coat
What’s the best part of
fall in Baltimore?
TEXT QUESTION TO 70701
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
YOU’VE
GOT THIS.
Month long
“Over the River and Through
the Woods,” Church Hill Theatre
KIFA’s Golden Jubilee Member
Show: “Together- 50 Years of
Art,” Stevensville
11/02 50th Annual Wye Parish
Christmas Bazaar
11/30 Small Business
Saturday- Countywide
University of Baltimore students don’t wait for
their future to find them.
They seek it out. They grab hold of it. And they shape it to fit
their passions.
Flexible scheduling, dedicated professors and innovative
degrees focused on the real world—together, they offer you
a chance to do more.
Empower the do-er in you.
Graduate Open House: Nov. 9
Graduate Admission: 410.837.6565
For more info call (410)604-2100 • www.visitqueenannes.com
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EVE
NTS
A Wise Choice Since 1985
Buy Two
get One
FREE*
HALLOWEEN on THURSDAY @ FELLS POINT
4pm-10pm, The Square
me contest to win a
Amelia broadcasts live! Take part in our costu
undtop/Whitetail
ty/Ro
Liber
Ski
to
s
trip for 2 to Las Vegas, lift passe
& more!
LIGHT THE NIGHT on SATURDAY
RAVENS PLAYLIST on MONDAY
599
INSTALLED
• 12 Styles to choose from!
• Glass, screen & standard hardware included.
• Standard size white or brown aluminum
storm door.
• Custom sizes & Steel Security Doors available.
$
s – Torrey Smith & Ray Rice!
Justin is your host along with Baltimore Raven
football.
to
d
relate
NOT
thing
every
about
chat
ll
They’
NOISE IN THE BASEMENT LIVE
on MONDAY @ OTTOBAR
7pm-midnight 2549 North Howard Street
bands or drop off a demo.
Matt Davis is your host! See your favorite local
nt cover, parking
98-ce
and
music
local
best
the
Enjoy
Not in a band?
& drink specials.
HOME
SHOP ATOR A
CALL F ATE
IM
FREE EST
Sage Home Improvements, Inc.
410-529-SAGE • 410-978-7243
Sale Ends 11.13.13 • Prior Sales Excluded
MHIC #23485
nationally known and
recognized artists and craftsmen
5, 6,HOWARD
7, 2010
COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
West Friendship, MD
301-271-4432 [email protected]
CRAFT
SHOW
Admission is $5 per day • A 3-day pass is just $7
Children under 10 are FREE
DOOR PRIZES / FREE PARKING
CRAFTS
SPECTACULAR
NOVEMBER 1, 2, 3, 2013
9AM TO 5PM
AN ARTS & CRAFT SHOW
www.atozcrafts.net
We Do Vinyl and Steel Patio Doors Too!!!
www.sagehomeimprove.com
Magic Shows Saturday and
Sunday 11am and 12:30pm
DOOR PRIZES
ES
EVERY 15
MINUTES!
Weekend
Watch
Find great things to do every weekend…
movies, music, events and more.
Sign up now!
$500 OFF
ANY JOB*
SAVE NOW!
baltimoresun.com/
newsletters
*Minimum job applies
S
999
INSTALLED
Theirs $1,299
STORM DOOR
@ JIMMY’S FAMOUS SEAFOOD
6pm-8pm, 6526 Holabird Ave
WARD COUNTY
O
AN ARTS &
H
*3 Installed for $800
• Standard Size White Door
• Knob Set
• Magnetic Seal
• Steel Frame
• Custom Colors & Sizes Extra • Threshold
$
. Meet animal ambassadors
Sarah is your host, and Christoff plays the tunes
help those who suffer from
to
Walk
too.
ore
Baltim
from the Maryland Zoo in
homa Society.
Lymp
mia
blood cancers. All proceeds benefit Leuke
A
• Double Pane Glass
• Minimum Purchase of 4
• Normal Installation in Wood Opening
Up to a Giant 101 U.I.
STEEL ENTRY DOOR
@ CAMDEN YARDS
5pm-8pm, 333 W. Camden Street
Z CRAFTS PRESENT
TO
WINDOWS
We
Roofing Do
, Siding
,
Awnin
Glass B gs &
lock To
o!
bthesite.com
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October 30, 2013
|
YOur
Creative
s
Career iG
in uGe OppOrtunities.
WaiCt
lasses. H
small
r Spring or
apply now fo
u/apply
oran.ed
Fall 2014 corc
pen HOuse
Graduate O
pm
2013 • 10am–3
November 2,
staff, and
Meet faculty,
r Graduate
students at ou
out
Information ab
Open House.
d
an
d,
ai
al
ci
an
programs, fin
ble.
la
ai
av
be
ill
admissions w
sIgN BFA, MA
INterIor De
DesIgN MA
exhIBItIoN
A, BFA
A DesIgN AF
DIgItAl MeDI
A, BFA
FINe Art AF
BFA
otogrAPhy
FINe Art Ph
A
sIgN AFA, BF
grAPhIc De
AlIsM BFA, MA
PhotojourN
t MA
IoN BFA, MA
Art eDucAt
HOLY COMFORTER THE JAZZ CHURCH
PRESENTS
AUTUMN SPLENDOR & JAZZ
The Rhonda Robinson Quartet
Rhonda Robinson, Vocals/Flute
Charlie Sigler, Guitar
Todd Simon, Jazz Organ
Robert Shahid, Drums
Holy Comforter
Fundraiser
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2013, 7:30pm
Meet the musicians and enjoy refreshments
during the intermission
Tickets $15.
Call 410-433-1801 for information or
visit www.comforterbalt.com, credit cards accepted
Holy Comforter Church | 5513 York Road | Baltimore, MD 21212
4 blocks so of Northern Parkway. Park in our secure lot on Harwood Avenue behind Wendy’s.
500 SeventeentH Street nW
WaSHInGtOn, DC 20006
near FarraGUt WeSt MetrO StatIOn
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MAKING THE SCENE
MORGAN PHILLIPS, FRONT, MOVES AS PART OF THE HALLOWEEN LANTERN PARADE THROUGH PATTERSON PARK ON SATURDAY.
NATE PESCE PHOTOS
They come out at night
EMILY SCHUBERT, 22,
OF BOLTON HILL,
LIGHTS UP THE
LANTERN PARADE.
STILT WALKERS
MAKE THEIR WAY
ALONG THE PARADE
ROUTE.
bthesite.com
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October 30, 2013
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11
MAKING THE SCENE
POWER RANGERS PEDAL THEIR WAY DOWN FALLS ROAD IN HAMPDEN DURING THE BALTIMORE BIKE PARTY HALLOWEEN BREW RIDE ON FRIDAY.
KAITLIN NEWMAN PHOTOS
STEVE NESHAWAT AND
MARK CHAFFER, TWO
OUT OF THREE MUSKETEERS, AT THE BALTIMORE BIKE PARTY
HALLOWEEN BREW
RIDE.
MICHAEL DIEDRICK AND
SHELLY WILLEMS
COME DRESSED AS THE
YIPYIPS FROM “SESAME
STREET.”
12
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bthesite.com
LIKE/DISLIKE
Now -November 4th
An extraordinary collection
of original posters all available
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In our new location
Village of Cross Keys · 88 Village Square
Baltimore, MD · Tel. 410.484.8900
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©2013 PC LLC
www.MegaMates.com
3164
CHUCK GREEN AND HIS PUPPET SHERLOCK BONES.
HANDOUT
Chuck Green, Halloweiner
Sphinctacular organizer
When the Baltimore Rock Opera Society throws a Halloween party, there’s
“only four requirements,” according to
BROS member Chuck Green: “beer,
butts, theatre (with an ‘re’) and beer.”
Enter the Halloweiner Sphinctacular,
a BROS benefit co-presented by Single
Carrot Theatre on Friday 8 p.m. doors,
party until midnight; 1727 N. Charles St.,
$10 online via Tixato, also at the door).
Green, 31, a member of BROS’ artistic
council, is the main mastermind behind
the awesomely named night.
“It came from our desire to have party
and to make people crawl through a disgusting intestine in order to get into the
party,” said Green, an engineer who lives
in Charles Village. Yes, partygoers will
have to navigate a giant butt. And there’s
blood wrestling. God bless you, Chuck
Green.
Worst pet peeve? I absolutely hate
when my cat meows. I have a fat truck of
a cat and he just cannot stop begging for
food. He keeps eating the other cat’s food
and he’s going to get diabetes again, the
dumb jerk.
What songs are you loving/hating
right now? I’m really into “Cosmic Love
Affair” by Chiffon right now. I think they
are the next Prince, but better.
Trend that has exceeded its natural
lifespan? “YOLO.” It’s not even true. You
don’t only live once. You live every single
day.
Last movie you liked? I recently
liked the movie “Dredd,” which I saw on
Netflix. It’s about mouths. So much
mouth acting in that movie.
TV show(s) you can’t get enough
of? “Sherlock”! Oh my god I can’t wait to
see how Benedict Cumberbatch explains
to us stupid people how he faked his
death, went to his own funeral, and had
the restraint to not jump out from behind
the tree and scare everyone.
Favorite type of butt-related costume? I was thinking of going as a gerbil.
Favorite place to get a drink in Baltimore? I honestly can’t think of anything better than half-price pitchers of
Sangria at Tapas Teatro.
Best advice you ever got? “Pizza is a
vegetable.” I have never been healthier in
my life.
Favorite thing about Baltimore?
Definitely the local theater scene. All
these people dressing up in weird outfits
and acting like idiots on stage for you. It’s
better than drinking. My second favorite
thing is drinking.
AS TOLD TO JORDAN BARTEL
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14
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October 30, 2013
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bthesite.com
NEWS
Weathering a political storm
How officials such as
Gansler handle their
problems can make or
break their careers
BY JEAN MARBELLA
A gaffe about his opponent’s race, allegations that he is the back-seat driver
from hell and, most recently, an indelible
photograph of him in the middle of a
wild party of teenagers — is Maryland
Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler
having the worst run a candidate for
higher office can possibly have?
In a word, no.
The world of politics is as rife with
setbacks — from lapses in judgment to
serious crimes — as it is with examples of
candidates and officeholders who have
survived them. While Gansler’s campaign for governor seems to have
lurched from one damaging revelation to
another, political observers say he could
recover as others have before him.
“Everybody, whether they’re a politician or not, can have these kinds of problems,” former Gov. Marvin Mandel said.
“I think they can hurt a little bit, but I
don’t think it’s fatal.”
At 93, Mandel can look back on a career in which he survived both a corruption conviction — later overturned — and
a marital scandal to become something
of an eminence grise in the state.
“They were very kind to me,” Mandel
said of Maryland’s voters, who re-elected him to a second term as governor despite a messy divorce and marriage to his
longtime mistress during his first term.
“I never lost an election in my life.”
Voters may be kind — or have short
memories by the time the primary election rolls around in June, or eventually
decide that other issues matter more, political consultants say.
Some, though, say Gansler has wounded himself — the degree to which remains to be seen — given that some early
MARYLAND ATTORNEY GENERAL DOUG GANSLER BEFORE THE PHOTO CONTROVERSY.
LLOYD FOX PHOTO
polls showed him lagging behind his
main rival for the Democratic nomination, Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown.
“He was already an underdog,” said
Larry J. Sabato, who directs the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.
“Something like this can kill you.”
SCANDALS OVERCOME
Any number of politicians have managed to overcome scandals that seemed
career-killing — and certainly were more
serious than what Gansler has faced.
Most famously, perhaps, Washington
Mayor Marion Barry was videotaped
smoking crack cocaine and imprisoned,
but ultimately returned to City Hall, first
as a councilman then as mayor.
There have been other comebacks,
from President Bill Clinton, who survived the Monica Lewinsky scandal and
impeachment, to David Vitter, the Louisiana senator re-elected despite his involvement in the D.C. Madam prostitution scandal. But some have been sunk at
least temporarily by scandal, including
former Rep. Anthony D. Weiner, whose
recent campaign for New York mayor
was derailed when it turned out he had
continued sending sexually explicit online messages to women.
In Maryland, some politicians are trying to come back from their problems.
For example, Don Dwyer Jr., the Anne
Arundel County delegate sentenced last
week to 60 days in jail for drunken driv-
ing and boating, has left open the possibility of running for re-election.
John T. Willis, executive in residence
at the School of Public and International
Affairs of the University of Baltimore,
said that with the exception of Mandel,
there have been no significant examples
of dramatic political redemption on the
statewide level in the past half-century.
But there are local examples, he noted,
such as the late Baltimore County Executive Dale Anderson, who was convicted on corruption charges and served
a prison term in the 1970s before being
elected to the House of Delegates in1982.
The potential for overcoming his recent problems — along with the $5 million Gansler had in his campaign account
bthesite.com
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October 30, 2013
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15
NEWS
as of the last reporting period, make it
premature to write his political obituary,
Willis said.
“Anybody with that much money in
the bank in today’s environment can reshape themselves to the mass public,”
Willis said.
One reason gaffes and scandals are important during campaigns is that they
show a candidate’s mettle — how he or
she handles, or mishandles, bad news.
“People have a real window into a person when they’re in a crisis situation,”
said Aileen Pincus, whose Silver Springbased communications company specializes in media training and crisis management. “They’re not cleaned up and
pretty like at a press conference.”
In Gansler’s case, she noted, just as he
was introducing himself as a gubernatorial candidate, revelations started to pile
up. First, Gansler was recorded saying
that Brown, an African-American, was
running on his race.
Then came reports about state troopers’ complaints that the attorney general
made them speed and drive recklessly.
Most recently, there were revelations
that Gansler, who had advocated for
stricter laws against underage drinking,
had been at a party that his son and some
classmates held at a beach house —
where some teenage participants later
acknowledged that they had been drinking.
Pincus, a former communications director for now-retired Sen. Kent Conrad
of North Dakota, said Gansler’s responses violated one of the rules of crisis management.
“I think the big one in this case is:
When you’re in a hole, stop digging,” she
said. After The Baltimore Sun story
broke about the beach party, for example,
Gansler added to his problems by changing his response, first saying that he
didn’t have “moral authority” over other
people’s children, then deciding that he
should have done more at the time.
“Finally, ‘I made a mistake,’ ” Pincus
said, referring to Gansler’s news conference Thursday. “But is anyone listening
anymore?”
Sabato agreed that Gansler missed
chances to immediately take responsibil-
GANSLER ( TAKING A PHOTO, RIGHT OF CENTER) IN THE SENIOR WEEK PARTY PHOTO.
INSTAGRAM
ity for the problems, rather than charging that the media had been tipped off to
them by political opponents.
“He was really defensive. He just
wanted to tough it out,” Sabato said. “The
goal is to make it a one- or two-day story
— just go ahead and get it over with.”
Time might be among Gansler’s advantages at this point, according to Sabato.
“It’s a long time to the primary,” he
said. “He’s the AG, he can make news.
And people forget quickly.”
THE CREDIBILITY TEST
Still, political observers said, voters
will be watching how Gansler navigates
any further campaign turbulence for
clues about his character and skills.
“I don’t think this is [fatal] to his candi-
dacy, because other factors will come
into play,” said Christopher Garrett, executive vice president of Smith & Company, the Washington-based crisis management firm that inspired the hit TV
show “Scandal.”
“But this will be one of the factors in
how voters perceive him,” said Garrett,
whose firm has advised clients such as
Lewinsky; quarterback Michael Vick,
who went to prison for involvement in
dogfighting; and former Idaho Sen.
Larry Craig, who was arrested in a sex
sting. “Credibility is the coin of the realm.
Things that you do that undermine your
fundamental credibility are going to be
something voters factor in.”
William Benoit, author of the book,
“Accounts, Excuses, and Apologies: A
Theory of Image Restoration Strategies,”
said voters tend to view scandals in context — how serious the allegations are,
how much of a history they have with the
politician, how effective he or she has
been in office.
“There are things people will forgive
and things people will forget,” said Benoit, a professor of communications
studies at Ohio University. In Gansler’s
case, Benoit said, his offenses might
strike some as minor.
“There are far more serious allegations out there,” Benoit said. “It’s not like
he was smoking crack or having an affair
with an underage girl. It’s not like a hitand-run where he left someone lying in a
ditch.”
Pincus, the crisis communications
specialist, said Gansler has a lot of rehabilitation ahead of him. Turning around
his troubled campaign, she said, is “a lot
to ask. There’s just so little room for error
now.”
Matthew Crenson, professor emeritus
of political science at the Johns Hopkins
University, agreed. “If he does manage to
pull this off and win the primary, it’ll be
one of the most remarkable political reversals we’ve seen lately,” he said.
There might be another candidate for
that title: Baltimore political consultant
Julius Henson, who served jail time for
his involvement in a 2010 scandal over
robocalls in the gubernatorial election,
has announced that he is running for a
seat in the Maryland Senate.
But don’t expect Henson to apologize
and seek forgiveness.
“I’m not in the redemption kind of a
campaign,” he said. “I don’t think that’s
my story, and that’s not how I’m running.”
He knows he’ll have to explain the incident to voters, but believes they will see
his conviction in the same terms he does:
“as a bunch of unfairness.”
“The people will have an opportunity
to say, ‘Julius Henson, you’re a terrible
person,’ or ‘Julius Henson, I believe you,
I’ll recommend you,’ ” Henson said.
“We’ll see. It’s a contest.”
Baltimore Sun reporters Michael Dresser
and Erin Cox contributed to this article.
[email protected]
twitter.com/jean_marbella
16
|
October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
RAVENS
Scratch ‘n’ Save
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BALTIMORE RAVENS COACH JOHN HARBAUGH LEADS THE TEAM ONTO THE FIELD BEFORE THE STEELERS GAME.
USA TODAY SPORTS
It’s early, but Browns
are a ‘must win’
BY MIKE PRESTON
T
Some discounts, coverages, payment plans and features are not available in all states or all GEICO companies. Motorcycle and
ATV coverages are underwritten by GEICO Indemnity Company. Homeowners, renters, boat and PWC coverages are written
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GEICO Gecko image © 1999-2012. © 2012 GEICO
he Ravens aren’t officially at the
halfway point of the 2013 season,
but they face a “must win” situation Sunday in Cleveland against the
Browns.
Few like to use the phrase so early in
the season, especially in a league where
scenarios change like the weather. But
with the Cincinnati Bengals (6-2) playing
so well while leading the Ravens (3-4) in
the AFC North and heading to Baltimore
next Sunday, the Ravens need the win to
make a big move.
Sunday is the perfect time for a Ravens
victory.
“They’re all critical,” Ravens coach
John Harbaugh said. “Every one of these
games is critical. I don’t care if it’s division, not division, they’re all linchpin
games as far as I’m concerned. Every
time we play a game — in my mind — is
make-or-break as we go into it. When the
season is over, that will be determined,
which games were and which games
weren’t. But we feel like we’ve got to go
win this game, just like we felt we had to
win the last game.”
Cleveland (3-5) is coming off a, 23-17,
emotional loss to the unbeaten Kansas
City Chiefs, and a loss to the Browns
would make reaching the playoffs a
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
|
17
RAVENS
tougher challenge.Besides, the Ravens
will have had two weeks to prepare, since
they had a bye Sunday.
The Browns are actually playing well
by Browns standards and they would
have beaten the Chiefs if receiver Davone Bess had managed to hang onto a
few passes and a punt. The Browns are
playing strong defense and their offense
is functional enough to win, but the Ravens still should win.
They’ve had time for players to heal.
Guards Kelechi Osemele (back) and
Marshal Yanda (shoulder) have gotten
healthier and running back Ray Rice
(hip) might be close to 100 percent. With
a week’s rest, the Ravens should have had
time to get defensive linemen Chris
Canty, Terrence Cody, Brandon Williams
and Haloti Ngata back into a steady rotation, and offensive tackle Eugene Monroe and linebacker Jameel McClain have
had time to get acclimated again.
Under these situations, the Ravens
should be near full-tilt. Right? They
should win. Correct?
“I thought it was good. I thought we
had a good couple of days off,” Harbaugh
said. “It was good to get them some time
away with their families. The midseason
rest is always good. You get a chance to
get your legs back, get a chance to get
your body healed a little bit. Those are
the positives of a bye week, the great
thing about it. It was a plus for us. I’m
looking forward to seeing how we respond in terms of how we play.”
It’s also safe to assume that the Ravens
have made some adjustments on both offense and defense because they have had
time to self-scout and employ new
schemes.
Maybe they’ll add a few Wildcat plays
or get wide receiver Torrey Smith
(Maryland) more touches.
After showing improvement against
the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Ravens, according to a team source, want to go back
to the offensive game plan of last postseason, when they used more three-receiver sets and allowed quarterback Joe
Flacco to call his own plays at the line of
scrimmage.
Through the first seven games, according to the source, the play-calling
Ravens fan
RAVENS@BROWNS of the week
4:25.p.m. Sunday
TV: WJZ/CBS
Radio: 97.9.FM, 10900AM
Line: Ravens by 2 1⁄2
had been a collaboration of receivers
coach Jim Hostler and offensive coordinator Jim Caldwell. There hasn’t been
one signal caller like the previous coordinator, Cam Cameron.
On defense, the Ravens have had an
opportunity to add some more run blitzes to a group that has allowed 104.3 rushing and 238.7 passing yards per game. In
the secondary, the Ravens have had time
to work to improve a unit that had more
communication glitches than the website for signing up for Obamacare.
The Ravens have never lost to Cleveland under Harbaugh, now in his sixth
season. The Ravens have always been favorites but most of the games have been
hard-played.
This one will be no different. Cleveland is allowing 103.6 yards rushing, but
only 216.8 passing yards. The Browns are
stout on the defensive front, but they
don’t have great talent at quarterback
with Jason Campbell or at running back
with Willis McGahee.
The Ravens have four road games remaining, and they can take this one in
Cleveland and the other Nov.17 when the
Bears probably will be without quarterback Jay Cutler. They still have five home
games remaining, but only one, the Minnesota Vikings, appears to be a definite in
the win column.
So when a team gets a chance to rest a
week and make some changes the other
team hasn’t seen, there is a good chance
for victory. When it comes against a team
that is used to losing and coming off an
emotional loss, the percentages improve.
There aren’t many opportunities like
this in the NFL. The Ravens have to win.
They must, because if they don’t, they dig
a hole so deep that they can’t recover.
[email protected]
twitter.com/mikeprestonsun
NEIJMA CELESTINE-DONNOR, 28,
CATONSVILLE, CLINICAL TRAINING
SPECIALIST
Your favorite all-time Ravens moment? Next to the Super Bowl, it has to
be the Jacoby Jones touchdown when
we played Denver in the AFC championship game. I still remember the look
on his face … priceless.
Biggest way you’ve displayed your
Ravens fandom? Besides naming my
cat Raven? For my
wedding, I chose the
raven colors ... down to
the purple and black
shoes I wore.
Your favorite place
to watch a Ravens
game (besides M&T
CELESTINEBank Stadium)? At
DONNOR.
home. I am superstitious. Every time I
watch the game at home we win, so I
seldom leave the house during a game
unless I have to.
What does it mean to you to be a
Ravens fan? Simply put: loyalty.
Your favorite Raven? Right now it’s
Terrell Suggs. The way he plays his heart
out each game is simply inspiring?
How did you celebrate the Super
Bowl win? After I cried for 30 minutes
straight, my husband and I drove around
downtown Baltimore with me hanging
out the roof top screaming. It was one of
the best things I ever experienced.
If you could be a Raven for a day,
who would you be? Torrey Smith. His
talent and humility amazes me.
Your prediction for Sunday’s game?
Ravens 27, Browns 17. The Ravens are going to bring their A game and continue
their winning streak with the Browns.
Fill in the blank. I am a Ravens fan
because ______ I BELIEVE.
AS TOLD TO JORDAN BARTEL
Want to be featured as a Ravens fan of
the week? Email b assistant editor Jordan
Bartel, [email protected].
Scratch ‘n’ Save
get a quote
geico.com
1-800-947-AUTO (2886)
Local Office
Some discounts, coverages, payment plans and features are not available in all states or all GEICO companies. Motorcycle and
ATV coverages are underwritten by GEICO Indemnity Company. Homeowners, renters, boat and PWC coverages are written
through non-affiliated insurance companies and are secured through the GEICO Insurance Agency, Inc. GEICO is a registered
service mark of Government Employees Insurance Company, Washington, D.C. 20076; a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. subsidiary.
GEICO Gecko image © 1999-2012. © 2012 GEICO
18
|
October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
TRAVEL
Shuck oysters or ‘chunk’ a few pumpkins
BY PATRICK FARRELL
DELAWARE
Delaware Wine & Ale Trail
See what Delaware’s wineries and
breweries have to offer by traveling
through this collection of 12 stops showcasing the state’s offerings of beers and
wines. Stops include Nassau Valley
Vineyards, 3rd Wave Brewing Co., Harvest Ridge Winery and the Dogfish Head
Craft Brewery. Download your “passport” and travel from the Wilmington
riverfront to the Atlantic while enjoying
scenic views and spirits along the way.
Locations offer free self-guided tours as
well as paid tours. For more information
on prices, check with individual breweries
and wineries. To download your passport
and tour map, go to visitdelaware.com.
BRIDGEVILLE, DEL.
Punkin’ Chunkin’
Pumpkins will fly at the World Championship Punkin’ Chunkin’. Join more
than 20,000 spectators and watch teams
compete to break the world record. Using slingshots, catapults and other
pumpkin-tossing machines, teams will
be launching pumpkins all weekend to
raise money for national and local charitable organizations. Pumpkin-tossing
festivities will be accompanied by a chili
cook-off and cooking contest, and a variety of crafts will be on site
The pumpkin tossing begins Friday and
will run all weekend until the championship Sunday afternoon. After you arrive
at Royal Farms, 18657 Sussex Highway,
follow Delaware DOT signs to the event.
Admission is $10 per day, and parking
passes are an added $10. Tailgating spots
are available. Gates open at 7:30 a.m., and
the first pumpkin will be launched at 8
a.m. For more information, go to punkin
chunkin.com.
SHUCKIN’ GOOD TIME: THE ANNUAL URBANA OYSTER FESTIVAL.
CHRISTOPHER HUNTER PHOTOGRAPHY
WILMINGTON, DEL.
the Fringe Festival. From Wednesday
through Sunday, visual, performing and
cinematic artists will come together to
celebrate unconventional art and performances. Events will be held at venues
throughout downtown Wilmington, and
performances will include drama, comedy, magic, improv and everything in between.
Events are at various times and locations, and visitors are asked to arrive early
— all seats are first-come, first-served.
Festival-goers can pay $25 for an all-access pass or $5 per performance. For more
on the festival, including artist and performer lineups and details, go to fringe
wilmingtonde.com.
2013 Fringe Wilmington Festival
For those looking to experience something new, “journey beyond the edge” at
‘Capture the Moment: The Pulitzer
Prize Photographs’
PHILADELPHIA
Head up to the National Constitution
Center this weekend to view “Capture
the Moment: The Pulitzer Prize Photographs,” the most comprehensive collection of Pulitzer-winning photographs
ever displayed. Also on display will be “A
Glimpse of Life: The Pulitzer Photographs,” a documentary produced by the
Newseum exploring the stories behind
the acclaimed photos. The center also
offers other exhibits, including the theatrical production “Freedom Rising.”
This exhibition is at the National Constitution Center, 525 Arch St., through
Dec. 31. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturdays and noon to 5 p.m. Sundays.
Admission prices are $14.50 for adults, $13
for seniors 65 and older and students, and
$8 for children 4-12. For information, call
215-409-6600 or go to constitutioncenter
.org.
URBANNA, VA.
56th Annual Urbanna Oyster Festival
Enjoy a day on the waterfront filled
with live entertainment, oyster-shucking contests and crafts. The festival, running Friday and Saturday, draws a crowd
of more than over 75,000 every year. The
festival’s main attraction will be the Oyster Festival Parade on Saturday, showcasing antique cars, floats, marching
bands and a beauty pageant. Both days
will feature wine tastings and live musicians.
Events begin at 10 a.m. both days, and
will run to midnight Friday and 3:30 p.m.
Saturday. Free admission. Friday parking
is $10; Saturday parking is $20. For more
information, go to urbannaoysterfestival
.com.
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
|
19
Murder Mystery
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FOR THE LATEST NEWS,
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20
|
October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
GAY IN MARYLAND
BRENDON AYANBADEJO TALKS TO REPORTERS IN FRONT OF THE U.S. SUPREME COURT.
REUTERS
Ayanbadejo
reshaping LGBT
rights in sports
Advocacy stems from
being ‘concerned
citizen’
BY KEVIN RECTOR
Growing up as a mixed-race kid in
Chicago and in his father’s native Nigeria, where he really stood out, Brendon
Ayanbadejo became attuned to issues of
identity from a very young age.
By his midteens, while living with his
family in a dorm for lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender students at the University of California, Santa Cruz — his stepfather was the dorm’s headmaster — he
thought no differently about LGBT people than he did straight people.
“I learned people are just people,” the
former Baltimore Ravens linebacker
said.
Ayanbadejo, now 37, has turned those
early lessons into an expanding role as a
gay-rights activist. After first announcing
his public support for same-sex marriage
in 2009 — rare and groundbreaking for a
sports star at the time — he has continued his advocacy through the Ravens Super Bowl victory last season and beyond.
“It’s just one of the pieces of me,”
Ayanbadejo said, when asked about his
commitment to the cause since retiring
from football. “It’s just something I do. It
doesn’t take up all of my time, but it’s
something I live and breathe.”
The straight, married entrepreneur
with two kids and a second career as a
sports analyst frequently finds time to
take stages around the country, speaking
to young students about bullying or to
corporate executives about equality.
He’s also helping to craft a campaign
for Athlete Ally, a nonprofit focused on
ending discrimination against homosexuals in sports, ahead of the 2014 Winter
Olympics in Sochi, Russia, where an
anti-gay propaganda law has drawn
widespread attention.
Ayanbadejo appeared this month before a couple of hundred students at
McDaniel College in Westminster to
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
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21
GAY IN MARYLAND
talkb about knowing gay people all his
life and wishing that the NFL would take
more of a stand for LGBT rights.
The NFL is “not lollygagging, but
they’re kind of hesitant to pull the trigger” to really stamp out discrimination,
he told the crowd. “I’d like to see them do
more.”
Robert Gulliver, the league’s chief human resources officer, said in a statement
that the league has already stepped up
anti-discrimination efforts, impressing
on all general managers and head coaches the importance of diversity, including
the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community, and incorporating those
ideas into rookie training last spring.
The NFL has “proactively formed
partnerships with LGBT organizations
in active dialogue on LGBT diversity,”
Gulliver said.
Many credit Ayanbadejo for his early
advocacy on a still semi-taboo subject —
after all, NBA player Jason Collins just
became the first openly gay athlete
playing in a major American team sport
in April.
“He took this stance before the topic
really became any kind of controversy,
before the Jason Collinses of the world
came out and said they are openly gay,”
said Anthony Fernandez, a sports marketing and branding consultant who has
worked with Ayanbadejo in the past.
“The key is having authenticity behind
that, and he’s shown that authenticity by
continuing to make it a point to talk
about these topics.”
Outspoken, and with commanding
stage presence, Ayanbadejo is on a circuit
of speakers hired to talk about LGBT
equality in sports. The three-time Pro
Bowl selection has spoken at places including Harvard University, ESPN and
Google.
Longtime Baltimore sports agent Ron
Shapiro said such honorariums for topflight athletes can be as much as as
$10,000, but that’s “the exception, not
the rule.” Far more often, he said, honorariums cover only transportation and
hotel costs.
Fernandez, who does work with AthletePromotions, a sports celebrity marketing and booking agency, said the demand for athletes who can speak to
AYANBADEJO SPOKE ABOUT GAY RIGHTS AT MCDANIEL COLLEGE ON OCT. 16.
KEVIN RECTOR/BALTIMORE SUN
WASHINGTON BLADE
LGBT issues “has probably quadrupled”
in the past year.
Still, Ayanbadejo has never been about
the money and doesn’t always require a
fee, he said. “His fee is incredibly reasonable compared to what we have seen for
athletes of his level of demand, which is
incredibly unusual,” Fernandez said. “He
just wants to spread his message as wide
as possible.”
Jennifer Jimenez Marana, McDaniel’s
new director of diversity and multicultural affairs, said bringing Ayanbadejo to
the campus not only dovetailed with a
new “inclusive language” campaign her
office is launching to cut down on derogatory language on the campus, but also
was “a great way to attract students who
would not usually come to a diversityoriented event.”
At McDaniel, which has an undergraduate enrollment of 1,600, Ayanbadejo told the students in Alumni Hall he
doesn’t consider himself an “advocate”
as much as a “concerned citizen” —
someone with no agenda other than to
make the world a better place, including
for his own kids. He used the phrase “the
three-letter F-word” for a gay slur.
Ayanbadejo also said that when Del.
Emmett C. Burns Jr., a Baltimore County
Democrat, criticized his support last
year for same-sex marriage and wrote a
letter to Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti, it
was “nerve-racking,” but never so much
that he thought about backing down.
“To me, silence was consent,” he said.
He said one of his proudest moments
was seeing same-sex marriage pass in
Maryland, after campaigning for it
alongside Gov. Martin O’Malley.
The first paragraph of the biography
on Ayanbadejo’s personal website, brendonayanbadejo.net, says, “Ayanbadejo,
former Baltimore Raven and member of
the Super Bowl XLVII Champion team,
is a man who understands both the pain
of discrimination and the gain of personal joy that comes from embracing an unwavering belief in equal rights for all.”
Since leaving football, Ayanbadejo has
taken on new career aspirations. He has
become a Fox Sports contributor and
plans to open a chain of gyms in Califor-
nia in November. At the time he was cut
from the Ravens’ roster, he was due a
$940,000 base salary, entering the second year of a three-year $3.2 million contract.
At the same time, he has expanded his
efforts for gay rights. He recently acted
as guest editor of a special sports edition
of the Washington Blade, an LGBT
newspaper.
“He’s one of those folks who is highly
educated, who’s taken the time to educate himself on a topic that he feels is
important,” said Fernandez, who advised
Ayanbadejo on his website design.
“Some athletes who haven’t necessarily
done that have tried to talk about something, and they find themselves just
putting their foot in their mouths.”
Sam Marchiano agreed. She’s a founding board member of Athlete Ally, led
by former University of Maryland wrestler Hudson Taylor.
Ayanbadejo became involved in the 2year-old organization early on, Marchiano said, and then did something surprising: He kept becoming more involved.
“He grew and grew and grew with our
organization,” Marchiano said. “That his
commitment was so big and he was so
involved, it was like, ‘Oh wow, this person is a potential board candidate.’ ”
Ayanbadejo was named to the board in
July, she said. And he’s not only attending board meetings but has been working
on strategy for the coming Winter Olympics, focusing on a tenet of the International Olympic Committee’s charter that
bans discrimination, known as Principle
6.
After Ayanbadejo’s talk and Q&A at
McDaniel, students said he had an impact with them.
“The points he made were really, really good. I didn’t realize how difficult it
was to be in the NFL and have a politician come in and say, ‘You need to be
quiet,’ ” said senior communications major Elyssa Bidwell, 21.
“He’s putting his reputation on the
line talking about this stuff,” said Matt
Kammer, 19, a sophomore business major. “I thought it was cool he was willing
to do this.”
[email protected]
twitter.com/rectorsun
22
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October 30, 2013
COMICS
|
bthesite.com
SAID WHAT?
OVERHEARD COMPILED BY BENN RAY
Said what? depicts real dialogue overheard by real Baltimoreans. Really.
Email your overheards to [email protected].
HOROSCOPES BY OMARR
AQUARIUS
01.20-02.18
You can’t fit a square peg into a round
hole. Avoid trying to force an issue if a situation turns into a dispute. Your best bet is to see
how events unfold and then adapt your strategy accordingly.
TAURUS
04.20-05.20
Beware the heat of the moment. You
may feel so good in the company of a certain
someone that you make promises you’ll later
regret. Take time to think things over carefully
before making important decisions.
LEO
07.22-08.22
Accentuate the positive. Cast your
doubts by the wayside and understand that
there are plenty of people who appreciate and
support what you’re doing. Those who have
earned your trust can be counted on.
PISCES
SAGITTARIUS
11.22-12.21
02.19-03.20
Stick it out to the end. You may have
A little change never hurts. Making subtle
doubts as to whether a plan will be successful, adjustments to your daily routine or regimen
but you’re past the point of no return. Making could make a healthy difference. Don’t allow
yourself to get drawn into someone else’s perchanges may just make things worse.
sonal troubles or squabbles.
CAPRICORN
12.22-01.19
ARIES
Problems will take care of themselves.
03.21-04.19
Don’t rush sweeping changes since if you simFools rush in where angels fear to tread.
ply show a little patience matters will eventu- Don’t let enthusiasms overcome your common
ally improve on their own. Make plans now but sense. Stop and think before taking any action.
Be careful not to let minor expenditures add up
don’t act upon them.
to something bigger.
GEMINI
05.21-06.21
Good things come to those who wait.
An unpleasant situation is about to come to an
end and you’re likely to be rewarded for your
patience and perseverance. Your prospects for
romance take a turn for the better.
08.23-09.22
VIRGO
Stay put unless you have a plan. If you
don’t have all the facts, it may be best to take
no action at all for the time being. This is not
the time for taking risks, as you may lose much
more than you gain.
CANCER
06.22-07.21
Don’t give in to temptation. You may
feel the sudden urge to follow your whims
today, but going off on flights of fancy may cause
you to neglect important responsibilities. Stick
with the program.
09.23-10.22
LIBRA
If you play with the bull, you get the
horn. Don’t take unnecessary chances; playing it safe will get you where you’re going faster. Reassure a partner that they are still “No. 1”
before jealousy surfaces. TRIBUNE MEDIA
SCORPIO
10.23-11.21
The only sure thing is that there’s no
sure thing. An offer may seem too good to pass
up, but there may be more to it than meets the
eye. Let common sense guide you through a
minor crisis or confrontation.
SERVICES
?
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
|
23
ALLERGIC
TO CATS
The Parexel Early Phase Unit, located at Harbor Hospital
in Baltimore, MD is currently seeking Volunteers to
participate in a clinical research trial to evaluate a new
Investigational medication.
We are recruiting the following populations:
•
•
•
•
Healthy Males and Females
You are Allergic to Cats
Ages 18 – 55
BMI 18 – 32
The study involves one screening visit, one in-house stay of
5 days / 4 nights and 8 outpatient visits.
If you qualify and complete the study you may receive
up to $ 4,420 in reimbursement.
Please reference the Cat Allergy study
For more information, please visit our website
www.parexel.com/baltimore, or contact us toll free at
1-877-61-STUDY or 1-877-617-8839
(Monday to Friday between 9AM and 5PM).
24
|
October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
FASHION 5
BY JOHN-JOHN WILLIAMS IV
ADAM LEVINE COLLECTION AT KMART
The Maroon 5 lead singer and coach on NBC’s
“The Voice” has ventured into a
new realm with a line of clothes
for Kmart. The collection, which
has been offered online since September, hit stores last week. Merchandise includes checked button-ups, sweaters, skinny jeans
and accessories such as scarves
and belts. Items range in price
from $9.99 to $69.99.
Find the Adam Levine collection at Kmart.
‘LOVE’ RING
If the public didn’t know about the Sydney
Evan “Love” ring before this month, Lauren
Conrad made sure they do now. The celeb
tweeted a picture of her hand wearing her
engagement ring, which was next to her
“Love” ring. Conrad is joined by stars such as
Rihanna, Julianne Hough and Lily Collins,
who have all worn the ring. Get one of your
own. They are available in 14k yellow, white
and rose gold or black rhodium with pave diamonds.
Find the Sydney Evan “Love” ring for $860 at
sydneyevan.com.
MONIQUE LHUILLIER TRUNK SHOW
Monique Lhuillier has become a go-to designer.
From the red carpet to ready to wear, the Los Angeles-based Lhuillier is a major name in the fashion
world. Her bridal line is no exception. Betsy Robinson’s Bridal Collection will host a trunk show for
both the Monique Lhuillier and Bliss collections.
Attend the Monique Lhuillier and Bliss collection
trunk shows Friday through Sunday at Betsy Robinson’s Bridal Collection, 1848 Reisterstown Road in
Pikesville. Call 410-484-4600 for an appointment.
HYATT & CO. TRUNK SHOWS
EYE OF THE WOLF
This Hi Expectation dress is just what the fashion doctors ordered this season. With this iridescent image of a
wolf, the Dallas-based women’s wear brand has created
an on-trend and slightly frightening frock.
Find the Hi Expectation dress for $108 at urbanout
fitters.com
Coppley, the Canadian-based custom clothing
brand, will have a trunk show Thursday at Hyatt &
Co. In addition, the fall shoe collection of Allen
Edmonds will be displayed in store. A fine bourbon tasting will be ongoing throughout the day.
Attend the Coppley and Allen Edmonds trunk
shows Thursday at Hyatt & Co., 8180 Maple Lawn
Blvd. in Fulton. Go to hyattclothing.com
GLIMPSED
LOove
nes
bthesite.com
Maryland’s
Premier
Adult
Store
Just In! Check Out our New
Full Line of Lingerie - In Stores Now!
Middle River - 3217 Eastern Blvd.
Catonsville - 6400 Baltimore National Pike
Cockeysville - 12 Scott Adams Road
Owings Mills - 9616 Reistertown Road
Pasadena - 2334 Mountain Road
Severn - 2720 K Annapolis Road
Baltimore - 506 South Broadway
Brooklyn Park - 5714 Ritchie Highway
COLBY WARE PHOTO
Shining bright
BY SLOANE BROWN
WHO: Alli Hopkins, 22, Charles Village resident, Jackson Marketing & Advertising assistant
SPOTTED AT: Art for Hope Gallery
Opening and Breast Cancer Benefit at
the Ritz Carlton Residences, featuring
DeanKaneART and benefiting the Red
Devils
WHAT SHE WORE: Green, yellow,
pink and orange zigzag print Love Couture A-line shift from Nordstrom; tan flat
Rack Room boots: verdigris leaf pendant
and filigree teardrop earrings from Forever 21; metallic pewter leather wristlet
from the Coach outlet.
HER FASHION PASSIONS: “I love
bright colors ... I always carry wristlets. I
don’t do purses ... I love tall boots. I get
sad during the summer when I can’t
wear them.”
|
October 30, 2013
|
25
5
OFF
$
anyy purchase
p urchase over $30
$ 30
Limit one coupon per customer • Expires 11/28/2013
A Baltimore Sun blog
on local wedding-planning
news and adventures
of aisle-bound brides
and grooms
www.baltimoresun.com/marriedinmaryland
October 30, 2013
bthesite.com
BOGGLE
|
SUDOKU
|
SCRABBLE
26
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
Answer to Wednesday’s Boggle Brainbuster
HELMET SANDAL JACKET
crossword
ACROSS
1
Kicked oneself
for
5
Sudden
increase
10 Rain heavily
14 Consequently
15 Ordinary
16 Pete or Charlie
17 Very eager
18 Aired
20 Nov.’s follower
21 Deep mud
22 City in England
23 Black wood
25 Soldiers,
for short
26 Inborn; natural
28 Of the mind
31 Door fastener
32 Sheep’s cry
34 Building site
36 Actor Cameron
37 Fencing sword
38 “A __ Is Born”;
Streisand film
39 Heavyweight
Muhammad __
40 Eggbeater
41
42
44
45
46
47
50
51
54
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
Snapshot
Eton or Yale
Plane trip
“__ you kidding
me?”
Glider or jet
Car thief
startler
Roaring beast
Actor Cruise
Sweetened
cherry
“The Buckeye
State”
Individuals
Rowed
Affleck & Stiller
Mediterranean
and Caribbean
Goblet
Irritates
DOWN
1
Peruse
2
Egg on
3
Selfish
4
Chow or collie
5
Lying flat on
one’s back
Fill in the grid so
that every row,
column and 3 x 3
box contains every
digit from 1 to 9
exclusively
10/30/13
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
19
21
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
32
33
35
37
38
Loan shark’s
crime
Bumpkin
Four qts.
Inventor __
Whitney
Man of the
cloth
Seep out
Did drugs
Ruby & scarlet
Actor Eastwood
Clothes-eating
insect
Go __; return
Equipment
Actress Chase
Manicurist’s
concerns
Submissive
Taken as a
whole
Reluctant
Arrestee’s hope
Weight units:
abbr.
Horse’s gait
Oxford or loafer
Part of the leg
40 Soil crawlers
41 Arrange
beforehand
43 Badger
44 Deluges
46 Evergreens
47 Actor John __
48 “Penny __”;
Beatles hit
49 Zone
50 Italy’s currency
before the euro
52 Cry from a sty
53 Velvety green
ground cover
55 Gear tooth
56 Actor Holbrook
57 Japanese sash
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
10/30/13
bthesite.com
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October 30, 2013
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27
SUDOKU
kakuro
To solve Kakuro, you must enter a number
between 1 and 9 in the empty squares. The
clues are the numbers in the white circles
that give the sum of the solution numbers:
above the line are across clues and below
the line are down clues. Thus, a clue of 3 will
produce a solution of 2 and 1, and a 5 will
produce 4 and 1 or 2 and 3, but, of course,
which squares they go in will depend on the
solution of a clue in the other direction.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
Fill in the grid so
that every row,
column and 3 x 3
box contains every
digit from 1 to 9
exclusively
10/30/13
10/30/13
crossword
ACROSS
1
__-Wan Kenobi
of “Star Wars”
4
Jewish leader
9
Facts & figures
13 Takes first prize
15 Popular cuisine
16 Hardly __;
seldom
17 Every
18 “Been __,
done that”
19 Thailand, once
20 Broke into bits
22 In a lazy way
23 Close friends
24 “__ a long way
to Tipperary...”
26 Pitcher’s delight
29 Make resentful
34 Huge lifting
machine
35 Banishment
36 Wallach or
Marienthal
37 Ladder step
38 Syrup flavor
39 Bodies of water
40 __ up;
misbehave
41 Wild
42 “Divine
Comedy” poet
43 Most vexing
45 __ up; blows it
46 Printer owner’s
purchase
47 Chopped meat
concoction
48 Hotel room
furnishings
51 Strike a deal
56 Chopping tools
57 Chris of tennis
58 High-pitched
barks
60 Longest river
61 Good judgment
62 Pass over
63 Mixer speed
64 Look of
contempt
65 Like dangerous
winter roads
DOWN
1
Run up a tab
2
Unfairness
3
1/12 of a foot
4
Toy for a baby
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
14
21
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
35
38
39
Hearth
residue
Coffin
platform
Uncovered
Not fit for
consumption
Cease
Gung-ho
Short-necked
duck
Military force
Molding
Give-and-__;
compromise
Even score
Leftover piece
Cease-fire
Talks wildly
One living
abroad
Run-of-the-__;
ordinary
Adolescents
Gladden
Ascends
All __; listening
Humility
Walks
pompously
Swim __; diver’s 50
flipper
42 Mr. Arnaz
52
53
44 Mouth,
slangily
45 As a __ of fact; 54
actually
47 Steed
55
48 Prohibits
49 Way out
59
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
41
10/30/13
Sandwich
shop
Level; smooth
Trait
transmitter
Polynesian
carved
image
Heroic tale
Secret agent
28
|
October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
NEVER RUN OUT OF
HOT WATER AGAIN
ON-DEMAND
WATER
HEATER
FOR LESS
$1.50 A DAY
©2013 Clockwork IP, LLC Roland Mann General Manager License #MD6592
bthesite.com
TECH
|
October 30, 2013
|
29
Baltimore City Public School System
Baltimore
Polytechnic Institute
“A Blue-Ribbon
School of Excellence”
Celebrating 129 Years
OPEN HOUSE
CYNAPS
Sunday, October 27th, 2013 • 1pm - 3pm
With cap, you’ll get
the music in you
Headset offers new
ways to tune in
BY KEVIN HUNT
TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
Even without Google Maps, the route
sound takes to the listener is easy to
track. It passes through the outer ear and
into the ear canal. Not with Cynaps, a
Bluetooth headset in a baseball cap that
uses bone-conduction technology to
send sound directly to the inner ear
through skull bones.
The concept might sound terribly
Halloweenish, but it’s an effective way to
listen to music while remaining aware of
your surroundings. It’s also an option for
people with impaired hearing.
Bone-conduction headphones, like
Panasonic’s upcoming RP-BTGS10, look
more like standard ’phones except each
earpiece is placed on the temple, directing sound through the cranial bones and
into the auditory nerve. The Cynaps
headset positions the tiny transducers,
lodged into a sleeve, so that they press
against skull, above each ear, when the
user wears the cap.
A sleeve in the cap’s bill holds a module with volume controls, Bluetooth activation, a tiny microphone for hands-free
(and outer-ears-free) phone calls and a
1000mAh battery.
The ensemble is available in generic
dark gray, light gray and white for $79
each or as a $69 self-install module
adaptable to your favorite cap.
The wearer, without question, will
have greater awareness of ambient noise.
In traffic or on a morning jog through
suburban streets, it could provide valuable peace of mind.
It will not, however, produce sound
comparable to even the cheapest earbuds. During my evaluation, the Cynaps
(as in “synapse”) indeed transmitted
sound through my skull, but the signals
that reached the auditory nerve resembled an old-time AM transistor radio. Or,
alternately, a pair of headphones playing
music while placed on a table a few feet
from the ears.
Wearing the cap more snugly improved the sound quality, as did pressing
(and holding) each transducer more
tightly against the head.
Suggestion: Do not try the latter in
public.
Some ears might prefer basic, Bluetooth-equipped bone-conduction headphones like the AfterShokz Bluez
($119.95, aftershokz.com) to wear under
your favorite cap. The technology might
sound ghoulish, but through-the-skull
bone conduction works.
[email protected]
Presentation begins promptly at 1:00 p.m.
General Session/Guided Tours
Wednesday, November 6th, 2013 • 6pm - 8pm
Presentation begins promptly at 6:00 p.m.
General Session/Guided Tours
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute
1400 West Cold Spring Lane | Baltimore, Maryland 21209
410-396-7026 | www.bpi.edu
Greek Food
and Cultural
Festival
Friday Nov. 1st – Sunday Nov. 3rd
Annunciation Cathedral 24 West Preston Street Baltimore, MD 21201
Authentic Greek Food and Pastries
Live Music and Greek Dancing
Cathedral Tours and Heritage Exhibits
Jewelry, Art and Gifts
Silent Auction and Greek Grocery
Children’s Games and Activities
“Greek Food & Cultural Festival”
Free Admission & Parking, Rain Or Shine
ATM on Premises, Credit Cards Accepted
410-727-1831
Visit goannun.org
30
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October 30, 2013
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31
32
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October 30, 2013
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bthesite.com
The Baltimore Sun’s
Photography at its Best
For more than a century, Baltimore Sun photographers
have chronicled everyday life in Maryland. In our newest
book,The Darkroom, the third in the iconic photo series,
The Baltimore Sun features the talent of seven of our
many great photographers.
•
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•
•
•
•
•
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William L. Klender
Robert F. Kniesche
Ellis J. Malashuk
Hans Marx
Walter M. McCardell
Richard Stacks
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$
19.99
plus S&H
Order online at
www.BaltimoreSunStore.com/TheDarkroom
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E
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for the bundle price of only
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You save almost $10.00!
Visit BaltimoreSunStore.com or call 410-332-6027.
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
|
33
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TRAVEL
30 in Philly
City offers a wealth of attractions with its
museums and distinctive neighborhoods
THE BALTIMORE SUN
1
PHILADELPHIA CITY HALL Walk
through the country’s largest municipal building. City Hall on Center
Square contains 14.5 acres of floor space
with lavish public rooms and an exterior
to match. Head to the observation deck
for a panoramic view of the city. (phila
.gov)
2
LIBERTY BELL CENTER Let free-
dom ring! After all, you can’t visit
Philly without stopping at the most famous cracked bell of all time, the Liberty
Bell. The experience at the center includes a video presentation and exhibits.
(nps.gov/inde)
3
THE CITY TAVERN RESTAURANT Enjoy a historic dining ex-
perience at its best, with costumed waiters, Colonial-era drinks and more, all
housed in a historic building dating back
to1773 that served as the unofficial meeting place for the First Continental Congress in the summer of 1774. (citytavern
.com)
4
CONGRESS HALL See where the
founding fathers ratified the Bill of
Rights and the Constitution. Between
1790 and 1800, Congress Hall served as
the capitol of the United States when
Philadelphia was the capital of the fledgling United States of America. It has been
restored to appear as it did when it was
the capitol of the United States, and is
next door to Independence Hall.
(nps.gov/inde)
5
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY. Take part
in the American Jewish experience. The
National Museum of American Jewish
History opened last year and is located in
a breathtaking glass facade five stories
tall in the heart of the historic district.
(nmajh.org)
6
SHOPPING ON SOUTH STREET
7
MORIMOTO Famed Philadelphia
The always funky South Street in
Philly’s Headhouse District offers over
300 stores and restaurants to choose
from, and most shops stay open until
midnight.
restaurateur Stephen Starr has
nearly a dozen restaurants in Philadelphia, but our pick is Morimoto. The contemporary interior is bursting in bright
colors and designs; the restaurant is
named for the head chef, who was on
Food Network’s “Iron Chef.” There is
more than sushi at this Japanese restaurant, and it is extremely popular, so make
reservations in advance. (morimoto
restaurant.com)
8
READING TERMINAL MARKET
Head to the market. Philadelphia is bursting with farmers’ markets.
The Reading Terminal Market, established in 1892 at 12th and Arch streets, is
the nation’s oldest and home to wonderful fresh and prepared delights, including Delilah’s, which has what is possibly
the best mac and cheese in the country.
For a cupcake fix, stop in at the Flying
Monkey Bakery, which offers whimsical
treats like whoopie pies as well as vegan
sweets. (readingterminalmarket.org)
9
STATESIDE Grab dinner at the
creatively cool and muchbuzzed-about restaurant Stateside. The
restaurant prides itself on its locally
sourced food and extensive whiskey selection. Stateside is a cool South Phila-
INSIDE IRON CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO’S RESTAURANT, MORIMOTO.
HANDOUT
delphia spot that is loved by locals and
visitors alike. (statesidephilly.com)
10
THE TROCADERO THEATRE
Movies on the big screen and
benefit concerts are only a few of the
events the theater offers to the public.
Formerly a vaudeville theater of the late
1800s, the Trocadero has kept its historic
charm and personality. (thetroc.com)
11
BOYD’S Ready, set, shop! At
12
FISHTOWN This former ware-
Boyd’s, a classic Philadelphia department store, upscale shopping and
wonderful service await. Boyd’s offers
goods from designers ranging from Burberry to Cole Haan. Need a pick-me-up
while shopping? Head to the in-store cafe. (boydsphila.com)
house district neighborhood is
colorful and creative with a host of bars,
music venues and art galleries. It’s also
home to another Stephen Starr fave,
Fette Sau, an eatery devoted to barbecue
and smoked meat that opened this
month. (There’s another in Brooklyn,
N.Y.) Check out the neighborhood on
First Fridays. ( fettesauphilly.com)
13
MCGILLIN’S OLDE ALE HOUSE
14
MASONIC TEMPLE AND LIBRARY What did most of our
Since 1860, McGillin’s Old Ale
House has had the beer taps flowing for
happy patrons. The city’s oldest tavern
still keeps visitors and locals coming for
its beer, food and atmosphere. (mcgillins
.com)
founding fathers have in common, besides a desire to make the U.S. independent? Most of them were Masons. The
Masonic Library Museum has more than
30,000 artifacts, including George Washington’s Masonic apron and Benjamin
Franklin’s Masonic sash. ( pagrand
lodge.com)
15
THE MARY CASSATT TEA
ROOM When you’re tired from
walking and touring, take a seat in the
fancy Rittenhouse Hotel’s Mary Cassatt
Tea Room for the traditional afternoon
tea. The Mary Cassatt Tea Room has just
been renovated, invoking the grandeur
of the former room. Enjoy hand-crafted
teas with an assortment of finger foods as
well as a selection of dishes from the hotel’s restaurant, Lacroix. (rittenhouse
hotel.com/dining)
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35
TRAVEL
16
MANAYUNK Walk along the
17
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN MUSEUM The recently opened Benja-
scenic Schuylkill River in Manayunk, located 15 minutes from City
Center. Small-town feel, traditional main
street and footpaths make Manayunk a
destination. The Manayunk Towpath,
part of the Schuylkill River Trail, curves
along the bends of the river, for outdoor
fun and recreation. (manayunk.com)
min Franklin Museum’s techno gadgets
and virtual presentations bring visitors
up to speed on one of Philadelphia’s most
famous residents in a style that would
wow Franklin himself. Strolling from
room to room of the former underground museum in Franklin Court, visitors can tap plenty of touch screens,
chuckle along with the animated film
segments told in his voice, and play
matching games about his life. (nps.gov/
inde)
18
JOHNNY BRENDA’S What was
once a local hangout complete
with a boardinghouse, Johnny Brenda’s
is now a neighborhood landmark. The
bar serves local brews, and the food is
focused on fresh and seasonal. There is
no set menu because it changes with the
day and is written on a chalkboard in a
central area. Well-established and upand-coming bands alike perform at the
stage at Johnny Brenda’s, making this
landmark a must-see. ( johnnybrendas
.com)
19
PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF
ART The vast collections of Ren-
aissance, American and Impressionist
art make the Philadelphia Museum of
Art one of the largest in the country. And
its impressive collections, acclaimed exhibitions and special programs make the
museum a cultural must-see. (philamu
seum.org)
20
FEDERAL DONUTS Three
things every foodie needs: coffee, doughnuts, and fried chicken. At
Federal Donuts, all three are offered
25
GENO’S STEAKS You can’t ven-
26
LOVE PARK If you’re visiting
ture through South Philadelphia
and not give into the greasy goodness of
an authentic Philly cheese steak. Geno’s
famous sandwiches consist of sliced ribeye steak, melted cheese, baked bread
and grilled onions, with condiments
available on the side. (genossteaks.com)
Philly with a significant other,
chances are you’re going to end up posing in front of Robert Indiana’s massive
LOVE sculpture located in what’s officially known as John F. Kennedy Plaza.
Chances are, you’re also going to be waiting in line behind all the other couples
visiting Philly. But hey, love is patient.
And it’s free.
THE INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART AT THE THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA.
27
RODIN MUSEUM After an extensive renovation, the museum
dedicated to Auguste Rodin reopened in
2012. It is home to some 140 pieces, including bronzes, marbles and plasters,
and is the largest collection of the French
sculptor’s work outside of Paris.
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART
under one roof. The doughnuts come in
some crazy flavors, like milk-chocolate
peanut butter, Indian cinnamon, and vanilla-lavender, while the Korean-style
wings have more traditional flavors, like
honey-ginger glaze and buttermilk ranch
seasoning. ( federaldonuts.com)
21
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART The art at the Insti-
tute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania features artists who
stretch the boundaries with works that
are meant to intellectually involve the
viewer. (icaphila.org)
22
NATIONAL CONSTITUTION
CENTER Renew your under-
standing of the Constitution. The National Constitution Center tells the story
of the country’s ever-important document. (constitutioncenter.org)
23
AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM IN PHILADELPHIA Life-
size 3-D characters greet visitors at the
African American Museum in Philadelphia’s permanent exhibition, “Audacious
Freedom; African Americans in Philadelphia, 1776-1876.” As the characters
speak about their lives, beliefs and aspi-
BOYD’S DEPARTMENT STORE.
BOYD’S
rations in 18th-century Philadelphia, listeners of all ages are immersed in their
world. (aampmuseum.org)
24
SILK CITY DINER Silk City on
Spring Garden Street in Northern Liberties serves Philadelphians
brunch, dinner and nightly entertainment. In 2007, the 3,000-square-foot
beer garden opened, offering alfresco
dining and mingling during the warmer
months. The eclectic interior and exterior decor along with the New American
cuisine and diverse beer list make this
diner-restaurant-nightclub hybrid a
popular neighborhood hangout. (silkcityphilly.com)
28
PHILADELPHIA ZOO Just as
29
THE FRANKLIN INSTITUTE
30
RITTENHOUSE SQUARE This
many of America’s famous documents were born in Philadelphia, so too
was the country’s first zoo, a 42-acre Victorian garden-style home for some of the
world’s most exotic animals. There’s also
a new $33 million children’s zoo that
opened earlier this year. (philadelphiazoo.org)
With some of the quirkiest exhibitions on modern science and technology around, the Franklin Institute is the
perfect place to go to get those wheels
turning. (www2.fi.edu)
popular park plaza hosts some of
the city’s most beloved outdoor sculptures. Recently, it’s become a trendy
nightspot. Check out the Rittenhouse
hotel’s new Library Bar for cocktails and
ambience.
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COVER STORY
Moving
on
Five questions for the
Ravens post-bye week
BY CHILDS WALKER
With the Ravens off to a 3-4 start and staring at the AFC playoff race from the outside
looking in, here are five questions they face
coming off their bye week:
MARSHAL YANDA PROTECTS JOE FLACCO IN THE
THIRD QUARTER VS. THE MIAMI DOLPHINS.
RAY RICE LOSES THE BALL AS HE’S HIT BY GREEN BAY
PACKERS DEFENSIVE TACKLE JOHNNY JOLLY.
LLOYD FOX PHOTO
KARL MERTON FERRON PHOTO
1
Can the Ravens fix their offensive line?
No problem has vexed the Ravens more
consistently than poor play from their offensive line.
Every player on the line has produced at least one
solid game. But each season-long starter, including
two-time Pro Bowl selection Marshal Yanda, has
delivered more mediocre-to-poor performances
than good ones.
This has been especially true in run blocking, in
which tight ends Ed Dickson and Dallas Clark have
struggled as well. The Ravens have been stuffed at
the line of scrimmage more than any other team in
the league, even the lowly Jacksonville Jaguars.
That’s a big reason why the Ravens running backs’
yards-per-carry average stands at a ghastly 2.75,
more than a yard below the league average.
Right tackle Michael Oher is a better pass blocker
than run blocker, so his difficulties are no surprise.
But center Gino Gradkowski has been a significant
downgrade from the retired Matt Birk. And a chronic back injury has kept left guard Kelechi Osemele
from living up to the promise of his rookie season.
There are reasons for optimism, however.
Bryant McKinnie was a disaster at left tackle
through five games, but the Ravens moved aggressively to replace him by trading for Eugene Monroe.
Monroe, younger and more agile than McKinnie,
has played well in both his starts.
The line also played perhaps its best all-around
game of the season against the Pittsburgh Steelers in
its last outing. That might seem like a booby prize,
given that Ray Rice and Bernard Pierce combined
for only 58 yards on 21 carries.
But coach John Harbaugh has said the Ravens
now have the players they need to block effectively.
With Monroe in place, there’s at least a chance he’s
correct.
2
Will Ray Rice get his season on track?
From the time he established himself as the
full-time starter at running back in 2009 through
the end of last season, Rice almost never played two
bad games in a row. Even when he received few
carries, he compensated by serving as one of Flacco’s best possession receivers.
We simply have not seen that player this season.
Rice’s best running game of the year, 27 carries for
74 yards against the Miami Dolphins on Oct. 6,
would’ve ranked as one of his worst in past years. He
has averaged just 4.8 yards a catch, more than 40
percent down from his career average.
Some of the blame belongs with the offensive
line. Rice’s backup, Pierce, has also seen his yardsper-carry plummet, from 4.9 in 2012 to 2.8 this season. If the line was doing its job, both wouldn’t be
struggling to this degree.
But the story goes deeper than that with Rice. He
suffered a hip injury in the second game of the season, and though he missed just one start, he hasn’t
run with the same acceleration since.
Rice says he’s healthy and has his burst back. But
we haven’t seen it in a game.
The troubling thing for Rice and Ravens fans is
that running backs have a tendency to lose their
abilities suddenly. Think of former Denver Bronco
Terrell Davis, who rushed for 2,008 yards at age 26
and never played a full season again.
It’s way too early to predict anything like that for
Rice. He hasn’t carried the ball nearly as much as
many who have become cautionary tales at the position. But there is at least some unease about a player
who means so much to the Ravens, both on the field
and in the community.
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COVER STORY
JOE FLACCO LOOKS TO PASS AS THE TEAM FIGHTS
OFF THE HOUSTON TEXANS.
DOUG KAPUSTIN PHOTO
3
Can Joe Flacco produce the kind of hot
streak that carried the Ravens through
last season’s playoffs?
Flacco’s sublime postseason, one of the best produced by any quarterback in NFL history, helped
land him a $120.6 million contract in the offseason.
But it also created unrealistic expectations that he
would suddenly be a different quarterback than the
guy we watched in past regular seasons.
In reality, Flacco is much the same guy. He’s incredibly durable. He’s unafraid to throw boldly in
tight spots. And every so often, he plays a cringeworthy game.
Flacco has not thrown deep as often or as accurately as he did last season. But that’s in part because
Torrey Smith (Maryland) has taken on a more varied receiving role and in part because Flacco’s other
favorite deep threat, Jacoby Jones, missed the better
part of five games with a knee injury.
The awful running game also is a culprit here.
The easiest way to set up a deep throw is off playaction, but play-action can’t work as well if the run
doesn’t present a realistic threat. Flacco recently
said it himself: The Ravens have to run better on
first and second down to set up the rest of their
offense.
There are reasons to think Flacco will play better
down the stretch than he has so far. He has developed a better rapport with Clark and wide receivers
Marlon Brown and Tandon Doss. Jones is healthy.
Dennis Pitta, Flacco’s safety blanket, might return
from a hip injury in November.
Even so, Flacco might never again play four
straight games as good as the ones he played in January. That’s just reality, given his broader track
record and the history of NFL quarterback play.
COACH JOHN HARBAUGH ON THE SIDELINES DURING
THE THIRD QUARTER VS. THE BILLS.
KARL MERTON FERRON PHOTO
4
Will John Harbaugh find the kind of midseason corrections that have saved his
teams in the past?
It’s easy to forget given the end result, but the
Ravens were a lost team last December. A crushing
home defeat to the Denver Broncos seemed to expose them as a noncontender. Mounting injuries
made any course correction feel like a long shot.
But one of Harbaugh’s great strengths is that he
has never let a period of turmoil sink a season completely. It’s hard to know whether he’s exactly the
same way with players, but to the outside world,
Harbaugh never seems to panic or blow a bad loss
out of proportion. He always speaks of the team’s
troubles as a collection of discrete, fixable problems.
His consistency and attention to detail have helped
the Ravens through plenty of rough patches over the
past five seasons.
Harbaugh’s sixth season might present his most
challenging puzzle, in part because the Ravens have
given themselves no cushion in the standings.
Their coach has shown admirable aggression in
recent weeks, calling games as if he expects his team
to execute better than it actually has. That was the
case when he went for a touchdown on fourth-andgoal against the Green Bay Packers instead of settling for a field goal that would not have greatly
increased the Ravens’ statistical odds of winning.
For all his team’s struggles in short yardage, Harbaugh believed it could surely hammer home a 1yard run. This optimism has worked for him over
time, and it’s impressive to see Harbaugh not dissuaded by a few weeks of bad play.
But the Ravens did not score that touchdown
against Green Bay, and they have not made obvious
progress in correcting their weaknesses. All the belief in the world might not help them do it.
MARLON BROWN IS TACKLED BY BROWNS DEFENSIVE
BACK CHRIS OWENS AT THE HOME OPENER.
KARL MERTON FERRON PHOTO
5
Can the Ravens stay afloat in the AFC playoff race?
The Ravens have never had a losing record this
late in a season under Harbaugh. They’re coming off
two performances that raised questions about their
ability to fix obvious flaws. Despite those realities,
they might not be in the “state of emergency” Terrell Suggs declared after the loss in Pittsburgh.
That’s because there’s a whole heap of mediocrity
competing for the conference’s last wild-card spot.
Eight AFC teams finished the weekend with either
three or four wins. Not one of them lurks as a sleeping giant.
In fact, the Ravens and San Diego Chargers are
the only teams from the group that haven’t been
outscored overall.
The Ravens have not given up on winning the
AFC North. But with the Cincinnati Bengals holding a 2 1⁄2-game lead, the Ravens might have to win
in Cleveland against the Browns next week and then
beat the Bengals at home Nov. 10 to get back into the
divisional race.
They can do it; Cincinnati has grappled with its
own troubles on offense. But the wild card is the
easier target.
The Ravens still face two games against the Bengals and three relatively tough nondivisional games
against the Chicago Bears (a challenge if quarterback Jay Cutler is back), Detroit Lions and New
England Patriots. On the plus side, they’ll play five of
their last nine games at M&T Bank Stadium.
Analytics website Football Outsiders places the
Ravens’ playoff odds at a mere 12 percent. But given
the AFC’s wild-card muddle, expect them to remain
in the conversation well into December.
[email protected]
twitter.com/childswalker
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COVER STORY
How we got here
A game-by-game look
at the Ravens’ first half
BY NICHOLAS FOURIEZOS
Whether or not you believe in a “Super
Bowl curse,” there’s no debating that the
Ravens have appeared to be in a trance
for much of their Super Bowl follow-up.
The signs are everywhere: Three
quarterbacks (the Seattle Seahawks’
Russell Wilson, the Oakland Raiders’
Terrelle Pryor and the Philadelphia
Eagles’ Michael Vick) have more rushing
yards than Ray Rice. Joe Flacco has been
sacked more than only four of his peers.
And the Ravens are the first defending
champ since 2006 to be under .500 after
seven games.
Yet amid the gloom remains a beacon
of hope: The Ravens play in perhaps the
weakest division in football. And they
still have both games against the only
team ahead of them in the AFC North.
It’ll be a while before we know
whether the Ravens are cursed, first or
something in between. In the meantime,
here’s a game-by-game look back at how
they got here:
Broncos 49, Ravens 27
What happened: Because of a scheduling conflict with the Orioles, the Ravens became the first defending Super
Bowl champions in 10 years to play their
opener on the road. The result was a
roller-coaster performance that would
foreshadow the rest of the season’s first
half. Quarterback Peyton Manning and
the Broncos stormed through a 21-point
third quarter, exposed a leaky Ravens
secondary and forced Joe Flacco to
throw a total of 62 times while playing a
doomed game of catch-up through the
air. Flacco threw two interceptions, tight
ends Ed Dickson and Dallas Clark
dropped multiple passes, and the offensive line gave up four sacks — and those
miscues don’t even count the defense’s
BRONCOS’ RAHIM MOORE LIGHTS UP DALLAS CLARK.
KARL MERTON FERRON PHOTO
matador impression.
Performance of the game: Manning
threw for 462 yards and seven touchdowns on 27-for-42 passing. It was the
most touchdown passes ever allowed by
the Ravens in a single game and tied the
NFL record.
Turning point: In the third quarter,
Manning passed for three touchdowns in
a six-minute span. The Ravens put up 10
points in the fourth but also gave up 14 to
seal the blowout.
Key stats: The Ravens averaged 2.8
yards per carry. Manning threw for 11
yards per attempt, while Flacco averaged
5.8 yards per attempt on 20 more passes.
The Ravens secondary gave up passing
touchdowns of 23, 24, 26, 28 and 78
yards.
Quote: “We’re better,” Ravens coach
John Harbaugh said. “We can play better.
We gave them too many things, too many
open guys, too many things where we
just need to get better at communication
[and] things early in the season.”
Ravens 14, Browns 6
What happened: It was far from
pretty, but the Ravens eked out a win
with an improved defense and a justgood-enough passing attack. They
sacked quarterback Brandon Weeden
five times while keeping the Browns out
of the end zone. The Ravens offense had
little success running the ball and was
shut out in the first half. But Flacco led
the team down the field for two touchdowns — a 5-yard run by Bernard Pierce
in the third quarter and a 5-yard catch by
Marlon Brown in the fourth quarter.
Performance of the game: Middle
linebacker Daryl Smith, who spent nine
seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars
before signing with the Ravens in the offseason, led the team with 11 tackles. He
added 1.5 sacks, a tackle for loss and two
passes defended.
Turning point: After the Ravens got
the ball at the 11:03 mark of the third
quarter, running back Ray Rice bolted for
14 yards on the left side, then Flacco hit
speedster Torrey Smith (Maryland) for a
23-yard pass down the middle. After conversions on third-and-7 and third-and-8,
the offense got the first touchdown of the
game with Pierce’s 5-yard run.
Key stats: Cleveland’s offense was 4for-15 on third down and had 259 total
yards. Ravens kicker Justin Tucker went
0-for-2 on field goals, one fewer miss
than he had last season. Rice lost his
fourth fumble in his last six games. The
Browns went for it on fourth down twice
but were stopped each time.
Quote: “When Joe put up points, it
was like sharks. It was blood in the water,
and we pinned our ears back,” Ravens
defensive tackle Arthur Jones said.
Ravens 30, Texans 9
What happened: . After allowing two
quick field goals, the Ravens took a sudden lead with a field goal, an interception
returned for a touchdown and an 82-yard
punt return for a score. They had an
underwhelming offensive performance,
settling for three field goals and scoring
only one touchdown.
Performance of the game: Once
again, Daryl Smith came to play. The 31year-old returned the interception of
Matt Schaub 37 yards for the touchdown.
He added a game-high 10 tackles, with
seven solo, a pass defended and a
quarterback hit.
Turning point: The offense was held
scoreless for the first 20 minutes of the
game. But after a 28-yard field goal with
4:11 left in the first half, Smith and Tandon Doss reached the end zone in a span
of 1:54 to put the Ravens up 17-6. On the
first drive of the second half, the Ravens
went 80 yards and got a 1-yard touchdown run by Pierce to take a 15-point
lead.
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COVER STORY
Key stats: The Texans went 3-for-12
on third down yet led in total yards 264236. While possession time was about
equal, the Texans racked up 14 penalties
for 113 yards to the Ravens’ 10 for 87.
Quote: “Anytime you can start off slow
like that, have some help from your defense and your special teams, that really
propelled us today,” Ravens quarterback
Joe Flacco said. Bills 23, Ravens 20
What happened: It’s a credit to the
Ravens defense that this game wasn’t as
lopsided as the Denver loss. The team
made mistakes all over the field — in addition to Flacco’s career-high five interceptions, there were dropped passes,
missed tackles and questionable play
calling, especially involving the running
game, which had a historically bad afternoon.
Performance of the game: The entire Bills defense contributed to this one,
despite — or maybe because of — its
youth. Third-year tackle Marcell Dareus
dominated with seven tackles (five solo)
and two sacks. Rookie Kiko Alonso had
five tackles and two interceptions, and
cornerback Aaron Williams, also in his
third year, added two picks. Buffalo
brought constant pressure, sacking Flacco four times and recording 12 hits on the
quarterback.
Turning point: Somehow, with a
minute left to play, the Ravens still had a
chance to win. Flacco had driven the offense to the Bills’ 48 and was looking for
at least a game-tying field goal. However,
his third-and-8 pass intended for tight
end Dallas Clark was deflected and then
caught by a diving Alonso.
Key stats: The Ravens ran the ball
nine times — the fewest in franchise history — for 24 yards against one of the
worst rushing defenses in the league.
Afterward, offensive coordinator Jim
Caldwell said, “I don’t think we ran it
quite enough.” Buffalo dominated time of
possession 36:26 to 23:34. Bills running
back Fred Jackson rushed for 87 yards
and a score on 16 carries, a 5.4-yard average.
Quote: “It’s frustrating simply because we’re not a team that does that and
Joe’s not a quarterback that typically
makes picks,” Torrey Smith said. “Joe
BILLS’ MARCELL DAREUS CELEBRATES HIS SACK OF JOE FLACCO DURING THE SECOND
QUARTER ON SEPT. 29. THE BILLS WON, 23-20.
KARL MERTON FERRON PHOTO
didn’t flinch at all. No one on offense
flinched. We never doubted for a second
that with the way our defense was
playing, we [had] a chance to win the
game.”
Ravens 26, Dolphins 23
What happened: The Ravens got an
important road win against the Dolphins,
pulling ahead with a late field goal by
Tucker and then watching Miami kicker
Caleb Sturgis miss a 57-yard attempt
wide left with 38 seconds remaining.
Performance of the game: Torrey
Smith’s stellar play through the first four
games — 21 catches for 435 yards — had
been overshadowed by the rest of the offense’s ineptitude. After turning in a career-high 166 yards receiving the week
before, Smith had 121 yards on six catches. His 14-yard catch on the Ravens’ final
drive put them within field-goal range at
the Miami 34-yard line.
Turning point: This game came
down to the final two minutes, like the
week before, but this time Flacco was
able to lead a clutch drive. Starting at the
Ravens’ 40-yard line, Rice ran twice for a
total of 12 yards. After Smith’s catch and
three straight runs, the Ravens kicked the
44-yard field goal with 1:42 left.
Key stats: The Ravens committed six
penalties for 64 yards, not an impressive
number, but a drop from previous weeks.
Quote: “We do make it difficult at times,
but it just feels good to win on the road,
especially with what we went through
last week,” Rice said.
Packers 19, Ravens 17
What happened: Green Bay led by 13
points after three quarters, but its offense
slowed in the fourth quarter after wide
receivers Randall Cobb and James Jones
suffered knee injuries. The Ravens rallied in the fourth, with Joe Flacco throwing an 11-yard touchdown to wide receiver Jacoby Jones and an 18-yard scoring pass to Clark. But Packers tight end
Jermichael Finley took a short pass for
52 yards on third-and-3, and the Packers
ran out the clock.
Performance of the game: Packers
rookie Eddie Lacy showed why he was a
first-round pick in April’s draft, bulldozing would-be defenders while racking up
120 yards on 23 carries.
Turning point: As energized as the
Ravens’ comeback attempt was in the
fourth quarter, they really needed to play
better early in the game. The Packers
were up 6-0 at the half and 16-3 after the
third quarter, setting the tone at M&T
Bank Stadium. Green Bay’s touchdown
— a blown coverage by cornerback Lardarius Webb that resulted in a 64-yard
reception for Jordy Nelson — put the
lead out of reach, and the Ravens simply
ran out of time.
Key stats: The Ravens rushed for 47
yards on 22 carries, compared with
Green Bay’s 140 on 30 touches. The Ravens went 2-for-14 on third down and 1for-2 on fourth down. Flacco threw for
342 yards and two touchdowns but was
sacked five times.
Quote: “In the NFL, you stay with
your running game, especially on the
road,” Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs
said.
Steelers 19, Ravens 16
What happened: Any loss to the
Steelers is hard to swallow, but this one
was worsened by the fact that Pittsburgh
was 1-4 entering the game. The Ravens
never led but did tie the score on a pass to
Clark with 1:58 left. There was too much
time left on the clock, though, and Pittsburgh drove into field-goal range for a
42-yard try. Shaun Suisham converted it
as time expired.
Performance of the game: Suisham
was the most effective offensive player of
the day, going 4-for-4 on field goals and
adding an extra point. In an environment
tough on kickers, Suisham calmly lined
up and split the uprights almost perfectly.
Turning point: After the Ravens were
held out of the end zone for the first 46
minutes of the game, Flacco’s touchdown to Clark tied the game at 16. To set
up the score, the Ravens drove 73 yards
on 16 plays, taking up just over eight minutes while converting on four third
downs. That was a critical moment
where the Ravens could have wilted, but
the drive forced the Steelers to conduct
the two-minute offense to win.
Key stats: Steelers rookie Le’Veon
Bell ran for a career-high 93 yards on 19
carries. Pittsburgh converted 7 of12 third
downs, while the Ravens went 7-for-14.
The teams finished about equal in total
yards (287-286 in favor of the Ravens)
and time of possession (31:01 to 28:59,
Pittsburgh).
Quote: “I’m very concerned,” Suggs
said. “We can’t kid ourselves anymore.
We’ve got a tremendous amount of work
to do.”
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ANIMALS
VIP
menagerie
DECKER, THE ACE HARDWARE CAT, LOUNGES ON TOP OF HIS CAT TREE IN THE PAINT AISLE.
KAITLIN NEWMAN PHOTO
We may not have a Panda Cam, but Baltimore has its share of animal celebs
BY CHRIS KALTENBACH
Baltimore and its environs are home
to plenty of animals that are at least as
compelling as a months-old panda.
Sure, there was plenty of wailing
and gnashing of teeth when Washington’s National Zoo, blaming the government shutdown, was forced to turn
off the camera it has trained on its
resident giant pandas, Mei Xiang and
her 2-month-old cub.
Thank goodness the Panda Cam is
back on.
But Baltimoreans, for one, should
have been able to take the shutdown in
stride. Charm City has plenty of
critters living within its borders and
slightly beyond that might not have a
camera trained on them 24/7 but
deserve to be media stars nonetheless. (Some already are.)
Here are eight area animals that
can, and do, shine in the spotlight,
happily soaking up whatever attention
is sent their way.
And here’s a bonus: We’ve got some
humans willing to speak for them.
DECKER, 2
Resident cat at Ace Hardware in
Federal Hill
ANSWERING FOR DECKER: Store
manager Nina Burriss
WHERE THE NAME “DECKER”
CAME FROM: He’s named after Black &
Decker. The employees voted on it, and
“Decker” came in first. “Ace” came in
second.
WHAT’S A TYPICAL DAY LIKE FOR
DECKER? He lounges everywhere he
can. He’s playful, he’s crazy and, a lot of
times, he’s lazy. He loves it. He absolutely
loves it here.
BEST STORY ABOUT DECKER: We
all have our little stories of Decker. At
Christmas, I love it that he’s always
playing in the Christmas trees.
WHO HAS THE UPPER HAND IN
THIS RELATIONSHIP? Decker, for sure.
We’re all the pets, and he’s the owner.
RISE AND CONQUER, 4
The Baltimore Ravens’ ravens
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October 30, 2013
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41
ANIMALS
cializing with her people (our staff ) and
guests.
ANSWERING FOR RISE AND CONQUER: Amy Eveleth, animal embassy
specialist at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore (where R&C live when it’s not
gameday).
BEST STORY ABOUT MARGARET:
Margaret actually likes going to see the
vet! She lets aquarium staff file her nails,
trim her wing feathers, listen to her with
a stethoscope and even give her any
needed oral medication. It’s just like her
to have everyone in the room working to
please her.
DO THEY ENJOY THE SPOTLIGHT?
Rise and Conquer love the whistles, the
flames as the players come out of the tunnel during pregame ceremonies. They’re
so conditioned to the sound of “Lose
Yourself” by Eminem that they start getting jumpy if they hear it on the radio.
BEST STORY: Their handlers always
ask fans to put down their food and
drinks prior to having a photo taken with
Rise and Conquer. Why, you ask? They
have been known to steal a bite or a drink
when you aren’t looking! There was that
one time Conquer snagged a cherry out
of a cup of sangria …
WHAT WOULD THEY SAY IF THEY
COULD SPEAK? First, they would ask
the human who makes their diets to stop
trying to get them to eat green peppers;
they hate them. Second, they can’t help
but look at you sideways when you ask, at
M&T Bank Stadium, what kind of bird
they are.
BILL, 100+ (IN USNA
YEARS)
Naval Academy mascot
Answering for Bill: Midshipman 1st
Class Broderick Neelfeller, one of Bill’s
goat handlers.
HOW BILL AND THE USNA GOT TOGETHER: Currently, there are two Bills,
Nos. 33 and No. 34. Bill made his first appearance over 100 years ago at the ArmyNavy football game and personally led
the team to victory.
IF THERE WERE A BILL CAM, WHAT
WOULD THE PUBLIC SEE? Bill is your
normal happy goat that wanders the
fields and eats as much as he can, though
we probably don’t want everyone seeing
his weekly meetings with Coach Niumatalolo where they discuss game plans for
Navy football victories.
SAMSON, 5
Maryland-born elephant
ANSWERING FOR SAMSON: Mike
McClure, general curator/elephant
manager at the Maryland Zoo in Balti-
BUCK, 1
MARYLAND ZOO’S AFRICAN RAVENS, FROM LEFT TO RIGHT, RISE AND CONQUER.
KIM HAIRSTON PHOTO
more.
NOTABLE ACCOMPLISHMENTS: He
went through a record-breaking growth
spurt recently and put on over 1,000
pounds in less than 4 months!
BEST STORY ABOUT SAMSON:
When he was “little,” he once managed
to get a tractor tire stuck around his
waist. He looked like a bizarre ballerina
with a rubber tire tutu. It took me a while
to get it off of him, but he was having fun
the entire time, rolling around and
bumping into things like he was in a giant
hamster ball.
IF THERE WERE A SAMSON CAM,
WHAT WOULD THE PUBLIC SEE?
Cameras would have to be mounted up
out of trunk reach (those cute fluffy pandas don’t have a 7-foot-long arm on their
faces), so all you would see is a top-down
view of a big elephant eating and sleeping.
MIRABELLE, 7
Boston terrier; model, muse, subject of a series of picture books for
kids
ANSWERING FOR MIRABELLE: Baltimore artist Michael Muller, the human
caretaker of Mirabelle’s empire
ANY BRUSHES WITH FAME? Recently at the Decatur [Ga.] Book Festival,
we got to meet Sara Shepard, author of
“Pretty Little Liars,” the hugely successful [young-adult] book series. It turns out
she and her little boy are fans of Mirabelle.
DOES MIRABELLE ENJOY THE
SPOTLIGHT? I think she does. She al-
ways seems to know when she is going to
do an event. I know she enjoys meeting
kids, especially the sticky ones. She licks
a lot of babies.
IF THERE WERE A MIRABELLE
CAM, WHAT WOULD THE PUBLIC
SEE? I think they would see a lot of
All-access feline at Baltimore
Arena
ANSWERING FOR BUCK: Paul Webster, the arena’s assistant box office manager (and the man who takes Buck
home)
BRUSHES WITH FAME: Buck’s already experienced a photo shoot for the
[Baltimore Animal Rescue and Care
Shelter Inc.’s] Soft Side Campaign, which
can be seen gracing the Baltimore Arena
on the Hopkins Plaza side. He has
achieved the temperament of a full-scale
diva.
WHO HAS THE UPPER HAND IN
THIS RELATIONSHIP, BUCK OR THE
ARENA? Buck definitely has the upper
hand. His displeasure is doled out on
toys and ankles alike, but when he’s
happy, the world seems to stop so he can
cuddle you.
WHAT WOULD BUCK SAY IF HE
COULD SPEAK? Buck would inform me,
wrestling with her sister, Amelia.
in no uncertain terms, that he tolerates
my presence only because I feed and pet
him.
MARGARET, 25
ORB, 3
Macaw and media star at Baltimore’s National Aquarium
ANSWERING FOR MARGARET: Liz
Evans, the aquarium’s manager of animal
training
NOTABLE BRUSHES WITH FAME:
Margaret was on “Late Night with David
Letterman” as part of the stupid pet
tricks segment several times.
DOES MARGARET ENJOY BEING IN
THE SPOTLIGHT? Margaret is a hya-
cinth macaw, and her kind live in very
large flocks, so she is very social. Since
she lives at the aquarium, people are her
“flock,” and she is most comfortable so-
Kentucky Derby winner
ANSWERING FOR ORB: Co-owner
Stuart Janney III
DOES ORB ENJOY BEING IN THE
SPOTLIGHT? Yes. He loves crowds and
lots of attention.
WHO HAS THE UPPER HAND IN
THIS RELATIONSHIP, ORB OR YOU?
Orb. He’s much stronger and has more
people taking care of him than I do.
WHAT WOULD ORB SAY IF HE
COULD SPEAK? He would ask why I
think I won the Kentucky Derby, because
he is pretty sure he won the race.
[email protected]
42
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bthesite.com
EATS
Quiet, capable dinner service in Midtown
Casual American
classics and good
service in an unlikely
location
PLATES
BACK STORY: Opened in
BY KIT WASKOM POLLARD
When it comes to restaurants, never
underestimate the role of location.
For Plates, a casual American eatery
located in the Downtown Athletic Club
and surrounded by midtown office
buildings, the location means a busy
lunch but not much of a dinner rush.
Sometimes the best time to visit a restaurant is in its off hours. At Plates, we
found good service, well-executed, familiar food and a quiet — though sometimes slightly odd — atmosphere, right in
the center of the city.
SCENE & DECOR During our visit, on
a rainy Thursday night, Plates was nearly
empty, though we did see a handful of
diners grabbing a drink or a bite after the
gym.
In itself, a location next to a gym is no
big deal. Restaurants have neighbors.
However, most restaurants don’t share
glass walls with said neighbors; Plates
does. That visual link between the two
spaces left us with the erroneous impression that Plates was somehow part of the
gym.
The two businesses have different entrances, though, and Plates’ entryway is
peculiar. Diners walk through a passage
that must have originally been a storage
room or exit hallway. A few decorations
try to spruce up the spot but don’t disguise it enough to erase the feeling that
you’re somehow behind the scenes.
But the gym window and strange entrance are small things. Inside, Plates’
decor has the vaguely urban-industrial
vibe of a West Elm catalog — think metal
tables and rough wood accents. It feels a
little generic but is appealing enough, especially because Plates’ food works.
APPETIZERS Our first course was a
home run all the way around. A cup of
THE LAMB CHEESE STEAK AT PLATES.
CHIAKI KAWAJIRI PHOTO
crab and corn chowder ($4.99) was
creamy and thick, with chunks of crab.
The soup was well seasoned with just a
hint of underlying sweetness, thanks to
the corn and crab.
A large plateful of fried calamari
dunked in Buffalo sauce and served with
blue cheese ($8.99) was fantastic. The
calamari was cooked nicely — it was tender with just enough breading to balance
the spicy sauce. Buffalo sauce and squid
are a good pair.
ENTREES Like the calamari, the lamb
cheese steak ($10.99) put a simple but
unexpected spin on a familiar dish. Replacing the beef with provolone-covered
lamb made the sandwich a crossover between a gyro and the Philadelphia classic. Somehow, it ended up tasting more
sophisticated than either of those sandwiches do on their own.
Fries, on the side, were just as good.
Thick enough to be hearty but still crispy
on the outside, they hit all the right notes.
Two oversized mahi mahi and shrimp
tacos ($10.99) were the only disappointment of the evening. The flavors worked
— the pico de gallo was fresh and we especially liked the smoky chipotle aioli —
but the fish itself, chopped into small
bites, was overcooked. Rubbery shrimp
didn’t ruin the tacos, but we found ourselves focusing more on the vegetables
and a smoking hot side of Spanish rice
while avoiding the fish.
DRINKS Plates doesn’t offer any beers
on tap but they do make a mean glass of
sangria ($8). Fruity, but not too sweet,
the drink was fun and also a good match
for the food.
A glass of Finca El Origen malbec ($8),
a smooth and peppery red from Argentina, was equally drinkable — especially
with the rich, savory crab and corn
chowder.
DESSERT Dessert was a comically
large slice of sweet potato cheesecake
($4.99), made in-house. When we saw
the size of the slice, we were sure we’d
leave half of it on the plate. But after a few
bites of the creamy, tangy-sweet filling,
we were hooked. We ate the whole thing.
SERVICE Eating at Plates outside of
office hours meant we had nearly the
whole place to ourselves — and the dedicated service of our waitress. She was as
friendly as could be, offering recommendations and making sure our drinks
mid-2012 by Baltimore native
and restaurant veteran
Valanti Koliofotis, Plates adds
a likable casual dining option
to the Midtown restaurant
scene.
PARKING: Street parking and
multiple garages
SIGNATURE DISH: The lamb
cheese steak is a fun twist on
the familiar Philly sandwich.
Instead of beef, shaved lamb
joins melted provolone,
caramelized onions, lettuce,
tomato and mayonnaise on a
crusty roll. The lamb’s slight
gaminess makes the
sandwich more sophisticated
— even edgier — than
traditional cheese steaks.
TVS: Three
WHERE: 210 E. Centre St.,
Midtown
CONTACT: 443-453-9139;
platesbaltimore.com
OPEN: 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
Monday-Friday; 9 a.m. to 4
p.m., Sunday; Closed
Saturday
CREDIT CARDS: All major
RESERVATIONS: Accepted
BOTTOM LINE: Casual
American classics and good
service in an unlikely location
stayed full.
By the time we left, we were the only
people in the place. At Plates, the lack of
company felt more private than weird,
like we’d chosen someplace off the beaten dinner path.
Between the happy service and approachable and sometimes surprising
menu, it felt like a smart choice, too.
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43
FINE DINING
Cornering the market
The Corner BYOB in
Hampden spawns a
dazzling cafe
BY RICHARD GORELICK
Magic happens when you’re not
looking. Over on Elm Avenue in Hampden just a few weeks ago, the Other Corner Charcuterie Bar sprang full grown,
Athena-like, from the head of its parent
restaurant, the Corner BYOB.
The Other Corner Charcuterie Bar is
from Bernard Dehaene, co-owner of the
Corner BYOB and the Other Corner and
the chef at both. The new place feels like
it’s been dreamed of and planned for a
long time, which makes it something
very personal.
I dropped in on the first weekend, fell
badly, madly in love with it, and have
been trying like heck ever since to describe what exactly the Other Corner is,
how it relates to the original and why it
evoked in me such a strong emotional
response.
It’s not easy. Even the street address of
the Other Corner is a misdirect. Its legal
address is on 36th Street, but the real entrance is on Elm Street, a few steps north
from the Corner BYOB’s entrance.
The original restaurant and its offspring are connected through an interior
door and share a kitchen, as well as a
liquor license. That means diners seated
at the Corner BYOB can now order up
cocktails, beer and wines by the glass
from the new bar next door, but they can
still bring in their own beer and bottles of
wine.
The Other Corner is very much its
own thing, with its own separate personality, which hits you as kind of a Cubist
recombination of typical Belgian taverns
and bits of pieces from your favorite old
movies.
When you’re walking by, you get an
oblong glimpse of the interior, which is
clean-cut and handsome, a sharp mix of
MEAT AND CHEESE PLATES AT THE OTHER CORNER CHARCUTERIE BAR.
BARBARA HADDOCK TAYLOR PHOTO
the rustic and the contemporary, with
cool slate floors, a long cushioned-seating banquette against the far wall and
country farmhouse touches like the
wooden tabletops perched on oak wine
barrels.
The Other Corner occupies a space
that had been a private club called the
Elmwood, which was kept hidden behind an unmarked, closed door. You had
to have known it was there.
The door is now kept propped open
from the Other Corner’s daily 4 p.m
opening until it closes at 1:30 a.m. And
when you’re inside, the open door brings
in fresh air, which is a wonderful thing.
The Other Corner has already become
a haven for workers in restaurants and
bars in Hampden and elsewhere, who
show up when their shifts are over, for a
glass of beer or a bite to eat — maybe
crispy pommes frites with dipping mayonnaise or cognac-laced chicken liver
mousse served with toasted brioche.
The best times I’ve had here were at
the bar, with a friend or alone, ordering
up small and savory plates. The singlepage menu makes no divisions between
appetizers and entrees. But it’s wrong to
think of this as small plates. The food is
rich and hearty; you won’t leave hungry.
The Other Corner worked less well at
the table, when we tried to have a more
or less conventional restaurant dinner.
The small staff was contending with an
unexpected overflow of patrons waiting
for tables at the Corner BYOB, and it took
a long while for some food to come out.
Even if the food takes a while, it shows
up hot — very hot. The oven-baked escargots are earthy, herby, buttery perfection. They arrive nestled in shallow lake
of parsleyed garlic butter, with plenty of
baguette slices.
A bowl of lovely French onion soup,
listed on the specials board, was brimming with real stock flavor and melting
caramelized onions, and would warm
the most chilled bones. There are constant simple pleasures, like the impeccable wild mushrooms sauteed with garlic, herbs and olive oil, the thick slice of
“peasant bread” that the kitchen tops
with its own fromage blanc and fresh
herbs, and garnishes with an aromatic
mix of chopped radish, cucumber and
mint.
And just when you thought charcu-
THE OTHER
CORNER
CHARCUTERIE
BAR
RATING: ★★★1⁄2
WHERE: 850 B W. 36th St.,
Hampden
CONTACT: 443-869-5075,
which is for the Corner, the
adjacent restaurant
OPEN: Dinner daily, 4 p.m. to
1:30 a.m.
PRICES: Plates are
$6.50-$9
FOOD: European cafe food
SERVICE: Neighborly and
well-informed
BEST DISHES: Wild
mushrooms in herbs and
garlic, escargots
PARKING/ACCESSIBILITY:
On-street parking
NOISE
LEVEL/TELEVISIONS: The
noise level grows with the
crowd; no televisions.
[KEY: Superlative:★★★★★;
Excellent: ★★★★; Very Good:
★★★; Good: ★★; Promising:
★]
terie and cheese was yesterday’s restaurant news, along comes the Other Corner’s stellar program. They’re doing it up
— with jewel-like savory jams and condiments and admirable curating. The
ashed goat log from Pipe Dreams Farm in
Greencastle, Pa., is the best American
cheese I’ve ever tasted.
It might go better for you if you get to
know the Other Corner first as a bar. A
bar is a more personal thing than a restaurant, though. You have to feel right in
the space. But if fresh air mingled with
garlic and butter sounds like your thing,
you’ll love this place.
[email protected]
44
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MIDNIGHT SUN
World of Beer
off to a busy start
And that’s a good — and bad — thing
BY WESLEY CASE
A couple of Friday nights ago, it was
hard to find a place to comfortably stand
in World of Beer, McHenry Row’s newest bar.
The beer emporium was celebrating
its opening weekend, and the scene was
what new owners dream of: Wall-to-wall
customers packed inside as an outdoor
patio filled up simultaneously. A band
played instantly recognizable songs on
stage. There were at least 200 people on
the premises.
It was obvious that World of Beer, a
national chain founded in 2007, appeared to be off to a great start at its first
Baltimore location. And that was part of
the reason I wished I had come at another time.
According to its website, World of
Beer began as a neighborhood tavern in
Tampa, Fla., where hops enthusiasts
could interact and discuss craft-beer culture. On my visit, such a conversation
would have been impossible due to the
foot traffic, constant conversations and
general busyness by the never-ending
bar. The band added to the cacophony
with an eye-rolling song selection. (We
do not need any more limp, bro-rock covers of Kanye West’s “Heartless.”)
As a few friends and I angled for position by the bar, we finally obtained a
menu. Or was it a David Foster Wallace
novel? The “hook” of World of Beer is its
staggering selection, which includes
more than 500 beers in cans and bottles,
and 50 on tap. The beers are sorted by
brewing location, and World of Beer
rightfully takes pride in its range of products. (Smartly, beers brewed in Maryland
were well represented on draft.)
But, at least on this busy trip, the vast
selection felt overwhelming and impenetrable. I flipped through more than 12
THE PACKED BAR AT WORLD OF BEER. IN MCHENRY ROW.
COLBY WARE PHOTO
pages of beers, and was still not sure
where to begin. It would have been nice
to talk the decision through with a bartender, but the unrelenting crowds
would not allow it. How strong were the
licorice notes on the Ommegang Abbey
Ale ($5)? Did the Young’s Double Chocolate Stout (also $5) taste too much like
dessert? These are questions a menu can
broach, but not answer as effectively as a
human being.
Grabbing a bartender’s attention long
enough to place an order felt like a win
on that Friday, and my gut tells me that
was not how World of Beer’s founders
imagined a customer’s experience. (“Every member of our staff attends ’Beer
School’ and we pride ourselves on how
well we know our stuff,” reads the website. That knowledge, paired with the selection, is World of Beer’s strongest asset,
and it was a shame we were not able to
tap into it.)
While the customer service was fine
overall, something seemed amiss when a
friend ordered a Gavroche by France’s
Brasserie De Saint-Sylvestre from the
menu. World of Beer did not have it, but
that was not the issue, as bars sell out of
products all the time. But when the bartender suggested we download the
World of Beer app to see which beers
were currently in stock (“It updates
automatically,” he pointed out), it
seemed backwards.
Label me naïve or idealistic, but I simply do not want to use my phone at the
bar more than I already do. Many of us
stare at various glowing screens all day,
and drinking a beer at the bar should remain a haven from that sort of technological dependency. Despite what our culture has us believing, not everything
needs an app. It limits human interaction, and makes the exchange between
bartender and patron seem cold and
WORLD OF
BEER
BACK STORY: Since 2007,
the expanding World of Beer
franchise has made its name
for its vast selection of beers.
It has a loyalty program that
rewards frequent patrons
with free beer and T-shirts.
World of Beer opened in
McHenry Row in
mid-October.
PARKING: McHenry Row
has two free parking garages.
There is also metered parking
on the street.
SIGNATURE DRINK: With
more than 500 options, beer
is the way to go here. I
enjoyed the Sea Dog
Blueberry Wheat Ale ($5),
but you can also order a flight
paddle ($8-$14), which is
four 5 oz. samples of World
of Beer’s 50 drafts.
WHERE: 1724 Whetstone
Way at McHenry Row in
Locust Point
CONTACT: 410-752-2337,
wobusa.com/baltimore
OPEN: 3 p.m.-midnight,
Monday-Thursday. 3 p.m.-1
a.m. Friday. 11-1 a.m. Saturday
and Sunday.
sterile.
Our trip to World of Beer was successful on one front: I had a delicious beer I
had not tried before. The Sea Dog Blueberry Wheat Ale ($5) was refreshingly
light and highly carbonated, which made
it smooth and easy to drink. It’s served
with real blueberries, a garnish not used
often enough in bars.
World of Beer likely will not be as busy
as it was its opening weekend, or at least
that is my hope. Like the perfect beer, the
knowledge of a bar’s staff is a sad thing to
go to waste.
[email protected]
twitter.com/midnightsunblog
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45
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DRINKS
We’re a Maryland style Gastropub
asstropub
astropub
b
featuring the best local produce and products!
TUESDAY • ITS WINE NIGHT!!
• $5 Glasses or $15 Bottles of Wine.
• 25% off all entrées and Pasta Night with
Late Night Happy Hour 9pm-close
• $5 Crushes, $4 Drafts, $3 Rail Cocktails and $2 Domestic Bottle Beer
WEDNESDAY • LET’S GET WEIRD WEDNESDAY
• 2 For 1 Special on Domestic Bottles, Rail Cocktails, Bombs and Fireball.
• $3 Sliders – 6 different options to choose from!
THURSDAY • TACOS AND RITAS NIGHT
• $5 Selections of Chef made Tacos • $4 Corona and Corona Light
• $5 House Margaritas • $6 Fresh Fruit Margaritas
SATURDAY/SUNDAY • BRUNCH 10AM-4PM
• $10 bottomless Bloody Marys, Mimosas and Sangría till 2pm
HAPPY HOUR • TUESDAY-FRIDAY 4PM-7PM
Happy Hour Pub Grub Menu – all items priced between $5-$10
• $5 Crushes, $4 Drafts, $3 Rail Cocktails and $2 Domestic Bottle Beer
1738 Thames St • Fells Point, MD 21224 • 410.327.7264
Oyster Night at Donna’s
Every Wednesday
5-9pm
ALL
BEERS
HALF
PRICE
1
$
OYSTERS
ON THE
HALF
SHELL
FEATURING
Fried Oysters, Oyster Chowder
and Steak and Oysters
Cross Keys
5100 Falls Road
410.532.7611
donnas.com/crosskeys
Charles Village
3101 St Paul St
410.889.3410
donnas.com/charlesvillage
Beads Before
Barrels,
Mr. Rain’s
Funhouse
JAZMINE JOHNSON PHOTO
BY MEEKAH HOPKINS
I’m on a mission to revel in as much of
autumn’s bounty as I can.
Yes, I said “autumn’s bounty.” Can you
blame me? It took this season long enough
to get here. So in celebration, I (my taste
buds, really) am devouring apples and
spice and any and everything associated
with the crisp, tart fall goodness one can
find at Baltimore area farmers’ markets.
That especially means cider. I could
bathe in cider … but I’ll spare you that tale.
I also like to bake with it, marinade things
in it, and I especially enjoy imbibing a few
dozen cocktails mixed with the alcoholic
variety. Hard cider is a delightful bite of
sweet acidity that adds warmth and depth
to just about any drink, which is probably
why I’ve noticed an abundance of ciderthemed drinks on menus around town.
But by far the most creative comes by way
of the innovators at Mr. Rain’s Funhouse.
Infusing hard cider with gin and sherry,
their Beads Before Barrels is bold and daring.
Beads Before Barrels is listed under
“Cobblers and Cups” on the cocktail
menu, which, according to beverage director Perez Klebahn, involves mixing
wine or beer of any kind, fruit, herbs, sugar and charged water. Check off all the
above here. Monkton’s own Millhouse
Harvest Cider adds local flavor to the
drink. Klebahn and company tend to favor
local and or small batch distilleries for
most of their cocktails, mirroring the seasonal theme of Mr. Rain’s food menu. The
drink also utilizes Barr Hill gin out of Vermont, a fantastic little find that is infused
with raw honey — and a very sensible
partner for the presence of Amontillado, a
dry Sherry. Sherry in cocktails — not just
for cooking anymore! — is relatively new,
relatively trendy and dicey to execute
properly in a mixed concoction. But here,
it’s smooth, nutty profile works well with
the other two seasonal ingredients —
house-made pear and anise syrup.
The Amontillado also reminds me of
the short story of the same name by
adopted Baltimore son, Edgar Allan Poe.
Another perfect nod to the playful darkness of the season. And even more reason
to order, then savor the full, fall flavorings
of Beads Before Barrels at Mr. Rain’s Funhouse while you can. Just make sure to
not follow any strangers through the deep
,haunted recesses of ancient catacombs
after you do.
HOW TO MAKE BEADS BEFORE
BARRELS
1 part amontillado
1 part Barr Hill gin
1 part Millstone Cellars Harvest Cider
Pear and anise simple syrup
Mix ingredients together, pour over ice
in a highball. Garnish with seasonal fruit
and herbs.
WHERE TO GET BEADS BEFORE
BARRELS
Mr. Rain’s Funhouse
800 Key Highway, Federal Hill (top
floor of the American Visionary Art Museum)
443-524-7379
mrrainsfunhouse.com
$9
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48
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MUSIC
Holy Ghost! melds dance and dark
The New York City duo
plays 9:30 Club on
Friday
BY ANTHONY LANDI
Nick Millhiser and Alex Frankel have
the uncanny ability to write songs with
heavy themes and danceable grooves.
“We’ve always liked stuff that can feel
kind of fun and carefree from a production standpoint, but lyrically not have to
be totally innocuous, like New Order, Depeche Mode or even LCD Soundsystem,”
said Millhiser over the phone last Thursday.
“On the last record, the song “Jam for
Jerry’ was about a really good friend of
ours who passed away,” he said. “The
only way we could’ve tackled that song
lyrically was with something that wasn’t
so melancholy, brooding or on the nose
with the subject matter.”
The two lifelong friends make up the
Brooklyn-based synthpop group, Holy
Ghost! The duo, which headlines 9:30
Club on Friday, released their sophomore effort, “Dynamics,” in September.
Their eclectic, catchy sound is indebted
to many sources, many of which are represented on the album.
“We were listening to a lot of random
disco and Italo-disco 12-inches, and Bill
Nelson, this guitar player from the ’80s,”
Millhiser said. “He made a lot of weird
synthpop records and this soundscape-y,
instrumental synth-driven stuff that’s a
lot of fun, too. His guitar playing always
reminded me a lot of Robert Fripp’s guitar playing with [David] Bowie.”
As opposed to the densely packed
sound of its 2011 self-titled debut, the
band made a conscious decision to trim a
lot of excess on “Dynamics.”
“Alex and I have a bit of an everythingbut-the-kitchen-sink approach to production,” he said. “We can get a little carried away with ‘let’s add this thing, and
this thing, and this other thing,’ which is
something we definitely tried to tone
down on this record.”
ALEX FRANKEL (LEFT) AND NICK MILLHISER ARE BROOKLYN-BASED INDIE SYNTHPOP BAND HOLY GHOST!
HARRY MCNALLY
The band broke through with its prolific remix work, having been approached by acts such as MGMT, Phoenix and Moby for re-workings of their
music.
“It started out as simple as hearing
something in a song and saying,
‘Wouldn’t it be fun to make a version of
this that we can play out when we DJ?’
We’re always looking for some element
that we can re-contextualize,” Millhiser
said.
Most recently, the group covered
Drake’s hit, “Hold on, We’re Going
Home,” transforming it into a more
dance floor-ready single.
“Doing covers is just fun,” he said. “All
the pressure is off. The act of doing a
cover already establishes that it’s a song
you like. All you have to do is record it.
It’s like a vacation.”
The duo got their start in high school
as members of a hip-hop group called
Automato. After being tossed from producer to producer, they finally met DFA
Records owners James Murphy and Tim
Goldsworthy and released their debut on
the label. Once Automato disbanded,
Millhiser and Frankel stayed with DFA
and received studio training from Murphy.
“From a production standpoint, James
has a very fixed way of doing things,”
Millhiser said. “He has a drum sound, a
bass sound, a guitar sound and he generally uses that same palette on most things
that he does. Obviously, we borrow from
that palette pretty extensively, because
we really learned how to engineer from
him.”
Being signed to an independent label
such as DFA affords the band many freedoms that other groups signed to major
labels rarely get to experience.
“People are really shocked at how
hands-off and helpful DFA is,” he said.
IF YOU GO
Holy Ghost! performs Friday
at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St.
N.W. in Washington. Doors
open at 10 p.m. Midnight
Magic and Ozker will also
perform. Tickets are $20.
Call 877-435-9849 or go to
930.com.
“We don’t have to play anything for reps,
or have people coming down to check
things out and tell us whether the record
is done or not. If we wanted to do an
album of fart noises and dubstep drops,
they’d be OK with it. I don’t know too
many places where we can do whatever
we want.”
[email protected]
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49
NIGHTLIFE
COMEDY
p.m. at Warner Theatre, 513 13th St.
N.W., Washington. Tickets are $71.50.
Call 202-783-4000.
KREATOR: Overkill, Warbringer, Ghost
of War and March to Victory also perform at 7 p.m. at Baltimore Soundstage,
124 Market Place. Tickets are $24.20$82.50. Call 410-244-0057.
OLD INDIAN: Dirty River, the Fed and
Surf Harp also perform at 9 p.m. at the
Sidebar, 218 E. Lexington St. Call 410659-4130.
BILL BURR: The stand-up comedian
and actor had roles in “Breaking Bad”
and “The Heat.” He performs at 7:30
p.m. Nov. 7 at DAR Constitution Hall,
1776 D St. N.W., Washington. Tickets
are $33-$43. Call 202-628-4780.
JIM BELUSHI AND THE CHICAGO
BOARD OF COMEDY: The actor and
comedian presents an improvised
comedy sketch show at 6:30 p.m. and
9:30 p.m. Nov. 1 at Rams Head On Stage,
33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets are $55.
Call 410-268-4545.
JOHN OLIVER: The British comedian
is known for his work on “The Daily
Show with Jon Stewart.” He performs
at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. Nov. 8 at Warner Theatre, 513 13th Street N.W., Washington. Tickets are $39.75. Call 202783-4000.
KEVIN JAMES: The actor and comedian starred as Doug Heffernan on the
CBS sitcom “The King of Queens.” He
performs at 7 p.m. Nov. 6 at Warner
Theatre, 513 13th Street N.W., Washington. Tickets are $47.50-$77.50. Call
202-783-4000.
MARC UNGER: The Baltimore-based
comedian delivers his stand-up routine
at 7:30 p.m. and 9:45 p.m. Nov. 1-2 at
Magooby’s Joke House, 9603 Deereco
Road, Timonium. Tickets are $9-$17.
Call 410-252-2727.
MARK CURRY: Curry was the star of
ABC’s “Hangin’ with Mr. Cooper” and
one of the hosts on “It’s Showtime at
the Apollo.” He performs at 8 p.m. and
10:15 p.m. Nov. 1, 7 p.m., 9:15 p.m. and
11:15 p.m. Nov. 2 at Baltimore Comedy
Factory, 6 Market Place, Power Plant
Live. Tickets are $22-$30. Call 410-5477798.
PAULY SHORE: The comedian and
actor is known for films such as “Encino Man” and “Son In Law.” He performs at 8 p.m. Nov. 7, 7:30 p.m. and
9:45 p.m. Nov. 8-9 at Magooby’s Joke
House, 9603 Deereco Road, Timonium.
Tickets are $22. Call 410-252-2727.
PURE FILTH: THE IMPROVISED
GAME SHOW EDITION: Area comedi-
THURSDAY
BLACK TUSK: Inter Arma, Bastard
HAPPY HALLOWEEN! DRAKE PLAYS D.C.’S VERIZON CENTER ON THURSDAY.
GETTY
ans including Marc Unger, Jay Szech,
Tommy Sinbazo and Dorian Gray perform at 8 p.m. Nov. 6 at Magooby’s Joke
House, 9603 Deereco Road, Timonium.
Tickets are $15. Call 410-252-2727.
ROY WOOD JR.: The stand-up comedian plays Roy on the TBS sitcom “Sullivan & Son.” He performs at 8 p.m. Nov.
7, 8 p.m. and 10:15 p.m. Nov. 8, 7 p.m.,
9:15 p.m. and 11:15 p.m. Nov. 9 at Baltimore Comedy Factory, 6 Market Place,
Power Plant Live. Tickets are $17-$25.
Call 410-547-7798.
THE TWO MAN GROUP: “Whose Line
Is It Anyway?” stars Colin Mochrie and
Brad Sherwood perform at 3 p.m. Nov.
3 at Weinberg Center for the Arts, 20
W. Patrick St., Frederick. Tickets are
$30-$45. Call 301-600-2828.
CONCERTS
WEDNESDAY
BIG SOMETHING: The alt rock band is
joined by Jimkata at 8 p.m. at 8x10, 8-10
E. Cross St. Tickets are $10. Call 410625-2000.
CRISTIAN CASTRO: The Mexican pop
singer performs at 8 p.m. at the Fillmore Silver Spring, 8656 Colesville
Road, Silver Spring. Tickets are $32.
Call 301-960-9999.
INDIA.ARIE: The Grammy Awardwinning R&B musician performs at 8
Sapling and Xeukatre also perform at 7
p.m. at the Sidebar, 218 E. Lexington St.
Call 410-659-4130.
DRAKE: The rapper performs songs
from his third album, “Nothing Was
the Same.” R&B artist Miguel and rapper Future also perform at 7 p.m. at
Verizon Center, 601 F St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $59.75-$109.75. Call
202-628-3200.
HALLOWEEN BASH: Freedom Enterprise, Moogatu and Greasy Hands
perform at 8 p.m. at 8x10, 8-10 E. Cross
St. Tickets are $10. Call 410-625-2000.
JESSIE WARE: The British singersongwriter performs with special guest
Mikky Ekko at 8 p.m. at the Fillmore
Silver Spring, 8656 Colesville Road,
Silver Spring. Tickets are $30.50. Call
301-960-9999.
JOHN K BAND: The folk rock group
performs at 9 p.m. at Rams Head Live,
20 Market Place, Power Plant Live.
Tickets are $15-$18. Call 410-244-1131.
PASSION PIT: The indie pop group is
joined by the Joy Formidable at 8 p.m.
at the Patriot Center, George Mason
University, 4500 Patriot Circle, Fairfax,
Va. Tickets are $45. Call 703-993-3000.
REGINA BELLE: The R&B singersongwriter performs at 8 p.m. at Rams
Head On Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis.
Tickets are $49.50. Call 410-268-4545.
FRIDAY
BRETT DENNEN: Noah Gunderson
also performs at 8 p.m. at Baltimore
Soundstage, 124 Market Place. Tickets
50
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October 30, 2013
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NIGHTLIFE
are $22. Call 410-244-0057.
BUILT TO SPILL: Slam Dunk, Genders
and The Warm Hair also perform at 5:30
p.m. at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St. N.W.,
Washington. Tickets are $25. Call 202265-0930.
CHRIS TOMLIN: The contemporary
Christian musician performs at 7 p.m. at
the Patriot Center, George Mason University, 4500 Patriot Circle, Fairfax, Va.
Tickets are $25-$35. Call 703-993-3000.
COP PROBLEM: Post Freedom also
performs at 7 p.m. at Charm City Art
Space, 1731 Maryland Ave. Call 240-4610707.
E-DUBBLE: The Baltimore hip-hop
artist performs with 27 Lights, Kane
Mayfield, Greenspan and Al Rogers at 8
p.m. at 8x10, 8-10 E. Cross St. Call 410625-2000.
HOLY GHOST!: Midnight Magic and
Ozker also perform at 11 p.m. at the 9:30
Club, 815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets
are $20. Call 202-265-0930.
MATT NATHANSON: The folk rock
musician brings his Last of the Great
Pretenders tour to Baltimore with special guest Joshua Radin. Concert starts
at 9 p.m. at Rams Head Live, 20 Market
Place, Power Plant Live. Tickets are
$29.50. Call 410-244-1131.
THE OLD LINE: Pretty Little Kennedy
Curse, the Skipjack and Go Home
Freshman also perform at 9 p.m. at the
Sidebar, 218 E. Lexington St. Call 410659-4130.
SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY AND THE ASBURY JUKES: The group performs at 8
p.m. at Avalon Theatre, 40 E Dover St.,
Easton. Tickets are $55-$65. Call 410822-7299.
THIRD EYE BLIND: The alt-rock band
performs at 8 p.m. at the Fillmore Silver
Spring, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver
Spring. Tickets are $38.50. Call 301-9609999.
TRAVIS TRITT: The country music
singer performs songs from his new
album, “The Calm After...” at 8 p.m. at
the Music Center at Strathmore, 5301
Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda. Tickets are $30-$70. Call 301-581-5200.
SATURDAY
THE BEATLES: 50 YEARS ON AIR: The
Beatles tribute show features the Honey
Dewdrops, the Stone Hill All-Stars, Arty
Hill and more at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at
the Creative Alliance, 3134 Eastern Ave.
Tickets are $12-$17. Call 410-276-1651.
BRENDAN JAMES: Tony Lucca also
performs at 8:30 p.m. at Rams Head On
Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets are
$18.50. Call 410-268-4545.
FARAMARZ ASLANI: Babak Amini also
performs at 8 p.m. at Warner Theatre,
513 13th Street N.W., Washington. Tickets
are $45-$95. Call 202-783-4000.
JAMES BLAKE: Nosaj Thing also performs at 8 p.m. at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St.
N.W., Washington. Show also scheduled
for 7 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $32. Call
202-265-0930.
KMFDM: CHANT also performs at 9
p.m. at Rams Head Live, 20 Market
Place, Power Plant Live. Tickets are $26.
Call 410-244-1131.
THE SELDOM SCENE: The bluegrass
group from Bethesda performs at 8 p.m.
at Gordon Center for the Performing
Arts, 3506 Gwynnbrook Ave., Owings
Mills. Tickets are $24-$28. Call 410-3567469.
STORY OF THE YEAR: Like Moths to
Flames, Hawthorne Heights, Set it Off
and more also perform at 6:30 p.m. at
Baltimore Soundstage, 124 Market Place.
Tickets are $22-$25.30. Call 410-2440057.
TOBY LIGHTMAN: The pop singersongwriter performs with Doug Wamble at 8 p.m. at Eutaw Place, 2501 Eutaw
Place. Tickets are $20. Call 410-484-9110.
THE WERKS: Second Self also performs
at 8 p.m. at 8x10, 8-10 E. Cross St. Tickets
are $12. Call 410-625-2000.
SUNDAY
A LOT LIKE BIRDS: HRVRD, Night
Verses, My Iron Lung and more also
perform at 7:30 p.m. at the Ottobar, 2549
N. Howard St. Tickets are $12. Call 410662-0069.
DENNY LAINE: The English musician of
Moody Blues and Wings fame performs
at 7:30 p.m. at Rams Head On Stage, 33
West St., Annapolis. Tickets are $35. Call
410-268-4545.
MOLE SUIT CHOIR: Nathan Bell and Liz
Durrett also perform at 7:30 p.m. at the
Metro Gallery, 1700 N. Charles St. Tickets are $5. Go to themetrogallery.net.
THE PRETTY RECKLESS: “Gossip Girl”
actress Taylor Momsen fronts the rock
band. Concert starts at 7 p.m. at the
Fillmore Silver Spring, 8656 Colesville
Road, Silver Spring. Tickets are $18. Call
301-960-9999.
TRAVIS TRITT: The country music
singer performs at 7:30 p.m. at Harford
Community College, 401 Thomas Run
Road, Bel Air. Tickets are $20-$40. Call
443-412-2211.
WATAIN: In Solitude and Tribulation
also perform at 7:30 p.m. at Baltimore
Soundstage, 124 Market Place. Tickets
are $22. Call 410-244-0057.
MONDAY
THE HEAD AND THE HEART: Quiet
Life and Thao and the Get Down Stay
Down also perform at 7 p.m. at the 9:30
Club, 815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets
are sold out. Call 202-265-0930.
JUDITH HILL: The singer competed on
the fourth season of “The Voice.” Concert starts at 8 p.m. at Rams Head On
Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets are
$39.50. Call 410-268-4545.
TUESDAY
ANI DIFRANCO: Melissa Ferrick and
Buddy Wakefield also perform at 7 p.m.
at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $40. Call 202-265-0930.
THE DICKIES: Pure Junk, Ruleta Rusa,
Cult Control and The Clamors also
perform at 8 p.m. at the Sidebar, 218 E.
Lexington St. Call 410-659-4130.
MICHAEL NESMITH: The rock musician performs at 8 p.m. at Rams Head
On Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets
are $47.50. Call 410-268-4545.
NOV. 6
ANDY MCKEE: The guitarist performs
at 8 p.m. at Rams Head On Stage, 33
West St., Annapolis. Tickets are $29.50.
Call 410-268-4545.
ASKING ALEXANDRIA: Sevendust, All
That Remains, Emmure and For Today
also perform at 4 p.m. at the 9:30 Club,
815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are
$35. Call 202-265-0930.
BIG D AND THE KIDS TABLE: Red City
Radio and Survay Says! also perform at 8
p.m. at Baltimore Soundstage, 124 Market Place. Tickets are $16.50. Call 410244-0057.
CIRCLE TAKES THE SQUARE: B. Dolan
and more also perform at 8 p.m. at the
Ottobar, 2549 N. Howard St. Tickets are
$12. Call 410-662-0069.
JOHN FOGERTY: The vocalist and guitarist of roots rock band Creedence
Clearwater Revival comes to Baltimore.
Concert starts at 8 p.m. at the Patricia
and Arthur Modell Performing Arts
Center at the Lyric, 140 W. Mount Royal
Ave. Tickets are $38-$135. Call 410-6855086.
THE MANTRAS: Deltanine and Ultraviolet Hippoptamus also perform at 8 p.m.
at 8x10, 8-10 E. Cross St. Tickets are $10.
Call 410-625-2000.
POLICA: Marijuana Deathsquads also
performs at 10 p.m. at the 9:30 Club, 815
V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $20.
Call 202-265-0930.
REEL BIG FISH: Five Iron Frenzy and
Beautiful Bodies also perform at 7:30
p.m. at the Fillmore Silver Spring, 8656
Colesville Road, Silver Spring. Tickets
are $22.50-$25. Call 301-960-9999.
TAKING BACK SUNDAY: Polar Bear
Club and Transit also perform at 8 p.m.
at Rams Head Live, 20 Market Place,
Power Plant Live. Tickets are $27.50.
Call 410-244-1131.
MORE CONCERTS
BLACK LIPS: Tweens, Big Mouth and
Sick Thoughts also perform at 9 p.m.
Nov. 8 at the Ottobar, 2549 N. Howard
St. Tickets are $13. Call 410-662-0069.
CHEICK HAMALA DIABATE: The musician from West Africa performs at 8
p.m. Nov. 8 at the Creative Alliance, 3134
Eastern Ave. Tickets are $15-$20. Call
410-276-1651.
CONFETTI: Malphunktion, Wubblek-
bthesite.com
BY CHRIS KALTENBACH
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October 30, 2013
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51
CHEAP EVENTS
$8
FREE
$7-$12
FREE
$5-$7
FREE
Friday
SMASHING
PUMPKINS
The Maryland Science
Center, at 601 Light St., offers discounted admission
from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. the
first Friday of every
month through March
2014. But that’s only half
the story. Bring your old
pumpkins Friday, and you
can drop them off the science center roof, to the
musical accompaniment
of School of Rock. 410685-5225 or mdsci.org.
Friday
FRINGE FESTIVAL
PREVIEW
A preview of this
week’s 2nd Charm City
Fringe Festival, a weeklong cornucopia of offbeat
theater and performance
arts, is set for 7:30 p.m. at
the Cabaret at Germano’s,
300 S. High St. Organizers
are promising performances that are “wacky”
and include audience participation. Sounds intriguing, no? 410-752-4515
or germanospiattini.com.
Saturday
‘JESUS CHRIST
SUPERSTAR’
A 40th anniversary
screening of director Norman Jewison’s film version of “Jesus Christ
Superstar,” the rock opera
that first put Andrew
Lloyd Webber on the map,
is set for 2:15 p.m. at the
AFI Silver Theatre, 8633
Colesville Road in Silver
Spring. Includes an appearance by actor Ted Neeley, who played Jesus.
301-495-6700 or afi.com/
silver
Saturday-Sunday
PUMPKIN CHUCKING
The poor pumpkin — is
any gourd so loved, yet so
abused at the same time?
Clark’s Elioak Farm, at
10500 Clarksville Pike in
Ellicott City, is offering a
Pumpkin
Chucking
Weekend, the chance to
see how far your pumpkin
will fly when propelled by
a catapult. Oh my! Open10
a.m.-5 p.m. both days.
clarklandfarm.com
Saturday-Sunday
THE FINAL
STREETCARS
The Baltimore Streetcar Museum, 1901 Falls
Road, will commemorate
the 50th anniversary of
the last streetcar ride in
Baltimore (on Nov. 3,
1963) this weekend.
Among the streetcars
available for rides this
weekend is Car #7407,
which took that last ride a
half-century ago. 410-5470264 or baltimore
streetcar.org
Sunday
DOWNRIGGING
FESTIVAL
Family Day at this annual celebration of traditional sailing (with seven
visiting tall ships) offers
boat tours (beginning at
2:30 p.m.) and plenty of
hands-on activities for
youngsters (including the
Maryland DNR’s “Sales
and Tales” exhibit). 11
a.m.-4:30 p.m. at the foot
of High Street in Chestertown, Kent County. sul
tanaprojects.org/down
rigging
NIGHTLIFE
nox and more also perform at 8 p.m.
Nov. 8 at the Sidebar, 218 E. Lexington
St. Call 410-659-4130.
DELBERT MCCLINTON: The blues rock
musician performs at 8 p.m. Nov. 8 at
Rams Head On Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets are $65. Call 410-2684545.
DIR EN GREY: Dagoba also performs at
8 p.m. Nov. 8 at Baltimore Soundstage,
124 Market Place. Tickets are $27.50.
Call 410-244-0057.
HALF JAPANESE: The Dot Wiggin
Band, the Tinklers and Boister also
perform at 8 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Ottobar,
2549 N. Howard St. Tickets are $12. Call
410-662-0069.
J. RODDY WALSTON AND THE BUSINESS: No BS! Brass Band also performs
at 10 p.m. Nov. 7 at the 9:30 Club, 815 V
St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $20.
Call 202-265-0930.
JAKE MILLER: The rapper brings his
Us Against Them tour to Silver Spring at
7 p.m. Nov. 8 at the Fillmore Silver
Spring, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver
Spring. Tickets are $25. Call 301-9609999.
JOHN FOGERTY: The vocalist and guitarist of roots rock band Creedence
Clearwater Revival comes to Washington at 8 p.m. Nov. 8 at DAR Constitution
Hall, 1776 D St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $53-$73. Call 202-628-4780.
LEFTOVER SALMON: Swear and Shake
also performs at 8 p.m. Nov. 8 at the 9:30
Club, 815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets
are $25. Call 202-265-0930.
LESS THAN JAKE: Anti-Flag, Masked
Intruder and Get Dead also perform at 7
p.m. Nov. 7 at Rams Head Live, 20 Market Place, Power Plant Live. Tickets are
$22. Call 410-244-1131.
LUCERO: Titus Andronicus also per-
forms at 8 p.m. Nov. 7 at Baltimore
Soundstage, 124 Market Place. Tickets
are $20-$22. Call 410-244-0057.
LVL UP: Pile, Two Inch Astronaut and
Flashlight O also perform at 7 p.m. Nov.
8 at Charm City Art Space, 1731 Maryland Ave. Call 240-461-0707.
MATT WERTZ BAND: Elenowen also
performs at 8 p.m. Nov. 7 at Rams Head
On Stage, 33 West St., Annapolis. Tickets
are $21. Call 410-268-4545.
NEW FOUND GLORY: Alkaline Trio and
H2O also perform at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 at
the Fillmore Silver Spring, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. Tickets are
$26. Call 301-960-9999.
RESTORATIONS: Weatherbox, Have
Mercy and Invitational also perform at 8
p.m. Nov. 7 at the Metro Gallery, 1700 N.
Charles St. Tickets are $8-$10. Go to
themetrogallery.net.
STEEP CANYON RANGERS: The blue-
grass band performs at 9 p.m. Nov. 8 at
Rams Head Live, 20 Market Place, Power Plant Live. Tickets are $20-$22. Call
410-244-1131.
THREE BAD JACKS: JJ Damage and
the Bandits and Sean K. Preston also
perform at 9 p.m. Nov. 7 at the Sidebar,
218 E. Lexington St. Call 410-659-4130.
TINY MOVING PARTS: Liotta, Class
Picture and Centerfield also perform at
7 p.m. Nov. 7 at Charm City Art Space,
1731 Maryland Ave. Call 240-461-0707.
TOAD THE WET SPROCKET: Lee
DeWyze also performs at 6 p.m. Nov. 7
at the 9:30 Club, 815 V St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $35. Call 202-265-0930.
TURKUAZ: The Subtle Hustle and Mister F also perform at 8 p.m. Nov. 8 at
8x10, 8-10 E. Cross St. Tickets are $12.
Call 410-625-2000.
52
|
October 30, 2013
|
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410-962-1510
9:30 AM - 8:00 PM • 7 Days A Week
Visit our new website!
potunggrocery.com
JUST ANNOUNCED
On sale through Ticketmaster and Live
Nation (ticketmaster.com, livenation.com
or 410-547-7328), unless noted:
Kings of Leon at the Verizon Center
on Feb. 21; on sale Nov. 1.
Panic! at the Disco, Hellogoodbye
and The Colourist at Rams Head Live on
Dec. 9; on sale Nov. 1 at ticketfly.com.
Jimmy Eat World and Diamond
Youth at Rams Head Live on Dec. 12; on
sale Nov. 1 at ticketfly.com.
Twenty One Pilots, The 1975, MS
MR and NONONO at Rams Head Live
on Dec. 16; on sale Nov. 1 at ticketfly.com.
Jimmie’s Chicken Shack at Rams
Head Live on Jan. 10; on sale now at
ticketfly.com.
Karmin at Baltimore Soundstage on
Jan. 29; on sale Nov. 1.
Infinite at the Fillmore Silver Spring
on Nov. 13; on sale Nov. 1.
Andrew Dice Clay at the Fillmore Silver Spring on Dec. 15; on sale Nov. 1.
Falling in Reverse at the Fillmore Silver Spring on Jan. 29; on sale now.
Walk Off the Earth at the Fillmore
Silver Spring on Feb. 1; on sale now.
Karmin at the Fillmore Silver Spring
on Feb. 7; on sale Nov. 1.
Skinny Puppy at the Fillmore Silver
Spring on Feb. 11; on sale Nov. 1.
Umphrey’s McGee at the Fillmore
Silver Spring on Feb. 15-16; on sale Nov. 1.
Austin Mahone at the Fillmore Silver
Spring on March 4; on sale now.
Children of Bodom and Tyr at the
Fillmore Silver Spring on March 21; on
sale Nov. 8.
Reggie and the Full Effect at the
Ottobar on Jan. 17; on sale now at mission
tix.com.
Rockin’ New Year’s Eve Extravaganza with Deanna Bogart at Rams
Head on Stage on Dec. 31; on sale now at
ticketfly.com.
Ruthie and the Wranglers at Rams
Head on Stage on Jan. 12; on sale now at
ticketfly.com.
AJ Swearingen and Jonathan Beedle at Rams Head on Stage on Jan. 17; on
sale now at ticketfly.com.
Matt Schofield at Rams Head on
Stage on March 20; on sale now at ticket
fly.com.
AMY HEIDEMANN AND NICK NOONAN
OF KARMIN.
GETTY
Candy Dulfer at Rams Head on Stage
on April 8; on sale now at ticketfly.com.
Earl Klugh at Rams Head on Stage on
April 25; on sale now at ticketfly.com.
LoCash Cowboys at Rams Head on
Stage on April 26; on sale now at ticket
fly.com.
Memories of the King at Rams Head
Center Stage on Jan. 9; on sale now at
missiontix.com.
Blue Oyster Cult at Rams Head Center Stage on Jan. 10; on sale now at
missiontix.com.
Audio Push at Howard Theatre on
Dec. 9; on sale now.
Crankin’ Christmas with the Chuck
Brown All-Star Band at Howard Theatre on Dec. 13; on sale Nov. 1.
Cultura Profetica at Howard Theatre
on April 1; on sale Nov. 1.
Hal Ketchum at the Birchmere on
Jan. 3; on sale Nov. 1.
Gaelic Storm at the Birchmere on Feb.
20; on sale Nov. 1.
Keiko Matsui at the Birchmere on
Feb. 22; on sale Nov. 1.
Earl Klugh at the Birchmere on April
24; on sale Nov. 1.
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October 30, 2013
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ARTS
VISUAL ARTS
AFTER DARK: The exhibition features
works inspired by nocturnes and old
horror movies. Runs through Nov. 30 at
Crystal Moll Gallery, 1030 S. Charles St.
Call 410-952-2843.
AMY CARNAHAN: The artist exhibits
her pottery. Runs through Nov. 9 at
Baltimore Clayworks, 5707 Smith Ave.
Call 410-578-1919.
AMY SHERALD: The painter explores
identity through her life-sized portraits. Runs through Dec. 29 at Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland
African American History & Culture,
830 E. Pratt St. Tickets are $6-$8. Call
443-263-1800.
AN-MY LE: The artist’s black and white
photographs explore the consequences
of war. Runs through Feb. 23 at Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum
Drive. Free. Call 443-573-1700.
BLACK BOX: GERARD BYRNE: The
artist uses film, video and photography
to question society’s belief in fantasy
worlds. Runs through Feb. 16 at Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum
Drive. Free. Call 443-573-1700.
BOOK BINDINGS FROM THE GILDED
AGE: The exhibit features 20 rarely
seen books from the museum’s collection. Runs through May 18 at the Walters Art Museum, 600 N. Charles St.
Free. Call 410-547-9000.
CITY LIMITS: BALTIMORE REVEALED: Exhibit runs Nov. 1-30 at
Hamilton Arts Collective Art Gallery,
5502 Harford Road. Call 410-205-5027.
COLOR AND LINE: London artist Selena Beaudry exhibits her large color
pencil drawings. Runs through Nov. 17
at Schulman Project, 840 W. 36th St.
Call 410-336-6767.
THE DAWN OF NEUROSURGERY:
The exhibit features rare books documenting the history of neurosurgery in
Renaissance Europe. Runs through
March 2 at George Peabody Library, 17
E. Mount Vernon Place. Free. Call
410-516-8000.
DIA DE LOS MUERTOS: Exhibits runs
through Nov. 5 at Pascal Center for
Fine Arts, Anne Arundel Community
College, 101 College Pkwy., Arnold. Call
410-541-2218.
DRONE ART: BALTIMORE: Terry and
Belinda Kilby share photographs of
Baltimore taken by using a drone helicopter. Runs through Nov. 1 at Top of
the World Observation Level and Museum, 401 E. Pratt St. World Trade
Center, 27th floor. Tickets are $3-$5.
Call 410-837-4516.
EGYPT’S MYSTERIOUS BOOK OF
THE FAIYUM: The exhibit is dedicated
to “Book of the Faiyum,” a well-preserved papyrus from ancient Egypt.
Runs through Jan. 5 at the Walters Art
Museum, 600 N. Charles St. Tickets are
$6-$10; members and children 17 and
under are free. Call 410-547-9000.
HOLIDAY SPRINGS AND SPROCKETS: The exhibit features holiday-
themed mechanical sculptures created
by artist Steve Gerberich from recycled
materials. Runs through Jan. 26 at Port
Discovery, 35 Market Place. Call 410727-8120.
HUMAN ECOLOGY: The works in this
exhibit explore the realtionship between humans and nature. Runs
through Nov. 23 at Community College
of Baltimore County Catonsville, 800 S.
Rolling Road, Catonsville. Free. Call
443-840-2222.
HUMAN, SOUL AND MACHINE: THE
COMING SINGULARITY!: The exhibit
explores the impact of technology on
our lives. Runs through Aug. 31 at
American Visionary Art Museum, 800
Key Highway. Tickets are $9.95-$15.95;
free for children under 6. Call 410-2441900.
JACOB LAWRENCE’S GENESIS SERIES: The painter depicts eight passag-
es from the book of Genesis. Runs
through April 13 at The Walters Art
Museum, 600 N. Charles St. Free. Call
410-547-9000.
JOURNEY THROUGH BREAST CANCER: Artist Claudia T. Vellere exhibits
her abstract work created from acrylics
and pastels. Runs through Nov. 9 at
Bromo Seltzer Arts Tower, 21 S. Eutaw
St. Call 443-874-3596.
THE KINSEY COLLECTION: The exhibition includes more than 400 years of
African-American art and artifacts.
Runs Nov. 2-March 2 at Reginald F.
Lewis Museum of Maryland African
American History & Culture, 830 E.
Pratt St. Call 443-263-1800.
LASTING LEGACIES: RECENT AND
PROMISED GIFTS TO THE PERMANANT COLLECTION: The museum
showcases gifts donated over the past
20 years. Runs through Feb. 23 at Evergreen House, 4545 N. Charles St. Tickets are $3-$8; free for children 5 and
under. Call 410-516-0341.
LAURA AMUSSEN: AFLOAT: Goucher
College’s director of exhibitions showcases her sculptures, drawings, photography and more. Runs through Nov. 23
at the Creative Alliance, 3134 Eastern
Ave. Free. Call 410-276-1651.
LITTLE ITALY, UN CUORE GRANDE:
Harry Connolly’s photography shows
the people and history behind Baltimore’s Little Italy neighborhood. Runs
through Nov. 23 at Stevenson University, 1525 Greenspring Valley Road,
Stevenson. Call 877-468-6852.
LORING CORNISH: The mixed-media
and mosaic artist showcases his work.
Runs through Dec. 30 at the Sofa Store,
1125 Cromwell Bridge Road, Towson.
Call 410-346-2400.
MATISSE’S MARGUERITE: MODEL
DAUGHTER: The exhibit features more
than 50 prints, drawings, sculptures
and paintings of Matisse’s daughter
Marguerite. Runs through Jan. 19 at
Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum Drive. Free. Call 443-573-1700.
MICA JURIED UNDERGRADUATE
EXHIBITION: The exhibit features
selected work from all four years of
undergraduate students. Runs through
Nov. 24 at Maryland Institute College
of Art Decker Gallery, 1303 W. Mount
Royal Ave. Call 410-669-9200.
MILESTONES: AFRICAN AMERICANS
IN COMICS, POP CULTURE AND BEYOND: The exhibit showcases contri-
butions by African-Americans to pop
culture and comics. Runs through
March 1 at Geppi’s Entertainment
Museum, 301 W. Camden St. Tickets
are $7-$10. Call 410-625-7060.
MORRIS LOUIS UNVEILED: The ex-
hibit features more than 25 works by
the artist, including large-scale paintings and rarely seen drawings. Runs
through Feb. 9 at Baltimore Museum of
Art, 10 Art Museum Drive. Free. Call
443-573-1700.
MUMMIES OF THE WORLD: This new
exhibition features ancient mummies
and artifacts from Asia, Oceania, South
America, Europe and ancient Egypt,
dating back as far as 6,500 years. Runs
through Jan. 20 at Maryland Science
Center, 601 Light St. Call 410-685-2370.
NATIONAL MINIATURE ART EXHIBITION: See mini art works. Pieces can be
no larger than 25 square inches. Runs
through Nov. 3 at Art Gallery of Fells
Point, 1716 Thames St. Free. Call 410327-1272.
POST-ARCADIA: The exhibit features
new work by Kate MacKinnon. Runs
through Dec. 21 at Jordan Faye Contemporary, 823 Park Ave. Call 443-9551547.
POTTERS GUILD: FALL SHOW: Exhibit runs through Nov. 9 at The Potters Guild of Baltimore, 3600 Clipper
Mill Road, Suite 101. Call 410-235-4884.
STEPHANIE GARMEY: WETLANDS:
The MICA faculty member explores
different aspects of nature. Runs
through Nov. 17 at Maryland Institute
College of Art Pinkard Gallery, 1401 W.
Mount Royal Ave. Call 410-669-9200.
UNEXPECTED ART SPACE: A POPUP: The exhibition will transform
throughout the fall and winter, rotating
the layout of the artwork as well as the
pieces themselves. Runs through Dec.
31 at The Fitzgerald, 1201 W Mount
Royal Ave. Call 443-838-8877.
UNFOLDMENT: The exhibit features a
labryinthine installation by Les Harris.
Runs through Dec. 22 at Amaranthine
Museum, 2010 Clipper Park Road.
Tickets are $5. Call 410-523-2574.
VISIBILITY MACHINES: Artists Harun
Farocki and Trevor Paglen explore the
impact of military images. Runs
through Feb. 22 at UMBC, 1000 Hilltop
Circle. Free. Call 410-455-1000.
VISTA SANS WOOD TYPE PROJECT:
The exhibit features 32 letterpress
prints. Runs through Dec. 15 at UMBC,
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
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55
OPEN HOUSES
This Weekend
Baltimore County, Waterfront
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An exclusive, yet affordable, gated enclave of 39 huge ENERGY
STAR townhomes. Including 2-car gara, skydeck, skyloft, priv.
marina. Priced from the $250’s. Decorated Model Open Daily.
MHBR No. 7007
Call 410-477-2943
www.villageofbearcreek.com
Baltimore County, Worthington Green
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OPEN SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 12-4 PM
Dream Home Tour!
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410-616-9631
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55+ Clubhouse Community. 3BR, 2BA, deluxe kitchen & MBA, lg
porch & morning rm. Available w/gar. Near Chesapeake, shopping,
dining & golf. From $160s. Great incentives and program to help
you sell your current home.
Terri Hill 410-287-0005
http://55plusmd.com
Look for our next
“Open Houses
this Weekend”
b – November 13
& The Sun - November 17
56
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October 30, 2013
|
bthesite.com
ARTS
1000 Hilltop Circle. Free. Call 410-4551000.
VISUAL CAPTURE: The exhibit features
new paintings by artist Hal Boyd. Runs
through Nov. 24 at Minas Gallery, 815 W.
36th St. Call 410-732-4258.
VISUAL VIBRATIONS: Artist John K.
Lawson exhibits his new work. Runs
through Nov. 30 at Metro Gallery, 1700
N. Charles St. Go to themetrogallery.net.
WOMAN OF TWO WORLDS: The exhibition explores the life of Elizabeth
Bonaparte in Europe and Baltimore.
Runs through June 9 at the Maryland
Historical Society, 201 W. Monument St.
Tickets are $4-$6. Call 410-685-3750.
THEATER
CHARM CITY FRINGE FESTIVAL:
Catch numerous eclectic performances
over the four-day festival, Nov. 7-10 at
Baltimore Theatre Project, 45 W. Preston St. Call 410-752-8558.
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN: Children’s
Playhouse of Maryland presents the
zany play about a family of 12 children,
through Nov. 3 at CCBC, Essex campus,
7201 Rossville Blvd. Tickets are $5-$10.
Call 443-840-2787.
COMPANY: Tony-award winning musical with songs by Stephen Sondheim.
Runs through Nov. 17 at Vagabond Players, 806 S. Broadway. Call 410-563-9135.
DANCE OF THE HOLY GHOSTS: A
PLAY ON MEMORY: Marcus Gardley’s
family drama runs through Nov. 17 at
Center Stage, 700 N. Calvert St. Tickets
are $10-$59. Call 410-332-0033.
DEATH AND THE MAIDEN: Runs
through Nov. 11 at Spotlighters Theatre,
817 St. Paul St. Tickets are $16-$20. Call
410-752-1225.
DEATH BY TURKEY MURDER MYSTERY SHOW: Do or Die Productions
presents this murder-mystery tale at
7:30 p.m. Nov. 1-2 at Chesapeake Arts
Center, 194 Hammonds Lane, Brooklyn
Park. Tickets are $25-$30. Call 410-6366597.
DISNEY ON ICE: LET’S CELEBRATE!:
The family ice-skating show runs
through Nov. 3 at Baltimore Arena, 201
W. Baltimore St. Tickets are $15-$60.
Call 410-347-2020.
EAST TEXAS HOT LINKS: Eugene Lee’s
drama about 1950s Texas. Runs through
Nov. 3 at The Arena Players, 801 McCulloh St. Tickets are $13-$18. Call 410-7286500.
HERE IN THE DARK: Baltimore cabaret
performer Jennifer Blades and pianist
John Bowen take a musical journey into
love and loss at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7 at Germano’s, 300 S. High St. Tickets are $15.
Call 410-752-4515.
HOUSE OF YES: A young man brings his
girlfriend home to meet his family in
this dark comedy, Nov. 8-23 at Mobtown
Players, 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite
114. Go to mobtownplayers.net.
HUMP NIGHT! Temple of Improv
presents an evening of long-form improvisational comedy at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesdays at Zissimos Bar (second
floor), 1023 W. 36th St. Free. Call 410467-4707.
I AM MY OWN WIFE: Show runs
through Nov. 17 at Howard Community
College, 10901 Little Patuxent Parkway,
Columbia. Call 443-518-1000.
IF/THEN: Tony Award-winner Idina
Menzel stars in the show, Nov. 5-Dec. 8
at the National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W., Washington. Call 202628-6161.
LE SEANCE: Daydreams + Nightmares
Aerial Theatre presents this Halloweenthemed production, through Nov. 2 at
Baltimore Theatre Project, 45 W. Preston St. Tickets are $15-$35. Call 410-7528558.
LES MISERABLES: Experience the
story of Jean Valjean as he evades his
parole officer, Javert, while trying to
raise orphaned Cosette, all against the
background of the French Revolution.
Runs through Nov. 10 at Toby’s Dinner
Theatre, 5900 Symphony Woods Road,
Columbia. Call 410-995-1969.
LOVE IN AFGHANISTAN: Runs through
Nov. 17 at Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. S.W.,
Washington. Call 202-554-9066.
ORPHANS: The story tells of three men
whose childhood lack of love and affection has incredible effects. Runs Nov.
8-Dec. 8 at Fell’s Point Corner Theatre,
251 S. Ann St. Tickets are $15-$20. Call
410-276-7837.
THE PRINCESS BRIDE — LIVE: Show
runs Nov. 1-10 at Harford Community
College, 401 Thomas Run Road, Bel Air.
Tickets are $8-$12. Call 443-412-2211.
RED: Explore the world of abstract
expressionist Mark Rothko on the brink
of his biggest commission: murals for
the Four Seasons Restaurant in the
1960s. Runs Nov. 6-Dec. 8 at Everyman
Theatre, 315 W. Fayette St. Call 410-7522208.
ST. NICHOLAS: Performance Workshop
Theatre presents Conor McPherson’s
one-man show, through Nov. 24 at the
theater, 5426 Harford Road. Tickets are
$15-$22. Call 410-659-7830.
TWISTED KNICKERS BURLESQUE:
The burlesque troupe presents “Witchcraft: Strictly Taboo” at 8 p.m. Nov. 2 at
Yellow Sign Theatre, 1726 N. Charles St.
Tickets are $10-$15. Call 410-727-8815.
TWO SUNS OVER THEBES: Runs
through Nov. 10 at The Chicken Box, 1
W. North Ave. Go to baltimoreannextheater.org.
CLASSICAL
ANNAPOLIS CHORALE: BERNSTEIN,
FAURE: J. Ernest Green conducts the
Annapolis Chorale in works by Bernstein, Faure and Vasks at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8
and 8 p.m. Nov. 9 at Maryland Hall for
the Creative Arts, 801 Chase St., Annapolis. Tickets are $12-$37. Call 410-2805640.
ANNAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: BRITTEN, BRAHMS: Jose-Luis
Novo conducts the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra in works by Britten
and Bridge, and, with soloist Peter Serkin, Brahms’ Piano Concerto No. 2 at 8
p.m. Nov. 1-2 at Maryland Hall for the
Creative Arts, 801 Chase St., Annapolis.
Call 410-263-0907.
BACH CONCERT SERIES: CANTATA
116: T. Herbert Dimmock leads the choir
and orchestra of the Bach Concert Series in Bach’s Cantata No. 116 at 4 p.m.
Nov. 3 at Christ Lutheran Church, 701 S.
Charles St. Free. Call 410-752-7179.
BALTIMORE SYMPHONY: STRAVINSKY, HOLST: Marin Alsop conducts the
BSO in a program featuring Gustav
Holst’s “The Planets” and Igor Stravin-
sky’s Violin Concerto (with soloist Leila
Josefowicz) at 8 p.m. Nov. 7 and 3 p.m.
Nov. 10 at Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony
Hall, 1212 Cathedral St. Call 410-7838000.
BSO OFF THE CUFF: THE PLANETS:
Marin Alsop leads the BSO in an “Off
the Cuff” program that explores Gustav
Holst’s orchestral suite “The Planets” at
8:15 p.m. Nov. 8 at Music Center at
Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Lane,
North Bethesda, and at 7 p.m. Nov. 9 at
Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, 1212
Cathedral St. Call 410-783-8000.
LYRIC OPERA BALTIMORE: PUCCINI’S ‘TOSCA’: Lyric Opera Baltimore
presents Puccini’s “Tosca,” featuring Jill
Gardner and Eric Owens and conducted
by Steven White, at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 1 and
3 p.m. Nov. 3 at the Lyric, 140 W. Mount
Royal Ave. Call 410-685-5086.
NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:
BARBER, RACHMANINOFF: Kristjan
Jarvi conducts the National Symphony
in Barber’s Violin Concerto, with soloist
Jennifer Koh, and works by Enescu and
Rachmaninoff at 8 p.m. Nov. 1-2 at The
Kennedy Center, 2700 F St. N.W., Washington. Tickets are $20-$85. Call 202467-4600.
PRO MUSICA RARA WITH SOPRANO
JULIANNE BAIRD: The early music
ensemble Pro Musica Rara is joined by
soprano Julianne Baird in a program
featuring works by Handel at 3:30 p.m.
Nov. 3 at Towson University, 8000 York
Road, Towson. Call 410-704-2787.
SAXOPHONIST STEPHEN DUNLAP:
Shriver Hall Concert Series presents
saxophonist Stephen Dunlap, winner of
the 2013 Yale Gordon Competition, and
pianist Choo Choo Hu in works by
Schumann, Ned Rorem and Michael
Hersch at 3 p.m. Nov. 2 at Hodson Hall
at Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N.
Charles St. Free. Call 410-516-7164.
SONAR NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE: The
SONAR new music ensemble performs
works by winners of the American
Academy’s Rome Prize, including Stephen Hartke and Andrew Norman at 8
p.m. Nov. 8 at Old St. Paul’s Church, 233
N. Charles St. Free. Call 410-685-3404.
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
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57
Thanks for making us Baltimore’s Best Adult Store
Seven Years In A Row!
SUGAR IS A WOMAN OWNED, MULTI GENDER OPERATED SEX TOY STORE
stirring up raw passion…
Sugar is located at 927 West 36th Street • Hampden • 410.467.2632
CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE! • www.sugartheshop.com
We are on the corner of 36th & Roland. Entrance is in the parking lot off Roland right under Sprout
• *parking lot is for apartment residents only
FIRST FRIDAY AT SUGAR!
Friday, November 1st • 6:00 - 9:00 pm
Come and see our new toy and enjoy some hot cider and donuts. 10 % of sales from this day will be
donated in support of men’s health. Spend $50 and you’ll receive a free Screaming O vibrating gift!
Want to learn more about prostate cancer? Testicular cancer? Or http://www.nami.org/mental
health? It’s all important!
INTRO TO ANAL PLAY
Monday, November 4th • 6:30 pm • $25
Anal sex is one of the most common fantasies for people of all genders, and it’s much more fun when you have
the info you need to make it work. In this workshop, you’ll learn about the three essential ingredients for easy and
fun anal penetration, finger techniques to get things started, choosing the right toys to add to your pleasure, what
positions work best, tips for pegging and anal intercourse, how to introduce the topic with your partner, and more!
STRIPTEASE FOR SEX
Monday, November 11th • 6:30 pm • $25
Ever wish you could gracefully navigate and elongate those moments between being fully dressed and completely nude? Has a partner suggested you
“dance” for them, and you were confused by what they meant? Did you scratch your head through “Showgirls” or “Flashdance” wondering how they
make stripping look so effortless? Then this is the class for you! With Roma Mafia as your guide, you’ll learn the art of clothing removal paired with
confidence-boosting exercises and seductive dancing techniques. In addition to obtaining a range of sexy tips and tricks for getting out of any piece of
clothing, you’ll also learn how to incorporate a partner into the fun, and how to use the clothes you shed as props in the bedroom!
Participation IS required! Come dressed in clothing you can move comfortably in and bring lots of layers!
Check our website for more info on these classes www.sugartheshop.com
Tickets for classes available in person at the store, over the phone, by credit card or online at Brown Paper Tickets.
www.sugartheshop.com
58
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October 30, 2013
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bthesite.com
LOVE DRAMA?
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Cars.com has reviews of local dealerships from car shoppers like you so you can find a
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bthesite.com
NEXT 4 WEEKS
SUN
MON
AFFORDABLE
ART EXBIBITION
‘THE REAL
HOUSEWIVES OF
ATLANTA’ PREMIERE
RAVENS VS.
BENGALS
3
5
The first home game
after bye week. M&T
Bank Stadium, 1101
Russell St., downtown. 1 p.m.
baltimoreravens.com
10
MACKLEMORE
AND RYAN LEWIS
With Talib Kweli and
Big K.R.I.T. Verizon
Center, 601 F. St.
N.W., Washington.
7:30 p.m. $44.50$42.50.
verizoncenter.com
18
PINK
The singer’s ubersuccessful The Truth
About Love tour
comes to the Verizon
Center 601 F St.
N.W., Washington.
7:30 p.m. $39.50$125. verizoncenter.
com
24
7
SYMPHONY OF
LIGHTS
Because you can’t
get enough of a good
drive-through light
show this time of
year. Through Jan.
5. Symphony Woods,
5940 Symphony
Woods Road, Columbia. $20-$125.
hopkinsmedicine.org
25
WED
THU
FRI
MARYLAND
IRISH FESTIVAL
The former
Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman
is on the road in
support of his new
album “Wrote A
Song For Everyone.”
Lyric, 140 W. Mt.
Royal Ave. $38$135, 8 p.m.
lyricoperahouse.com
Music, dance,
cultural exhibits
and everything
Ireland. Also Nov.
9 and 10. Maryland
State Fairgrounds,
2200 York Road,
Timonium. $15-$25.
irishfestival.
com
8
6
7
‘JERSEY BOYS’
ELI YOUNG BAND
LEWIS BLACK
The popular rockcountry quartet
brings its Drunk Last
Night tour to town.
With Eric Paslay.
Rams Head Live, 20
Market Place, downtown. 7 p.m. doors.
$25. ramsheadlive.
com
The oft-exasperated
“Daily Show” vet is
on the road with his
the Rant is Due tour.
Weinberg Center for
the Arts, 20 W. Patrick St., Frederick. 8
p.m. $49.50-$59.50.
livenation.com
‘A CIVIL WAR
CHRISTMAS’
AMOS LEE
This acclaimed
musical features
stories of people affected by the war —
including President
Abraham Lincoln.
Through Dec. 22.
Center Stage, 700
N. Calvert St. $19$59.
centerstage.
org
19
59
|
SAT
The Tony-winning
musical tells the
story of Frankie
Valli and the Four
Seasons. Hippodrome Theatre, 12
N. Eutaw St., downtown. 8 p.m. (runs
through Nov. 24).
$38-$117. francemerrickpac.
com
12
October 30, 2013
UPDATE YOUR CALENDAR Go to bthesite.com for an interactive
database of the latest local events
JOHN FOGERTY
Fill your walls for
cheap. Through
Dec. 29. Art Gallery
of Fells Point, 1716
Thames St. Most
items are $175 or
less.
fellspointgallery.org
NeNe Leakes and
the gang are back
for Season 6. 8 p.m.,
Bravo.
NOVEMBER
TUE
|
13
Stretch limos take
people to city bars
to complete team
challenges. 3-10
p.m., meet at Greene
Turtle McHenry Row,
1606 Whetstone
Way. $500 per team
of up to 10.
lindypromo.com
2
9
15
‘THE HUNGER
GAMES: CATCHING FIRE’ OPENS
The singer-songwriter blends elements
of soul, folk, rock and
jazz. The Lyric, 140
W. Mt. Royal Ave. 8
p.m. $30-$50.
lyricoperahouse.com
20
BALTIMORE
LIMO SCAVENGER HUNT
Katniss (er, Jennifer
Lawrence) is back
for the Quarter Quell.
And to make boatloads more money.
RAVENS VS.
STEELERS
27
Digest your
Thanksgiving meal
while watching this
sure-to-be-epic
rematch! M&T Bank
Stadium, 1101 Russell
St., downtown. 8:20
p.m. WBAL/NBC
16
20
16
28
22
14
FESTIVAL
OF TREES
Decorated trees
and more. Maryland
State Fairgrounds,
2200 York Road,
Timonium. 10 a.m.-9
p.m. (same times
Nov. 30; 10 a.m.-6
p.m. Dec. 1). $7-$13.
festvaloftrees.
kennedykrieger.org
29
LEAKES: GETTY; FOGERTY: GETTY; RAVENS-BENGALS: KENNETH LAM; ELI YOUNG: GETTY; BLACK: HANDOUT; MACKLEMORE: GETTY; AMOS LEE: GETTY; RAVENS: LLOYD FOX
BAZAART
HOLIDAY ART
MARKET
Ditch the mall, dig
some local crafts.
American Visionary
Art Museum, 800
Key Highway, Federal Hill. 10 a.m.-5
p.m. Free. (preview
party is 8 p.m. Nov.
29; $10-$20). avam.
org
30
60
|
October 30, 2013
|
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TV
Shining
forth
from the
shadows
FX
Jessica Lange says her work on ‘American Horror
Story’ has revived the thrill of acting for her
BY YVONNE VILLARREAL
TRIBUNE NEWSPAPERS
Jessica Lange sees an end in sight.
Shrinking into her all-black ensemble
in a cold Beverly Hills, Calif., hotel room,
the 64-year-old actress fidgets with her
sleeves as she talks about her version of a
five-year plan.
“I am coming to the end of acting,” she
says with sureness. “I have a list: another
stage production, maybe one or two
more movies, one more season of ‘American Horror Story’ … and then that is it for
me. Because I think that’s enough. I want
to go out with a bang … or should I say, a
scare?”
If her remaining future roles are anything like her starring role in FX’s dark
anthology “American Horror Story,” the
audience will be the one to go out with a
whimper.
A very frightened whimper and lots of
it. Lange, whose four-decade career includes such cinematic hallmarks as
“Tootsie” and “Blue Sky,” has become an
unexpected star of horror on the network’s hit series, which racked up 17
Emmy nominations this year and drew
5.5 million viewers in the third-season
premiere of its latest installment, “Coven,” this month.
“It re-energized me; it re-energized
my career,” says Lange, who took home
an Emmy, a Golden Globe and a SAG
award in 2012 with her first-season portrayal of meddling neighbor Constance
Langdon. “There’s no shame in recognizing that. It’s exposed me to a whole
new generation, which is a little strange.
I’m not used to young people thinking
I’m cool.”
Oh, how they do. Lange spooked audiences with her first-season character, a
poisonous cupcake-maker and master
manipulator with a Southern drawl. She
followed it up in the second season with
her tormented portrayal of Sister Jude
Martin, the stern head nun with a tortured past running a mental institution.
Now, in the third season, her scenestealing performance as the all-powerful
witch Fiona Goode has earned her the
unofficial title of the grand dame of
“American Horror Story.”
“There are certain people who just
pull focus no matter who they’re onscreen with,” says “American Horror
Story” co-creator Brad Falchuk. “She is
one of those people. She has an incredible intensity and incredible fragility.
She, on the one hand, scares the hell out
of you, and on the other hand has you
falling in love with her. It’s hard not to be
compelled by her.”
Lange’s road to terror was paved two
years earlier by HBO’s “Grey Gardens,” a
telefilm about the lives of socialite
wannabes Edith Bouvier Beale/“Little
Edie” (Drew Barrymore) and her
mother, Edith Ewing Bouvier/“Big Edie”
(Lange).
Lange’s unflinching take on the unkempt, gray-haired woman who makes a
home amid piles of rotting garbage and
cat feces had critics buzzing and people
talking.
“It brought back the thrill of acting,”
she says. “It was the perfect storm. It’s all
the tired stuff everybody says: age working against you, films that made your career not being made anymore. But, also, I
really needed a distraction in my life; I
was still getting used to the idea of my
kids leaving the nest. I thought it was a
good time to go out on a limb, because
horror is not my thing.”
But madness, heartbreak and despair
seem to be. Many of Lange’s most memorable performances are rooted in darkness, whether for a big-screen portrayal
of Frances Farmer, an actress who went
into a physical and emotional tailspin in
the ’40s, or a stage and TV depiction of
Blanche DuBois in “A Streetcar Named
Desire.”
Sarah Paulson, another “American
Horror Story” vet who has also worked
with Lange, admires her ability to drop
into mental illness.
Paulson recalls a scene from “American Horror Story: Asylum,” in which Sister Jude becomes unraveled as Paulson’s
character Lana is released from the mental institution.
“I remember just staring at her and
thinking, ‘I was just talking to her on the
way to the set, and now she’s muttering
to herself. And it was so simple, not overwrought. But it was so damn powerful.
Nobody plays more things at once than
that lady. There is more going on in one
line with Jessica than another actor can
get across in an entire season.”
Lange isn’t quite sure what accounts
for her comfort in doom and gloom: “I’m
sure it has to do with what’s bred in the
bone,” she says.
She grew up with a hard-drinking father but doesn’t attribute her penchant
for darkness to that.
“I think it’s just genetic,” she says. “I’ve
never been a sunny personality. I’ve never been outgoing. I’m a solitary person.
So those are areas of the human psyche
that I like to explore, probably in a subconscious attempt to understand my
own place in the world. It hasn’t been
easy; it’s been my own horror at times.”
Presenting a stark truth is what drives
and guides her work, says Lange, who
moonlights as a fine-art photographer.
“I shoot in black and white because I
think there is something much more arresting about it. I think any time you distill an image down to shadows and highlights, it has a kind of power that speaks
to something on a much more primal
way,” she says. “My acting roles are a
blending of that. It’s the gray. And I love
the balance. It’s been fun. Depressing,
sure, but fun. So I want a little more of it,
for a little longer.”
bthesite.com
RAMS HEAD LIVE
COMING SOON
LOCATED
AT:
October 30, 2013
October 31, 2013
John K Band
20 Market Place BALTIMORE, MD
410.244.1131 BOXOFFICEOPENMON.-SAT.10AM-5PM
FOR A FULL
LISTING VISIT:
www.ramsheadlive.com
11.09
THIS THE RESCUE CD RELEASE PARTY
11.12
Monozine presents MANCHESTER
11.13
ELI YOUNG BAND: Drunk Last Night Tour w. Eric Paslay
11.15
BOND & BENTLEY w. Hangdog, Sticky Longfingers & The Rusted
11.16
DR. DOG w. Fly Golden Eagle
11.17
JOHNNY MARR w. ALAMAR
11.22
Soulbird Presents A SongVersation with INDIA.ARIE
11.23
GO GO GADJET
11.26
K. MICHELLE
11.27
All Good Presents THE
11.29
POISON TO THE KOOL KIDS w. more
11.30
WILD EYES (TOOL TRIBUTE) w. Coda, Queen Mother, Click 5
w. Barefoot Brothers, The Lilly Kills,
ORCHESTRA w. The Front Bottoms
Butter, Dirk Schwenk, The Wayfarer Project, Bret Staymates
12.01
|
BRIDGE w. Freedom Enterprise
DETECTIVE SHANE VOLK MEMORIAL CONCERT
Hosted by Fight for Eli & The A Team w. Roll It Over
12.04
24-7 presents HALESTORM
12.08
SCHOOL OF ROCK WINTER SHOWCASE
12.11
HOT WATER MUSIC w. Torche, O’Brother
12.14
THE LEGWARMERS
12.15
LUPE FIASCO: Tetsuo and Youth Preview Tour
12.21
KIX MAS feat. Kix w. So Low
12.31
All Good Presents
1.03
24-7 presents
1.04
GET THE LED OUT
1.10
JIMMIES CHICKEN SHACK: Bring Your Own Stereo 15th
November 2, 2013
KMFDM
w. CHANT
November 5, 2013
The
Movement
w. Natural Vibrations,
Dub City Renegades
November 6, 2013
Taking Back
Sunday
w. Polar Bear Club,
Transit
w. Redlight King, Stars In Stereo
KELLER WILLIAMS’ NEW YEARS FUNKIN’ EVE
w. The Keels, More Than A Little
BADFISH A Tribute To Sublime
November 7, 2013
Less
Than Jake
w. Anti-Flag, Masked
Intruder, Get Dead
November 8, 2013
Steep Canyon
Rangers
Anniversary Show
JUST ANNOUNCED AND ON SALE FRIDAY 11/01 @ 10AM
97.5 WHFS presents THE
HFSMAS NUTCRACKER Concert Series:
12.09 PANIC AT THE DISCO w. Hellogoodbye, The Colourist
12.12 JIMMY EAT WORLD w. Diamond Youth
12.16 TWENTY ONE PILOTS & THE 1975 w. MSMR, NONONO
FOR A FULL LIST OF SHOWS: WWW.RAMSHEADLIVE.COM • 410.244.1131
November 10, 2013
Parachute &
Plain White T’s
|
61
62
|
October 30, 2013
|
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MOVIES
Crafting futuristic
fashion with flash
HAILEE STEINFELD AND ASA BUTTERFIELD IN "ENDER’S GAME."
SUMMIT ENTERTAINMENT
Christine Bieselin Clark used sci-fi tricks of her
own for the ‘Ender’s Game’ look.
BY CRISTY LYTAL
LOS ANGELES TIMES
To fashion the costumes for military scifi film “Ender’s Game,” designer Christine
Bieselin Clark used not only patterns and
sewing machines but also lasers and magnets. Crafting futuristic threads and helmets for the film, which opens Friday, was
“sci-fi just in its process,” she said.
Bieselin Clark, 41, began her career in a
much lower-tech space: the theater. She
grew up on Long Island, a stone’s throw
from Broadway, earned a degree in theater
arts from Stony Brook University and
went on to design costumes for regional
theater productions all over the East
Coast. She was managing a costume shop
at the College of Charleston in South Carolina when the production of 1997’s “Deceiver” came to town.
“I threw myself at the costume department, and they brought me on as an intern,” she said. “Before I knew it, I was a
paid member of the department, and that
started my foray into film.”
In 1998 she sold her car and moved to
Los Angeles to continue her film adventures. Since then she’s lent her vision to
numerous productions, including several
in the comic book and sci-fi genres.
“I spent a lot of years at Comic-Con,”
said Bieselin Clark, who has worked on
films ranging from 2006’s “300” to 2010’s
“Tron: Legacy.” “It’s so much fun when
you meet someone who’s replicated or interpreted something you’ve done. ... It’s
the
highest
form
of
flattery, and it’s really exciting.”
No room in the closet: In “Ender’s
Game,” based on the novel by Orson Scott
Card, Earth’s most talented children attend an international school where they
learn to defend their planet against aliens.
During simulated zero gravity battles, they
wear special training outfits called Flash
Suits — and Bieselin Clark made 78 of
these for the film.
“We had platoons of kids every day,” she
said. “Just to craft something of this scale is
a challenge. It’s like a small business that
we’re running once we get the designs in
place. You start saying, ‘Well, we have to do
all the boots at once, because then we’ll be
able to cut all these pieces at the same
time.’ It’s like assembly-line stuff.”
Growing celebrity: In one sense, the
size of the cast was fixed. In another sense,
it wasn’t. “These are young men who were
getting taller while we were filming,” Bieselin Clark said. “The suit is two pieces: it’s
a jacket and a pair of pants. And we designed the style lines of that to go higher
on the body, so that if the body is growing,
and the jacket rises up, there’s still more
pants. And the gloves go over the top of the
wrist, so if the arm continues to grow, you
have about two inches of wiggle room in
which the body can shift. Everything was
made out of stretch materials. We used a
lot of technologies that you’d use in dance
fabrics. So when the body changes a little
bit, you still have that dance fabric in play
in those places.”
Dry clean only: Since the film is set in
the future, no present-day fabric felt quite
right. “The predominant fabric in the
Flash Suit is one that we made,” Bieselin
Clark said. Using spandex or leather as a
base fabric, she layered other fabrics on
top using glue, solvents and heat-fusible
webbings and overlaid these with thin
laminates. “It was like a crazy science experiment to combine certain ingredients
to make specific fabrics for specific places
on the suit,” she said. “[We also did] screen
printing with rubberized inks in different
colors to create surface texture.”
Head cases: Bieselin Clark designed
the helmets in three parts connected by
strong magnets: the main helmet, the
mandible that comes around the front of
the chin, and the visor. “We knew that we
might get into a place where that visor and
the reflections would be compromising
for filming,” she said. “So that visor could
come away if we needed it to not be in the
shot. It’s very cool. They also had to be
light enough. And we had to put little fans
in them so people could breathe.”
Stranger than sci-fi: To construct the
helmets, Bieselin Clark and her team took
a digital scan of each actor and fed it into a
computer program, which overlaid the
helmet design onto the scanned head
shape. They then created an output of that
by using a rapid prototyping machine that
lays down thin layers of resin and shapes
them with lasers. “So you’re basically
growing with lasers a part that perfectly
fits the head of the person you’ve
scanned,” Bieselin Clark said.
bthesite.com
|
October 30, 2013
|
63
MOVIES
ALSO OPENING
About Time
Universal, R; 2 hours, 3 min.
Domhnall Gleeson, Rachel
McAdams
A man (Gleeson) can travel
through time — and uses it to
get a girl (McAdams).
Free Birds
Relativity Media, PG; 1 hour,
30 min.
Owen Wilson, Woody
Harrelson
Animated comedy about two
turkeys who travel in time
(apparently, a theme this
weekend) to readjust
Thanksgiving menus.
Last Vegas
CBS Films, PG-13
Michael Douglas, Robert De
Niro
Four old friends reunite for a
Vegas bachelor party.
Man of Tai Chi
Radius-TWC, R; 1 hour, 45
min.
Keanu Reeves, Tiger Chen
Reeves directs this tale of a
young martial artist in an
underworld fight club.
NOT-SO-SMOOTH SAILING FOR ROBERT REDFORD.
LIONSGATE/ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONS
All is Lost
Lionsgate/Roadside
Attractions, PG-13
1 hour, 46 min.
Robert Redford
★★★ (out of 4)
BY MATT PAIS
REDEYE MOVIE CRITIC
Closing out Survival Month at the
Movies (“Gravity,” “Captain Phillips,”
“12 Years a Slave”), “All is Lost” presents
the gravity of being Captain Redford for
eight days. No, that isn’t the name of the
unidentified sailor (Robert Redford)
whose boat is violently poked by a shipping container 1,700 nautical miles from
the Sumatra Straits. (Of course I knew
that was in the middle of the Indian
Ocean. Who told you I was awful at geography?) He’s everyone — a sole representative for human existence, fighting
the odds and seeing that it’s not over
until it’s over.
At least, that’s my take. Writer/director J.C. Chandor (“Margin Call”) wisely
refrains from awkward back story or
forced emotion (looking at you, “Gravity,”) so it’s merely an interpretation to
say that the man’s wedding ring and
boat (named “Virginia Jean”) suggest
that he has set off alone, testing his limits or running away, after the loss of his
wife. The opening scene features a
voiceover of the man reading what he
intends as his last words, the inevitable
regrets of a person dying in unforeseen
circumstances.
Needless to say, these are extreme
conditions. If you’re going on a dangerous solo journey, amends probably are
best handled in advance. Redford’s lone
seaman is a man of few words, at least in
terms of not exclaiming, “Oh, [bleep]” or
something when turning to his right and
seeing a bitch of a storm a-brewin’.
Rarely does he verbalize his feelings,
and Redford capably holds attention in a
nearly wordless film likely to garner him
an Oscar nomination — because that’s
often the case with isolated acting jobs
like this. (I was less taken with “Life of
Pi” and more impressed by James
Franco in “127 Hours,” FYI.)
With minimal information and multiple near-devastations, “All is Lost”
sometimes conveys a sense of “What
else can go horribly wrong?” or that it
contains valuable info should viewers
ever find themselves in a similar situation. (Here’s hoping they don’t.) Others
will see the continual destruction and
resurrection of a life through the experience of a tormented traveler who,
among other things, displays the value
of lip balm. Never hurts to have some,
just in case.
64
|
October 30, 2013
|
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POSITION
COMPANY
LOCATION
WEBID
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Confidential
Baltimore
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Park West Health Systems, Inc.
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Baltimore
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Veolia Energy North America
Baltimore
BA214394
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Nursing-Open House
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Baltimore
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For Breaking News
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The PAREXEL
Early Phase Unit, located at
Harbor Hospital in
Baltimore, MD
is currently seeking
Volunteers to participate in a
Clinical research trial
to evaluate a new
Investigational medication.
We are recruiting the following populations:
Healthy Non Smoking Males
Healthy Non Smoking Females
Ages 18 – 65
The study involves one
screening visit, one in-house
stay of 16 days / 15 nights
and one outpatient visit.
If you qualify and
complete the study
you may receive up to
$3,545 in compensation.
For more information, please visit our website
www.parexel.com/baltimore
or contact us toll free at 1-877-61-STUDY or 1-877-617-8839
(Monday to Friday between 9AM and 6PM).
Please reference study # 210299-PartA