Wednesday, 02 October 2024

Arts & Life

NORTH COAST, Calif. – Rising Stars Music Showcase is a multi-musician, multi-genre competition in which musicians from Lake and Mendocino counties will be competing for prizes and supporting local area non-profits.

Presented by 94.5 K-Wine, City of Light Recording and Sound, Max 93.5 and Mendo Lake Credit Union, this sixth annual event is held to benefit multiple local charities.

The daylong event on Oct. 5 will be held at the Redwood Empire Fairgrounds from noon to midnight.

Rising Stars will encompass as many musical genres as possible showcasing the often-unheard talents of musicians of all ages.

Solo musicians and group musicians from all genres are encouraged to enter the competition.

Bands from all genres are encouraged to enter this competition by going to the Web site at http://www.risingstarscompetition.com and submitting their entry.

Bands will be placed in divisions according to their genre of music and be judged on an individual basis with each judge scoring individual acts on stage performance and presence, talent and audience reaction. Prizes will be awarded to the winners in each genre plus winners overall.

Prizes that have been donated this far include recording studio time at City Of Light Recording and Sound, a mastered live performance CD from Golden Ratio Recording, a Limo Ride from Pure Comfort Limousine along with the coveted Star Awards created by Cash Auto Recycling and Scrap.

The deadline for entry is Sept. 5 but due to the limited amount of spots in each genre, musicians are encouraged to apply early.

Being a family-friendly event, Rising Stars is an opportunity for local organizations and businesses to get exposure.

Nonprofits and businesses alike are welcomed to rent booth space at this popular event. Booths can be anything from selling items to participatory games or information. Vendors must sign up by Sept. 5.

This showcase of talent is an effort to promote awareness of all of the musical talent in the area along with helping community organizations.

Musicians, businesses and organizations are encouraged to participate in some way to help keep the music alive and help keep vital services for those in need.

Information can be obtained at the Web site, through email or through calling Mary Chadwick at 707-272-6514.

tedkooserbarn 

On a perfect Labor Day, nobody would have to work, and even the “associates” in the big box stores could quit stocking shelves.

Well, it doesn’t happen that way, does it? But here’s a poem about a Labor Day that’s really at rest, by Joseph Millar, from North Carolina.

Labor Day

Even the bosses are sleeping late
in the dusty light of September.

The parking lot’s empty and no one cares.
No one unloads a ladder, steps on the gas

or starts up the big machines in the shop,
sanding and grinding, cutting and binding.

No one lays a flat bead of flux over a metal seam
or lowers the steel forks from a tailgate.

Shadows gather inside the sleeve
of the empty thermos beside the sink,

the bells go still by the channel buoy,
the wind lies down in the west,

the tuna boats rest on their tie-up lines
turning a little, this way and that.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright 2012 by Joseph Millar from his most recent book of poems, Blue Rust, Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2012. Poem reprinted by permission of Joseph Millar and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2013 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

ukiahfiddlekidwinners

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Two young fiddlers represented Lake County at the Ukiah Fiddle Contest.

Taran Dutra and Rafael Contreras both won blue ribbons and prize money for playing three tunes on stage in the junior-junior class.

Rafael also entered the open class, competing with adults, and came in second place, winning even more prize money.

These fiddlers are both members of the Konocti Fiddle Club, which will be performing at the Kelseyville Pear Festival in September.

CLEARLAKE, Calif. – This coming September, for the first time in more than six years, there will be no Second Sunday Cinema.

Due to a serious accident in the family, Shannon Tolson, SSC's coordinator, will need to focus her time and energy on supporting and helping the healing process of her life partner, Jim, who recently fell off his roof and is hospitalized.

Stay tuned for further information as to if and when SSC will resume.

KICK-ASS 2 (Rated R)

Just in case it wasn’t obvious in the original, the R rating achieved by the comical superhero franchise “Kick-Ass” has been attached for a purpose.

Notwithstanding the lead characters being teens, this is not a family film.

Arguably, the thrust of “Kick-Ass 2” appears even more intense and over-the-top than the first, though there was something completely shocking about a foul-mouthed pre-teen vigilante superhero in Hit Girl the first time around.

Chloe Grace Moretz’s Hit Girl is now in high school, watched over by her guardian, a police officer (Morris Chestnut), who insists that she hang up her uniform to be a normal teenager, known only by her given name of Mindy Macready. Of course, that’s not part of her plan.

Meanwhile, Hit Girl’s partner in crime-fighting, Kick- Ass (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), now a high school senior, has also put away his green and yellow spandex uniform. But Kick-Ass inspired a motley crew of masked vigilantes to continue the efforts to battle the bad guys.

Mindy tries to fit in with the school’s clique of popular girls, even trying out for the cheerleader squad. Her acrobatic moves, inspired by Hit Girl’s martial arts skills, make the other contestants look inferior.

Of course, the cool kids are, in fact, the mean girls, and they are just like the obnoxious students in Lindsay Lohan’s “Mean Girls,” and to a lesser extent, “Clueless.”

At school, Kick-Ass is Dave Lizewski, a rather nerdy fellow who’s bored by his mundane life, so he starts patrolling the streets with Justice Forever, a fearless group of urban watchdogs fronted by Colonel Stars and Stripes (Jim Carrey).

Members of the colonel’s squad of masked crime-fighters include Dr. Gravity (Donald Faison) and Night Bitch (Lindy Booth), an ordinary girl by day and a Catwoman-like sexy figure by night.

For a movie that contains some very graphic violence and brutality, the comic element springs, in part, from the transition of Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s Red Mist character of the first film into a full-blown super villain who goes by a moniker not printable in a family newspaper.

For the sake of clean language, we’ll go with Red Mist’s given name of Chris D’Amico, who still nurses a desire for revenge for the death of his father at the hands of Kick-Ass. After the accidental death of his mother, Chris inherits a fortune.

With seemingly limitless funds, Chris acts like a spoiled rich kid as he hatches an evil scheme to recruit the scum of the earth into a super villain’s army. His best conscript is Mother Russia (Olga Kurkulina), a truly frightening psychopath.

As to be expected, there is climactic showdown between the Justice Forever good guys and the villains. The best thing about “Kick-Ass 2” remains the sweet yet tough appeal of Hit Girl.

TV UPDATE – STARZ ORIGINAL PROGRAMS GROW AS LOSSES MOUNT

During the recent national TV press tour, Chris Albrecht, CEO of the Starz cable channel, announced a goal for 2014 to air more than 50 hours of original programs.

Starz has had critical, if not financial, success with several original series, including “Boss,” starring Kelsey Grammar as a ruthless Chicago mayor, and “Magic City,” starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan as the owner of a ritzy Miami Beach hotel during the early 1960’s.

At a press conference on July 26, Albrecht answered a question about a possible third season for “Magic City” only by saying that there many “surprises left in the last three episodes” and that Starz is “evaluating all the options” with “Magic City.”

Little more than a week later, Starz announced that they would not order a third season of “Magic City.” Listening to TV executives is a lot like trying to figure out what politicians are really saying.

Albrecht dropped another clue on the TV critics when he said in his answer about the fate of “Magic City” that they had a couple of surprises in store “so I can’t reveal too much other than you’ll have the answer to your question soon.”

OK, he was at least right about the last part, knowing soon, that is. So while we may never be able to check into the Miramar Playa again, there will be other new programs.

Interestingly, Albrecht also revealed a second season pick up for “Black Sails,” based in part on fan reaction at Comic-Con to a viewing of the first episode. And in 2014 there will be a second season of “Da Vinci’s Demons.”

Palace intrigue is always good for TV programs. Just ask Showtime about “The Tudors.” Launched this month, “The White Queen” is a limited ten-hour series based on Philippa Gregory’s best-selling novel “The Cousins’ War.”

“The White Queen” is set against the backdrop of England’s War of the Roses, but it is told through the eyes of three main female characters as they manipulate behind the scenes for the throne of England.

The year is 1464, before the Tudor dynasty, and war has been ravaging throughout England over who is the rightful King. It is a bitter dispute between two sides of the same family, the House of York and the House of Lancaster.

There may not be a sequel to “The White Queen,” but Philippa Gregory continues to be a prolific writer about medieval British royal history, so the source material will be available for several new series.

I know little about the finances of cable networks, but it is obvious that programs like “Magic City” and “The White Queen” have tremendous production costs, which must be recouped.

If the audience for a Starz original series does not grow over time, the financial losses continue to mount, which has factored into whether series stay or go. Starz is committed to keep searching for the right balance.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

joannsaccato
 
COBB, Calif. – Local food advocate and spiritual life coach, JoAnn Saccato, MA released her first Kindle book in July of this year.

The book, “Companioning the Sacred Journey: A Guide to Creating a Compassionate Container for Your Spiritual Practice,” is the combined wisdom of self-awareness tools, mindfulness meditation, recovery principles, and energy work as learned and taught by Saccato in her local consulting practice.

Saccato said in a recent interview, “I have learned these incredibly valuable tools that lead to a deepened sense of awareness and a more authentic and meaningful life. I've learned some ways that help provide for healing from past abuses (both self and other inflicted!) and paint a path to a deeply profound way of being and living.”
 
Saccato shares some of this journey in her book. Having lived 10 years off the grid in a “chop wood, carry water” fashion in the oak woodlands of Lake County with her dog and spiritual companion Shyla, she credits this time and experience as giving her the opportunity to delve deeper into her spiritual practices.

“Journaling, mindfulness meditation, affirmations, Xi Gong and Yoga are at the core of my practice, but the book offers a wide array of tools suitable for any religious background and invites the reader to create their own 'container' for a compassionate spiritual practice,” Saccato said.
 
“Compassion towards ourselves is one of the most vital ingredients for our path,” she furthered. “When we come from a culture that asks us to seek life's answers outside ourselves – in the marketplace, or through mind-altering substances – the unknown journey inward can seem scary, especially to go it alone. Creating this 'compassionate container' to help us navigate this journey becomes imperative.”
 
A native of Lake County and a founding member of the Lake County Community Co-op, Saccato traveled part of her spiritual journey with Walter Robinson, the longtime executive director of the Highlands Senior Service Center in Clearlake.

“If there is anyone who taught me how to live through example, it was Walter,” she said. “His presence alone was enough to wake me up out of any mindlessness!”
 
While very little in Saccato's first book reflects on their friendship, she plans to write more about her experiences with Robinson and life on the land where she lived in a voluntary simplicity lifestyle in a single room cabin.

“This first book – not to sound cliché here – really wrote itself,” she said.

She professes that when Shyla, her canine companion of more than 15 years passed this last winter, the writing just poured out.

“There was such a profoundness in our relationship! I had lost my life companion, best friend and spiritual partner in just a few months during a huge transition in my living circumstances,” she said. “The writing was one way to deal with her passing and served as the catalyst for sharing these profundities I'd learned with a wider audience. I found again and again with my clients that the tools I offered in our one-on-one consultations were universally important and I realized through Shyla's passing how most of these came during the time of being with her and Walter on the land.”

companioningsaccato

Saccato is in conversation with several publishers for the soft-bound production of the book, which she hopes to have available in the very near future.

“While the Kindle book shot to No. 1 in its categories on Amazon during a recent promotion, I have a lot of friends and readers that like holding a book. (Me included!) Given that the book is a guide and not intended as a quick read, this makes sense,” she noted.

There is talk of a companion journal for the book to help the reader establish their own practice and reflect upon the questions peppered throughout “Companioning the Sacred Journey.” “It's really something that can be referred to again and again as a person's practice develops and deepens.”
 
The book begins with the individual journey with ideas for creating a compassionate practice. It then expands to include the journey in relationship and with the larger community.

“The book,” Saccatp said, “is really geared for the beginner who has very little knowledge of where to start with a spiritual practice.

“But,” she added, “it also has practical applications for those already in an established practice who want to deepen their experience or add an element of compassion to it.”
 
Saccato, who holds a master's in co-creating sustainable futures (which was the foundational work for the Lake County Community Co-op) is a Reiki master/teacher and a consultant who works with groups and individuals seeking out a more authentic, deep and meaningful life for themselves, their relationships and their work. She is available for private consultations and group workshops at her office in Cobb.

Saccato also is available for public speaking engagements and interviews on her book, Reiki (a form of energy healing), voluntary simplicity and her life at the cabin.
 
To purchase a Kindle version of “Companioning the Sacred Journey: A Guide to Creating a Compassionate Container for Your Spiritual Practice,” visit www.amazon.com .

For more information on Saccato, the book, her consulting business or to reserve a soft-cover copy, visit her Web site at www.companioningthesacredjourney.com .

Upcoming Calendar

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31Oct
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