river cities' reader issue 748 march 18, 2010
TRANSCRIPT
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 1/28
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 2/28
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
Things we want you to know: New two-year agreement (subject to early termination fee) and credit approval required. A $30 activation fee may apply. Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee applies; this is not a tax or government-required charge. Additional fees, taxes, terms, conditions andcoverage areas apply and vary by plan, service and phone. Use of service constitutes acceptance of the terms of our Customer Service Agreement. See store for details or visit uscellular.com. BOGO: Buy one handset and get a second handset for free. Mail-in rebate and activationrequired on each handset. Free Incoming Calls are not deducted from package minutes and are available only when receiving calls in your calling area. Night and Weekend Minutes valid Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. to 6:59 a.m. or 9 p.m. to 5:59 a.m. (depending on Calling Plan)and all day Saturday and Sunday. Night and Weekend Minutes are available throughout your calling area. Mobile-to-Mobile rate applies to calls you make to or receive from other U.S. Cellular customers in your Mobile-to-Mobile Calling Area (see brochure for details). Roaming indicatoron your phone must be off for Mobile-to-Mobile rates to apply. Promotional Phones subject to change. U.S. Cellular Visa Debit Card issued by MetaBank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. Allow 10–12 weeks for processing. Card does not have cash access and can be usedat any merchant location that accepts Visa Debit Cards. Card valid for 120 days after issued. Premium Mobile Internet Plan is $19.95 per month. Application and data network usage charges may apply when accessing applications. Mobile Broadband on 3G Network only availablewith select handsets. Users can expect an average download speed of 768Kbps and an average upload speed of 200Kbps. ©2010 U.S. Cellular.
Let us help you find a location: visit uscellular.com or call 1-888-BUY-USCC
Get a National Plan with 1,000 Anytime Minutes for just $49.99/ month plus:
• Free Incoming Calls, Texts and Pix
• Free Night and Weekend Minutes starting at 7 p.m.
• Free Mobile-to-Mobile Minutes
SAMSUNG CALIBERTM
GET ONE FREEWHEN YOU BUY ONE
FOR $9995After $50 mail-in rebates that come as Visa ® Debit Cards. Requires new
2-yr agmts. and Premium Mobile Internet Plans. $30 act. fees may apply.
Get great deals on great phones you
can use on our speedy 3G Network:
connect nationwide
and save.
SAMSUNG GLOSS
TM
QWERTY Keyboard, Cameraand Bluetooth®
freeAfter $50 mail-in rebate that comes as a Visa Debit Card. Requires new2-yr. agmt. and 3-mo. Unlimited Data Plan. $30 act. fee may apply.
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 3/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s •
C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2 0 1 0
M Plan or aFrdom Prsidnt
U.S. Representative Ron Paul
o not prosecuting marijuana users when theiruse o the drug is consistent with state medical-marijuana laws. A constitutionalist administration
would also deer to state laws reusing compliancewith the REAL ID act and denying ederalauthority over interstate gun transactions.
None o the measures I have discussed so arinvolves repealing any written law. Tey can beaccomplished simply by a president exercising
his legitimate authority to set priorities orthe executive branch. And another importantstep he can take toward restoring the balance
o powers the Founders intended is repealingunconstitutional executive orders issued by hispredecessors.
Te president could also use his managerialpowers to shrink the ederal bureaucracy by reusing to ll vacancies created by retirements or
resignations. Tis would dramatically reduce thenumber o ederal ocials wasting our money andtaking our liberties.
While the president can do a great deal on his
own, to really restore the Constitution, he will haveto work with Congress. Te rst step in enacting apro-reedom legislative agenda is the submission
o a budget that outlines the priorities o theadministration. While it has no legal eect, thebudget serves as a guideline or the congressional
appropriations process.I Congress ailed to produce a budget that
was balanced and that moved the country
in a pro-liberty direction, a constitutionalistpresident should veto the bill. O course, vetoingthe budget risks a government shutdown. But
a serious constitutionalist cannot be deterredby cries o “It’s irresponsible to shut down thegovernment!” Instead, he should simply say: “I
oered a reasonable compromise, which was togradually reduce spending, and Congress rejectedit, instead choosing the extreme path o continuing
to jeopardize America’s reedom and prosperity by reusing to tame the welare-warare state. I amthe moderate; those who believe that America can
aord this bloated government are the extremists.”All o these measures will take a lot o work – a
lot more than any one person, even the president
o the United States, can accomplish by himsel. orestore the country to the kind o government theFounders meant or us to have, a constitutionalist
president would need the support o an active
liberty movement. No matter how many pro-reedom politicians we elect to oce, the only way
to guarantee constitutional government is throughan educated and activist public devoted to theideals o the liberty.
For an expanded version o this commentary, visit RiverCitiesReader.com.
U.S. Representative Ron Paul (R-exas) is the author o End the Fed and Te Revolution: A Maniesto.
Tis essay originally appeared in Young AmericanRevolution , a magazine published by Young Americans or Liberty (YALiberty.org).
Since my 2008 campaign or the presidency I have oen been asked, “How woulda constitutionalist president go about
dismantling the welare-warare state and restoring
a constitutional republic?” Tis is a very importantquestion, because without a clear road map andset o priorities, such a president runs the risk
o having his pro-reedom agenda stymied by the various vested interests that benet rom biggovernment.
While our goal is to reduce the size o the stateas quickly as possible, we should always make
sure our immediate proposals minimize socialdisruption and human suering. Tus, we shouldnot seek to abolish the social saety net overnightbecause that would harm those who have grown
dependent on government-provided welare.Instead, we would want to give individuals whohave come to rely on the state time to prepare
or the day when responsibility or providingaide is returned to those organizations best ableto administer compassionate and eective help
– churches and private charities.A president who strictly adheres to the
Constitution could use his constitutional
authority as head o the executive branch and ascommander in chie to take several signicantsteps toward liberty on his own.
Te area where the modern chie executivehas greatest ability to act unilaterally is in oreignaairs. Unortunately, Congress has abdicated its
constitutional authority to declare wars, insteadpassing vague “authorization o orce” bills t hatallow the president to send any number o troops
to almost any part o the world.I the president has the power to order U.S.
orces into combat on nothing more than his
own say-so, then it stands to reason he can ordertroops home. Tereore, on the rst day in oce, aconstitutionalist can begin the orderly withdrawal
o U.S. orces rom Iraq and Aghanistan. He canalso begin withdrawing troops rom other areas o the world.
Domestically, the president can use hisauthority to set policies and procedures or theederal bureaucracy to restore respect or the
Constitution and individual liberty. For example,today manuacturers o dietary supplementsare subject to prosecution by the Food &
Drug Administration (FDA) or Federal rade
Commission (FC) i they make even truthulstatements about the health benets o their
products without going through the costly andtime-consuming procedures required to gaingovernment approval or their claims. A presidentcan put an end to this simply by ordering the FDA
and FC not to pursue these types o cases unlessthey have clear evidence that the manuacturer’sclaims are not true.
A crucial policy that a president could enactto bring speedy improvements to governmentis ordering the bureaucracy to respect the 10th
Amendment and rerain rom underminingstate laws. We have already seen a little renewedederalism with the current administration’s policy
1616 2nd Avenue, Rock Island, IL 61201March 19, 20, 26, 27, 28 at 8PMMatinee performance on March 21 at 2PM Tickets $8 & available at door only
prenzieplayers.comA post-show discussion follows the opening
night performance
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 4/28
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
widely derided as incompetent and corrupt.But anybody who takes the time to look at
this proposal knows it’s just too obvious o asetup. Quinn didn’t propose any cuts at all tothe State Board o Education’s bureaucracy.Instead, the slashes were all classroom-related. And education took well over hal o all the cuts Quinn proposed, despite beingonly about a third o the budget.
Rather than making a serious attemptto balance the budget in a reasonable,
even-handed
manner, the Quinnadministration wentar out o its way to strike maximumear into thepopulace. Te realmotivation behindthis gambit is justway too overt to bebelievable.
And doesanybody really believe that Quinn
will actually stick to his guns?Doubtul. Tegovernor threatened
a doomsday or social-service providerslast year and then blinked when hisdeadline approached. He’s an old-schoolcompassionate liberal. Everybody knows hedoesn’t want to make these cuts and will do just about anything to avoid them.
Tere are those in the administration whosay the tax-hike-or-schools template can be
used aer the November election (assumingQuinn wins), when legislators eel saerabout voting or it. Te proposal, the insiderssay, is more o a road map or the uture thana plan to be implemented this spring.
Te schools tax h ike, they say, is alsoa way to lessen the pain o the inevitableRepublican charge that the Democrats arenot-so-secretly planning to raise taxes oncethey’re reinstalled in power in November.But i the “secret” plan is to raise taxesor schools and local governments, thatmight mitigate the political damage by
giving Quinn a way to dodge claims on thecampaign trail that he wants to raise taxesto prop up the bureaucracy. Te pollingnumbers are turning so bad on taxes rightnow that Quinn needed to do somethingto save his political skin without totally abandoning his principles.
Tat’s all well and goo d and a dandy littlepolitical theory. In the meantime, the state is$13 billion in the red and still lacking a realplan to tackle it.
Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax (a daily political newsletter) and TeCapitolFaxBlog.com.
by Rich Miller
Like all o the budgets proposed by governors in the past ew years, PatQuinn’s spending outline last week
was an almost complete antasy. It has pretty much zero chance o surviving intact andwill have to be tossed out and substantially reworked beore the session ends.
Unless the school interests can pull o alegislative miracle during an anti-incumbentelection year, Quinn’s proposed one-percentage-point tax increase to prevent$1.3 billion in school-
unding cuts andpay another $1.5billion in overduebills to schoolsand universities isdeader than a rock on a stump. HouseSpeaker MichaelMadigan made thatpretty darned clearright aer the speech.
Asked what hewould do i the
Republicans reusedto cooperate on thebudget, Madigansaid his Democraticmajority would have to go it alone. Asked i that meant he’d go it alone on a tax hike, hepointedly said: “No.”
A ew minutes later, appearing on publictelevision’s Illinois Lawmakers program,Madigan said, “Let’s be straightorwardabout this. Te people o America, thepeople o Illinois, they don’t want tax
increases. Tey’re hurting.”Madigan then praised the governor orhaving the courage to propose a tax h ike inthis climate, but quickly added: “Tat doesn’tmean it’s going to happen.”
Shortly aerwards, Senate PresidentJohn Cullerton made it crystal clear thathis chamber would not take the lead on atax hike. House GOP Leader om Crossindicated that he still has the hammer downon his members who might be amenable toa tax hike. “It’s not going to happen,” saidSenate GOP Leader Christine Radogno.
Just like that, the whole thing was deadbeore Quinn’s voice had stopped echoing inthe House chambers.
In a dierent year, the theory behindQuinn’s tax-hike gambit wouldn’t be bad.
People despise Illinois government thesedays – or good reason – s o a tax increaseor state operations is pretty much out o the question. Most people do like their localschools, parents like their kids’ teachers, andproperty-tax payers are ed up with constantincreases. Using a tax hike to “save” the
schools is ar easier to do than justiying atax hike to make more pension paymentsto state employees, or und a state system
Quinn’s Budgt Plan DOAbut Provids Political Covr
Rather than making
a serious attempt to
balance the budget, the
Quinn administration
went far out of its way to
strike maximum fear into
the populace.
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 5/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s •
C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
Judicial, Justic BrancsCould S 600 Job Cuts
Approximately 600 ull-time state-government positions would be eliminated inthe judicial branch and justice system – whichincludes corrections and public saety – underbudgets approved on party-line votes by theHouse Appropriations Committee.
“Tere’s going to be real cuts, denitely,”said Representative odd aylor (D-CedarRapids), chair o the legislature’s joint justice-
system budget subcommittee. “Tese areessential government unctions. People say one thing that you have to do is protect thepublic, and we wil l do that. We’re going to dothat by backlling some o those positionswith any dollars that we can nd. Tat’s whatwe did last year with new ees. I think thebottom line is: We are in this budget areataking a hit because o drastic declines inrevenues. I that continues to decline, publicsaety will continue to suer.”
It’s unclear how many o those positionsreduced will translate to actual layos,although aylor said most would occur in the judicial branch. “Tere are cutbacks in salariesand mandatory unpaid days that hopeully will prevent layos in some o the correctionsarea,” he said. “ Te courts did have a lot morelayos and they’re not going to have themoney to rell many o those positions. Sothat means more closure days.”
A total o 188 people in the Departmento Corrections had also applied or early retirement by March 5, and the deadlineto apply isn’t until April 15. Some o those
who retire will be replaced with lower-paidemployees.
Te $484.1-million justice-systembudget spends $31.3 million less than thisyear’s budget aer an across-the-boardcut. It includes a reduction o 367 jobs incorrections, 184 in the judicial branch, and 54in public saety. “Tat is a drastic hit,” aylorsaid. “At the end o the day, it’s a lot less peopleand a lot less money.”
A proposal to once again increase courtees remains alive, but was not considered aspart o the judicial budget.
aylor said additional revenue generated by last year’s ee increase was oset by the across-the-board budget cut. He said any new court-ee increases this year would probably bemade in areas that weren’t aected last year.
For an expanded version o this article, visit RiverCitiesReader.com.
Tis weekly summary comes rom IowaPolitics.com, an online government and politics newsservice. Reporter Andrew Duelmeyer and other correspondents contributed to this report.
by Lynn Campbell, IowaPolitics.com
Democratic lawmakers last week
unveiled a long-awaited tax-credit-
reorm package that they said
would reduce Iowa’s t ax-credit liability
by $115 million a year; Republicans and
business leaders were quick to criticize
the legislation and said it sends the wrong
message.
“We have listened to the public’s anger at
abuses and we are responding with historic
reorms,” said S enator Joe Bolkcom (D-Iowa
City), chair o the Senate Ways & Means
Committee. “We are ending some taxcredits, cutting many remaining credits, and
dramatically increasing accountability or
all tax-credit spending.”
Te unveiling o House Study Bill 738
came two weeks beore the targeted March
26 adjournment o the legislature.
Te bill would reduce Iowa’s tax-credit
liability rom $525 million to $410 million.
It includes suspending the lm-tax-credit
program or two years, lowering the
cap on business tax credits rom $185
million to $120 million, cutting in hal the supplemental-research-activities tax
credit or large corporations, and cutting
10 percent rom many other tax-credit
programs.
“Every part o the budget is being cut,
and that will now include tax credits,” said
Representative Paul Shomshor (D-Council
Blus), chair o the House Ways & Means
Committee.
House Minority Leader Kraig Paulsen (R-
Hiawatha) said it’s appropriate to review tax
credits and make sure they’re doing whatthey’re supposed to. However, he said the
bill proposed by Democrats is equivalent to
raising taxes.
Business ocials were bracing or the
bill all session and said they were glad to
nally see the legislation. But lawmakers
can expect businesses to oppose the bill as it
moves through the legislature.
“In this tough economy, when we want
to put Iowans back to work, we would
not recommend cutting these credits,”
said John Gilliland, senior vice president
or government relations or the Iowa
Association o Business & Industry. “You
look at other states that are in a similar
circumstance with their state budgets,
some o those states are being aggressive
and increasing the types o credits and
incentives to bring jobs to their state. In
reality, that’s what we’d preer, looking
at being more aggressive rather than
retreating.”
Tax-Crdit-RormLgislation Unvild
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 6/28
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
6
The Inside Story o the History Channel’s Surprise Hit
American Pickers
In the American Pickers episode“Back Breakers,” Mike Wole is
donning a bright-red MotorHome Club jacket with the name“Louise” embroidered on the ront.
Te jacket is an “ice-breaker,” aterm that Wole and picking partnerFrank Fritz use to describe an item
that they don’t really want but buy anyway as a way to warm up areticent person to the idea o selling
their old stu.It’s a charming bit in the History
channel’s rst-season reality-serieshit, because it shows t hat Wole andFritz aren’t araid to look oolishor silly. And Wole seems to enjoy
wearing that jacket.But it also works because it
teaches viewers about how picking
works. We learn the nuances o scavenging, and how they get peopleto part with the objects they’ve
collected over decades. “We’re likepsychologists or people and theirstu,” Fritz said on the show.
Pickers has myriad appeals.On the unny side, Wole buys along-unworn leather coat that has
condoms in the pocket and shares alaugh with the previous owner.
Te negotiation game can be both
enjoyable and instructive. One sellerhas such a keen sense o what hiscollectibles might etch that Wole
and Fritz try to oer him a singleprice or all the stu they want; he keepstrack o their piles, though, and outsmarts
them.And then there are times when the
pickers screw up and learn something
themselves. Te pair spends so longrummaging through the barn o a 92-year-old man that he loses any interest in sellingto them; the two immediately recognize
that they were so excited about what was inthe barn that they didn’t respect t heir host’stime.
“Te show is about modern-day treasurehunting, that you can still do it,” Wole said.“And the show is about ... looking at things
with a dierent eye.” And it’s inormativeabout the histories o the eatured objects,in the orm o commentary by Wole and
Fritz, and acts that pop up on the screen.Tere’s also a human-interest angle to
American Pickers. Some people might like
the easy rapport between Wole and Fritz,who have known each other since eighthgrade.
But Wole thinks the undamental appealis the people they meet and the objectsthey’ve collected. While buying is the thrust
o the show, American Pickers spends plenty o time on the interactions between thepicking pair and the olks they encounter,
many o whom talk about their amilies and
their histories. One woman shows a car that
her husband bought to teach her to drive;
she never learned, she said, and the carsat untouched in a barn or our decades.
alking about the show’s debut, Wole
discussed 88-year-old World War II veteran
Leland rather than what they bought rom
him: “He was the treasure. He was the star
o the show.”
He added: “I wanted to tell the story
o these people that had the items, and I
actually wanted the item to have a voice,
too, in some ways.” And as he says in the
closing o the show’s introduction, “We
make a living telling the history o America
one piece at a time.”
When American Pickers debuted on
January 18, it got a lot o press in the Quad
Cities, with Wole and Antique Archeology
oce manager Danielle Colby-Cushman
living in LeClaire and Fritz based in
Davenport.
But at the time, nobody had any idea
that it would be a monster Monday hit
or History when paired with Pawn Stars. American Pickers debuted with more than
3 million viewers and this month has
approached 4 million, placing it amongthe 20 top-rated shows on cable. Tose
two shows and Ax Men pushed History to
a stellar February. “Tis is the rst time in
history the network has ranked top-ve
in all our adult and men 18-49 and 25-
54 demo[graphic]s in any given month,”History said in a press release.
In the past ew weeks – as the show
wound down its 10-episode initial run and
approached shooting its 26-episode second
season – the three stars o American Pickers
talked with the River Cities’ Reader about
the show’s success, history, and controversy.
Five Years in the MakingLike Pawn Stars, American Pickersmines
the drama o bartering, seeing i buyers and
sellers can nd common ground. But whilePawn Stars by its nature ocuses on people
who want or need the money, Pickers deals
with people who are oen hesitant to sell.
Te dynamics are dierent.
“Tis is really one o the sides o the
[bartering] business that no one’s seen,”
Wole said. “Te pickers’ story’s never been
told.”
Te episode “Super Scooter” shows
how the pair works together. Wole is
nearly drooling over a Vespa Ape scooter.
Te owner wants $5,000 or it, and Woleoers $4,500 – which is rejected. Fritz
haleartedly oers $150 or a bike but
quickly rolls over or the $200 the owner
is asking; he’s trying to soen him up or
Wole. But then Wole’s oer o $4,800 is
turned down, and he gives in to the $5,000asking price. Te t actic wasn’t successul,
but it shows viewers the process. Wole
osets the transaction by selling the Vespa
owner a sidecar rame or $600; he had paid
$400.
Some “picks” are arranged in advance,
and other times Fritz and Wole “reestyle,”
driving around the countryside looking
or promising homes, yards, and barns.
Tey bypass places where the grass is cut
too requently, or where there are new cars.
Experience tells them those properties
aren’t worth their time.
Few people realize the amount o work
that goes into the show. For the rst season’s
10 episodes, the pickers were on the road
or more than ve months, covering 20
states. Each 44-minute episode had 13
scheduled days o shooting, Wole said.
“I had no idea what I was getting into,”
he said. “We had no idea the grind it would
be.”
Tat sounds like complaining, but the
reality is that Wole has been working
toward this or ve years, when he rstbought a video camera and began recording
his picks.
Frank Fritz and Mike Wolfe
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 7/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
Continued On Page 21
by Jef Ignatius
Lujack.com866-386-1511
Just South of the Northpark Mall
MITSUBISHI
MSRP$21,973
MSRP$22,143
MSRP$22,514
2009MITSUBISHI
2009MITSUBISHI
2009MITSUBISHI
STK #Z6274
STK #Z6310
STK #Z6321
PLUS TAX, TITLE, LICENSE AND DOC FEE. WITH APPROVED CREDIT. ALL REBATES AND INCENTIVES APPLIED.
FOR RENT: Great Spaces in BucktownDavenport Riverfront!
Oce & Warehouse. High-Speed Internet, Loading Docks, Parking, River Views.
$2 to $10 per square foot – www.admospheres.comContact Todd McGreevy, Owner: 563-322-4864 or [email protected]
301 E 2nd Street, Davenport, IA 52801(aka Peterson Paper Building)
1550 sf oce – up to 10,000 sf warehouse
308 E River Drive, Davenport, IA 52801 (south of Peterson Paper)
1500 sf oce – up to 5000 sf warehouse
225 E 2nd Street, Davenport, IA 52801 Bucktown Arts Center
4th Floor Loft Condo – For Sale or Lease
3000 sf – Warm Shell – #1 River View in Quad Cities
“Five years is a long time to work onsomething,” Fritz said. “And without Mike’s
drive, we probably still wouldn’t have it onthere. He’s a pretty persistent guy.”
Colby-Cushman, who said she’s known
Wole or a decade, said she was skepticalo the show’s prospects when she rstheard the idea ve years ago. “Because o
the whole small-town mentality, I kind o thought, ‘Tere’s no way. Tere’s just noway it could happen.’” I asked whet her she
thought Wole had his head in the clouds,and she replied, “He always does, but that’s
why he gets so ar. He did it.”Wole can (and will) talk or hal an hour
on the winding road that American Pickers has taken rom idea to hit series. Te short
version is that production companies andtelevision networks were interested in theshow but never pulled the trigger on it
until History snatched it up last August andbegan shooting in early September.
“I had ideas, and ... I had all these great
tapes ... ,” Wole said, but he didn’t have aconcept. “It’s like I had all these leaves but Ihad no tree.”
Wole said he initial ly approached theyoung lmmakers o Bluebox Limitedabout editing his material, but they were
too busy. Tey sent him to Justin Anderson,proprietor o Crazy Eyes Productions.Anderson said they met in 2006 andworked together or several years. “I was
never interested in antiques, but I t houghtthe idea o a modern-day Americantreasure hunter was very cool, and the piece
we put together rom the ootage was sogrungy and real – like Indiana Jones meets
Sanord & Son,” Anderson wrote in an e-mail.
Wole would post the videos heand Anderson made on his Web site
while working with various productioncompanies and pitching it to cableoutlets. Executives rom Discovery, LC,
and Smithsonian all seemed game, butthe closest the show got to airing was adevelopment deal with Discovery. “Tat’s
or a network to throw a little bit o money at you, so they can sit on it or a long timeso no one else can get it,” Wole said.
He eventually gave the videos to PlumV, a liestyle channel shown in tony
vacation spots.
Wole said that Anderson hated thePlum V situation, but he said he wantedto get the videos in ront o these wealthy,
infuential vacationers – the type o peoplewho could do something with it i they liked it. “Someone’s seeing it,” he said. “Who
gives a shit i it’s lying in a can on my desk?”But then a LC exec hooked Wole up
with the Cinefix production company,
which pitched (and sold) it to History.Fritz’s involvement is cr itical to the
show’s success, Wole said: “I always knew
that no one was going to watch a show with just me sitting there talking to mysel. Soit was great that he and I [already] had thechemistry.”
While Wole wanted to tell the storieso collectors and objects, reality televisionthrives on relationships with amiliar aces.
Te key is to balance each episode’s stand-alone stories with the main characters.
And the personalities o Wole and Fritz
– who are both in their mid-40s – arebalanced by Colby-Cushman, who is 34 andowns the Burlesque Le Moustache troupe.
(“She’s a really cool chick,” Wole said. “Andthat’s what I want people to see in here.”)
“We’re very real people,” said Colby-
Cushman, who began working or Wolewhen production o the show started.“We’re just down-home olks. And we don’t
hide that. ... All o us have very strongpersonalities that are not easily contained.Tey have to do a lot o editing. Tey have
to bleep out a lot.”
Picking on Pickers American Pickers has drawn its share o
criticism. Comments on one blog dubbed
the show Pricks Rob Hicks and AmericanPredators, based largely on the debutepisode in which a saddle was “picked” or
$75 and was later appraised at $5,000. Critics accuse the pickers on preying on
older people.
Fritz and Colby-Cushman are dismissiveo the criticism. Fritz says the complaintscome rom “armchair quarterbacks,”
“naysayers,” and “haters,” and said that he
doesn’t pay attention to them.“You cannot please everybody,” Colby-
Cushman said. “Jesus, they killed MartinLuther King. And Mike’s not Martin LutherKing.”
But Wole seems to take it morepersonally. “Sometimes I wonder i peopleare watching the same show that we made,”
he said.Much o the criticism ignores the realities
o the business, Wole said.
For one thing, he said, t he pair isn’ttargeting senior citizens; they are simply
more likely to own the objects that Fritz andWole want. “I’m not looking or someonein their 80s; I’m looking or old stu,” Wolesaid. “When you drive down these roads,
that’s who has the stu – older people.”More importantly, an appraisal doesn’t
necessarily refect a realistic sale price.
Wole said his aim is to turn items aroundquickly, not to earn top dollar.
“When you get into this business, you
need to sell,” Fritz said. “Being able tofip your stu is very, very important. I
probably keep too much. ... We all want
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 8/28
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
Vol. 1, No. Marc 1 1, 010
532 W. 3rd St.
Davenport IA 52801
RiverCitiesReader.com
(563)324-0049 (phone)
(563)323-3101 (ax)
Publishing since 1993
The River Cities’ Reader is an independent newspaper
published every other Thursday, and available ree
throughout the Quad Cities and surrounding areas.
© 2009 River Cities’ Reader
DEADLINES
• To submit a letter to the editor,
([email protected]): 5 p.m. Wednesday
• To submit items to our calendar o events,
([email protected]): 5 p.m. Wednesday
• To submit items to City Shorts column,
([email protected]): 5 p.m. Wednesday
• To purchase a display ad,
([email protected]): 5 p.m. Wednesday
• To purchase a classifed ad,([email protected]): 10 a.m. Monday
PUBLISHER Todd McGreevy
EDITOR Kathleen McCarthy
EDITORIAL Managing Editor: Je Ignatius • [email protected]
Arts Editor, Calendar Editor: Mike Schulz • [email protected]
Contributing Writers: Amy Alkon, Rob Brezsny, Lynn Campbell,
Luke Hamilton, Rich Miller, Jill Walsh, Thom White
ADVERTISING Account Executives:
Chris Walljasper • [email protected]
Advertising Coordinator: Katie Bergthold
Advertising rates, publishing schedule, demographics,and more are available at
QCAdvertising.com
PRODUCTION Art Director, Production Manager: Shawn Eldridge •
[email protected] Artist - Nathan Klaus
Production/Design Intern - Nathan Ortner
ADMINISTRATION Business Manager: Kathleen McCarthy
Oce Administrator, Classifeds Manager, Circulation Manager:Rick Martin • [email protected]
Distribution: William Cook, Cheri DeLay, Greg FitzPatrick, TylerGibson, Daniel Levsen, J.K. Martin, Jay Strickland
By Thom White
I
there’s one wordI’d use to bestdescribe Playcraers
Barn Teatre’s currentproduction, it wouldbe “nice.” And while
that can be taken as anunfattering adjective,or Te O’Conner Girls
I mean it as a positiveone; I le the opening-night perormance with
a smile on my ace, oneawash with the sweetnostalgia and dash o
humor that put it there.Te O’Conner Girls
takes place over thecourse o two days,during which twin sistersMartha (Lisa Kahn) andLiz (Pamela Crouch)– having just buriedtheir ather – are nowhelping their mother,Sara (Jan Golz), clean out the house. Marthaspent the last year taking care o her ather,losing sleep along with any semblance o a personal lie. Liz did her part by sendingmoney home, even aer losing her husbandand her job. Now, however, Sara is ready tosell the amily home and head o to Europe,and Te O’Conner Girls nds the threewomen sharing these and other secrets withone another, secrets that end up changingtheir lives.
Written by Katie Forgette, the script
does not oer new ideas or creativeplotlines. Instead, its strength is in itsrealistic dialogue. Rather than delivering
the pretentious, overly dramatic linesyou oen nd in weaker scripts, or theexquisitely poetic but loy monologues o
stronger plays, these characters speak asreal people do. Te eect created is like aslice o lie, where it’s easier to believe we’re
actually looking in on a real amily in a realsituation, rather than something staged.
In her directorial debut at Playcraers,
Susan Zelnio cras a production thatembraces that sense o realism, as do herleads. Golz has a way o taking lines that
may not have been written with humorand delivering them with an infectionthat creates a bit o o-the-cu, slightly
The O’Conner Girls, at the Playcraters Barn Theatre through March 21
T Pluc o t Iris
sarcastic un. Kahn oers a sweetly sincere
perormance, adding just enough hints atMartha’s being overburdened and tired;
her acial expressions are a bit overdonewhen simply reacting to others, but this isarguably the most unaected perormanceI’ve yet seen rom Kahn. Te same could be
said o Crouch (although her perormancein the Harrison Hilltop Teatre’s Steel Magnolias, also eaturing Kahn, was quite
enjoyable). In past shows, I’ve seen Crouchoverdo her perormances, but here it wasrereshing to see her let the lines simply
fow, rather than using them to orce acharacter.
Don Faust portrays Dr. David Stevens,
a longtime amily riend and secret loveinterest o Martha, and seems to be overly aware o the audience, oen delivering his
gestures toward those watching the play rather than those perorming in it. As inprevious productions in which I’ve seen
him (most notably Harrison Hilltop’s TeGraduate), it’s apparent that Faust likes toperorm and enjoys pleasing an audience.
Here, however, his tendency to play to theaudience is a distraction, although – as it’sconned to his body language –at least it’s
a minor one; Faust’s line deliveries projecta more honest nature, and make his D r.Stevens a simple, likable man.
It’s Judy Luster
as Aunt Martha,however, who
almost stealsthe show. Lusterdoesn’t seem tobe araid to play
things big – romdramatic highs andlows in infection
to uninhibitedphysical movement– yet doesn’t allowher perormance
to dri into
caricature, keepingit believable. And
she’s just so darncute! She had mewishing her Martha
was my aunt, too.Scenically, Te
O’Conner Girls marks the rstplay I’ve seen at
Playcraers where the perormers are notorced to pantomime opening a downstagedoor. (I loathe seeing actors pretend to turn
a doorknob or slide open a window that isnot actually there, especially when it’s theonly set piece they and the audience areorced to imagine.) For this production,Zelnio, who also ser ves as set designer,chose to include a hinged decorative board(and actual knob) to represent a ull doorwithout blocking anyone’s view. It’s such aclever piece that I actually took a moment tomarvel at it ... only to be disappointed when,during its rst usage, Golz closed the doorand reached up to fip on a pretend light
switch. Sigh.As it concerns an Irish Catholicamily, Te O’Conner Girls would seeman appropriate production or the days
surrounding St. Patrick’s Day. Yet while, orme, it’s preerable to a mug o green beer,it doesn’t matter that Playcraers chose to
stage this play during the holiday – thisproduction would be just as nice any timeo the year.
For more inormation and tickets, call (309)762-0330 or visit Playcraers.com.
Tom White is the entertainment newsreporter on WQAD Quad Cities News 8.
Jan Golz, Lisa Kahn, and Pamela Crouch
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 9/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 10/28
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
10
GREEN ZONE Set in Baghdad during the early months o 2002,
director Paul Greengrass’ action thriller Green Zone casts Matt Damon as a stalwart, driven military ocer who gradually discovers that the Americangovernment liedabout the prolieration– even the existence– o Iraqi weapons o mass destruction. Tis
might strike you asold news, and it is. Tedisappointing surpriseo Green Zone, though,is that the movie itsel should eel like suchold news, and in ways that have nothing to dowith Greengrass and Damon re-teaming aer theconsiderable artistic and popular successes o theirBourne Supermacy and Bourne Ultimatum lms.
It takes a while or that realization to sink in,mostly because Greengrass is such a no-rillswizard at composition and choreography; theskirmishes, assaults, and chase sequences – shotin hand-held, vérité style by Te Hurt Locker cinematographer Barry Ackroyd – are beautiully executed. Yet despite the lm’s technical acumenand Damon’s expectedly magnetic stoicism, youcan’t shake the eeling that this ction inspired by truth is a little too ... well ... fctional , twisting eventso unimaginable complexity into a conveniently simplistic, one-man-bucking-the-system narrative.(Te movie ends with the swelling o John Powell’striumphant-hero score, which suggests, “ ...and everyone in Iraq lived happily ever aer!”)Brian Helgeland’s fat, prosaic script doesn’t helpmatters, nor do the oddly unocused supportingturns by Greg Kinnear, Brendan Gleeson, andAmy Ryan (who, as a compromised Wall Street Journal reporter, appears to be wincing her way through her dialogue). But in all honesty, GreenZone is never more chilling than when recountingPresident Bush’s notorious “mission accomplished”press conerence or the announcement o thedismantling o Iraq’s army; on any level you canname, those real-lie horrors trump Greengrass’and Helgeland’s invented, discouragingly roteaction-thriller horrors. In the end, the movie isproessionally assembled but easy to tune outon, and so little o it is reshly imagined that youcan nd your mind wandering in odd directionsthroughout. Whatever its lmmakers wanted us totake rom the overly amiliar experience o GreenZone, I’m doubting it’s the thought that Damonand Kinnear were actually preerable co-stars whenplaying conjoined twins in Stuck on You.
REMEMBER ME Your reaction to the romantic drama Remember
Me will largely, i not completely, depend onyour eelings toward its nale, which I’ve readreviewers and online commentators describe as agrossly exploitative, unprepared-or shock. I won’t
necessarily argue with that rst part, but the climaxseemed to me nothing but anticipated; I’m sorry,but i (SPOILER ALER ... I guess ... ) a lm opensin Manhattan in 1991, then oers a “10 Years Later”title card, then delivers a melancholic love story while May slowly turns to September ... . Well, by
then, should there really be any question as to whatlie-altering event theplot is leading toward? I you’re alert to, and can
handle, director AllenCoulter’s and screenwriterWill Fetters’ inevitabledestination, you might ndthis contrived yet hearteltlove story between
damaged souls (wilight ’s Robert Pattinson and Lost ’sEmilie de Ravin, both very ne) a solid, emotionally resonant tearjerker that nicks at your insides inunexpected ways. I not, at least you’ve been warned.Kind o.
SHE’S OUT OF MY LEAGUE
Crass, predictable, yet intermittently entertaining,She’s Out o My League gives away its entire plot in itstitle, with Jay Baruchel’s skinny nebbish spending 90-ish minutes distrustul o the aections o his perect-10 girlriend (played by the sunny, riendly Alice Eve,who seems deserving o that numerical ranking).Despite the occasional bodily-fuid and ball-shavinggags, director Jim Field Smith’s debut eature is awispy little throwaway o a movie – the laughs match
the groans in pretty much equal measure – and itculminates in one o those race-through-the-airportclimaxes that became old hat, oh, about a zillionromantic comedies ago. Still, there are worse ways
to piss away your time than with an ensemble thisenjoyable: Beyond the agreeably mismatched leads,She’s Out o My League nds room or terrically likable, even witty turns by Nate orrence, Mike
Vogel, Lindsay Sloane, Kyle Bornheimer, KrystenRitter, and that abulous Tat ’70s Show mom DebraJo Rupp, who at one point here steals a scene merely by grinning, giggling, and happily jumping up anddown. Which is pretty much my reaction any timeRupp shows up anywhere.
OUR FAMILY WEDDING
Te deathly obvious, staggeringly ununny Our Family Wedding concerns an Arican-Americanather (Forest Whitaker, wayout o his element) anda Hispanic-American ather (Carlos Mencia, all tooin his element) who are grudgingly orced to acceptthe mixed-race marriage o the ormer’s son (LanceGross) and the latter’s daughter (America Ferrera).In one scene, or reasons not worth explaining, agoat runs amok in Whitaker’s bathroom, downs theman’s supply o Viagra, and proceeds to hump hisleg to high heaven. Aerward, the animal makes eyecontact with Whitaker and bleats, “Call me,” and as itwalks away ... . Yeah, I think that’s all you really need
to know.
LISTeN TO MIk e eVeRy FRIDAy AT AM ON ROCk 10- FM wIT h DAVe & DARReN
Mismas Accomplisd
Greg Kinnear and Matt Damon
in Green Zone
Movie Reviewsby Mike Schulz • [email protected] Mike Schulz • [email protected]
Movie Reviews
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 11/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
11
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 12/28
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1
, 2
0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
1
Cancer Survivor Christina Marie Myatt Perorms an April 3 Beneft or the Genesis Center o Breast Health
In t Fac o an Unsn enmby Mike Schulz
In 2005, Christina Marie Myatt – president o
the Countryside Community Teatre’s board o directors and owner/artistic director o
Davenport’s Center Stage Perorming Arts Academy
– was diagnosed with breast cancer. And not long aerward, as she recalled in our interview, she
received a visit rom her parents.“Tey came out when I was getting ready to go or
chemotherapy or the frst time,” says Myatt, “and mydad said, ‘I brought you a gi.’ I opened it, and it was
his Purple Heart rom when he was in Vietnam. And I said, ‘Why would you give this to me? I can’t take
this.’ And he said, ‘When they hand you this medal,
they tell you that this medal is or bravery in the aceo an unseen enemy. And watching you, that is what
you are doing right now.’”
Tat medal, says Myatt, “is now in my bedroom,
in its own little shadow box, with a little notethat says, ‘For bravery in the ace o an unknown
enemy.’” Yet as she well knows, Myatt is but one o millions who have bravely ought breast cancer, and
it’s her hope to help raise awareness and unds or the continued struggle through her April 3 cabaret
perormance at Davenport’s Col Ballroom –An
Evening with Christina Marie: A Benet or the
Genesis Center or Breast Health.
Backed by pianist Tea Engelson and Rod
Pierson’s (Not-So) Big Band – an ensemble o musicians recruited rom Pierson’s bigger Big Band
– Myatt will perorm a blend o period standards
(“Happy Days Are Here Again,” “Boogie WoogieBugle Boy,” “Fly Me to the Moon”) and showtunes
(“I Get a Kick Out o You,” “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” “Being Alive”), with all proceeds benefting the local
treatment center that ostered Myatt’s recovery. Teevent celebrates Myatt not only entering her fh
year o survivorship but also her 40th birthday on April 2, and the gied, unny, and optimistic area
talent recently sat down to discuss her illness, her recovery, and the power that the arts have on her
positive outlook.
Tis Is Not Good Myatt frst discovered a lump in 2005, during a
routine sel-exam, and says that even aer being diagnosed with Stage 1 Intraductual Carcinoma,
she and husband William chose not to share thenews with all o their riends and amily members
– including their young children.
I had always done sel-exams; I haveendometriosis, so I’d done them rom a very youngage. So one time, through the routine, I oundsomething. And I went to the doctor, who said to
me, “You’re 35 years old. It can’t be anything. Tatdoesn’t make any sense.”
So I went in or t he mammogram, and I don’t
know whether you’d call it a sick eeling, but they’ddo one test and then go, “Oh, we need to do morepictures ... .” Ten, “Oh, we need to do this test ...
.” And the doctor’ssaying, “Oh, that’sinteresting. I’ve never
really seen anythinglike that beore ... .”And you’re sittingthere going, “Tis
is not good.” Tenit was, “Now youhave to wait over
the weekend or theresults,” and I justknew, all through
the weekend, howthe tests were gonna
come back. And they did.
My daughter, at the time, was three, and my stepson was seven, and my husband and I sat down
and I said, “I want their lie to be normal. I don’twant their lie to be about this.” So we made a bolddecision not to tell them. I know that lots o people
say, “How could you do that?”, but I just didn’t wantthings to be about ... that I had cancer. I didn’t wantto be the poster child or anything. I just wanted
something in lie that was normal, where we couldhave our daily routine, and have un ... . So wedidn’t tell them.
All my co-workers knew, because I had to tellthem; there were just certain things I couldn’t do,or I’d get too ill. And some riends knew. I didn’t
take the time to callall o them. I called one riendand said, “Guess what. It’s your responsibility totell other people, because I can’t make these phone
calls.” And my parents knew, o course, but evenmy whole amily didn’t know. I had an uncle whohad brain cancer, and my grandparents had already
been in and out o the hospital, and it was like, “We
can’t add this on there. We just can’t.”
So to t his day, some amily members don’t know.Tey’re coming to the cabaret, though, so we’regoing to share it with them beore that. Because Ican’t do the cabaret and not talk about it.
hug BlssingsWishing to keep her daily routine as close
to normal as possible, Myatt continued withher job (rom 2001 to 2008) as the Putnam
Museum’s theatrical programming coordinator. “I missed
work when I had my chemotherapytreatments,” she says,“and I missed whenI was out or surgery– they ask you to takea week o becauseo everything you’re
going through. But that was it. I did radiation during my lunch hour, and
then come back.” Tankully, she also had a strong support systemthere to assist her.
My parents were great. Tey had come to st ay with us when we started chemotherapy, becausewe didn’t know what was gonna happen and
what it was gonna be like, and i the kids neededsomething, they could be a nice diversion.
I was very lucky, because I didn’t have a loto nausea. But there were certainly days where I
didn’t eel well, and just wanted to be le alone, anddidn’t want to have anything to do with the kids.And that’s when my ather would sweep in and say,
“Hey! Guess what! We’re gonna go to Happy Joe’s!”And the kids were like, “Oh, Happy Joe’s!” Tat wasa huge blessing.
But there were moments at home when I wouldeel horrible, and my little girl would go, “Look,Mommy!” And she’d sing some song rom a show
that I did, and it would be hysterical. Just laughing helped. And my husband ... . Tere were days,during the process, when just having him there
was all I needed to make everything else go away.
You know, these things you take or granted every
single day all o a sudden become so vivid to you.I can’t imagine what it would’ve been like to go
through this alone. I mean, I consider mysel a very
strong person, but I’m not sure that I could have
done that without anybody else. Tere were so
many times where I knew it had nothing to do with
me that I made it through the day.
wondrul, Porul TingBeyond work and amily, Myatt says she also
continued to fnd comort in the arts, choreographing Pleasant Valley High School’s Crazy or You,
and directing Countryside Community Teatre’s2006 production o Oliver! while undergoing chemotherapy treatments.
When I rst ound out I was sick, I went to the
[Countryside] board and said, “I’ll understand i
you don’t want me to do this. But right now, I don’t
have anything that’s holding me back, so it’s up to
you.” And they said, “No, we trust you.” And people
like [previous Center Stage owner] Shellee Frazee,
and other olks that I knew, said, “I you need
somebody to step in – like i you need somebody to
show moves to the cast – I can do that.” Everybody
was willing to be supportive o the process, whichwas really kind o cool.
So I did the best that I could. It was hard
sometimes, but once you get to a certain point
in directing, you get to sit back a lot. So when I
was having bad days, I could sit, and it was okay.
And Page Grubb was my music director. He
passed away two years ago rom cancer, but he
had had cancer beore, so he’d been through it, and
sometimes, just all o a sudden, he’d say something
to make me laugh because he knew I wasn’t eeling
well.
Te arts are a wonderul, powerul thing. I
mean, I always thought that I hated the show Annie[which Myatt will actually direct or Countryside
this summer]. I swore that I would never, ever
direct that show in my lie, and i anybody did it,
I’d run as ar away as I could. But you know what?
Tere’s something about that show, like Oliver! – that in the dark o an orphanage, in the dark o
the streets, there are people who are still happy.
Who nd joy. You want to sit back and say, “Where
Continued On Page 18
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 13/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
1
Feels likeVegas!
Tastes likeVegas...
Looks likeVegas...
Looking for real Vegas-style gaming excitement?
The loosest and biggest selection of slots? Weekly slot and poker tournaments? You’regoing to love Jumer’s, voted the “Best Casino” in the Quad Cities!
Eat like a King, too! Our Player’s Buffet, voted the area’s “Best Buffet”, features:
Surf ‘N’ Turf Buffet—Fri. & Sat. 4pm-10pm......................................................$9.99*Champagne Brunch—Sun. 10am-3pm...............................................................$9.99**Late Night Steak ‘N’ Eggs Buffet—Fri. & Sat. 11pm-2am.................................$5.99***And don’t forget DJ’s Steakhouse, chosen as the Quad Cities’ “Best New Restaurant”.
Music? We’ve got the Edje! We bring you the Quad Cities’ finest live entertain-
ment. Showtimes are 8pm-12am Fri. & Sat. Never a cover—always FREE!
March 19–20 Pappa Razzi March 26–27 The Gray Wolf Band
April 2–3 Blue Collar Band April 9–10 Tronicity
It’s truly Style at Jumer’s!
Looking f V e g a s
I-280 and Hwy 92, Exit 11-A • Rock Island, IL309-756-4600 • 800-477-7747 • Open 7am-5am daily
The Australian Bee Gees: A Tribute to the Bee GeesIn Concert March 27–8pmTickets $20 with IMAGE Play ers card,$25 without
Purchase at Gi� Shop or call800-477-7747
If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can beaccessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537). *With IMAGE Players Club Card—$14.99without card. **With IMAGE Players Club Card—$13.99 without card. ***With IMAGE Players ClubCard—$7.99 without card.
A L W A Y
S SMO K E
- F R E E ! Visit Us On Facebook
Looking for something to do during Spring Break? Look no
further! The Family Museum has ten great days of spring break
programming for your family to enjoy. All events and
performances are included with admission or membership.
Sponsored by
Spring Break Spectacular!
Jim Gill
Insect Zoo (2 days)
Metropolitan Youth Program
MOvMNT Dance Company
Visit www.familymuseum.org for a complete
listing of dates, times, and events.
Going Green Art Days (2 days)
Niabi Zoo
Opera Iowa!
Mad Science
Week One
March 15-19
Week Two
March 22-26
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 14/28
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 , 2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
1
wat’s happenin’TheatreTroilus & Cressida1616 Second Avenue, The District o Rock Island
Friday, March 19, through Sunday, March 28
The arrival o William Shakespeare’s roilus& Cressida, the latest anything-goes oering
by the Prenzie Players, is a pretty huge deal, asdirector Maggie Woolley’s production is the rstto be staged in the classical-theatre troupe’s very own space, located at 1616 Second Avenue in theDistrict o Rock Island.
It’s also a pretty huge deal based on the c ast,
which eatures a quintet o gied area actors (PatFlaherty, Michael King, Brianne Kinney, MattMercer, and Steven Quartell) making their debuts
in a Prenzie endeavor, plusperormers (Stephanie Bur
David Furness, Andrew KoMcFarren, Matt Moody, BeYoder) amiliar rom previo
As or the plot to this in I actually wrote my nal excollege, but that was so mathat I don’t quite trust my me oer this description, stPlayers Web site:
“In the seventh year o thprince o roy, loves Cressiroilus seeks to woo CressiPandarus, though Cressida
MusicTantricRock Island Brewing Company
Saturday, March 27, 9 p.m.
“The unny thingabout going through
struggles,” says HugoFerreira, lead singer o thealternative rock band antric,“is that struggles make youinteresting.”
Man, what an interestingband antric is!Formed in 1999 with ormer
Merge rontman Ferreiraand three ormer memberso Days o the New – Mattaul, Jesse Vest, and oddWhitener – antric initially ound wild success with itssel-titled, platinum-sellingdebut album, smash singles in“Breakdown” and “Astounded,”and a national tour alongsideKid Rock and Creed. Tegroup’s career trajectory took aslight downward turn with thesomewhat disappointing saleso 2004’s Afer We Go, but theCD still yielded a top-10 hitwith the single “Hey Now,”and antric continued to tour,this time with ellow rockersShinedown and 3 DoorsDown.
And then ... .Vest lef the group, to be
replaced by Bruce LaFrance, in2005. antric parted ways with
its collapsing label, Maverick Records, in 2006. aul wasarrested on drug-relatedcharges in 2007. Whitener lefthe group in 2007. LaFrancelef the group in 2007. And thegroup’s third album peaked atnumber 91 on the Billboard charts. Its ironic title? Te End Begins.
Ah, but it ain’t over ’til it’sover, as you’ll witness whenantric brings its unrestrainedpost-grunge sound tothe Rock Island BrewingCompany on March 27. Withlead singer Ferreira joiningRichie Monica, Joe Pessia,Erik Leonhardt, and MarcusRatzenboeck, the group iscelebrating the release o itsrecent CD Mind Control , andwhile the band’s lineup may have changed, its rontmansays its name won’t. “I’m stillthe one who believes in it,” hesays. And besides, “I’ve got thething tattooed on my arm.”Which is exactly why I’m notallowed to nd a replacementor my mother.
For more inormation onantric’s RIBCO appearance,call (309)793-4060 or visit
RIBCO.com.
LiteratureCecil MurpheyMidwest Writing Center and The Outing ClubSaturday, March 20
When you learn that Davenportnative Cecil Murphey will soon
be leading a workshop titled “Why Can’t
You Be an Extraordinary Writer?”, yourrst response might easily be, “So whois he to teach me about writing?” Well,
according to the press materials Iwas sent, it appears that Murphey is qualied or the gig, as he’s hadthree books published: WhenSomeone You Love Has Cancer,When God urned O the Lights,and Christmas Miracles.
Oh, wait. My mistake. Toseare the books he had published last year .Murphey is actually the author o morethan 100 books, and apparently has nineothers set or release.
Fine. So he’s really, really, really
qualied.With works including the
nationwide bestseller 90 Minutesin Heaven – included on USAoday’s list o the 150 bestsellingbooks o the past 15 years – andcitations including the AdvancedWriters & Speakers Association’s
Lietime Achievement Award and theAmerican Society o Journalists &Authors’ Extraordinary Service Award,Murphey is clearly one o America’s mostprolic and lauded inspirational writers.
Andwhenand ton M
Atkeyno theDaviBanqthatand awriteCent
TheatreThe Pajama GameProspect Park Auditorium
Thursday, March 25 through Saturday, March 28
You want to know how long I’ve loved the Broadway musical Te Pajama Game? Its storyline concerns a
nightwear-actory union that’s demanding a raise o seven-
and-a-hal cents an hour, and when I rst saw the show, that
seemed like a healthy chunk o change.O course, there are plenty o people
who’ve adored Richard Adler’s andJerry Ross’ musical-comedy classic orar longer than I have. Te winner o three 1955 ony Awards including BestMusical – with Te Pajama Game’s2006 Broadway remount, starringHarry Connick Jr., winning the awardor Best Revival – this sensational entertainment is lled withlaughs, romance, and one o the most memorable scores in
American theatre. rust me, you won’t be able to get such
songs as “HClock,” “HeOnce Was a“Steam Heatyou won’t w
RunningAuditoriumdirector Kevrst outing i
2010 season, and i you’ve seenshow over the past ve years, y
Guild talent you recognize. A
David Furness as Hector
J. Adam Lounsberry and Kelly Thompson-Reyes
Equal Employment Opportunity • Equal Housing Opportunity
Morning Star Senior Residences Opening Soon!
A Great Place you’ll be proud to call home!Morning Star Senior Residences is co-sponsored by DisciplesUniting in the Quad Cities and United Church Homes, Inc. It ismanaged by United Church Homes, Inc.
Morning Star Senior Residences is an apartment communitylocated in the city of Moline. To be eligible, applicants must meetrental criteria and be age 62 or older as defned in the HUD 202elderly program.
Applications Available
When: March 30 • Time: 10AM-2PMLocation: Morning Star Housing located at 3551 6th Ave. in Moline, IL.
For questions, please call 800-613-2462 ext 2034 • TTY: 800-750-0750
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 15/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C
u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
1
Valid now through 4/15/10.
Reader 3/18
© 2010 Isle o Capri Casinos, Inc. Must be 21 or older. Management reserves the right to cancel or change the promotion
at any time without prior notifcation. Limit one per person per day. Not valid with any other oer. Gambling a problem?
There is help. And hope. Call 1-800-BETS-OFF.
101 West River DriveDavenport, IA 52801
www.rhythmcitycasino.com
Follow us on @ RCCASINO.
by Mike Schulz
MUSICSaturday, March 20 – The Pointer
Sisters. Grammy-winning pop and soul
singers in concert. Riverside Casino &Gol Resort (3184 Highway 22, Riverside).8 p.m. $40-$55. For inormation and
tickets, call (319)648-1234 or visitRiversideCasinoAndResort.com.
Sunday, March 21 – Toscanellie
“Lady T.” Marcelain. Chicago-based jazz vocalist, bandleader, and educatorperorms as part o Polyrhythms’ ThirdSunday Jazz Matinée & Workshop Series.
The Redstone Room (129 Main Street,Davenport). 3 p.m. All-ages workshop:$5/adult, children ree; 6 p.m. concert:
$10-$15, students ree. For tickets andinormation, call (563)326-1333 or visitPolyrhythms.org.
Friday, March 26 – The DaredevilChristopher Wright. Independent
musicians perorming with FloatingAction and Middle Distance, in an all-ages concert sponsored by Daytrotter.Huckleberry’s Great Pizza & Calzones (223
18th Street, Rock Island). 7 p.m. $6-$8. Forinormation, e-mail [email protected] or visit Daytrotter.com.
Saturday, March 27 – Mustard Plug. Michigan-based indie rockers in concert,with opening acts Firesale and The
Agrestix. The Redstone Room (129 MainStreet, Davenport). 7 p.m. $12. For ticketsand inormation, call (563)326-1333 or
visit RedstoneRoom.com.
Continued On Page 18
wat elsIs happnin’
batch o excellentough, Jaci Entwistle,
ki, J.C. Luxton, Coleh Woolley, and Deniseus Prenzie endeavors.equently produced title,m on it or a course iny beers – er, years – agoemory. Instead, letlen rom the Prenzie
e rojan War, roilus, aa, daughter to a traitor.a through her uncle,
secretly loves roilus
as well. Meanwhile, the Greeks, encamped outsidethe walls o roy, are suering rom dissension
among the ranks, and cannot move orward in theirgoal to seize roy until order is returned. A tale o love, war, and betrayal, roilus & Cressida is one o Shakespeare’s most controversial plays, whippingbetween bawdy comedy and gritty tragedy in a dark exploration o the classic heroes o Te Iliad .”
Hey, I’m doing Cyrano de Bergerac with thegroup in May; I’m working or them, they can work or me a little.
roilus & Cressida runs Fridays through Sundays,March 19 through 28, and inormation is availableby visiting the group’s Web site at PrenziePlayers.com.
MusicCowboy JunkiesThe Redstone Room
Wednesday, March 24, 8:30 p.m.
One o the most beloved andenduring o alt-country
bands, the Canadian outtthe Cowboy Junkies has beencomposed o musical siblingsMargo, Michael, and Peterimmins and longtime bassist palAlan Anton or more than two
decades. Since its debut in 1985,the hugely popular and critically acclaimed group has released morethan 20 studio records, live albums,and compilations; has perormedon Saturday Night Live; has touredEurope, the United States, and
its home tur o Canada; and hasbecome rmly enmeshed in popculture through songs heard inOliver Stone’s Natural Born Killersand Margo’s 1990 acknowledgmentas one o People magazine’s “50most beautiul people in the world.”
Yet some o you might think that you still don’t know all thatmuch about the group. I beg todier. ry matching the Cowboy Junkies’ impressive proessionalaccomplishments with the recentyears in which they occurred; Iguarantee you know more thanyou might think.
nspiration will no doubt be on handthe author shares his experienceslents in two Davenport appearancesrch 20.
6 p.m., Murphey will serve as thete speaker or the 30th anniversary Midwest Writing Center’s annualR. Collins Literary Awardset, an evening at the Outing Clubill eature dinner, an auction,ards and recognition or local
s. And at the Midwest Writingr itsel, rom 1 to 3 p.m., Murphey
will unveil the dierence between awriter who sells a thousand copies o abook and one who sells a million in theaorementioned workshop “Why Can’tYou Be an Extraordinary Writer?” I’dconsider attending mysel, but you know,I hear that question rom my bosses every damned day o my lie ... .
Pre-resigtration or both CecilMurphey events is strongly encouraged,and inormation on both is availableby calling (563)324-1410 or visitingMidwestWritingCenter.org.
y Tere,” “Racing with thenando’s Hideaway,” “Tere
an,” and the jazzy classicout o your head. Moreover,
nt to.t Moline’s Prospect Park
March 25 through 28,n Pieper’s production is theQuad City Music Guild’s
even oneProspect Park u’ll see the return o a Music
ong the show’s perormers:
J. Adam (Te Producers) Lounsberry, Shana ( All ShookUp) Lavino, Joe (Once Upon a Mattress) Urtbaitis, Kelly (Seussical ) Tompson-Reyes, Dan (You’re a Good Man,Charlie Brown) McGinn, Chris ( Joseph & the Amazing echnicolor Dreamcoat ) Castle, John Donald (Little Women)O’Shea, Mark ( Miracle on 34th Street ) Holmes, and Dave(Nuncrackers) Bailey.
I’m (Really ruly Awully) impressed.Te Pajama Game will be perormed at 7:30 p.m.
Tursday through Saturday and at 2 p.m. on Sunday; ormore inormation and tickets, call (309)762-6610 or visit
QCMusicGuild.com.
1) 20032) 20043) 20054) 20065) 20076) 20087) 20098) 2010
A) First perormance at Carnegie HallB) Release o Te ime Beore Llamas, a collection o songs
written between 1990 and 1992C) Sold-out concert in oronto, with Te rinity Session
songs played in sequenceD) On-stage reunion with brother John immins or the
rst time in 20 yearsE) Release o the band’s ninth studio album, One Soul NowF) Perormance with the Louisville Symphony G) Perormance with the Boston PopsH) March 24 concert at Davenport’s Redstone Room
A n s w e r s : 1 – B , 2 – E , 3 – D , 4 – A , 5 – G , 6 – C , 7 – F , 8 – H . S e e ? T e l l m e y o u d i d n ’ t g e t a t l e a s t o n e r i g h t ! T i c k e t s f o r t h e C o w b o y J u n k i e s ’ l o c a l
c o n c e r t a r e $ 3 7 . 5 0 , t h e g r o u p p e r f o r m s w i t h o p e n e r s L e e H a r v e y O s m o n d , a n d m o r e o n t h e n i g h t i s a v a i l a b l e b y c a l l i n g ( 5 6 3 ) 3 2 6 - 1 9 3 3 o r v i s i t i n g R e d s t o n e R o o m . c o m .
presents…
309-762-6610www.qcmusicguild.com
March 25, 26, 27, 28Prospect Park Auditorium, Moline
Curtain Times 7:30pm Thurs, Fri, Sat, and 2:00pm Sun
Tickets: $15
Children $9
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 16/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 , 2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
16
Corrine Smith, Through April at MidCoast Gallery West
“N to M”
by Jef Ignatius
The tree jumps out.And the buildings.And the still lie.
In the new show o 26works by mixed-mediaartist Corrine Smith,
these mundane objectsare nearly shocking.Smith, who teaches design
at Augustana College,said she encourages herstudents to think o shape
or shape’s sake, color orcolor’s sake, and textureor texture’s sake. “I’m very
much a ormalist in thatway,” she said recently.“Composition is a stickler
or me.”Her painting or the past
three decades has ollowed
those rules with abstract,sophisticated treatments o the most basic rectangular
and round orms. (“I don’tthink that I have exhaustedthose shapes yet,” she said.
“I’m not the least bit tiredo them at all.”)
So even though much
o the work in the newshow (which runs throughApril at MidCoast Gallery West in downtown Rock
Island) ts comortably inher pure-design aesthetic,something approaching
representative painting –in her Shelter series and in the tabletop stilllie Te Blue Olive – appears to represent a
radical shif. Shelter #9 is clearly meant as apair o buildings and a tree.
“Tat’s all really new to me,” she said o
this transition.Shelter Series #14 is not as easily
identiable, and Smith said the “buildings”
can also be seen as two people. Te tree ismissing its crown. “I suppose I didn’t putthe little green top on there because it kind
o reaked me out that I made a tree,” shesaid.
Tat’s a hint that this development in her
work has come as a surprise to the artist.“I don’t know where these things are
coming rom,” she said. “I kind o do like
it, actually. I don’t know it leaves as muchto the imagination ... but it’s still really newor me. I guess I’ll continue it or a while.”
At the end o last year, she said, shebegan looking at houses while on walksand got stuck on the idea o homes. She
thought about them as containers o
belongings, and about how the loss o a home or many people represents the
loss o their wealth, tied up as it is in
possessions. And the Shelter series was
born.
And those ideas dovetailed with a pair
o earthquakes. “Tere are a lot o disasters
happening in the world,” Smith said.
Other developments in her work have
been more gradual. “I think I’ve gotten a
little bit tighter over the years,” she said.
“I’ve gotten into a lot more layering and
a lot more planning. ... I’ve gotten into
making paper and exploring a large variety
o handmade paper, which then kind
o leads me into a little more interest inpattern.”
Her older works, she said, “might be a
little more painterly. ... I think these are
a little cleaner. ... I think these are more
controlled or some reason.”
Each work, she said, starts with two
or three line drawings laid on top o
each other, providing the compositional
ramework. She begins with a color scheme
in mind.
Yet Smith emphasized that her process
is intuitive: “I always let the painting paintitsel ... ,” she said.
And even though the basic structure is
one o the rst things sheestablishes, she rotates
the work while it’s inprogress. “Te top isconstantly changing,” she
said. “I don’t know whatis the top [edge] until it’sdone.”
Tat, o course,changes the nature o thework. urned one way, it
might be bottom-heavy.
urned another, it mighteel like it’s leaning to
the right. “It’s all aboutasymmetrical balance,”Smith said. “I tend to likethings that are weighted
on top, because I think it dees gravity a littlebit ... .”
Aside rom the Shelter series, don’t expect Smithto attach meaning to her
works. Viewers mightsee symbolism in aparticular shape or area,
she said, but “I ofenlove the shape o beans,”she said. “It’s just that
simple.”Te oldest works
in this show date to
September 2009, andthat’s a testament to howprolic Smith is. “I treat
it like a job,” she said.
She’s long had a goal o creating 100 works in a year, which she rst
surpassed with 102 in 2008. (“I never countuntil the very end,” she said.) She made 117paintings last year, she said, and sold 85.
She has a goal o creating two paintingsa week. “I you talk to most artists, it’s kindo insane,” she said.
Smith said that she works on paintings“one at a time. Always.” Beginning a newwork when she gets stumped by another,
she said, would be a cop-out. “You just haveto keep working on it,” she said. “I don’t
believe in starting another one just becausethe one you’re working on doesn’t work.You have to resolve it and then go on to thenext.”
Corrine Smith’s work is on display at MidCoast Gallery West (1629 Second Avenue in Rock Island) through April; theexhibit also eatures the ceramics o AshleyFulton. A closing reception will be held rom6 to 9 p.m. on April 16.
For more inormation on Corrine Smith, visit http://www.CorrineSmith.Home.MCHSI.com.
TOP: Corrine Smith in front of Blue Olive.
ABOVE: Shelter Series #14.
LEFT: Shelter #9.
Ma y 19 & 20 • 7:30pm
Adler Theatr e • Davenpor tCall 800-745-3000
Tic k ets available at the Adler Theatr e Box Of fic e,tic k etmaster.c om and all outlets.
Disc ounts f orGr oups! Call 563-326-8555
a
series
presents
www.Beaut y AndTheBeastOnTour.c om
© D i s n e y
NETworks presents
Be Our Guest!
On Sale Now!
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 17/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C
u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2 0 1 0
1
Digital Cable
Online
Phone Call now for speCial offers!
Savings YouCrave.
Features YouWant.
1-800-332-02451-800-332-0245
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 18/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 , 2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
1
Continued From Page 12
“Ugh ... I don’t know ... .” But he kept bringing it
up, and bringing it up, and nally last year, he said
to me, “But you’d do it i it was or a cause youbelieved in, right? And instead o the ocus being
on you, it could be on something you could help
support.” And I said, “Yup. Tat’s true. I would.”
So last year, or my 39th birthday, my husband
said, “We’re going over to Sports Fans [Pizza].”
Tey were doing karaoke, and we were gonna meet
riends there. So we get there, and they threw my
name in to sing, and they made me sing “I Will
Survive,” ’cause that’s usually my karaoke theme
song. And as I nish singing and get ready to leave,
my husband comes up and says, “You can’t leave
yet.” And I thought it was gonna be some stupid
birthday thing.But he hands me t his CD o Rod Pierson’s (Not-
So) Big Band, and hands me this mock-up poster,
and he says, “I’ve talked with all these people,
and next year, or your 40th birthday, to celebrate
ve years o survivorship, you’re gonna give t his
cabaret. You’re gonna be backed by your own big
band, and all the money is gonna go to this charity.”
And I was really ... . I was pretty fabbergasted.
A ormer student is gonna design the lighting,
and another ormer student is gonna make me
a dress, and it’s at the Col Balroom, which is a
wonderul place to sing. And once my husbandand I started planning this, it gave us the chance
to tell the kids [about Myatt’s cancer]. It was a
whole dierent way o telling them, o course, but
do you nd the hope and strength in these horrible
situations?”, but now I know. Because hope is what
sustains you. I you don’t have that, thereis no lie.One lady said to me, “I’m amazed by how
positiveyou are all the time.” And I said, “Well,
rst o all, I have small children at home. I want to
be an example or them, and t he example I want
to set is that sometimes lie throws us really hard
things, but you keep moving orward the best that
you possibly can.” But beyond that, I said, “Nobody
ever knows when that last day is. I this were the
last time that you ever got to talk to me, I wouldn’t
want you to think, ‘Man, she’s a bitch.’”
I will Surviv Aer two surgeries, six rounds o chemotherapy,
and six weeks o radiation, Myatt was declared
cancer-ree, and began, as she says, actually being
that poster child she previously hoped not to be. “I
became involved with the [Susan G.] Komen [or
the Cure] organization,” she says, “I sang or their
survivor celebration, I’ve been asked to be part o the
race committee ... .” And she’ll now be raising unds
or the Genesis Center or Breast Health with her
cabaret perormance – not that the idea, as she reely
admits, was originally hers.
My husband, who’s always been my number-one an, had always said to me, “You should do a
cabaret evening.” And I thought, “Well, that’d be
un, but isn’t that a little sel-serving?” So I said,
In t Fac o an Unsn enm
by Mike Schulz
we kinda said, “We went through this, Mommy’s
good now, but you need to know because it’ll bein the papers and people’ll be talking about it, andwe don’t want you to be surprised.” And they were
really good about it. O course, they’re older now,so that helps.
So now I get to do this un cabaret evening, but
it’s all or a good cause. I just eel like aer all thesepeople came orward or me, now it’s my turn togive something back, and it’s our hope that the
money will assist others who otherwise wouldn’thave the kind o experience I had. And give themthe same kind o hope.
Part o a PlanSince being presented with her clean bill o
health, Myatt says that lie has resumed to normal – or rather, better than normal. She appeared inCountryside’s productions o Seussical and TeSound o Music, co-directed (with her husband)last summer’s production o the organization’sAnnie
Get Your Gun , continues a ull class schedule at theCenter Stage Perorming Arts Academy (which shehas run since 2008), is currently choreographing Davenport North High School’s production o Anything Goes, and, on the eve o her 40thbirthday, is continually grateul or the chance to do
“all the things you thought could not be possibilitiesagain. I mean, this is it. Tis is me. And I haven’t stopped being me.”
Every day now is another day that I’m really
glad or what I have. I mean, you know, will the
cancer ever come back? My hope is no; I mean, Idon’t think anybody says, “I hope it comes back,’cause it was un.” It wasn’t . But it taught me a lot
about mysel that I didn’t know. It allowed meto be really vulnerable and ask or help, which isnot in my bag o t ricks, usually. I’m usually very
independent and do it all on my own and I couldn’t this time. And that was very humbling or me.
I love my lie, I love where I am, and I’m really
glad that, in the time that I’m here, I’ve ound a way to use what were unequivocally the most horriblemoments in my lie to do something that can be
good or other people. I just came to the realizationthat this was something that was supposed to
happen to me. Tat this was part o a plan, whetherI understood it or not.
People say to me, “Oh, you’re turning 40.” Idon’t care. It doesn’t matter how many years it
is, it doesn’t matter how old you are. One o thekids at Davenport North made me laugh, t hough,because she came up to me and said, “So-and-sosaid that you’re hot or an older person.” I’m like,
“Somewhere in there is a compliment ... .”
Myatt will perorm An Evening with ChristinaMarie: A Benet or the Genesis Center or BreastHealthat Davenport’s Col Ballroom on April 3, beginning at 7 p.m. ickets are $15, and can
be reserved by calling (563)391-3174. For moreinormation on the event, visit CenterStage-Arts.com.
Continued From Page 15
wat els Is happnin’Wednesday, March 31 – Miles Kurosky.
Independent musician rom Beulahperorming with Pancho-san, in an all-ages concert sponsored by Daytrotter.Huckleberry’s Great Pizza & Calzones (22318th Street, Rock Island). 7 p.m. $6-$8. Forinormation, e-mail [email protected] visit Daytrotter.com.
THEATRESaturday, March 20 and Sunday, March21 – Little Shop of Horrors. Broadway’s hitmusical comedy about a man-eating plant,and the ourth event in the church’s annualPerorming Arts Series. First PresbyterianChurch o Davenport (1702 Iowa Street,Davenport). Saturday – 7:30 p.m., Sunday – 4p.m. $8-$12. For tickets and inormation, call(563)326-1691.
Wednesday, March 24, throughSaturday, May 22 – Church Basement
Ladies 2: A Second Helping. Sequel tothe hit musical comedy set in the kitcheno a Lutheran Church. Circa ’21 DinnerPlayhouse (1828 Third Avenue, Rock Island). Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays,and Thursday, March 23 – 6 p.m. dinner,7:45 p.m. show; Sundays 4 p.m. dinner, 5:45
p.m. show; Wednesday matinées 11:45 a.m.plated lunch, 1:30 p.m. show. $27.04-$46.28.
For tickets and inormation, call (309)796-7733 extension 2 or visit Circa21.com.
Friday, March 26, through Sunday,March 28 – Avenue Q. The Tony Award-winning “Sesame Street or grown-ups,”in a presentation sponsored by HancherAuditorium. U.S. Cellular Center (370 FirstAvenue, Cedar Rapids). Friday – 7:30 p.m.,Saturday and Sunday – 2 and 7:30 p.m. $50-$57. For tickets, call (800)745-3000 or visithttp://www.Hancher.UIowa.edu.
Thursday, March 25, through Saturday,March 27 – Sexual Perversity in Chicago.Relationship comedy written by DavidMamet, directed by St. Ambrose senior Katie
McCormack. St. Ambrose University – GalvinFine Arts Center studio theatre (2101 GainesStreet, Davenport). Thursday and Friday7:30 p.m., Saturday 3 p.m. $6. For ticketsand inormation, call (563)333-6251 or visithttp://Web.SAU.edu/theatre.
COMEDY Saturday, March 20 – Larry the Cable
Guy. Blue Collar comedian in his “TailgateParty Tour.” Adler Theatre (136 East ThirdStreet, Davenport). 5 and 8 p.m. $43.75.For tickets, call (800)745-3000 or visit
AdlerTheatre.com.Saturday, March 20 – Sinbad. Stand-up-
comedy set with the television and lmstar. Quad-Cities Waterront ConventionCenter (1777 Isle Parkway, Bettendor).7:30 p.m. $25-$40. For tickets andinormation, call (800)843-4753 or visitBettendor.IsleOCapriCasinos.com.
MOVIESOpening Friday, March 19 – Hubble
3-D. An educational space adventure,narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio. PutnamMuseum & IMAX Theatre (1717 West12th Street, Davenport). $5.50-$8.50. Forshowtimes and inormation, call (563)324-1933 or visit Putnam.org.
Wednesday, March 24 – Kenny Salwey: The Last River Rat . Fity-minutedocumentary on the author’s experiencealong the upper Mississippi River, withstorytelling and a Salwey Q&A sessionollowing each screening. The Capitol Theatre (330 West Third Street, Davenport).5 and 7:30 p.m. $5 at the door, withproceeds beneting Nahant Marsh. Forinormation, call (563)326-8820 or visit TheCapDavenport.com.
Saturday, March 27 – Fifth-Annual
Sierra Club Environmental Film Festival.
Featuring screenings o the documentariesFresh, No Impact Man, Dirt, A Sea Change,
and Coal Country , and a lmmakingworkshop with photographer Ange Glade.Olin Auditorium – Augustana College (73335th Street, Rock Island). 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m.Donations accepted. For inormation, e-mail Kathryn Allen at [email protected] orvisit Illinois.SierraClub.org/eagleview.
LECTURETuesday, March 23 – Kathleen
Kennedy Townsend. Former lieutenantgovernor o Maryland and U.S. deputyassistant attorney general discusses “Hasthe Protestant Church Lost Its Bearings?”Bergendof Hall o Fine Arts – Augustana
College (3701 Seventh Avenue, Rock Island). 7 p.m. Free admission. Forinormation, call (309)794-7721 or [email protected].
EVENTFriday, March 26 – The World
Famous Lipizzaner Stallions. The 40thAnniversary Tour eaturing new music,routines, and choreography or theequine sensations. i wireless Center (1201River Drive, Moline). 7:30 p.m. $22-$29.
For tickets, call (800)745-3000 or visitiwirelessCenter.com.
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 19/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C
u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2 0 1 0
1
RE MARK ABLE!
Tickets start at just $10 and are available at all Ticketmasteroutlets, www.Ticketmaster.com, and 800.745.3000. For questions, visit www.QCSymphony.com or call 563.322.QCSO (7276).
SATURDAY, April 10 Adler Theatre, Davenport
SUNDAY, April 11 Centennial Hall, Rock Island
AARON COPLAND Appalachian Spring
PETER TCHAIKOVSKY Piano Concerto No. 1IGOR STRAVINSKY The Firebird Suite
95TH SEASON 2009-10 MARK RUSSELL SMITH
Music DirectorNorman Krieger, Piano
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 20/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 , 2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
0
The Biggest St. Patrick’s Day Party in IowaKelly’s Irish Pub & Eatery, Davenport - March 13
Photos: Jeremy Ford/River Cities Weddings
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 21/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C
u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2 0 1 0
1
unsavory because the sellers are oen at an
inormation disadvantage. In the History-
channel orums, one user wrote that “thepickers know what they are buying, and
how much it’s worth, but keep it secretive
to those who they are buying it rom. Tat’s
taking advantage.”
But the stars o the show emphasized
that they’re dealing with willing buyers, and
noted that they get shut down a lot. Wole
said that i he visits 20 arms in a day, he
might come away empty-handed 15 times.
“A lot o people turn us away,” Fritz said.
“We’ve been turned away hundreds o
times.”
But American Pickers doesn’t emphasize
that. “Would you watch a shing show i
the guy never caught anything?” Wole said.
And it’s wise to keep in mind the
perspective oered by another History-
channel orum poster: “Given all the people
that actually prey on the elderly, the energy
spent griping about this show on this board
kind o makes me ill.”
The Future
Wole said it was only a matter o time beore somebody made a show like
American Pickers. He was just rst. “I took
being a picker and put it in a bottle and
stuck a label on it,” he said.
He doesn’t make any eort to hide his
glee at American Pickers’ success, and it’s
clear that he’s interested in the business end
o television. “We own the rickin’ airwaves
on Monday night,” Wole said, noting 5
million viewers or recent episodes o PawnStars and nearly 3.9 million or the March 1
Pickers. “Tat’s insane numbers or cable.”
He noted that his show’s debut drew 3.1
million people, and he added that History
hoped or 1.5 million “Tere was only
one show ever that beat us on a premiere,
and that was Ice Road ruckers in 2007,
and they only got 3.2. So they barely beat
us.” (Ice Road ruckers was History’s best
premiere, not cable’s. Te debut o TeCloser , or instance, drew more than 7
million viewers.)
Wole wouldn’t discuss the show’s budget
or how much he’s being paid, but he said
that the rst season isn’t about money; to atelevision network, the advertising revenue
is theoretical until the show airs. “You’re
nobody; the show is nothing ... ,” he said.
Te second season is bringing with it
more money or its three stars, but he
said the real money lies in endorsements
– which he said wouldn’t even be realistic
until a third season.
“We’re all making a little bit more
money,” he said o the second season. “Are
we going to retire anytime soon? No.”
Te success has its own burdens. Colby-Cushman said she’s now getting 1,200
Continued From Page 7
to keep stu. ... [But] i you get stu and
fip it quick, you don’t get an emotional
attachment with it.”Tat saddle might be worth $5,000 i it’s
at an auction with multiple bidders trying
to get it, Wole said. But nobody bit with astarting bid o $199 on eBay. Wole said he
ended up selling it or $175. “I I can’t make
100 bucks on something ... then I need toget out o the business,” he said.
A 1948 Rock-Ola jukebox bought on
Pickers was estimated on the show to be
worth $5,000. “I sold it or $1,900.” Wolesaid. “I paid $1,300; I drove to Ohio to get
it.
“Te only thing that’s ever gotten us in
trouble on the show is these appraisals,” headded. “Te appraisals are way o-chart.
... We are not going to be guinea pigs to
appraisals any more.”Generally speak ing, Wole and Fritz said,
they pay hal o what they think they can
sell an item or. But even or that to work,
they have to sell a lot o items because o their costs.
“I’ve got a mortgage,” Wole said. “I’ve
got all this overhead” – including travel,
lodging, ood, storeront, and employeecosts.
Tere are times, o course, when the
pickers sell or ar more than they expected.Wole said he bought a moving-company
sign or $75, thinking he could only get
$200 or it because it was warped and
plastic, and because subject matter dictatesthe sale prices or signs. “When I put it on
eBay, it went or $1,200,” he said.
Tat speaks to the nature o the business.
Te stars o American Pickers stress
that they aren’t antique experts. (“We’reproessionals at nding things,” Fritz said.)
Tey have areas o expertise, but outsideo those, it’s a guessing game. When they
bought the jukebox on the show, Wole
said: “1,300 bucks or us is a lot o money to
gamble.”Both Wole and Fritz know their
motorcycles; Wole knows bikes and signs;
and Fritz is a toy collector. Outside o those
areas, Colby-Cushman said, “all he can dois guess at what it’s going to sell or. Tat is
where the trouble lies.”
And she said viewers oen don’t get theull story. “I can tell you o several situations
where Mike has ound out that something
he has picked or $20 is worth way more
than he thought, and he’s gone back andgiven more money to the person he’s picked
rom,” she said. “It happens more oen than
you think.”
And, she added, “we have to eat it onso many items. ... Tat stu is just what
happens.”
“You need to make sure you make more
right decisions than wrong ones,” Fritz said.Still, there’s an element o the show that’s
American Pickers
by Jef Ignatius
e-mail messages a day through the e-mail
address on Wole’s Web site. “We’re just
learning how to deal with something thathas exploded,” she said. “We were not ready
at all or it to be as big as it is. We thought itwould be a un little show.”
Fritz said he’s not surprised by the show’s
success. He said he thinks a lot o viewersget to have adventures through him andWole: “A lot o people would love to be
pickers, would love to be junkers. Butthey got ve kids, they got a wie, they gotthis, they got t hat. Tey can’t physically or
nancially do it.” He and Wole, he added,aren’t married and don’t have children: “Not
too many people are able to do this job laterin lie like we are.”
Wole said he hopes the show inspiresyoung people to do what he’s done since he
was a kid: pick. “It takes that one person toplant that seed,” he said. “ Tat’s what someold guy did with me. I would walk down
the alley and this old guy had a bunch o stu in his garage and he would sit and talk with me or hours. And I remember that he
gave me a cigar box one time, and that washuge. ... I remember that guy.”
Still, the degree o success has been asurprise. “Obviously we didn’t know howbig it was going to be,” Fritz said. “We’re
very ortunate to have what we have going,
and we’re going to keep riding this bus aslong as it keeps running. Te main thingis we’re hoping to spark some interest in
the antique trade,” especially among youngpeople. “I am embracing this with the mostpleasure I can. I’m very, very happy that
mother is still alive to be able to see my 15minutes o ame.”
Tat’s the diplomatic, gracious way to
look at the success o American Pickers.And Fritz sounded realistic about the long-term prospects o the show. Although PBS’ Antiques Roadshow has been around in
the United States since 1997 – the British version started in 1979 – it’s likely theexception. “Reality shows are good or three
or our years,” he said.But Wole isn’t above talking some
smack, saying that his show is responsible
or an impending glut o shows ocused onbuying and selling. “You won’t believe all
the stu all the networks are working onnow,” he said. “Now that us and Pawn Stars are spanking the shit out o everybody ...it’s all going to come at you like a ucking
tsunami now. ... Give it about a year.”
New episodes o American Pickers air Mondays at 8 p.m. on History. Te frst season concludes its run on March 29.
For more inormation on AmericanPickers , visit History.com/shows/american- pickers. Antique Archeology’s Web site is
AntiqueArcheology.com; Frank Fritz’s Website is FrankFritzFinds.com.
Sleep Well
Your Full ServiceNatural Food Market
1600 N. Harrison St. Davenport323-7521
HOURS: Mon-Fri 9am-8pmSat 9am-7pm • Sun 10am-7pm
WE ARE HEALTH MINDED WITH YOUR HEALTH IN MIND!
Add chamomile oil to your
bath or apply to your templesat bed time.
Exercise atleast several hours beforebed time.
Add chamomile oil to your
bath or apply to your templesat bed time.
Exercise atleast several hours beforebed time.
Eat Cashews: Rich inmagnesiumcashews havesoothingeect onour nervoussystems.
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 22/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o
w •
R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
Got A Problem? Ask Amy Alkon.171 Pier Ave, #280, Santa Monica, CA 90405
or e-mail [email protected] (AdviceGoddess.com)©2009, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved.
A sk the A dvice Goddess
By AMy ALkON
A sk the A dvice Goddess
A sk the A dvice Goddess
By AMy ALkON
makes small changes around their home (likemaking their gas-powered lights ficker),then denies anything’s dierent, making
her believe her sanity ’s gone o its hinges.In a relationship, writes Dr. Robin Stern in
Te Gaslight Eect , you’re being gaslightedwhen somebody relentlessly pressures you
to believe the unbelievable and do whatyou know you shouldn’t. Stern explains that
the gaslighter “needs to be right in order topreserve his own sense o sel and his sense
o having power in the world,” while thegaslightee allows him to bully away her senseo reality and sel because she ears losinghis love and approval. O course, in your
case, it could have something to do with notwanting to think you’ve wasted ve yearswith “a selsh, manipulative ass.” (Fart-play suddenly sounding inviting?)
Just as you don’t have to believe in Santa
to take your kid nephew to give his list
o demands to some at stranger in a akebeard, you don’t have to believe in marriageto appreciate what a huge lie event it is or
your riend. Huge enough that it’s reasonableto “sacrice” your “commitment” to attenda giant acid-dropping est in the desert.Tere are commitments, and then there
are commitments, which is why there arebazillions o wedding photographers butew earning thousands o dollars shootingkeepsake albums o people who carpooltogether.
O course, you know all this. Or knew– until Clarence Darrow, as played by a
big, soggy-diapered baby, started in onyou. Clearly, this is less about a weddingthan winning. But in a healthy relationship,winning sometimes means letting the personyou care about get their way. A loving
boyriend might be under-thrilled that you’reattending the wedding, but he won’t hammeryou about it until you’re not sure who you areor what you think. You either need to reuse
to engage when he goes bully on you or reuseto stick around or more. I you do decide
to leave, you shouldn’t have to worry aboutnding a new boyriend, just about hiring
bouncers or the line o guys wanting to dateyou aer hearing the reason behind yourbreakup: “Yeah, seems my ex just couldn’thandle it when I said, ‘Bummer that I have to
get all dressed up and go to this wedding, butyou live it up best you can at that p aganistic,psychedelic orgy in the desert.’”
I agreed to be in a riend’s wedding, andunortunately, she had to change the date
to the day my boyriend and I were going to Burning Man. When I told him I’d have
to go to her wedding instead, he eruptedin anger. He wants me to ask her to changethe date, and says he’ll “never orgive me”
i I don’t go with him. Now, we were only going to Burning Man together because he
couldn’t take the whole week o, so insteado going with his riends, he decided to
accompany me midweek. I reminded himthat we’ve been to Burning Man six times,
and a wedding, presumably, happens oncein a lietime. He called me a hypocritebecause I don’t believe in marriage, but
will “sacrifce my commitment” to himto celebrate her commitment. He argues
with such vehemence, I’m beginning todoubt my own judgment and wonder i
he’s right. He’s acted like this beore, but
it’s become less requent during our fve years together. I don’t want to believe my
boyriend’s a selfsh, manipulative ass, so… does he have a point? I not, how do I
explain that you don’t abandon your riendon her wedding day to run around naked
in the desert?– Upset Bridesmaid
I your boyriend’s ego were a pimple, it
would burst and food Vermont.He’s actually demanding that the bride
rebook the church, the caterer, the forist,
and the hall, and tell hundreds o her gueststo change their plans. Because he needs
you there when he accepts his Nobel? No,because he wants to bum a ride with you
to go to stand around the desert and watchmiddle-aged men and women fitting aboutin airy wings and clown noses, painting
daisies around each other’s nipples. It getsbetter. He’s telling you he’ll “never orgive”
you. Because you slept w ith his brother,his best riend, or his brother and his best
riend? Nope. Because he might have to
pitch in or gas or a ride in some riend-o-a-riend’s van that’s been modied into agiant rubber ducky in a tutu.
What your boyriend’s doing to you is
“gaslighting,” wh ich, unortunately, only sounds like lighting arts on re. It’s actually
insidious emotional abuse that gets its namerom the 1944 Ingrid Bergman movie,
Gaslight , about an heiress whose husband
Ovr M Dad Bod Paint
Time to broaden your view of telecomm careers. Welcome to
AT&T. Deeper product base. Broader career options. Together at
last. Join us as a CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE at our
Davenport Call Center.
Apply online at www.att.jobs/QuadCities.
Diversity is the AT&T way of standing apart. Equal OpportunityEmployer. © 2010 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved.
AT&T, AT&T logo and all other marks contained herein are trademarksof AT&T Intellectual Property and/or AT&T affiliated companies.
more experience
more passion.
paired with
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 23/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C
u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2 0 1 0
weeks, eed your dreams. And I mean “dreams”in both the sense o the nocturnal adventures
you have while you’re sleeping and the sweepingdaytime visions o what you’d like to become.
CAPRICORN (December 22-
January 19): I just ound out theAmerican shipping company UPS
has legally trademarked the color brown. Tegrass-roots activist in me is incredulous andappalled. But the poet in me doesn’t really
care; it’s ne i UPS owns drab, prosaic brown.I’ve still got mahogany at my command, aswell as tawny, sepia, taupe, burnt umber, tan,
cinnamon, walnut, and henna. Tat’s especially important or this horoscope, Capricorn,because I’m advising you to be very down to
earth, be willing to get your hands dirty, andeven play in the muck i necessary in orderto take good care o the basics. But don’t do
any o that in a boring, humdrum “brown”way. Do it exotically and imaginatively, likemahogany, tawny, sepia, taupe, burnt umber,
tan, cinnamon, walnut, and henna.
AQUARIUS (January 20-February 18): You are hereby
excused rom having to know a single nuanceabout the inside story o Angelina Jolie’s secret
love tryst with Lady Gaga, or the addictionso conspiracy theorists who lose huge sums o money gambling on the end o the world, or
the agony that millionaires suer rom havingto support social services with their taxes. Inact, it’s a good time to empty your mind o
extraneous, trivial, and useless acts so that youcan clear vast new spaces or more pressing data,like how you can upgrade your communicationskills, why you should do some upkeep on
your close alliances, and what you might do tostreamline your social lie.
PISCES (February 19-March 20):In my astrological opinion, you don’tneed anything that shrinks you or
defates you or tames you. Infuences thatpinch your imagination should be taboo, asshould anything that squashes your hope or
crimps your lie orce. o make proper useo the vibrations circulating in your vicinity,Pisces, you should gravitate toward situations
that pump up your insouciance and energize
your whimsy and incite you to express the mostbenevolent wickedness you can imagine. You’ve
got a mandate to atten up your soul so it cancontain a vaster sense o wonder and a moredaring brand o innocence.
Homework: I’ve got two avors to ask o you. No pressure! I’ll still love you i you can’t help. Go here or more ino: http://bit.ly/woFavors.
FRee WiLL AstRoLoGYby Rob Brezsny
Go to RealAstrology.comto check out Rob Brezsny's
EXPANDED WEEKLY AUDIO HOROSCOPES& DAILY TEXT MESSAGE HOROSCOPES
The audio horoscopes are also available by phone at1-877-873-4888 or 1-900-950-7700
existed. In nature, improbabilities are the one stock in trade. Te whole creation is one lunatic ringe...
. No claims o any and all revelations could beso ar-etched as a single g irae.” (Dillard’s entirepassage is here: http://bit.ly/inkerCreek.) Reading
this passage is a good way or you to prepare orthe immediate uture, Leo. Why? Because you’llsoon be invited to commune with outlandish
glory. You’ll be exposed to stories that burstrom the heart o creation. You’ll be prodded torespond to marvelous blips with marvelous blips
o your own. But here’s the catch: It may all remaininvisible to you i you’re blinded by the alse belie that you live a boring, ordinary lie.
VIRGO (August 23-September 22): Te storm is your riend right now,
Virgo. So are the deep, dark night andthe last place you’d ever think o visiting
and the most important thing you’ve orgotten
about. So be more willing than usual to marinatein the mysteries – not with logical erocity butwith cagey curiosity. Te areas o lie that are
most crucial or you to deal with can’t be ully understood using the concepts your rational mindavors. Te eelings that will be most useul or you
to explore are unlike those you’re amiliar with.
LIBRA (September 23-October 22):
Here’s your mantra or the comingweek: “I disappear my ear. I resurrect my audacity.”Say it and sing it and murmur it at least 100 times
a day. Let it fow out o you aer you’ve awokeneach morning and are still lying in bed. Let itbe the last sound on your lips as you drop o to
sleep. Have un with it. Dip into your imaginationto come up with dierent ways to let it fy – say it as your avorite cartoon character might say
it, like a person with a Swedish accent, like your
inner teenager, like a parrot, like a grinning sage.“I disappear my ear. I resurrect my audacity. I
disappear my ear. I resurrect my audacity.”
SCORPIO (October 23-November21): Have you ever heard about how
some all-night convenience stores blastloud classical music out into the parking lot inorder to discourage drug dealers rom loitering?
In the coming days, use that principle wheneveryou need to drive home a point or make a strongimpression. Your aggressive expressions will be
more eective i you take the darkness and anger
out o them, and instead ll them up with orceulgrace and propulsive compassion.
SAGITTARIUS (November 22-December 21): Te Hebrew wordchalommeans “dream.” In his book
Healing Dreams, Marc Ian Barasch notes that it’sderived rom the verb “to be made healthy and
strong.” Linguist Joseph Jastrow says that chalom is related to the Hebrew word hachlama, whichmeans “recovery, recuperation.” Extrapolating
rom these poetic hints and ring on your
astrological omens, I’ve got a prescription or youto consider: o build your vitality in the coming
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Fromwhat I can tell, your excursion to Fake
Paradise didn’t exact too serious atoll. Te accidental detour may have
seemed inopportune in the moment, but you
know what? I think it slowed you down enoughto keep you rom doing something rash thatyou would have regretted later. And are you
really sorry you were robbed o your cherishedillusions? In the long run, I think it was or thebest. As or the scratches on your nose rom
when you stuck it into business you weren’t“supposed” to: Tey’re a small price to pay orthe piquant lesson you got in how not to live.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Somepeople are here on the planet to nd
success, while others are here to ndthemselves. In the big scheme o things,
I’m not sure which category you t into, aurus.
But I’m pretty sure that or the next ew weeksyou’ll be best served by acting as i you’re thelatter. Even i you think you’ve ound yoursel
pretty completely in the past, it’s time to gosearching again: Tere are new secrets to bediscovered, in large part because you’re not who
you used to be. So or now at least, I encourage
you to give your worldly ambitions a bit o a restas you intensiy your sel-explorations.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Being
a paragon o moral behavior can beun and rewarding. It’s amazing howmany interesting people want to play
with me just because they think I’m so #%&@high-minded. But I’ve got to coness that my commitment to discipline and righteousness is
sometimes at odds with my rebellious itch togive you mischievous nudges and outrageous
challenges. Like right now, the conscientiousteacher in me might preer to advise you to keepa lid on debauchery, voracity, excess, uproar,slapstick, wise-cracking, reworks, and limit-
pushing. But the rabble-rousing agitator in meeels obligated to inorm you that at no othertime in 2010 will the karmic price be lower or
engaging in such pursuits.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): It’stime or you to stop specializing inurtive glimpses and start indulging
in brazen gazes. You’re ready to phase out your
role as a peripheral infuence and see i youcan be more o a high-intensity instigator and
organizer. Yes, Cancerian, you’ve earned theright to claim more credibility and clout – toleave your tentative position outside the magic
circle and head in the direction o the sweet hotspot.
LEO (July 23-August 22): “Natureseems to exult in aboundingradicality, extremism, anarchy,” wrote
Annie Dillard in Pilgrim at inker Creek. “I
we were to judge nature by its common senseor likelihood, we wouldn’t believe the world
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 24/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
ReAL eSTATeDonton Davnport Apartmnts efcinc & 1 Bdrooms
availabl.$340-$430 per month. MOVE-IN DISCOUNT - 20% o 1stmonth’s rent.$15.00 discount each month or timely rent payment.Appliances urnished, water/sewer paid, on-site laundry, o streetparking available, secure entry, no pets. 311 W 3rd St, Davenport.563-323-7737.
FOR ReNT BR Apt in Ditt. Rental Assistance available. All utilitiespaid. On-site Laundry. Equal Housing Opportunity. 563-212-0205.
kimbrl Par and Colonial Court have apartments or rent! Callus or our monthly specials, 563-445-7535! Voted #1 in the River CitiesReader Best o the Quad Cities poll!
Molin to bdroom apt or rent. Heat and water paid, appliances,laundry acilities, o street parking, no pets. $585.00.1015 - 18th StreetA, call 309-762-4444.
NOw ReNTING1 or 2 bedroom lot apartment.Call today or details anda showing @ 563-210-0638 www.riverwalklotsapts. com
JOBSApartmnt Support AssociatIn Quad Cities AreaApprox. 25 hours/weekFlexible availability preerred, on call position For job descriptioncall Carrie @ T&L Properties800-394-1288 x102
Amricas Incrdibl Pizza Compan is coming to Davenport! We area leading edge amily entertainment concept that merges 1950’s amilyvalues with excellent ood and tremendous un, games, and rides orall ages. We eature an Incredible “all you can eat” buet with over 16types o pizza, over 100 salad and pasta selections, and top it o withice cream and desserts. We are looking or a highly motivated OfcManagr to join our team. The right candidate will have:· Payroll Experience - ABRA, Maz90 Accounting· Experience, General Human Resource· Experience. Must be procient with Microsot· Ofce - Word and Excel. Excellent organizational skills. Must be ableto unction independently when needed. $12 - $15 per hour based onexperience.We were named “Top Entertainment Center o the World” awarded byIAAPA (International Association o Amusement Parks & Attractions)
in 2004 & 2008. Apply on line: www.incrediblepizza.com/d avenport/employment
Drivrs: we wANT yOU!! Excellent Home-time,Benets, 401k,Regional/OTR & P/T Avail.Ask about our $600 Guarantee.Jamie: 800-593-6433
LOOkING FOR DRUMMeR to join with relatively new band. Must bewilling to develop originals and play modern rock covers. Styles/artistsinclude unk rock, Sheryl Crow, Cake, Jet. Gigs on horizon so seriousinquiries only. Email Bruce at [email protected]
OTheRheALTh SeRVICeS
Massag Trapist no booing events or March, April.&May!Weddings, Birthdays, Fundraisers, Benets, etc. 563-340-8120. GitCerticates Available.
hOMe SeRVICeS
Handy Man Services Call Paul Weathers 563-570-5888 Roong, Drywall,Construction & More!
CALL TO PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
(6) -00 or visit
RivrCitisRadr.com/classifds
March Crossword Answers
July , 00 July , 00Marc 1, 010M&MsMarch 4 Answers: RightEdited by Justin Lynn Morris
ACROSS
1. Shaped like an onion
8. Up, so to speak
13. Merchant’s come-on
17. Gained without eort
19. Had a yen or
21. Big cat
22. A prime minister or Victoria
23. Southern university since 1834
24. “Git _, little dogies!”
25. Map abbrs.
26. West Point undergrad
28. Not your sharp-eyed lookout man!30. To boot
31. Have a talk
33. Plains dwellings
34. Hollywood star in 1928 debut
38. Floor-plan designation
39. Postscript’s postscript: abbr.
42. Redolence
43. Symphony conductor rom
Bombay
45. Aircrat-engine enclosure
48. Recital number
49. Exchange
51. Robin Hood’s girlriend
54. More like street talk
56. What witnesses take
58. To-do list item59. Gram preceder
60. Ceremony
61. Tea cakes
62. Faucet
65. One handy with tools
70. _ and sciences
71. Spuds
73. Troubled car company
74. Clock’s meas.
76. And others
77. City on the Moselle
79. Not o the “in”crowd
84. Fountain order
86. Chopin work
88. O course!
89. Colorul wool abric
90. Theater aide92. Actress Anderson
93. Business abbr.
94. Crescent
96. Best-actress nominee or “Cinder-
ella Liberty” (1973)
100. Doesn’t stay the same
103. _ Saud
104. Columnist’s paragraph
105. Investor’s target
109. Classies
111. Movie studio, ounded 1929
114. 19th-century Iowa commune
115. One with a deck
117. Spunkier
119. Vader’s “Star Wars”title
120. Swit’s orte
121. Type o evidence
122. Dry-goods remnants
123. “_ common denominator”
124. Homemakers, o a sort
DOwN
1. Signs o spring
2. Platoon, perhaps
3. Minus
4. Lawyers, as a group
5. Delphi attraction
6. Nervous
7. Only once in a while
8. Legislature’s oering
9. Marsalis instrument10. One o the Sundas
11. “Stop it, sailor!”
12. Placed under canvas
13. Eliot’s Marner
14. Wide-eyed
15. NBC night owl
16. Cogito _ sum
18. Stamping tool
20. Poor swimmers avoid it
21. Subdue
27. Properly aligned
29. Gives a new moniker
30. Ohio city
32. Fireplace residue
34. Sign o age, in the woods
35. Object o worship
36. Sot drink 37. Epps or Shari
39. Flexible
40. Runway trac
41. Dispatches mail
44. At ull speed
46. One o the Falkland Islands
47. Fumble
49. Can
50. Paper order
52. Freeze intro
53. March 15
55. An archangel
57. Kinship group
62. Philippine peninsula
63. Slanted type
64. Waistbands
66. _ spumante
67. Astronomer Sagan
68. Japanese verse
69. Dull sound
71. Rates o speed, in music
72. Handgun
75. Map abbr.
78. Addict’s retreat
79. Friendly, in war
80. Muslim world
81. Twosomes
82. Cube-maker Rubik
83. Restraint
85. Too many to count
87. Shore fyers91. Powerul attackers
95. Breakast ood
97. Add to the payroll
98. Duds
99. On-base dining halls
100. Lets o steam
101. Mumbai servant
102. Long-snouted ray
105. Created
106. Yemen neighbor
107. Ointment
108. Byline on English “Essays”
110. Not on
111. Ascend
112. Actor Dullea
113. Middle Earth minions
116. Not active: abbr.118. Explosive
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 25/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2
0 1 0
Funktastic Five - Rascals Rock Memora-
bilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, ILGray Wolf Band - Viking Club o Moline,1450 41st Street, Moline, IL
Hap Hazard - Jersey Grille, 5255 JerseyRidge Rd, Davenport, IA
Hardball - Greenbriar Restaurant andLounge, 4506 27th St, Moline, IL
Head for the Hills - Filling Space - Song-bird Bethann - Iowa City Yacht Club,13 S Linn St, Iowa City, IA
Hi-Fi - Len Brown’s North Shore Inn, 7thStreet and the Rock River, Moline, IL
Karaoke Night - Moe’s Pizza, 1312 Ca-manche Ave, Clinton, IA
Marmaduke - Parker’s, 635 15th St,Moline, IL
Mr. Whoopie - The Rusty Nail, 2606 WLocust, Davenport, IA
Open Mic Night - Coee Dive, 230 W. 3rdSt. 2nd Floor, Davenport, IA
Pappa-Razzi - Edje Nightclub at Jumer’sCasino and Hotel, I-280 & Hwy 92,Rock Island, IL
Rockstar - Time Out Sports Bar and Grill,1815 Manuacturing Dr, Clinton, IA
The Bucktown Revue - River Music Expe-rience, 129 Main St, Davenport, IA
uneXpected - Shenanigan’s, 303 W. 3rdSt., Davenport, IA
2010/03/20 (Sat)
Alash - CSPS/Legion Arts, 1103 3rd St SE,Cedar Rapids, IA
Angie Pierce Jennings - Monks KaeePub, 373 Blu St., Dubuque, IA
Ava’s Blue Pick - M.D. Green’s, 1808 2ndAve., Rock Island, IL
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ - Crab-by’s, 826 W. 1st Ave., Coal Valley, IL
Burning Halos - The Sullivan Gang- Justin Alan Cox - The Mill, 120 EBurlington, Iowa City, IA
Caught in the Act - The Rusty Nail, 2606W Locust, Davenport, IA
DJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202
W. Mayne St., Blue Grass, IADown 24’s - St. Patrick’s Day Celebra-
tion - The Lucky Frog Bar and Grill, 313N Salina St, McCausland, IA
Final Mix - Riverside Casino and Gol Re-sort, 3184 Highway 22, Riverside, IA
DJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202W. Mayne St., Blue Grass, IA
DJ Scott Keller Productions & Karaoke - Greenbriar Restaurant and Lounge,4506 27th St, Moline, IL
Gaelic Storm - Englert Theatre, 221 EastWashington St., Iowa City, IA
Gray Wolf Band - Route 61 Bar & Grill, 4320N. Brady St., Davenport, IA
Head for the Hills - The MilltownWranglers - RIBCO, 1815 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
Jake McVey (7:15 & 9:30pm) - JohnnyK & the Country Playboys (8:30pm) - Riverside Casino and Gol Resort, 3184Highway 22, Riverside, IA
Joe & Vicki Price - George’s, Iowa City, IAKaraoke Night - Sneaky Pete’s, 207 Cody
Rd. N., LeClaire, IAKASS DJ Night - Club Boulevard, 1801
10th St., Moline, ILLee Blackmon & The Gamblers (6:30pm)
- Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Leslie & The Ly’s - Christopher the Con-quered - The Mill, 120 E Burlington,Iowa City, IA
Live Lunch w/ Ren Estrand (noon) -Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Mr. Whoopie - The Rusty Nail, 2606 WLocust, Davenport, IA
Nick Mos s & th e F lip Tops - RascalsRock Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St.,Moline, IL
Pappa-Razzi - Edje Nightclub at Jumer’sCasino and Hotel, I-280 & Hwy 92,Rock Island, IL
Peter Balestreri - Monks Kaee Pub, 373Blu St., Dubuque, IA
Robbie Bahr - The Rodeo Saloon & Feed-
house, 1801 Lincolnway, Clinton, IARuss Reyman Trio (5pm) - The Rusty Nail,
2606 W Locust, Davenport, IATh e Bran don Gibbs Ban d - Uptown
Neighborhood Bar and Grill, 2340Spruce Hills Dr., Bettendor, IA
2010/03/17 (Wed)
Alan Sweet - Kilkenny’s, 3rd & Harrison,Davenport, IA
Feast of Mutton - Monks Kaee Pub, 373Blu St., Dubuque, IA
Karaoke DJ - The Lucky Frog Bar and Grill,313 N Salina St, McCausland, IA
Live Lunch w/ Chris Dunn (noon) -Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
New Karaoke - Hal’s Wagon Wheel, 1708State Street, Bettendor, IA
Open Mic Night - The Dam View Inn, 4102nd St, Davenport, IA
Paper Thick Walls - The Blue Moose Tap,211 Iowa Ave., Iowa City, IA
The Steady Rollin’ Blues Band featur-ing Jimmie Lee Adams - RascalsRock Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St.,
Moline, ILTrent Wagler & the Steel Wheels - TheMill, 120 E Burlington, Iowa City, IA
Troy Harris, Pianist (6pm) - Red CrowGrille, 2504 53rd St., Bettendor, IA
2010/03/19 (Fri)
ABC Karaoke - Circle Tap, 1345 Locust St.,Davenport, IA
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ -Commodore Tap, 2202 W. 3rd St.,Davenport, IA
Buddy Olson (5pm) - Missipi Brew, RiverDr, Muscatine, IA
Caught in the Act - The Rusty Nail, 2606W Locust, Davenport, IA
Corporate Rock - Jersey Grille, 5255Jersey Ridge Rd, Davenport, IA
Country Karaoke Idol - The Rodeo Sa-loon & Feedhouse, 1801 Lincolnway,Clinton, IA
Deja Vu Rendezvous - Marmaduke - The Redstone Room, 129 Main St,Davenport, IA
Email all listings to [email protected] • Deadline 5 p.m. Thursday beore publication
Continued On Page 26
20Saturday
18Thursday
19FRIday
Salsa Dancing - Club Boulevard, 180110th St., Moline, IL
SEVEN - Route 61 Bar & Grill, 4320 N.Brady St., Davenport, IA
Sin City Orchestra - Toucan’s OutdoorGril le-n-Cantina, 2020 1st Street,Milan, IL
Strange Neighbors - The RedstoneRoom, 129 Main St, Davenport, IA
“Tennessee” Tony Cavitt - The Grape LieWine Emporium, 3402 Elmore Ave.,Davenport, IA
The Brat Pack - RIBCO, 1815 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
The Chris & Wes Show - QC Zone, 15165th Ave, Moline, IL
The Karry Outz - Hawkeye Tap, 4646Cheyenne Ave., Davenport, IA
The Pointer Sisters - Riverside Casinoand Gol Resort, 3184 Highway 22,Riverside, IA
The Ragbirds - Bent River Brewing Com-
pany, 1413 5th Ave., Moline, ILToby Brown (6pm) - Mojo’s (River Music
Experience), 130 W 2nd St, Daven-port, IA
uneXpected - Mound Street Landing,1029 Mound St., Davenport, IA
Who Cares - Cabana’s, 4th Ave & 22nd St,Rock Island, IL
2010/03/21 (Sun)
Breille - The Hat Eatery & Pub, 1618 W.Locust St., Davenport, IA
Hersong: Carry the Spirit On (3pm) - First Congregational Church - Moline,2201 7th Avenue, Moline, IL
Russ Reyman, Pianist (10am-2pmbrunch performance) - The LodgeHotel, Spruce Hills & Utica Ridge,
Bettendor, IAStrangely Familiar (2pm) - Riverside
Casino and Gol Resort, 3184 Highway22, Riverside, IA
The Avey Brothers - Rascals Rock Memo-rabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, IL
The Terry Hanson Ensemble (10am) - Brady Street Chop House, RadissonQC Plaza Hotel, Davenport, IA
Third Sunday Jazz Matinee & Work-shop: Toscanellie “Lady T.” Marce-lain - The Redstone Room, 129 MainSt, Davenport, IA
Troy Harris, Pianist (11:30am) - BassStreet Chop House, 1601 River Dr,Moline, IL
2010/03/22 (Mon)
Karaoke Night - The Old Stardust SportsBar, 1191 19th Street, Moline, IL
Live Lunch w/ Randy Arcenas (noon) - Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Open Mic w/ J. Knight - The Mill, 120 EBurlington, Iowa City, IA
The Edgar Crockett Jazz Quartet(6:30pm) - Coee Hound Coee
House (East Moline), 4141 7th St, EastMoline, IL
The U.S. Army Band Brass Quintet -University Capitol Centre, DowntownMall Main Floor, Iowa City, IA
2010/03/23 (Tue)
Dance Party USA w/ Rich Rok & TylerCoon - Iowa City Yacht Club, 13 S LinnSt, Iowa City, IA
J. Elliot - The Old Stardust Sports Bar,1191 19th Street, Moline, IL
Live Lunch w/ Jonathan Turner (noon) - Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Mac Frampton Trio - U.S. Cellular Center,370 1st Ave NE, Cedar Rapids, IA
Open Mic Night @ M.D. Green’s w/ Jer-
emiah - M.D. Green’s, 1808 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
Open Mic w/ Jordan Danielsen - BierStube Davenport, 2228 E 11th St,Davenport, IA
John Gorka @ CSPS Legion Arts – March 25
22monday
23tuesday
21sunday
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 26/28
R i v e
r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
6
Email all listings to [email protected] • Deadline 5 p.m. Thursday beore publication
Screens - The Mill, 120 E Burlington,
Iowa City, IAThe Chris & Wes Show - Rascals Rock
Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Mo-line, IL
Wordcure - Monks Kaee Pub, 373 Blu St., Dubuque, IA
2010/03/24 (Wed)
Cowboy Junkies - Lee Harvey Osmond - The Redstone Room, 129 Main St,
Davenport, IAGoes Cube - East of the Wall - Aseethe
- The Picador, 330 E. Washington St.,Iowa City, IA
Open Mic Night - The Old Stardust SportsBar, 1191 19th Street, Moline, IL
Open Mic Night w/ Steve McFate(6:30pm) - Cool Beanz Coeehouse,
1325 30th St., Rock Island, IL“Tennessee,” That Nashville Cat (noon)
- Open Mic Night (7pm) - Mojo’s
(River Music Experience), 130 W 2ndSt, Davenport, IA
The Chris & Wes Show - Mound StreetLanding, 1029 Mound St., Daven-port, IA
The Craig Bentley Trio - Rascals Rock Mem-
orabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, ILTyrone Wells - Tony Lucca - Roy Jay - The
Mill, 120 E Burlington, Iowa City, IA
2010/03/25 (Thu)
Ava’s Blue Pick (6:30pm) - Cae Fresh!,1711 5th Ave, Moline, IL
Black Hawk College Jazz Ensemble
(6:30pm) - Huckleberry’s, 223 18th
St, Rock Island, ILDJ Jonny O - Greenbriar Restaurant and
Lounge, 4506 27th St, Moline, IL John Gorka - Denice Franke - CSPS/
Legion Arts, 1103 3rd St SE, Cedar
Rapids, IA
Jon Wayne & the Pain - RIBCO, 1815 2ndAve., Rock Island, IL
Live Lunch w/ Dave Maxwell (noon) - Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
New Karaoke - Hal’s Wagon Wheel, 1708State Street, Bettendor, IA
Open Mic Night - The Dam View Inn, 4102nd St, Davenport, IA
Stephen Cee - Mojo’s (River Music Experi-ence), 130 W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
The Steady Rollin’ Blues Band featur-
ing Jimmie Lee Adams - RascalsRock Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St.,Moline, IL
Troy Harris, Pianist (6pm) - Red CrowGrille, 2504 53rd St., Bettendor, IA
University of Iowa Jazz Performance - The Mill, 120 E Burlington, IowaCity, IA
2010/03/26 (Fri)
ABC Karaoke - Circle Tap, 1345 Locust St.,Davenport, IA
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ -Commodore Tap, 2202 W. 3rd St.,Davenport, IA
Dani Lynn Howe Band - Blueport Junc-tion, 6605 W River Dr, Davenport, IA
Daytrotter Presents: The DaredevilChristopher Wright w/Floating Ac-tion and Middle Distance Runner - Huckleberry’s, 223 18th St, Rock Island, IL
Dead Larry - Lunar Funk Theory - Jon
Wayne & the Pain - Iowa City YachtClub, 13 S Linn St, Iowa City, IA
DJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202W. Mayne St., Blue Grass, IA
Frank Drew CD Release Party - 11thStreet Precinct, 2108 E 11th St, Dav-enport, IA
Fruit Bats - Blue Giant - The Mill, 120 EBurlington, Iowa City, IA
Karaoke Night - Moe’s Pizza, 1312 Ca-manche Ave, Clinton, IA
Mustard Plug - Firesale - The Agrestix - The Redstone Room, 129 Main St,Davenport, IA
NINE-1-1 - Route 61 Bar & Grill, 4320 N.Brady St., Davenport, IA
Ol’ Thrashers Reunion 3: HOTT - LibertyLeg - Acoustic Guillotine - The Ter-cels - Bad Accidents - The Mill, 120 EBurlington, Iowa City, IA
Open Mic Night - Coee Dive, 230 W. 3rdSt. 2nd Floor, Davenport, IA
Painkiller Hotel Acoustic Show - KevinPresbrey - Kilkenny’s, 3rd & Harrison,Davenport, IA
Rick K & the Allnighters - RiversideCasino and Gol Resort, 3184 Highway22, Riverside, IA
Rocketpark - Route 61 Bar & Grill, 4320N. Brady St., Davenport, IA
Salsa Dancing - Club Boulevard, 180110th St., Moline, ILSin City Orchestra - Toucan’s Outdoor
Gril le-n-Cantina, 2020 1st Street,Milan, IL
Smooth Groove - Martini’s On the Rock,4619 34th St, Rock Island, IL
Tantric - Cavalry - RIBCO, 1815 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
The Burlington Street Bluegrass Band(6pm) - The Mill, 120 E Burlington,Iowa City, IA
The Mercury Brothers - Rascals Rock Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Mo-line, IL
The Tailfins - Jersey Grille, 5255 JerseyRidge Rd, Davenport, IA
Tronicity - Greenbriar Restaurant andLounge, 4506 27th St, Moline, IL
uneXpected - Hawkeye Tap, 4646 Chey-enne Ave., Davenport, IAWho Cares - Parker’s, 635 15th St, Mo-
line, IL
Zoos of Berlin - Child Bites - The Picador,330 E. Washington St., Iowa City, IA
2010/03/27 (Sat)
Acoustic Jam Session w/ Steve McFate - Corner Tap, 4018 14th Ave., Rock Island, IL
Back 4 More - Silvis Eagles, 911 MansurAvenue, Silvis, IL
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ - Crab-by’s, 826 W. 1st Ave., Coal Valley, IL
Community Drum Circle (10:30am) -Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Corporate Rock - Marlee’s Saloon, 506Main St., Lost Nation, IA
Cosmic - Alleman High School Perorm-ing Arts Center, 1103 - 40th Street,Rock Island, IL
Crossroads - Mulligan’s Valley Pub, 310
W 1st Ave, Coal Valley, ILDani Lynn Howe Band (5pm) - PlamorBowling Alley, 1411 Grandview Ave.,Muscatine, IA
Dean Wellman - Monks Kaee Pub, 373Blu St., Dubuque, IA
DJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202W. Mayne St., Blue Grass, IA
Dustin Lee - Mojo’s (River Music Experi-
ence), 130 W 2nd St, Davenport, IAEvolution - Rumors, 1415 Grandview
Ave., Muscatine, IAGray Wolf Band - Jumer’s Casino & Hotel,
I-280 & I-92, Rock Island, ILGreg Sullivan & Matt Podschweit - Bor-
ders Books, Music & Cae, 4000 E. 53rdSt., Davenport, IA
Guilherme Vincens (3pm) - DenkmannMemorial Hall, Augustana College,
Rock Island, ILHap Hazard - Ducky’s Lagoon, 13515
78th Ave, Andalusia, IL
Gray Wolf Band - Jumer’s Casino & Hotel,I-280 & I-92, Rock Island, IL
Karaoke Night - Sneaky Pete’s, 207 CodyRd. N., LeClaire, IA
KASS DJ Night - Club Boulevard, 180110th St., Moline, IL
Left Lane Cruiser - The One NightStandards- RIBCO, 1815 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
Live at the Lounge - St. Ambrose Univer-
sity, 518 W. Locust, Davenport, IAMichael Miller - Monks Kaee Pub, 373
Blu St., Dubuque, IAMidwest Dilemma - Maylane - I Eat
My Friends - Beat Boxcar Children - River Music Experience, 129 Main St,Davenport, IA
Painkiller Hotel Acoustic Show - KevinPresbrey - Kilkenny’s, 3rd & Harrison,
Davenport, IARealfoot Rift - Raised by the System
- Torn Between - Six to the Chest - Hal’s Wagon Wheel, 1708 State Street,Bettendor, IA
Retro Ron - Mojo’s (River Music Experi-ence), 130 W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Rick K & the Allnighters - Riverside
Casino and Gol Resort, 3184 Highway
22, Riverside, IA
Russ Reyman Trio (5pm) - The Rusty Nail,
2606 W Locust, Davenport, IA
Smooth Groove - Martini’s On the Rock,
4619 34th St, Rock Island, IL
Stoopifunk - Rascals Rock Memorabilia
Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, IL
The Mike & Carrie Show - Uptown
Neighborhood Bar and Grill, 2340
Spruce Hills Dr., Bettendor, IA
Tom Sadg e - Quad-Cities Waterront
Convention Center, 1777 Isle Parkway,
Bettendor, IA
Tony Hoeppner (noon) - Mojo’s (River
Music Experience), 130 W 2nd St,Davenport, IA
Vodkaseven - Route 61 Bar & Grill, 4320
N. Brady St., Davenport, IA
Left Lane Cruiser @ RIBCO – March 26
24 wednesday
25Thursday
27 Saturday
26FRIday
Continued From Page 25
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 27/28
B u s i n e s s • P o l i t i c s • A r t s • C u l t u r e • N o w Y o u K n o w • R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
R i v e r
C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r • V o l .1 7 N o .7 4 8 • M a r c h 1 8 - 3 1 ,2
0 1 0
Dawn’s Coffeehouse (5pm) - Dawn’s Hide& Bead Away, 220 E Washington St,
Iowa City, IADJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202 W.Mayne St., Blue Grass, IA
Johnny On Point - Cirrus Minor - The Red-stone Room, 129 Main St, Davenport, IA
Karaoke Night - Sneaky Pete’s, 207 Cody Rd.N., LeClaire, IA
KASS DJ Night - Club Boulevard, 1801 10thSt., Moline, IL
Las Rubias del Norte - CSPS/Legion Arts,1103 3rd St SE, Cedar Rapids, IA
Live Lunch w/ Ren Estrand (noon) -Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Mission Creek Festival: The Gglitch - D.Bess - Iowa City Yacht Club, 13 S LinnSt, Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: The Meat Puppets- Joe Jack Talcum - Sam Locke Ward &the Boo-Hoos - The Mill, 120 E Burling-ton, Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Tim Hecker - GregDavis & Lwa - The Picador, 330 E. Wash-ington St., Iowa City, IA
NINE-1-1 - The Rusty Nail, 2606 W Locust,Davenport, IA
Passion - Riverside Casino and Gol Resort,3184 Highway 22, Riverside, IA
Russ Reyman Trio (5pm) - The Rusty Nail,2606 W Locust, Davenport, IA
The Cowsills - Quad-Cities WaterrontConvention Center, 1777 Isle Parkway,Bettendor, IA
The Tailfins - Desperado’s, P.O. Box 386,Wheatland, IA
Tronicity - 11th Street Precinct, 2108 E 11thSt, Davenport, IA
uneXpected - Uptown Neighborhood Barand Grill, 2340 Spruce Hills Dr., Bet-tendor, IA
2010/04/03 (Sat)
An Evening with Christina Marie - Col Ball-room, 1012 W. 4th St., Davenport, IA
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ - Crab-by’s, 826 W. 1st Ave., Coal Valley, IL
Bumper Crop - Slaughterhouse Rootz - The Redstone Room, 129 Main St,Davenport, IA
DJ Night - Uncle Harley’s Bar & Grill, 202W. Mayne St., Blue Grass, IA
DJ Scott Keller Productions & Karaoke - Greenbriar Restaurant and Lounge,4506 27th St, Moline, IL
Karaoke Night - Moe’s Pizza, 1312 Ca-manche Ave, Clinton, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Cory Chisel &the Wandering Sons - Diplomats of Solid Sound - Sad Iron Music - TheMill, 120 E Burlington, Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Dennis McMur-rin & the Demolition Band - Iowa CityYacht Club, 13 S Linn St, Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Grant Hart - TheTanks - The Picador, 330 E. Washing-ton St., Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Greg Brown- Pieta Brown - Englert Theatre, 221East Washington St., Iowa City, IA
NINE-1-1 - The Rusty Nail, 2606 W Locust,Davenport, IA
Open Mic Night - Coee Dive, 230 W. 3rdSt. 2nd Floor, Davenport, IA
Passion - Riverside Casino and Gol Re-sort, 3184 Highway 22, Riverside, IA
River Prairie Minstrels (6pm) - Mojo’s(River Music Experience), 130 W 2ndSt, Davenport, IA
Salsa Dancing - Club Boulevard, 180110th St., Moline, IL
The Metro Gnomes - Fargo, 4204 Avenueo the Cities, Moline, IL
Tronicity - 11th Street Precinct, 2108 E11th St, Davenport, IA
uneXpected - Time Out Sports Bar
and Grill, 1815 Manuacturing Dr,Clinton, IA
J. Elliot - The Old Stardust Sports Bar, 119119th Street, Moline, IL
Live Lunch w/ Steve Couch (noon) -
Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Mission Creek Festival Pre-Party: TheCave Sin g ers - Birds & Batteries- Mondo Drag - The Mill, 120 E Burling-ton, Iowa City, IA
Mis s ion Creek F es tival: Pocah un ted- Sun Araw - Peaking Lights - ReneHell - The Picador, 330 E. WashingtonSt., Iowa City, IA
Open Mic Night @ M.D. Green’s w/ Jer-emiah - M.D. Green’s, 1808 2nd Ave.,Rock Island, IL
Open Mic w/ Jordan Danielsen - BierStube Davenport, 2228 E 11th St,Davenport, IA
Scott Miller - Uptown Neighborhood Barand Grill, 2340 Spruce Hills Dr., Bet-tendor, IA
The Chris & Wes Show - Rascals Rock Mem-orabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, IL
2010/03/31 (Wed)
Daytrotter Presents: Miles Kurosky -Pancho-san - Huckleberry’s, 223 18thSt, Rock Island, IL
Mission Creek Festival: Booker T - JJ Grey - Englert Theatre, 221 East WashingtonSt., Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: The DaredevilChristopher Wright - Brighton MA- Sarah Mannix and the WanderingBears - The New Bodies - The Mill, 120E Burlington, Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Xiu Xiu - tUnE-yArDs - Talk Normal - Coyote Sling-
shot - The Picador, 330 E. WashingtonSt., Iowa City, IAMission Creek Music Festival: Mannix!
- Carusella - Beast Wars - Liberty Leg - Iowa City Yacht Club, 13 S Linn St,Iowa City, IA
2010/03/28 (Sun)
Breille - The Hat Eatery & Pub, 1618 W.Locust St., Davenport, IA
Rick K & the Allnighters (2pm) - Riv-erside Casino and Gol Resort, 3184Highway 22, Riverside, IA
Roxi Copland - Shannon Curtis - RaeFehring (6pm) - The Mill, 120 E Burl-ington, Iowa City, IA
Russ Reyman, Pianist (10am-2pmbrunch performance) - The LodgeHotel, Spruce Hills & Utica Ridge,Bettendor, IA
The Avey Brothers - Rascals Rock Memo-rabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, IL
Troy Harris, Pianist (11:30am) - BassStreet Chop House, 1601 River Dr,Moline, IL
Whoozdads (10am) - Brady Street Chop
House, Radisson QC Plaza Hotel ,Davenport, IA
2010/03/29 (Mon)
Daytrotter Presents: Holiday Shores- Twin Sister - Huckleberry’s, 223 18thSt, Rock Island, IL
Karaoke Night - The Old Stardust SportsBar, 1191 19th Street, Moline, IL
Live Lunch w/ Randy Arcenas (noon) - Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130W 2nd St, Davenport, IA
Open Mic w/ J. Knight - The Mill, 120 EBurlington, Iowa City, IA
Stress Ape - Mantaur (5pm) - Easy Street,431 Rhomberg Ave., Dubuque, IA
2010/03/30 (Tue)
Adrian Legg - CSPS/Legion Arts, 1103 3rdSt SE, Cedar Rapids, IA
Deathface (Johnny Love of Guns ‘n’Bombs) - Lady Espina - Iowa CityYacht Club, 13 S Linn St, Iowa City, IA
Open Mic Night - The Old Stardust SportsBar, 1191 19th Street, Moline, IL
Steve Grismore Quartet - WallenbergHall, Augustana College, 3701 7th
Ave., Rock Island, IL“Tennessee,” That Nashville Cat (noon)
- Open Mic Night (7pm) - Mojo’s
(River Music Experience), 130 W 2ndSt, Davenport, IA
The Craig Bentley Trio - Rascals Rock Memorabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Mo-
line, IL
2010/04/01 (Thu)
Black Hawk College Jazz Ensemble
(6:30pm) - Huckleberry’s, 223 18thSt, Rock Island, IL
Just Chords - Kilkenny’s, 3rd & Harrison,Davenport, IA
Live Lunch w/ Rose ‘n’ Thorns (noon) - Mojo’s (River Music Experience), 130
W 2nd St, Davenport, IAMission Creek Festival: Acid Moth-
ers Temple - Over-Gain OptimalDeath - Wet Hair - Broken Water - The Picador, 330 E. Washington St.,
Iowa City, IA
Mission Creek Festival: Bomb Squad- Hood Internet - Database - Iowa CityYacht Club, 13 S Linn St, Iowa City, IA
Mis s ion Creek F es tival: David Bazan
- Headlights - Caroline Smith & theGoodnight Sleeps - The Poison Con-trol Center - The Mill, 120 E Burlington,Iow City, IA
New Karaoke - Hal’s Wagon Wheel, 1708State Street, Bettendor, IA
Open Mic Night - The Dam View Inn, 4102nd St, Davenport, IA
The Steady Rollin’ Blues Band featuringJimmie Lee Adams - Rascals Rock Mem-orabilia Bar, 1414 15th St., Moline, IL
Troy Harris, Pianist (6pm) - Red CrowGrille, 2504 53rd St., Bettendor, IA
2010/04/02 (Fri)
ABC Karaoke - Circle Tap, 1345 Locust St.,Davenport, IA
Bee All U Can Bee Karaoke & DJ - Commo-
dore Tap, 2202 W. 3rd St., Davenport, IABob Dorr & the Blue Band (6pm) - The Hub,
402 Main St, Cedar Falls, IACrossroads- Purgatory’s Pub, 2104 State St,
Bettendor, IA
SEVEN @ Route 61 Bar & Grill – March 5
3Saturday
28sunday
1thursday
Get Your Gig or Venue
HIGHLIGHTEDAdvertise in the Reader.
Call 563-324-0049
2FRIDAY
29monday
30tuesday
31 wednesday
Lujack.com
Just South of the Northpark Mall
VOLKSWAGEN
Zero security deposit. 39 month lease, 10k miles per year. Offerexpires 03/31/10. With $1999 due at signing. Plus tax & fees.
JETTA 2.52010 VW
$199PERMO.
LEASEFOR
Zero security deposit. 39 month lease, 10k miles per year. Offer expires03/31/10. With $2499 due at signing. Plus tax & fees.
2010 VWCC SPORT
$299PERMO.
LEASEFOR
2006 VW JETTA TDI #V4351A, CERTIFIED............................................. $15,9912008 VW JETTA SE #ZP9910A, CERTIFIED .............................................. $15,9942008 VW TOUAREG #V4192A, CERTIFIED .............................................. $29,991
EXTRA SAVINGS ON OURCERTIFIED PRE-LOVED VW’S
2010 VW
TIGUAN S$269PER
MO.LEASE
FOR .OR
Zero security deposit. 39 month lease, 10k miles per year. Offer expires03/31/10. With $2499 due at signing. Plus tax & fees.2009 VW NEW BEETLE
CONVERTIBLES
HURRY ONLY 6 REMAIN!
& 2009 VW EOS
ON REMAINING
WITH APPROVED CREDIT. THRU VCI FINANCIAL
UNTIL 03/31/10. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS.
FINANCING
APR0%For 72 Months
Lujack V W Goes The Extra Mile
8/9/2019 River Cities' Reader Issue 748 March 18, 2010
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/river-cities-reader-issue-748-march-18-2010 28/28
R i v e r C i t i e s ’ R e a d e r •
V o l . 1 7 N o .
7 4 8 •
M a r c h 1 8 -
3 1 ,
2 0 1 0
B u s i n e s s •
P o l i t i c s •
A r t s •
C u l t u r e •
N o w
Y o u K n o w
• R i v e r C i t i e s R e a d e r . c o m
Over half of Metro’s fleet runs on clean burning CompressedNatural Gas—keeping our skies blue while providing safe,reliable transportation for thousands of Quad Citians. www.gogreenmetro.com
IN OUR WORLD
BLUEISTHENEWGREEN.