Most Popular
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The Talk of the Green Iguana
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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The Muscle Men
Inside the "Rejuvenation Centers" at the heart of the nation's largest illegal steroid and HGH operation
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Are We There Yet?
Jeez, can we just embrace the electric car already?
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Accidental Hit Man
Sure, Paul Brandreth talks like a wiseguy. But is he a cold-blooded killer?
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They'll Take Your Houses
South Florida's real estate forecast calls for pain
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Man-Child in the Promised Land (11)
Pop star Sean Kingston hopes the party's just begun
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Your Mom Thinks Hes Hot (6)
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The Talk of the Green Iguana (5)
Will American voters elect the first gay vice president in November?
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Solar Eclipse (2)
Early-rising photographer becomes "cruising for cock" suspect
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Shooting the Moon (2)
Aim high or aim low, you're bound to hit something, even if it's the sleep button
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Cheat Sheet to Langerado
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Paul Potts
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Licensed to Chill
How the Beasties went from hip-hop pranksters to musical renaissance men
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Not Your Father's N Word
Eight months after its "burial," the world's most dangerous epithet is more popular than ever in hip-hop
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Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
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The Mind-Boggling Lewis Murder Case
12:17AM 03/19/08 -
Rejected!
12:56PM 03/18/08 -
Palm Beach Post Cuts Coffee, Pages
11:56AM 03/17/08 -
WMC Preview! Q&A with Louie Vega
12:32PM 03/20/08 -
New House Shoes Podcast Up
10:26AM 03/20/08 -
Q&A with Pink Martini, to play Adrienne Arsht Center this Friday
03:51PM 03/19/08
What we are writing about
- Anoushka Shankar and...
- anything goes here
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- BankAtlantic Center
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- Deerfield Beach
- FLIFF
- Guillermo Trujillo:...
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- Kid Rock
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- Maroon 5
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- National Collage Society
- No World for Tomorrow
- October 11 through...
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- Q&A
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- Sharon Jones and the...
- The Afromotive
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- Written and directed...
National Features
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Village Voice
A Long Way Wrong?
Another celebrated memoir threatens to blow into a million little pieces.
By Graham Rayman -
LA Weekly
Hoop Dawg
Billionaire Donald T. Sterling owns the L.A. Clippers and loves the ladies. And those are just two of his problems.
By Patrick Range McDonald -
Westword
The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, they messed with the wrong coward.
By Joel Warner
Fooled Again
Mother Nature plays dirty, but curfews, cancellations aren't exactly fair either
Published: November 3, 2005
A luscious bitch she is, true. But it's not nice to fool Mother Nature.
"Red Hot Mama" by George Clinton
You know you're starving for a groove when your mind cross-fades the sounds of groaning generators and dopplering sirens and the meep-meep-meep of reversing sewage trucks into a mechanical pseudo-symphony. As of this entry, the power's been out at the Beat House for a week. That means no records on the turntable and no strobe lights in the den and believe me, it's tough to do the Electric Slide when FPL isn't holding up its end of the bargain.
Beyond gas, ice, and patience, Wilma has depleted South Florida's normally crammed cultural calendar, forcing a painful number of cancellations and postponements. Some have gone unnoticed did anyone register that Gallagher was coming in the first place? while others, especially the nixing of Halloween weekend throwdowns like Moonfest in West Palm and Fort Lauderdale's Nightmare in the Park have dealt a blow to the collective morale. Add in a wet-blanket curfew and the selective prohibition of alcohol sales and it's clear that we could use the kind of relief that FEMA can't give.
"They stop you as soon as you try to grab a flat-screen TV! I don't know what the deal is," jokes local promoter and mustachioed bon vivant Isaac Alexander. Here's a guy directly affected by the gratuitous curfew his parties don't usually get started till 11 p.m., when Johnny Law would have us all sitting at home, alone in the dark. Crush, his weekly Thursday-night event, was canceled last week; next week's which would be the fashionable fete's two-year anniversary was still pending.
"The thing that bothers me the most is that it seems like the city officials were doing everything to not bring people together," he continues. "All that really happened was the hurricane came through and fucked up everybody's belongings. It's not like someone set off a bomb and we're worried about terrorists killing us all. It didn't need to go to this martial law. When Louisiana got hit, the first concern was to get the entertainment back up and running. They kept the bars open as long as they could and kept people happy. Here, it seems like they did the exact opposite. It's so backwards."
Backwards, of course, being the approach city suits typically take toward the indigenous arts community. There's little priority given to figuring out a way to make important cultural events happen say, for instance, the popular, long-standing Riverwalk Blues Festival, which would've gone on this weekend but has been postponed until February. This is how we're supposed to return to normalcy?
Alexander's solution was to get the funk out of Dodge after a friend waited nine hours for gas on Thursday, he took his decks and discs up to a house party in Orlando. For others, like Javid Kosari of Fort Lauderdale's Las Olas Gourmet, the festivities went on as planned. Kosari's weekly winetasting happened by candlelight on Friday, October 28. An unseen generator powered just the barest basics a refrigerator for the whites and hot damn! the store's killer sound system. Gipsy Kings segued into gaudy French house and Brazilian soul as a handful of grateful patrons guzzled Kosari's sophisticated stash. "American people don't know how to be hungry," said the Iranian-born oenophile of the up-in-arms reaction to long grocery lines and food shortages. Thankfully, he wasn't giving any lessons on this night. Food, wine, and the CD changer flowed freely but ended far too soon.
Full-blown musical salvation finally arrived Saturday afternoon. The call came as Beatcomber was stocking up on bottled water, oil lamps, and costume accessories at the consumptive chaos of Wal-Mart: The Heavy Pets are jamming poolside at the Summit in downtown Lauderdale.
This four-man band of transplants from upstate New York is an interesting story in its own right. Bassist/entrepreneur Joe Dupell has been relocating his mates south, one by one, over the past year, setting them up with jobs at his thriving Internet advertising company. When power went out Tuesday at E-Magine Networks' Oakland Park office, Dupell transferred operations to his two-bedroom condo at the Summit. And hell, since there was plenty of electricity to go around, why not, you know, plug in a few amps and rock on out?
"I woke up this morning, and there was no gig," red-bearded guitarist Jeff Lloyd said. "Two hours later, there was a gig. And it was a great scene, man. People were just having fun."
About 50 or so Summit residents and friends of the band took in the Heavy Pets' inaugural South Florida performance. The scruffy, barefoot quartet jangled through more than two hours of material funky, loose-limbed rock 'n' soul bound by tight vocal harmonies and ace guitar interplay. Kids played in the pool, couples boogied up above in their balconies, and everyone was, for a sweet-sounding moment, taken away from the stress caused by a weak-winded storm that somehow strongarmed into all our lives.
But you know what's coming next: That luscious bitch had the last laugh. By 3:30 p.m., mottled clouds began sponging out the hazy autumn sun. As the first post-Wilma drops fell on the Pets' set, the crowd scrambled back inside and the instruments were quickly packed away. You can beat a curfew, god damn it, but you can't beat Mother Nature.








