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Reason for the Season

July 3rd, 2009 by Jimmy Fowler

At some point this weekend, turn the party music down a little, step away from the grill, put the beer down (it’s not going anywhere), and savor the awesomeness of Thomas Jefferson’s greatest hit — or, at the very least, the first few graphs of it. Flags are fine as far as they go, but these words are really worth saluting.

The Return of the King

July 3rd, 2009 by Anthony Mariani

One-man-R&B-band Nathan Brown/Browningham is playing tonight at The Grotto, probably about 1 in the morning, after everyone has drunk a dangerous amount of alcohol and the gritty party band Shuttle has come and gone. That a singer-songwriter is going on in the wee hours of the morn after a semi-popular band deep in the heart of Texas on a hot summer night wouldn’t be news except for the fact that Nathan Brown isn’t just any singer-songwriter. He’s probably the closest thing North Texas’ underground scene has to a legitimate genius.

Brown is a multi-instrumental virtuoso, having played guitar in his punk vehicle, Pretend King; played keyb’s – and a Speak & Spell – in his Krautrock vehicle, AC Identity; filled in on drums for Berklee-educated maestro Dave Karnes on jazz-jam nights; and taken stages with nothing but his keyboard, samples, and a drum machine and sounded as full — and as smooooove — as Billy Ocean’s backing band.

Brown is versatile and prolific. The only genres he hasn’t tackled, as far as I know, are C&W and classical. His list of recorded songs numbers in the high dozens.

Brown also sells and repairs eight-track players and has released other bands’ music on eight-track cassettes. The name of his company/record label is The Dead Media.

Brown — a skinny, six-foot-something tall, white thirtysomething dude — also writes and performs his own cheers. Like “ra-ra,” high-school cheerleader-y cheers. Solo.

Brown returned to Fort Worth not too long ago from a couple-year sojourn in Little Rock. In everyday bar convos, I normally go out of my way to mention that he’s back and isn’t it awesome? The most common response is a titled head and a returned question: “Who’s Nathan Brown?”

Brown recently sent me an e-mail about his Grotto/Shuttle show. At one point, he said, “If you’re not too bummed, come out, please.” Sorry, Nathan. You’re not only not headlining but you won’t be going on until everyone’s cares have been drowned in hooch and you’ve been back in town for a few months now and still can’t get a decent gig. How could I not be bummed?

Dinner Roll: Restaurant Round-Up July 4 Edition

July 3rd, 2009 by Eric Griffey

Keep those restaurant related emails rolling in: eric.griffey@fwweekly.com

Hoffbrau Steaks (1712 S. University Dr. FW 76107 phone: 817-870-1952) is offering dinner for two for $19.99, but only if you tell your server that you know about the deal. Per their email: “A 20 oz. Sizzling Platter of Center Cut Top Sirloin for Two served on a bed of grilled onions and topped with crispy onion strings, accompanied by your choice of soup or salad and your choice of two favorite sidewinders.”

Lambert’s (2731 White Settlement Road FW 76107 phone: 817-882-1161) is one of many restaurants doing a special deal for July 4. They’re offering a burgers and BBQ buffet, and doing drink specials. The buffet runs from 3-8 pm, and includes: green salad, potato salad, fruit, brisket, smoked chicken, smoked sausage, ranch beans, and fresh fruit cobbler. The items that are cooked to order are: grilled burgers, veggie burgers, house fries, mac-n-cheese, chips & salsa, and chips & queso. They’re also offering $5 house margaritas, and $2 domestic bottled beer.

Mac’s Fort Worth (2600 West 7th Street suite 153 FW 76107 phone: 817-332-6227) has 4 for $4 happy hour deal, which includes select wines, margaritas, martinis, wells, and fancy beers for $4. They’re also offering a prime rib dinner for $10.95 every night.

Bistro Louise (2900 S. Hulen FW 76109 phone: 817-922-9244) is also offering a July 4 deal. It’s a clam bake buffet of sorts. On the buffet is boneless short ribs, and Colorado tenderloin stuffed peppers, and fresh New England clams. You can also add a whole Maine lobster for an additional $18.95. It’s 29.95 per person, and stops at 8pm.

On a more newsy note, Kincaid’s Hamburgers (4901 Camp Bowie Blvd. FW 76107 phone: 817-732-2881) has renewed their lease at their Camp Bowie location, where they’ve been since the dawn of time. The lease is for fiver years. They’re planning a special event, no word on what that will be.

Wacked-up Over Jacko

July 3rd, 2009 by Jimmy Fowler

“Breaking News: Michael Jackson Still Weird and Still Dead!”

CNN plays continuously throughout the day at my house as a kind of background noise. The amount of coverage being given to Jackson’s death is smothering, and I can only assume it resembles the rest of the cable news universe’s bug-eyed, salivating leer over every detail of this artist’s sad life and sudden death. Yesterday, anchors interrupted a discussion about the possibility of a post-U.S. withdrawal civil war in Iraq for the “breaking news” that Jackson’s memorial would go forward at Staples Center in LA. And there’s no sign that this particular “news cycle” is about to play itself out — a little while ago, CNN announced it would begin all-day coverage of Jackson’s Tuesday memorial starting at 6 am.

Post-traumatic stress disorder has begun to set in. I’m having flashbacks of 1982, when you had to avoid all public places, shut off the TV and the radio, and pull down the blinds if you wanted a brief escape from the “Thriller” single.

I enjoy the sugar jolt that comes from entertainment news and tabloid “revelations”—they’re like the Little Debbie Swiss Cake Rolls of cultural awareness. But any eight year old can tell you that a whole box of them consumed in under an hour will make you puke. My question to cable news producers is: At long last, have you no gag reflex?

Police Chief Backpedals Over The Rainbow

July 2nd, 2009 by Jeff Prince

Wow, how’s this for an about-face?

Fort Worth’s top cop, the one who came across as cavalier and condescending while first discussing last weekend’s raid at the Rainbow Lounge, is now doing the ol’ soft shoe.

A police press release says Chief Jeffrey W. Halstead has suspended all operations with the Texas Alcohol Beverage Commission (TABC) “until we gain a better understanding of the events that occurred at the Rainbow Lounge.”

Also, Halstead “desires to learn about the historical relationship between the TABC and the Fort Worth Police Department.”

The chief goes on to say he will conduct meetings with TABC officials to establish “clearly defined roles and responsibilities” of each organization with the intent to better serve the community in conducting inspections.

Halstead is inviting community leaders to meet with him to “gain their input on how the Fort Worth Police Department can deliver improved service to all who live in, work in, and visit the City of Fort Worth.”

Finally, the press release goes on to say that the chief will collaborate with the city’s Human Resource Department to ensure that current and future Fort Worth Police officers will be trained in multiculturalism, “specifically in consideration to the GLBT community.”

This is quite a different response from those first couple of days when the police department’s company line was more along the lines of, hey, the cops were doing a routine inspection, got pawed and groped by drunken, sex-crazed gay folk, and reacted accordingly, simply doing their jobs, no big deal, everybody take a deep breath, chill out, nothing to look at here.

James Michael Taylor responds

July 2nd, 2009 by Jeff Prince

I talked to local songwriter James Michael Taylor the other day and asked about his recent nomination in the “Best Acoustic/Folk” category in this year’s Fort Worth Weekly Music Awards.

Taylor didn’t know he’d been nominated.

He looked in the paper and read this description by music writer Caroline Collier: “Veteran songsmith James Michael Taylor is prolific – he releases a new album about every other month – and is an open book, sharing stories from his life with an almost shameless abandon.”

Now, I’ve known Taylor for several years and gotta say he’s an interesting cat. We’ve had many conversations, which are always enlightening but sometimes hard to follow, at least on my end. He’s a deep thinker and a constant one, a mental explorer and active conversationalist, examining the pebble from every angle before tossing it over his shoulder.

He agreed with every word of Collier’s description except one — “shameless.”

That single word prompted this response [edited for length], which gives you an idea of Taylor’s mental gymnastics and prolific nature:

“I think what people say about me might be a bit of an oversimplification, maybe even a bit of myth-making, maybe just missing a very important point. I don’t just spill my guts, wear my heart on my sleeve, cry my sadness out as a self-indulgent narcissist/egocentric chronicle of my own personal life.

“I find universal echoes in the conversations I have with the people around me and I search the depths of my own understanding of my personal experiences for the pictures and words that embody these themes in song.

“Take for example [his song] ‘Sequoia Memories’ — Peggy and I never spent a night in the Sequoias. Peggy and I never stood on the cliffs above the Pacific coast watching the dolphins. I don’t know any girls in Indiana. The song says, ‘Though our stories may be different, our states of mind are the same… .’ That’s the point! What we have in common. Not what makes me different. Not what makes me special. It’s the opposite.

“ ‘Since You Went Away’ specifically tries to capture the moment of realizing, ‘We’re like everybody else.’ I don’t just stumble onto these songs, these subjects. People believe there really was a watermelon stand in Brownsville (‘Watermelon Wind’). People believe there really was a trailer court called ‘The Cozy West.’ I made these up.

“People believe these things are true not because I’m spilling my guts and exposing my life to them. They believe these stories because they are as real to them as they are to me. They ring true. Because I craft them in such a way as to leave it all open.

“Expressing oneself and communicating are two different, though not necessarily, exclusive things. I would suggest that what I do different from the boring songs we hear, even from otherwise great songwriters like John Fogerty, when they sing about their personal lives, wives, children, dogs and cats, grandfathers and grandmothers, is I write about ideas. I take ideas and clothe them in pictures and places and situations that resonate, and that examine those ideas in the light of our understanding. Our common perceptions. Our common culture. Our common literature.

“When I listen to the Beatles sing ‘We Can Work It Out’ do I think being able to work it out is something only the Beatles can do? Only John and Cynthia?

“There is something I recognize as significance when I peruse the landscape of my conversations. There is a conversation preceding nearly every song I write. Maybe with myself (I am running conversations constantly) or with the people I pester to talk with me (I am always probing and I find that most people don’t really enjoy being probed.)

“When I wrote ‘Natalie Likes Me A Lot’ I was retelling what someone else told me about what their boyfriend’s mother said to them about their boyfriend. I changed it to first person because it held an idea and it was simpler to tell it that way… .

“No given song tells the whole story. The best a song can do it catch an idea and hold it in the light for a few seconds… .”

Hardware Haul

July 2nd, 2009 by Gayle Reaves

Fort Worth Weekly rocked in Houston last weekend –– even though none of us were able to be there in person to appreciate the vibe. At the statewide Lone Star Awards, presented by the Houston Press Club, the Weekly took firsts in five of the seven small-newspaper (circulation under 100,000) categories in which we were finalists.

I was particularly proud of the Business Story category, where the Weekly had all three finalist slots, with first place going to Kendall Anderson’s “Prophet of Boom (and Bust),” about groundbreaking economist Ravi Batra and his still-being-ignored predictions for the future of this country. The judges said the story “makes us very, very afraid.” Touché.

Other firsts:

– Jimmy Fowler, in the Feature Story category, for his “Standing Tall for AIDS Victims” profile on Rhonda Mae, Cowtown’s beloved AIDS-activist drag queen.

– Peter Gorman, in Politics/Government, for “A Border Under Siege.” The judges called it “a terrifying look at the escalating drug cartel wars” along the Texas-Mexico border. (We seem to have made it a practice this year of scaring the judges … in a good way.)

– Betty Brink, in Investigative Reporting (her forte), for her Tarrant County College investigation. Let’s see, that would be the college where the high-dollar, high-controversy chancellor just resigned as a result of the uproar caused by the stories that Betty started writing more than a year ago.

– Dan McGraw, in Sports, for his “Princess of Pong,” about Texas Wesleyan University’s colorful and world-class table tennis star.

Peter also took second place in the Print Journalist of the Year competition. Joaquin Sapien and Ben Welsh, in a project on which the Weekly partnered with the Center for Public Integrity, took second in Investigative Reporting for the same look at TXU air pollution (and Texas’ failure to regulate it) that won a national investigative reporting award a couple of weeks ago. Associate editor Anthony Mariani took third place in General Commentary/Criticism for “The Enemy Within,” his review of an art exhibit at the Modern. In the Business Story category, Kendall’s Ravi Batra story beat out Dan’s profile of Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon (“Putting on the Green Suit”) also and Jeff Prince’s “Magical Misery Tour,” a look back at the highs and lows of Tarrant County’s bar scene.

Jeff took another second-place in the Features category for “His Last War,” a poignant look at a local man and his crusade for better treatment by the medical profession of those who, like him, suffered from chronic, debilitating pain. That story, one of my personal favorites of the year, also brought Jeff one of two second place awards in the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies’ national contest, whose results were also announced last Friday. His “Magical Misery Tour” won second in Arts Features in the AAN competition as well.

The Weekly staff is small, and the writers are always paddling hard just to keep their heads above the tide of stories that need reporting in this community, stories that no one else is doing or that we do better, from local music and arts coverage to watchdogging the Barnett Shale to investigations of local governments. We couldn’t do it without our readers, who cheer us on (well, mostly), send us news tips, and look to us for the kind of journalism we thrive on. Keep those cards and letters comin’.

Fort Worth: 10th Fastest-Growing City

July 1st, 2009 by Anthony Mariani

The U.S. Census Bureau just announced its list of the fastest-growing cities in the country. At the top, perhaps naturally, is New Orleans –– evidently, people who moved away post-Katrina are moving back. In the 10th spot is probably the only real, bona fide city in the top 10, your very own Fort Worth, which indeed is positive news: More people means more money in city coffers, which means further improvements can be made in the quality of city services and the city’s overall livability. In between the Big Easy and Cowtown, however, aren’t real cities at all, with skylines and pedestrian-friendly downtown areas and neighborhoods, but exurbs. (Three of them are in Texas: Round Rock (No. 2), north of Austin; Killeen (No. 9), between Austin and Waco; and McKinney (No. 5), north of here.)

Exurbs are like suburbs but are much fancier and much farther from downtown sections. The growth of exurbs doesn’t necessarily mean that people with money are abandoning downtown areas –– cities, like Fort Worth, with drastically revitalized downtown areas are packing in upper- and upper-middle-class folks. What the exurbs’ growth likely means is that the suburbs are dying. Suburban home prices have been dropping over the past 10 years and, by the looks of things, will continue dropping, possibly until the average suburban home is the ’00 version of a Section 8 housing unit. Fort Worth, based on the census data, is immune –– for now.

Rainbow Lounge Heats Up

July 1st, 2009 by Dan McGraw

A group of prominent Fort Worth business leaders and community activists are calling for an independent investigation by private citizens of the TABC/FWPD raid at the Rainbow Lounge. Here is their letter sent today to Mayor Mike Moncrief, city council members, and city staff:

 

Dear Mayor Mike Moncrief, Members of City Council, City Manager Dale A. Fisseler, and Chief of Police Jeffrey Halstead.

 

Re; Rainbow Lounge

 

            As members of this community, we are deeply concerned about the events which occurred at the Rainbow Lounge involving the Fort Worth police and members of the TABC. From the various local, national, and, now, international news reports, it is evident that serious discrepancies exist between the official police statement concerning these events and those of the patrons who were there. Especially given the current economic uncertainties, it is essential that Fort Worth not be perceived as an intolerant or unwelcoming community. Although you, as mayor, have quite properly proposed that Chief Halstead commence an internal inquiry, we respectfully submit that only an independent investigation can lay to rest the concerns of all citizens.

 

            Therefore, we respectfully urge the immediate appointment of an independent citizens’ commission to investigate this incident, with full power and authority to collect evidence, render objective conclusions, and make recommendations, if necessary. Only in this way can Fort Worth be seen as having dealt with the situation openly and effectively.

 

The letter was signed by the following:

 

Maryellen Hicks (former judge and mother of FW council member Kathleen Hick)

Stephen H. Dutton (President and CEO of the Good Samaritan House)

Charlotte Sobel (Ex. Dir. Of the Fort Worth Partnership for Community Development)

James Askey (CFO for Good Samaritan House)

Tom Anable (local accountant who was at the Rainbow Lounge that night)

Jonathan D. F. Nelson (local gay attorney who has been involved in the gay/Episcopal church dispute)

Thomas P. Lang, Jr. (an executive with PlainsCapital Bank)

D. Michael Lynn (a federal bankruptcy court judge)

Joan Kline (local community activist and prominent realtor)

 

“We were very concerned about the public image of Fort Worth, and we all came to the consensus that an independent investigation done immediately was in the best interests of this city,” Nelson told the FW Weekly. “We have people who are calling for this from all walks of life, gay and straight.”

 

“I’ve lived in this city for 33 years,” Nelson continued, “and I love this city. I have not experienced any discrimination in all those years because of my sexual orientation. But when I read the extremely different account of what happened that night from law enforcement and the bar patrons, I think our only choice is to have an independent investigation. We have to act swiftly. This is all about Fort Worth being an inclusive city for all sorts of groups. But if we find members of the power structure who do not share that view, the city needs to deal with it.”

 

Our take on this is that those who signed this letter are some people with some pull in this community. If this was just a group of gay rights activists requesting an independent investigation, the Mayor Moncrief could easily dismiss the demand. But with judges, business leaders, heads of community outreach groups asking for this, we see Mayor Moncrief coming under a ton of criticism if he turns them down.

Texas Rangers Suck … Again

June 30th, 2009 by Jeff Prince

On June 18, I posted this rose-colored tribute to the Texas Rangers and exalted on how after 10 years of despising them and refusing to watch them play, I finally broke down and watched a game, enjoyed it, and considered lifting my longtime ban and embracing the team once again.

They were in first place at the time, about five games ahead in their division.

I was ready to jump on the bandwagon.

Well, after my naive post, the team lost its next five games, lost eight of its past 11, and have fallen 2-1/2 games behind the Angels.

I’m off the wagon again.

Screw the Rangers. Go Cowboys!