People, Politics, and Media
. . . And other revelations in the Rep’s new solo show.
Carnegie’s offers classic French cuisine. Just ignore the ghosts.
Now that we’re more than a week into the wake of Bumbershoot 2003, there are any number of approaches I…
A rock icon of the ’70s, Alan Parsons keeps an eye to the sky in the ’90s.
A final look at 14 days in Salt Lake.
A video documentary reveals how Nirvana exposed the generation gap at America’s largest record club.
He is heavy, and he’s my brother.
Youssou N’Dour’s Egypt praises the saints and passes the musical ammunition.
ARCHERS OF LOAF, Seconds Before the Accident (Alias) This was a great band: tuneful, dissonant, rhythmically propulsive, their roaring anger…
Where certain offerings have our review team fighting over who gets to eat them.
How one of the richest men in the world lobbies the Seattle City Council.
Independent spirit thrives amid the celebrity crush of Sundance 2000: a report from Park City, Utah.
Architectural promises: “Paris, Amsterdam, and New York are doomed cities,” warns architect Rem Koolhaas. “No longer laboratories of uncertainty, they…
Brother Wayne Kramer testifies on art, adulthood, and American Idol.
What’s in, what’s fresh, what’s cooking.
India in America (dance) This event ranges from traditional practitioners of ancient dance forms to the unique combination of the…
Sniff sniff. The Gnome weeps about the pending departure of the Weekly‘s own Jackie McCarthy, who leaves along with music…
We thought it had been too long since we’d heard from Tonya Harding. The ice-skating world’s very own trailer-park Lady…
A century before Littleton, social critics blamed a popular music form for inciting violence.
