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Life & Arts

Movie review: Story fails to fully explore

Lack of tangible conflict overshadows otherwise inspirational narrative

Based on the true story of now-Baltimore Raven blocker Michael Oher, “The Blind Side” tells the story of a homeless, black high school student on a sports scholarship to an all-white, upper-class Christian school in Memphis, Tenn.

Good Hair

Movie review: Film falters with narrow attitude

“Good hair” is a term that women know well. And for those of us who aren’t born with “good hair,” there is an almost daily struggle to find ways to make our tresses look more like those of the women we see posing on red carpets, flashing across our television screens and dominating our magazine covers.

Journalist-turned-musician maintains his modesty

Kevin Devine is an artist who truly does it himself.

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Movie review: Poignant film captures complex environment

“Precious” has received near-universal praise since its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival, where it reportedly received a 20-minute standing ovation.

Robert Shults

Photographer views Austin through new lens

Austinites often pass by the same buildings and landmarks every day without giving them a second thought or considering what they might mean for the rest of society.

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Kweller to play benefit concert

Texas native Ben Kweller will play at Zilker Elementary School tonight for the 10th annual Zilker Backyard Concert supporting the school’s music and arts education programs.

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ABC

Faces of Austin: Ohio transplant applauds Austin's comic book scene

It may come as a shock to some people, but comics are still around and thriving.

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Broccoli project Kyle

Plan II players engage complex plot

As audience members slowly trickled into the Burdine auditorium early Saturday night and chatted before the show, suddenly, and without any change in stage lighting, a planted cast member jumped up from the audience and began prefacing the play.

Burger

Your Mom’s burgers satisfy with ‘impressively soft’ buns

Downtown restaurant reimagines classic dish, provides friendly service

Despite its name, Your Mom’s Restaurant and Delivery is not a cute, old-fashioned
burger joint. 

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XX

The xx discusses music industry, artistic process

Londonites collaborate, blend genres to create unique sound on debut album

Members of the group The xx dress like the goth kids from South Park, gush about Lady Gaga and, in one song, really bring to mind “Wicked Game” by Chris Isaak. These ingredients, by all accounts, should not have produced something as self-assured, cohesive and dark as the band’s recently released debut album, xx.

Pickup artist's book aims to increase male self-confidence in social settings

'Rules' does more than simply increase reader's ability to talk to women

If ever there was a man to adhere to the policy of “Do as I say, not as I do,” he is Neil Strauss, notorious pickup artist and author of the book “The Rules of the Game.”

Imogen Heap

Experimental artist climbs back up the musical heap

Heap, whose return to Austin has been long-awaited, will play a sold-out show

It’s taken two-and-a-half years, 5,000 miles and a launch to stardom for Imogen Heap to come back to Austin.

Painter brings chocolate into art

Paula Simpson’s art isn’t just beautiful, it’s downright delicious.

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Get Up Kids

Emo-rock group reunites, concludes tour in Austin

Emo-rock darlings The Get Up Kids will wrap up their 2009 U.S. tour tonight at Emo’s Austin. Folk-rock artist Kevin Devine and little-known Louisville band Mansions will be supporting.

Hump Day: Lack of sexual desire could be more than a side effect

Dear Hump Day,

I have been dating my current girlfriend for 13 months. When we first started dating, we didn’t fool around a lot but still did about once every couple of weeks.

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ArcAttack plans to illuminate UT

The unmistakable smell of ozone will permeate the air tonight as the members of half-band, half-science experiment ArcAttack begin to fire up their electric singing Tesla coils at the UT Main Mall.

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Pump it up: Pumpkin pie soda reignites passion for the orange gourd

When I started this column, I had a very clear goal in mind.

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Sick

Play features mix of talented actors, interesting script

Capital T’s new production of the Zayd Dohrn drama, “Sick,” cordially invites audience members to spend an evening in the strange home of Maxine and Sidney.

Borderlands

Video game fusion, sequel satisfy

‘Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2’; ‘Borderlands’

Barbara Lugge

Art, thriftiness come together

Local studio tours feature nine days of programs, happenings

Cars lined East Sixth Street as people strolled in and out of Augusto Brocca’s gallery to view the massive iron sculptures of exotic fish that peered out the window to the busy sidewalk. Others jaywalked to the East Side Showroom right across the road to catch another art happening.

Blues Control

New York duo focuses on sound, not vocals

New York’s experimental duo Blues Control creates music that sounds as if it comes from everywhere and nowhere at once; Russ Waterhouse and Lea Cho simultaneously merge sonic leaps forward into delay and minimalism, with a love of ‘70s blues rock, usually forgoing vocals in the process. On the duo’s most recent album, this year’s Local Flavor, guest guitar, trumpet and saxophone from Kurt Vile and his bandmate Jesse Trbovich helped bring their boogie rock fetishism to the forefront.

CD Reviews: Albums vary in genre, reception

Post-rock band succeeds while 'Idol' debut, remix compilation disappoint

Do Make Say Think: The Other Truths; Kris Allen: Kris Allen; Merge: Score! 20 Years of Merge Records: The Remixes

Green bean casserole

Tasty Tuesday: Holiday classics derive traditional taste from a can

I’ve always associated Thanksgiving with everyone in the family doing his or her part to make the big feast happen.

Leonard Peña

Tent revivals come to Austin

Tent revivals are often thought to be relics of the past. Originating in the late 19th century, they were originally erected to host religious meetings in which preachers spread the gospel to groups of Christian worshippers.

Austin's vegetarian chili contest finds best meatless treat

One of the most consumed dishes during the winter months is the thick and hearty stew known as chili.

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Ringo Deathstarr

Music Monday: Ringo Deathstarr guitarist talks shop before tour in Japan, Europe

Ringo Deathstarr has rejuvenated the shoegaze genre with heavy doses of energy and volume.

John Krasinski

Brief interview with new director

On Friday, John Krasinski of "The Office" came to the Alamo Drafthouse-Ritz for the Austin premiere of his directorial debut, the screen adaptation of David Foster Wallace's "Brief Interviews with Hideous Men."

Monsters of Folk

Top indie-rock musicians unite for show at Stubb's

For anyone unfamiliar with the group, it is important to note that “Monsters of Folk” is a misnomer — the band’s sound does not fit comfortably within folk music’s traditional boundaries.

Movie review: Movie fails to stay afloat despite its promising cast

The sky is dark, the seas are rough and “Pirate Radio” writer/director/executive producer Richard Curtis has steered the Radio Rock ship directly into a looming storm of disappointment.

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John Thornton

Venture capitalist invests in nonprofit news outlet

While John Thornton refers to The Texas Tribune primarily as “The Tribune,” many of his colleagues affectionately refer to it as “The Trib.”

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Spiegelman

Comic artists to speak on campus

A recent study by marketing analyst Simba Information revealed that one in 10 book-buying adults also purchases comics. This means at least 10 percent of book-buying adults owe a giant “thank you” to both Robert Crumb and Art Spiegelman.

Movie review: Tired comedy offers little to care about

I did not hate “Splinterheads.” I didn’t even dislike it. I just didn’t care.

Lonestar Texas

Bawdy musical invites audience interaction, jeers

There seems to be a strange fascination with western-themed musicals around town.

Yoga

Yoga classes help stretch body, dollars

The meditative discipline of yoga is historically used in Indian countries as a way to facilitate mental and physical wellness, but the tradition has come to the United States with a hefty price tag.

Brian Friedman

Notable comedian comes to Austin

“Every once in a while, someone comes along who renews your faith in the art of stand-up comedy,” said Nathan Lane, two-time Tony and Emmy award winner, of 31-year-old comic Mike Birbiglia.

Restaurants

Restaurant mixes flavors, showcases healthy options

Snack Bar offers variety of tasty meals to fit any dietary need, appetite

Snack Bar on South Congress Avenue serves full meals, not snacks, but the restaurant is surely the place to go to fulfill whatever size appetite.

Entertainment Briefly: 11/12/09

Swift makes CMA history, Rucker wins best new artist

Elvis Perkins

Pump It Up: Singer-songwriter proffers pumpkin-related opinions

When it comes to pumpkin love, singer-songwriter Elvis Perkins has some unexpectedly deep thoughts.

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Big names receive women’s awards

NEW YORK — Even for a venue as grand as New York’s Carnegie Hall, there was a pretty dazzling concentration of star power at Glamour magazine’s Women of the Year awards.

Casserole Queens

Duo offers fresh take on casserole

Channeling the 1950s in cute aprons and with delicious casseroles on hand, Sandy Pollock and Crystal Cook are setting the Austin food delivery scene on fire with their unique style and delicious one-dish meals.

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Courtney Spencer

Group allows for students to travel, document change

Euripides once wrote that “Experience, travel — these are as education in themselves.” Courtney Spence, founder and director of Students of the World, agrees.

Hump Day: Male sex organ remains mysterious to many

What is, on average, about five inches long and one inch wide?

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Regina Spektor

Quirky vocals attract fans to sold-out performance

Regina Spektor breathes new life into older songs by adding unusual twists

Regina Spektor will play a sold-out show at Stubb’s Bar-B-Q in Austin tonight as part of a national headlining tour in support of her new album, Far, released June 23.

The Trey McIntyre Project

Classical ballet music, pop fuse in dance performance

Choreographer exhibits 'innovative,' 'fresh' take on traditional dancing

The “So You Think You Can Dance” generation generally writes ballet off as whirling tutus set to rigid classical music.

Johnny Gibson

Exhibit deconstructs book culture

Okay Mountain challenges artists to reimagine function of literature

The 13 pieces that make up Okay Mountain’s new “Booksmart” exhibit, running through Dec. 7, are intended to “re-order, deconstruct or alter books as a cultural system, either for critique, humor, formal investigation or all three,” What they do, at the very least, is make the observer think.

Jeffrey Novak

Band frontman relays history as indie artist

Singer shares sources of inspiration, remembers years as solo songwriter

Since releasing its first LP and garnering the support of friend and current punk kingpin Jay Reatard, Cheap Time has brought its whirlwind of glam and punk energy to increasingly larger audiences.

Cravings prompt early celebration of winter holidays

Stuffing suggestions start seasonal series inspired by home-cooked meals

With November upon us, it is hard to stay focused on schoolwork when thoughts of plump turkeys and sleeping in over the Thanksgiving break cross our minds nearly every day.

Bus riding experiences lead to etiquette suggestions for new, unfamiliar students

Frequent riders suggest helpful tips about seating issues, talking on phone

I take the bus at least once a day — downtown, across campus or to and from work in South Austin. “I thought only the British interns took the bus,” a colleague recently jeered, after learning of my daily dependence on mass transit.

CD Reviews: Port O'Brien, Brazos undergo sonic metamorphosis

Port O’Brien: Threadbare; Brazos: Phosphorescent Blues

Car Stereo Wars

Fun Fun Fun Fest

Cozier and considerably less muddy than Zilker Park during last month's Austin City Limits Music Festival, Waterloo Park provided the perfect venue for the fourth annual Fun Fun Fun Fest.

Caleb Coy

Music Monday: Local musician highlights a few of his favorite things

Guitarist describes best, worst experiences; picks top food joint in Austin

Though Headdress often disappears to record sprawling albums, the band now calls Austin home.

Dana Snyder

'Aqua Teen Hunger Force' goes live

Show's voice actors come to Austin for first onstage production, forget lyrics

Fans of Adult Swim's long-running cartoon "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" gathered at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema-Lake Creek on Friday and Saturday for a live show featuring voice actors Dana Snyder and Dave Willis, who is also one of the show's co-creators.

Faces of Austin: Harvard athlete embraces yoga

Growing up in rural Michigan, Ivy League schools weren’t the norm for kids in Ashley Hartley’s neighborhood. But, following the advice of teachers and coaches, she applied to and was accepted by Harvard University to play softball.

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Runway to Heaven

Charity runway show to feature student's designs

Textiles and apparel senior Alex King steps over dark-colored scraps of fabric strewn about the floor to cinch a jacket tighter on her model.

Movie review: 'Kind' blurs line between drama, reality

Walking out of “The Fourth Kind,” whispers could be heard across the theater: “Do you think it’s real?”

Long Center hosts classic opera with Bohemian ties

To those fans of tragic, unfulfilled love out there, you might have another tale to add to your repertoire. “La Bohème,” Giacomo Puccini’s classic starving-artist opera, is making its way to Austin’s Long Center for the Performing Arts.

Pancake

Pump It Up: Lack of pumpkin products incites creativity

I blame Cinderella for brainwashing the world into believing that pumpkins can do just about anything.

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California Club

Food Review: Savory sauces add zest to sandwiches, wraps

The smokey aroma of barbecue wafts up from the small wooden Texas Picnic Company next to Dobie Center, clinging to clothes and spurring memories of passionate football games with close friends and family. In many ways, it’s that same smell that serves as an olfactory lighthouse to safe harbors and great comfort food.

Picnic

Barbecue trailer draws crowds

Try walking anywhere near 21st Street on campus, and you’ll experience something that students along that route have noticed since the start of the semester — the robust smell of smoked meat on the fire pit.

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Hump day: Males provide top oral-sex advice to confused females

Anyone who has ever browsed the magazine racks at the grocery store has noticed, women’s magazines give a lot of advice about how to please men in bed. Although they are meant to give guidance about what turns men on, most of these articles are actually written by women.

Fantastic Mr. Fox

Holiday films promise to please

This is not an Oscar prediction. Many of the heaviest contenders have yet to enter the ring.

Museum-goers

Blanton sheds light on sculptures

Water-inspired exhibit a success, complementary pieces a distraction

The Blanton Museum of Art’s new exhibits, “Teresita Fernández: Blind Landscape” and the complementary “Drawn Toward Light,” are enchanting, if flawed.

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CD Reviews: Indie groups' second effort lacks original material, flair

Artists overcome loss of recordings

The Mary Onettes: Islands; Think About Life: Family; Pelican: What We All Come to Need

Brütal Legend

Video Game Reviews: Actor, designer collaborate on metal-inspired game

Brütal Legend (Xbox360, PS3); Uncharted 2: Among Thieves (PS3)

Homemade dressings spruce up boring salad mixes


Whether you prefer crispy iceberg lettuce or spinach leaves, salads are a favorite choice for meals due to their easy assembly and versatility.

Brazos

Music Monday: Rocker shares latest fall tastes

Band's lead singer describes perfect day in Austin's city limits

Local trio Brazos is one of the gems of Austin's flowering indie music scene.

Greg Foley

Texas literature enthusiasts read into Book Fest

Printed word the main attraction at Capitol's lively annual festival

This weekend, authors and book lovers came together at the 14th Texas Book Festival, an event held annually on the grounds of the Texas Capitol.

Andrea Mellard

Curator knows a picture's worth

The soft, rhythmic click-clack of heels breaks the silence within the Austin Museum of Art as Andrea Mellard moves from one gallery to another, quietly discussing the concepts behind each work of art and how it has been placed within the space.

A man calling himself "Halfbird Rustyfeathers"

Costumed cyclists spin for grins

Hundreds of bicyclists gather monthly to back alternate transportation

Eerie music blared from a bulky boom box rigged to a bike as hundreds of cycling enthusiasts gathered under the flawless autumn sky Friday for Critical Mass.

Steve Mannion

Faces of Austin: Austin chef recalls background, culinary education

Steve Mannion was raised on a farm and quickly learned not to become too attached to the animals there, seeing as how they might one day be dinner.

Film festival features unknown storytellers

And the Austin Film Festival’s 16th incarnation comes to a close.

Colin Beavan

Movie Review: Family endeavors to live in 'greenest way possible'

“We’re cutting down too many trees,” said the seemingly scatterbrained Colin Beavan as he waited in the green room before his guest spot on “The Colbert Report.” “We need the trees to save the environment ... and the polar bears.”

Albright's book discusses world of pins, politics

When asked about her opinion on foreign policy issues, Madeleine Albright, the first female Secretary of State, often instructs inquirers to “read my pins.”

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State book festival welcomes authors, visitors to Austin

Annual event showcases variety of authors, genres to generate public appeal

This weekend marks the 14th annual Texas Book Festival, an event that hosts more than 200 authors and more than 45,000 visitors to Austin.

witches

Play adapts Shakespeare's spirits

It seems odd to celebrate Shakespeare in conjunction with Halloween. Yet tonight and tomorrow, Austin Shakespeare will be putting on a production starring the eeriest characters of Shakespeare’s plays.

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Blues dancing features genre-defying versatility of individual performance styles

After changing out of your classic pumpkin and ghost outfits from Halloween, switch into your best “Dancing with the Stars” costumes and head over to Galaxy Dance Studios for the two blues dance workshops that will take place Sunday afternoon.

UT “zombie experts”

Zombie invasion draws near, students prepare

The day begins like any other at UT. You reluctantly get up, brush your teeth and maybe grab some semblance of a breakfast before you have to get to class. But things are clearly different outside.

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Local doughnut shop offers unique pastry combinations

If Willy Wonka made doughnuts, they would be something like the pastries at Gourdough’s food trailer on South Lamar Boulevard. The doughnuts are wacky, creative, full of imagination and to put it simply, absolutely delicious.

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Halloween costume ideas prove to have common trends

Halloween is Saturday, and the entire city of Austin is preparing to impersonate their favorite characters.

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Essays offer cynical, dark perspective on pop culture

On the cover of Chuck Klosterman’s newest book “Eating the Dinosaur,” the phrase “author of “Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs” is placed under his name.

Relationship-advice book gives ‘hypocritical’ how-to

Samantha Scholfield’s “Screw Cupid: The Sassy Girl’s Guide to Picking up Hot Guys” is yet another drop in the bucket of useless relationship-advice books targeted at young Cosmopolitan-reading women.

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Film festival offers advice, camaraderie to attendees

The Austin Film Festival has reached a halfway point.

Ben Wermund

Pump It Up: Childhood memories spur pumpkin reunion

Crooked eyes and jagged smiles flicker, guarding doorsteps and driveways and beckoning costumed kids for tricks and treats. Dotting Halloween landscapes from Sleepy Hollow to Halloweentown, the jack-o’-lantern remains a constant icon of the holiday — an icon I once forgot, but refuse to let go again.

Bite Mi

Drag sandwich shop disappoints

The bánh mì (BUN-mee), or Vietnamese sandwich, has been growing in popularity for years and was most recently heralded by an April New York Times feature. So when the sign for Bite Mi — a bánh mì specialty restaurant — appeared on the Drag a month ago, enthusiasts were excited.

Hump Day: Pill’s effects cause painful period

Hormone-based birth control methods can cause severe side effects

Three months ago, I began taking birth-control pills. I was prescribed the generic version of Yasmin. In the three months since, I have gained seven pounds, suffered through my first yeast infection and recently had the most painful period of my life because it was accompanied by two days of diarrhea and vomiting.

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Halloween specials return to TV

Seth Rogen discusses his newest voiceover project and success in animation

For years, Halloween television has consisted of the traditional scary movies and season specials, such as “The Simpsons: Treehouse of Horror.” But, this year’s lineup will include a shift from the standard Halloween-time fare.

Josh Row

Skateboarders show artsy side

Extreme sport creates community for input from local craftsmen

When Austin-based artist Michael Sieben celebrated the release of his book, “There’s Nothing Wrong with You (Hopefully),” this summer at local skate shop No-Comply, I was very confused.

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Tasty Tuesday: Festive pasta salad unusual dish for Halloween parties

With Halloween around the corner, many people are using any excuse they can to be festive. These excuses include throwing potlucks and parties with orange and black food.

Tegan and Sara Quin

Twin rockers release sixth album, begin world tour

Tegan and Sara have been busy.

This week the Canadian pop-rock duo, composed of twins Tegan and Sara Quin, will release their sixth album Sainthood, as well as a new three-book set, “On, In, and At.”

audience at The Alamo Drafthouse

Film festival showcases obscure, 'found' videos

The Found Footage Festival is a videotaped circus of the bizarre.

CD Review: Pop group sings of rape, folk singer explores style

Devendra Banhart: What Will We Be; Raveonettes: In and Out of Control;

Colorful festival celebrates living

Mexican art, altars of deceased Austinites enrich 'Viva la Vida' event

Downtown city streets transformed Saturday as Austin celebrated the 26th annual Viva La Vida Festival sponsored by the Mexic-Arte Museum.

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'Thrillerfest' raises undead, funds to aid local charity

Underneath the historic Seaholm Power Plant's smoke stacks Saturday, hundreds of zombies shuffled and stomped along to Michael Jackson's "Thriller" choreography.

Espresso cake balls

Cakery has a ball with unique creations

Local business owner discusses inspiration behind creative snack

In a nondescript brown building off Anderson Lane, employees of Austin Cake Ball work diligently to meet impending deadlines.

Explosions in the Sky

Music Monday: Guitarist shares favorite eats, tunes

Despite increased fame, member of Austin band leads 'mild' life with wife

One of Austin's most popular musical exports, Explosions in the Sky has become a perennial favorite on the large music festival circuit.

Tucson quintet sticks to psychedelic origins

Denton music scene includes anti-cultured Holy Rolling Empire

Never mind, MySpace. Never mind, blogosphere. The best way to find new music is to go to Dallas for the Red River Rivalry.

White Denim

Local band stays humble

The first time I got to interview White Denim frontman James Petralli, the band was preparing for a set at the 2008 Austin City Limits Music Festival.

Movie reviews: Film offers great stunts, poor story

Watching the new movie “Ong Bak 2,” I had the distinct impression that I was attending Cirque du Soleil.

Bertie Denby

Faces of Austin: Woman braves ghostly beings

Ghost hunter discusses her experience with paranormal encounters

Bertie Denby is a ghost hunter.

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Local cafe owner creates own line of designer boots

T-shirts, boxes, catalogues and cards clutter a small office in an East Austin house, all bearing one word: “Helm.”

Urban chicken and kid

Urban chickens gain popularity

The East Side Cafe had two dozen new residents move into the garden this year, causing significant anxiety for the cats who live next door.

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Film festival focuses in on screenwriting

It’s difficult to find the word “director” on the Austin Film Festival Web site, or even the word “filmmaker” without it being accompanied by the festival’s favorite subject: the screenwriter.

TV actor turns to theater

Some themes are eternal.
In the case of “Spring Awakening,” a musical based on an 1891 German play of the same name, those themes are the discovery and exploration of adolescent sexuality and the struggle with angsty intellectual development. For Jake Epstein, the Toronto-born actor who plays lead character Melchior Gabor, it’s a one-of-a-kind experience.

Spring Awakening

Play highlights adolescence, self-discovery

Adolescence is a tumultuous time, filled with confusion and shame. Adults seem to conspire against teens, and isolation can seem like the only way out.

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Book review: Journalist writes story of obsessive book lover

Novel follows the true story of a bibliomaniac turned rare-book thief

For book lovers, there is nothing more intoxicating than the feel of a brand new book in their hands or the earthy smell of its crisp, clean pages.

Entertainment Briefly: 10/22/09

Musicians upset about use of their music for interrogation

; Validity of DNA test argued in Lil Wayne gun case

Beets Cafe

Cafe's raw cuisine surprises, satisfies

Raw vegan food is in. Kick the cow out of the pasture, the chicken out of its coop and don’t put that turkey in the oven. 

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Hamlet

Shakespeare's 'Hamlet' gets modern twist at local venue

Ghosts, betrayal, swordfights, live music and classical theatre: the City Theatre Company’s upcoming production of “Hamlet” has it all.

Film amateurs need to know basics first

Of photography, Lewis Carroll once said, “It is my one recreation, and I think it should be done well.”

 Nicole Varnado

Cooler weather inspires flattering fall fashions

Fickle temperatures prompt wardrobe overhaul in favor of versatile, vintage apparel

Now that the fickle Texas weather has suddenly dropped 20 to 30 degrees in late recognition of the fall season, it’s time to re-stock your closet with new fabulous finds.

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Tasty Tuesday: Blueberry oat bars bear fruitful snack

As much as I adore the cooler weather, there is still something very comforting about coming home, turning on the oven and letting the gentle heat permeate the kitchen.

Benji Frankel

Multi-faceted host stumps trivia fans on weekly basis

Local taco restaurant celebrates 10,000th quiz question next month

Benji Frankel can beat anyone in a trivia contest.

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CD Review: 10/20/09

Russian Circles: Geneva; A Sunny Day in Glasgow: Ashes Grammar

The fairest of them all

Blue lights burst to life along every spoke of the towering "Texas Star," the State Fair of Texas ferris wheel.

Alton Brown

Food Network star finishes book tour at Whole Foods

With characteristic wit, 'Good Eats' host signs books, talks about media

Sun poured through tree-like sculptures Sunday afternoon, illuminating famous chef Alton Brown as he signed books at the Whole Foods Market downtown.

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Augustine Marsee & Amaru Marsee

Costumed cyclists congregate for charitable cause

Light glistened on endless racks of chrome bicycles as a nun quietly chained her bike under the bright Saturday sun.

Randy Reynolds

Music Monday: Leatherbag singer dishes on collaborative wishes

Austin's Leatherbag finds a way to reconcile the folk-rock stomp of Rod Stewart with the more hard-edged, angular sound of proto-punk bands like Television and The Modern Lovers.

Austin Empty Bowl

Project relieves Texans' hunger

Local organizations unite to combat malnutrition, fund children's program

For those of us lucky enough to afford three hot meals a day, going without supper may seem like an abstract concept or a problem for someone else to deal with.

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Garth Brooks

Garth Brooks ends retirement, signs on for Vegas show

LAS VEGAS — The e-mail from Garth Brooks was so special, Steve Wynn printed it out and framed it.

Citizens

Despite storytelling merits, 'Citizen' flounders in attempt to teach lessons about vigilante justic

“Law Abiding Citizen” wants to say something about justice, but all it can do is grunt.

March Fourth Marching Band

Austin's activities await those coping with Dallas blues

Action-packed weekend provides alternatives to Red River Rivalry

See “Evil Dead: The Musical”; Shop the downtown farmer’s market at Republic Square; Listen to Vivian Girls play a free in-store show at Waterloo; Participate in the Tour de Fat; Witness Texas NORML’s Sixth Street Smokeout

Elizabeth Walter

Faces of Austin: Dancer gets back in the zone with her own studio

Elizabeth Walter comes from a long line of dancers. Born in Austin, she moved to Northern California, trained for the Moscow International Ballet Competition and visited the homes of some of the most talented Russian ballet dancers of the day.

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MTV hosts Latin American music awards show

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif. — MTV rolled out its raucous red carpet to honor the best of the year’s pop, rock and reggaeton from Latin America with its eighth annual Los Premios MTV awards in Los Angeles on Thursday.

Entertainment Briefly: 10/16/09

‘Balloon boy’ no stranger to media exposure, public eye; Lindsay Lohan faces future court date for unknown reason

Food and wine event celebrates anniversary

Austin Museum of Art’s La Dolce Vita festival benefits art education

Jamie Lynn Witts

Dancer tiptoes into ballet role

A pile of pink pointe shoes lie on the floor next to Jaime Lynn Witts as she stretches in preparation for a rehearsal. In a black and green leotard, a white tutu and soft pink tights, she and fellow company member Christopher Swaim effortlessly glide across a studio floor to Tchaikovsky’s celebrated “Snow Pas De Deux.

Jack McBrayer

Award-winning ‘30 Rock’ returns for fourth season

The acclaimed comedy series “30 Rock” returns tonight for its fourth season.

Book review: 'PostSecret' releases anticipated new book

PostSecret.com’s uniqueness and creativity make it a rare bird.

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Book review: Social experiments lay groundwork for new book

A.J. Jacobs’ life reads like the idea behind a sitcom.

'Lucy' promises cheap costume finds

Lucy in Disguise with Diamonds, a South Congress costume fixture, is like when the seven-year-old version of yourself convinced your parents to visit Party City before Halloween.

Japandroids

Indie rockers mix 'clearness,' 'distortion'

“Yeah, just living that fast-paced rock star life, you know?” Dave Prowse, one-half of indie rock band Japandroids, is giving a phone interview to The Daily Texan while waiting around in a laundromat. “These machines aren’t even chrome.”

Gruff author pleased by film version of his work

About the hoopla surrounding the film adaptation of “Where the Wild Things Are,” Maurice Sendak is characteristically gruff.

Taco Loco

Sure Chipotle, Torchy’s Tacos, Trudy’s and On the Border are staples in every student’s diet, but these Mexican and Tex-Mex fusion diners can lighten your wallet.

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Pump It Up: In the grip of pumpkin overload

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth part in a series about society’s autumn obsession with pumpkin.

Contests, cocktails to curtail violence

Arm wrestling for charity — that’s the idea behind tonight’s Fierce Fest at the Lustre Pearl Bar.

Aaron Gross

Blowing hot air part of his job

Aaron Gross loves glass.

Ryan Ellis

At emergency meeting, interim director approved

Board unanimously votes on appointment, students voice concerns

After two weeks without a director, the Texas Student Media Board confirmed Jennifer Hammat, the University’s assistant vice president for student affairs, to serve as interim director until a permanent replacement can be hired.

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Program offers tips, counseling for stress

Campus begins training counselors in debriefing tense social workers

UT’s Institute on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault has begun a two-year program to help social workers across the country cope with the emotional fatigue of working with victims of child abuse.

CD Reviews: 10/13/09

Group’s project a success, artists’ lyrically based venture may be ‘musically trite’

Flaming Lips’ new release offers unexpected sound, maintains vocal quality; Mountain Goats album offers inspiring lyrics, lacks musical strength

Stick-Or-Treat

Tasty Tuesday: Sticks of meat are a delectable treat at Dobie eatery

The food trailers that line street corners city-wide are testaments to Austin’s affinity for delicious grab-and-go food. The trailer taco or cupcake connoisseur has multiple options to choose from, but what about those who desire something out of the ordinary?

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Charles Vento

Winery's finery proves divine

Vineyard provides gentle Italian ambience in Central Austin

If you've never been to Italy, Mandola's Estate Winery is the closest you'll get to Florence within a 30-mile radius of campus.

Iron Chef shares how past hardship shaped his future

The opportunity to meet a true "master" of something hardly ever happens.

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Music Monday: Monarch's singer divulges guilty food pleasures

Celeste Griffin's thick, Southern voice is the soul of Monarchs.

Author's cookbook makes challenging food approachable

Master chef shows ease of cooking troublesome New Orleans style recipes

Unless people are searching through a purple, green and yellow “king cake” for a tiny plastic baby Jesus during Mardi Gras, they hardly ever think of New Orleans cuisine. But with John Besh’s new cookbook, “My New Orleans: The Cookbook,” anyone who wants a taste of the city has the chance to create the flavors right at home. 1 comment

Author hosts backyard congregational services

Talking with Robin Chotzinoff reestablishes faith in the age-old saying that people can accomplish anything if they set their minds to it.

Military feminist gets UT award

Female Coast Guard retiree honored as Distinguished Alumnus

After making her mark as the first woman to become vice commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, the highest rank achieved by a woman in U.S. military history, UT graduate Vivien Crea received the Distinguished Alumnus Award on Friday night at a ceremony hosted by Texas Exes.

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'Paranormal' shocks the box office

LOS ANGELES — "Swingers" co-stars Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau buddied up for the weekend's top movie as "Couples Retreat" debuted with $35.3 million, while the micro-budgeted fright flick "Paranormal Activity" leaped into the top 10.

Takács Quartet

String quartet aims for perfection with Beethoven pieces

Classical musicians have likened the string quartet to a bottle of wine, a marriage and an octopus, to name a few.

State representative starts clothing line for Latinos

The visage of a matador in red and black, eyes downcast with a determined demeanor, sprawls over a red cotton background.

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Brian Mays

More meat, none of the frills

Austin boasts two impressive barbecue joints east of IH-35

Everyone knows about the great Salt Lick Bar-B-Que and the prominent Rudy’s “Country Store” and Bar-B-Q, which has many locations in Austin.

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Couples Retreat

Movie Review: 'Couples' fails to reach star-studded potential

“Couples Retreat” packs an all-star cast onto an island, hoping and praying that sparks will fly and jokes will kill.

John Rich

Country artist preps for UT debut

Rich took a few minutes away from his Country Music Association board meeting to speak with The Daily Texan about football, his solo album and what it means to be a Texan.

Entertainment Briefly: 10/09/09

‘Accidental mummy’ exhibit makes first stop in Detroit

Weekend Picks: 10/08/09

Erin Curtis : Perspective Threshold; Lebowski Fest; Wavve;
Sam Dahl : Reveal Thy Sel; Ghostface Killah

Interview with with Scott Walsh of Notes Floats

Interview with with Scott Walsh of Notes Floats

Fresh festival fuses genres

Maybe it’s not your average Austin music fest, but it’s definitely one for the books.

Electronic Escapes

Nestled among the barrios and government housing projects of the impoverished Rio Grande Valley is a majestic vision: a vibrant, underground music movement unlike anything you’ve ever witnessed before.

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Novel nostalgia

Drive-in movies were once a memory reserved for sharing the back seat of a 1950s wing-tipped Cadillac with their sweetheart on a Saturday night. Luckily, nostalgia found its way back to Austin through a local couple and their innovative interpretation with the Driftin’ Drive-In.

Book bombards the bedroom

Author Adrian Colesberry's anecdotal novel discusses sex and relationships

Adrian colesberry doesn’t necessarily want you to have sex with him.

This may be surprising given the title of his debut book, “How to Make Love to Adrian Colesberry.”  But it’s important to note that Adrian is, in fact, married.

Horror in unknown

Just the name “house of torment” is enough to make one feel a bit uneasy, and as we neared the building stationed in the parking lot Highland Mall, the apprehension started kicking in. It became clear as soon as the enormous figure of a bat-like creature holding bloody, dismantled body parts came into view that my maiden voyage into a haunted house would be anything but mild. Enduring harassment by everything from half-pig mutants to deranged clowns to the usual too-close-for-comfort, creepy butler who told me I “smelled pretty,” DT Weekend got a behind-the-scenes look at the business-side of freaking people out.

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Music Mayhem

Punk group The Black Lips create chaos with their outlandish live show

Whether or not punk is dead, The Black Lips rose up from the suburbs of Atlanta in 2000 to clearly say punk is alive and thrashing.

Exposure: Directions

This summer, I spent six weeks in Prague, Czech Republic, a city which has struggled to find its identity through decades of control by Nazi Germany and the Communist Party.

Murph and Ben Willcott

Changes to menu, not quality

Texas French Bread restaurant uses local produce, ingredients

As food culture has shifted to a more convenient, industrialized market, it is difficult to find a restaurant that truly defines sustainability and cares about community.

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Mark Gottschall

Open-mic nights provide stand-up entertainment

Diverse performances, multiple venues amuse audiences for cheap

Most nights of the week, a relatively friendly audience awaits aspiring poets, stand-up comics and musicians in Austin.

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David Stahl and Michael Stuart

Austin Playhouse's 'Frost/Nixon' production: political theater, literally

Play recreates chemistry, tension between leading figures in TV interviews

It isn’t very often that you see a fierce portrayal of politics in the world of theater.

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Courrier

UT seniors release EP, perform at La Zona Rosa

The Courrier boys know how to joke around. With their witty remarks and silly responses, their status as a group of UT-seniors-turned-bandmates is apparent.

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Johnston set to bare it all for erotic publication

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Levi Johnston is going for the ultimate exposure — the 19-year-old father of Sarah Palin’s grandchild will pose nude for Playgirl, his attorney said Wednesday.

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Entertainment Briefly: 10/08/09

‘The Goonies’ to play at first Bike-In Cinema in Austin

 

group of teachers and protestors

Palenstinians rise against Abbas

RAMALLAH, West Bank — In five turbulent years in office, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has never faced as much outrage as over his decision to suspend efforts to get Israeli officials put on trial for war crimes in Gaza.

Hundreds of people

Russians rally for justice in activist, journalist slayings

MOSCOW — Hundreds of people urged Russian authorities to find and punish the killers of journalists and human rights activists in Russia, rallying Wednesday to mark the third anniversary of the killing of Anna Politkovskaya.

Mary Louise Butters

Baker remembers beginnings

Local brownie businesswoman chronicles her early influences

At local grocery store counters, a woman flirts with customers. She stares with her flapper-esque hairstyle, her beautiful white teeth, her perfect jaw line and — oh yeah — her chocolate perfume.

Brownies

Nontraditional brownie flavors earn top reviews

How does one rate 16 ladies? This isn’t Miss America: this is a brownie tasting.

Autumn treat shakes up pumpkin search

Marketing in stores and eateries across the city seems to indicate that fall is in full swing.

Hump Day: Drunk sex entangled in legal issues

Every so often I receive a question about the effects of alcohol on sexual performance.

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David Bazan

Musician explores his own views on religion

David Bazan discusses thoughts on philosophy and Biblical parallels

In chaos, there is hope.

Or, at least, that what David Bazan believes.

Jessica Arjet

Theatre exhibits improv talent

At 10 p.m. every Saturday, 12 of Austin’s improv elite convene at a small theatre in downtown Austin to compete for recognition, humor and Canadian money.

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Interactive exhibit calls for volunteers to recreate eclipses

Art project tracks path of moon for next solar event visible from Austin

The Blanton Museum of Art will host famous Mexican artist Pablo Vargas Lugo  today for a massively interactive event, “Eclipses for Austin.”

Children's memoir an honest story of tragic loss

There has been a growing interest in memoirs and personal biographies over the last few years. These stories are not only of the entertainment and political elite, but of “ordinary” people as well. Non-fiction works like Jeannette Walls’s “The Glass Castle” and David Sedaris’s many collections of autobiographical essays give readers a relatable glimpse into the lives of people that could very easily be their next door neighbors.

Pumpkin bread a great fall breakfast idea

The recent overpopulation of all things orange in retail stores proves that people are not only ready to embrace fall, but also ready to embrace pumpkin. This week’s recipe features moist pumpkin bread that will fit in perfectly among bowls of candy corn and scarecrow figurines.

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ACL perfects rainy day music

Music lovers trek to Zilker Park by the thousands for annual fest

Reviewing a music festival after it’s done is a bit like a book’s appendix, unnecessary and a waste of space.

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Alex Henry

Music fans find hope in midst

Surprise conditions, run-ins make festival more memorable

There’s no doubt that this year’s Austin City Limits Music Festival was an anomaly, given the festival’s history of hot weather, dust storms and general bedlam.

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Ray Benson

Music Monday: Country musician plays at festival again

Ray Benson is a huge figure in the Texas music scene. Besides his imposing 6-foot-7-inch frame, his band Asleep at the Wheel has been playing its brand of Western swing music in Austin since the early ‘70s.

Crowd floods theater to see absurd thriller 'Zombieland'

LOS ANGELES — The undead were alive and well at movie theaters as Woody Harrelson’s horror comedy “Zombieland” opened on top with $25 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Stalker's normality shocks police

WESTMONT, Ill. — Neighbors said Sunday that it’s the apparent normality of the 47-year-old man who lived in a suburban Chicago town house that’s made his arrest for allegedly stalking and secretly taping ESPN reporter Erin Andrews in the nude so upsetting.

Woody Harrelson

City bids farewell to Fantastic Fest's colorful creations

And the fifth annual Fantastic Fest comes to a close.

Zilker Park

Making the most out of ACL

Optimal festival experience requires planning, preparation

The annual Austin City Limits Music Festival usually leaves festivalgoers reminiscing about great performances, great company and great tans.

Taylor Steinberg

The Faces of Austin: Music enthusiast tells no tall tale

Taylor Steinberg tells a lot of stories.

Whip It

Movie Review: 'Whip It' showcases talent, Austin

Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut, “Whip It,” is a coming-of-age sports story, an Austin showcase and a great time.

David Letterman

Letterman admits to sexual liaisons in extortion case

LOS ANGELES — David Letterman acknowledged on Thursday’s show that he had sexual relationships with female employees and that someone tried to extort $2 million from him over the affairs.

Capitalism: A Love Story

Movie Review: Michael Moore's anti-capitalist tale not without merit

When Michael Moore made his directorial debut with “Roger and Me: A Humorous Look at How General Motors Destroyed Flint, Michigan,” the film-going community recognized the man for what he was: a brilliant entertainer and humorist with an agenda and a knack for anecdotes.

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Power plant hosts event prior to redevelopment

The Seaholm Power Plant — Austin’s little art-deco piece of Gotham City — will be re-energized this weekend.

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Jonathan Sims

Tea houses near campus are a tasty find

Nestled close to campus lie quirky tea joints that serve exotic blends

Considering that tea is the second-most consumed beverage in the world, finding full-fledged tea houses around campus is a surprisingly challenging task.

Campbell Miller

Students get in step with 'ballroom'

Some couples move gracefully across the room. Others plod along muttering “one, two, three” under their breath as they try to remember the moves they’ve learned over the past few weeks.

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Adreon Henry

Local artist surrounds himself in everyday art

Adreon Henry’s chaotic workspace sheds light on his unique approach

An aluminum foil-covered wall, a detailed plastic mask of a sorrel horse face and a lamp made of metal piping and candy-colored ice pops — these are but a few of the items that confront visitors of artist Adreon Henry’s eccentric work space.

The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

'Spelling Bee' production rich with hilarity, drama

Carefully constructed characters reveal quirks and insecurities of youth

Think back to your elementary school years, those carefree days when homework didn’t exist and responsibility was a fallacy. At some point, however, you must have come across that quintessential competition known as the spelling bee.

'B Scene' features Italian art

Students and friends are invited to eat, drink and dance to live music amidst a nearly complete 16th century altarpiece Friday night at the Blanton.

Titus

Punk, shoegaze combine in band’s music

“We don’t have guilty pleasures,” said Patrick Stickles, lead singer of New Jersey indie band Titus Andronicus, when asked about his unabashed disclosure about jamming to a Lou Bega tape while on tour sans a CD player last spring. “That term is oxymoronic as far as we’re concerned, because anything that gives you pleasure, why would that be guilty?

TLC’s 'Jon & Kate' soon to be 'Kate Plus Eight'

NEW YORK — “Jon & Kate Plus 8” will soon be simply “Kate Plus Eight.”

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Entertainment Briefly: 09/30/09

CBS show's crew survives Pacific earthquake, tsunami; Video company asks for millions in Lennon, Ono case; Overdose, combination of drugs caused DJ AM's death

The Front Row

Gallery features 'Front Row' photos

Up-close-and-personal images capture unique moments, raw emotions

Situated in the heart of downtown Austin, The Fifth Gallery delivers appropriately themed art to the “live music capital of the world.”

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Search continues as pumpkin brew fails to truly satisfy

With a light breeze blowing after a day cooled by rain showers, the pumpkin patch outside of HEB actually looked timely Monday night. Gourds of various shapes and colors mingled as I passed through on my way inside.

Hump Day: Herpes breaks out of normal stigma

In my experience, discussions about sexual health almost always veer off into a debate over which STDs are “the most harmful.” And the students that I have come in contact with almost always identify HIV and herpes among these “most harmful” diseases.

Mates of State

Music 'mates' make touring a family affair

Before indie-rock duos like She & Him and Matt and Kim, there were Mates of State.

The London Stage

The London Stage meets the UT stage in 'King Lear'

Five-actor theatre troupe set to perform classic Shakespearean tragedy

The British are coming. Actually, they’re already here.

Brandon “Chippy” Barnett

Zombie fans anticipate film release

Texas Union committee offers free advanced screening to students

UT zombie fans rejoice; while most will have to pay to see “Zombieland” on Oct. 2, the Student Events Center Film Committee will host a free advanced screening tonight at 7:30 p.m. There’s even going to be a zombie costume contest.

Quick fritada recipe serves as fast food alternative

One of my weekend rituals is to sift through cookbooks, magazines and cooking blogs to find a dish that will inspire me to give up takeout and actually cook a meal. But many many recipes are made for more than just one.  As a student who mainly cooks for herself, I am left wishing there was something of a more personal size to make.

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CD Reviews: Collaboration brings African vibe to American pop music

Alice in Chains: Black Gives Way to Blue; The Very Best: The Warm Heart of Africa; Avett Brother: I and Love and You

Book Review: Cookbooks make it easy to brush up on chef skills

As said by the great character Gusteau in the movie “Ratatouille,” “Anyone can cook,” but, what he didn’t mention is that instructional literature is absolutely necessary. 

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Rodrigo Jaramillo

Food Review: Vendor offers alternative hot dog

Curbside stand provides students with new take on ordinary frankfurter

Upon first look, the unique gastronomic experience that is Rigo’s Madness appears to be yet another hot dog cart on the Drag. Giving a double take, many are surprised to find that this push cart boasts intriguing goodies such as caramelized onions, roasted red peppers and many more, all prepared in hot dog fashion.

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French leaders defend filmmaker

PARIS — Was Roman Polanski “thrown to the lions because of ancient history?” That’s what the French culture minister says — though not everyone in France agrees.

 Elliott Erwitt

Artist just goes with the flow

Renowned photographer to focus on 'amateur' work as part of University visit

World-renowned photographer Elliott Erwitt, famous for his humorous and touchingly candid black and white photographs, will be speaking today and Friday on campus at The Blanton.

cast of  “Staged By The Bell,”

Television show gets new life with 'Staged By the Bell'

Second City alum puts comedy spin on episodes of late ‘80s teen favorite

If you went to middle school in the late ‘80s, or had a sibling that did, you probably watched “Saved By the Bell.” But maybe you were too young for this.

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Demand for tea leads Austinites to Buddha Brew

The Buddha’s Brew Kombucha Tea factory lies nestled in a modest row of red and white warehouses in Southwest Austin off Highway 71. A small sign — a pensive golden Buddha’s head with the company name in a handwritten-font – is tacked onto the door to distinguish it from the rest of the industrial homogeny.

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Van Diemen’s Land

Film festival promises screams, laughs with audience-friendly flicks

In 2005, Fantastic Fest crawled out of the Austin sewers and into Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar. As the brainchild of Tim League of Alamo Drafthouse and Harry Knowles, founder of Ain’t It Cool News, it reeked of geeky-greatness but, in a city already home to SXSW and the Austin Film Festival, what would FanFest bring to the table?

Entertainment Briefly: 09/24/09

Actress enrolls in a Master’s program to learn heritage: Nintendo slashes prices on Wii system to stay competitive

Sitcom parodies college

Community college gets a humorous spin this season with NBC’s “Community.” From the beginning, the show jokes about the college’s stereotypes.

Annual event draws thousands

Old Pecan Street Festival offers up family fun on Sixth Street

Artisans and patrons crowded along the expanse of Sixth Street as thousands of locals braved the weekend heat to partake in Austin’s annual Old Pecan Street Festival.

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Mother of GLBT martyr reminds public of sacrifice

Mom shares her hope that current legislation will prevent hate crimes

On Oct. 7, 1998, 21-year-old gay college student Matthew Shepard was brutally tortured, tied to a fence post and left for dead, forever changing the GLBT community and bringing hate crimes to the political forefront.

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Will Courtney

Music Monday: Brothers and Sisters

Austin’s Brothers and Sisters have a knack for making songs that sound timeless.

Entertainment Briefly: 09/28/09

SNL newcomer marks first show with accidental on-air expletive; Animated children’s tale
dominates box office again; Michael Jackson documentary sells out a month in advance

Movie Review: Baader-Meinhof

While the first thought that comes to an American’s mind when they think of the late 1960s may be of peaceful hippies and free love, “The Baader-Meinhof Complex” portrays the bloody contrast that was occurring at that time in Germany. As the world vowed never again to allow the rise of Nazism, the Red Army Faction (RAF) from the democratic western Federal Republic of Germany was only beginning to fight perceived forms of fascism with terrorism.

The Depreciation Guild Dream in 8-bit

Video games have begun to outgrow their status as a social stigma over the past decade to the point where San Francisco can have an 8-bit-inspired sculpture downtown and a band called The Depreciation Guild can use a Nintendo sound chip as an instrument without the music directly relating to games.

Spencer Scorcelletti

Faces of Austin: Cyclist in tandem with students

Every morning, Spencer Scorcelletti wakes up at the “House of Guys,” a self-described “fauxternity” that sits at the corner of MLK and Rio Grande Street. He gets out of the lofted bed he built and exits via a pole stretching from floor to ceiling — also built by him. He gets ready, exits the house and takes a deep breath before mounting the tandem bike he rides to school. He’s the “free rides” guy, energetically riding around campus day and night offering rides to needy students.

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Bright Star

Movie Review: 'Bright Star' fails to shine in telling tragic love story

“Bright Star,” written and directed by Jane Campion (“The Piano”), chronicles the tumultuous love affair of John Keats (Ben Whishaw), the Romantic poet, and Fanny Brawne (Abbie Cornish), a bold, intelligent woman who lives next door.

Mbewe Escobar

Artist best known for 'Fame' continues exploring dance

There is something about Mbewe Escobar that is both comforting and intimidating. Her slender figure and perfect posture reveal her profession at a glance. She exudes a sense of calmness and wisdom that makes her audience feel at ease.

Panel appeals to comic book writers

The Undergraduate Writing Center isn’t just for those last-minute revisions on papers. Tonight the center will host a panel in its “After Hours” series on comic book writing.

Morgan Dover-Pearl

Austin actress measures up to Shakespeare play

The weekend marks the end of Austin Shakespeare’s three-week run of “Measure for Measure” at The Long Center’s Rollins Theatre. The play — one of Shakespeare’s darkest — covers sin, mercy and justice. This particular production is set in southern Georgia in the 1920s.         

Josh Block, James Petralli and Steve Terebecki

Local band headlines show to support local Red Cross

The American Red Cross of Central Texas teamed up with Antone’s for a benefit show Wednesday night in an attempt to reach out to a younger crowd.

Entertaining author delivers again

If you haven’t heard of bestselling author Dan Brown’s controversial novels,“Angels & Demons” and “The Da Vinci Code” then you’ve probably been trapped under a secluded, soundproof rock for the last six years.

Linda Branson

Packed store offers unique finds

A porcelain plate with the image of an armadillo at its center awkwardly balances halfway over the edge of a pedestal. Below the armadillo stretches a pie recipe: two pounds armadillo meat, two tablespoons shortening, one tablespoon dry herbs, one package frozen mixed veggies and flour.

Hump Day: Wheelchair-bound need sex, too

When I was first encouraged to write a Hump Day article on sexuality and physical disability, I felt hamstrung by my inherent lack of insight into the experience of a physically disabled person. And despite positive encouragement from my wheelchair-bound friends, I felt like anything I wrote would be innately inadequate and ostracizing.

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Online games alleviate boredom

While there is no shortage of great games this fall, there probably is a shortage in your personal funds. Why regret spending $60 on a game when you can enjoy many free and innovative games online?

Gourd-flavored drink has sentimental value

Serving autumn-themed beverages before October normally would be a torturous tease in Texas. With the summer sun ceaselessly beating down on the state well into September, chemically produced pumpkin java seems to signal the seasonally spiced steam of an illusory autumn oasis.

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Novel exposes Katrina aftermath

It has been said that truth is often stranger than fiction, but in Dave Eggers’ latest piece of non-fiction, “Zeitoun,” the facts are so inconceivable that any fictional tale would pale in comparison.

News Briefly: 09/23/09

Lawyer disputes relationship between Anna Nicole, doctor

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Indie music reminiscent of '80s pop

Washed Out: Life of Leisure; The Big Pink: A Brief History of Love; Girls:
Album; Monsters of Folk: Monsters of Folk; The Pains of Being Pure at Heart: Higher Than the Stars

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Student fashion group to assist with Style Week

For those questioning the fashion trends of 2009, Tribeza, an Austin lifestyle and culture magazine, is here to help.

Justin Champlin

Mask-wearing Nobunny to put on show in Austin

A little over a year ago, Bay Area garage rocker Justin Champlin, better known as Nobunny, was spray-painting paper covers onto record sleeves found in the trash for his debut album, Love Visions.

Summer corn provides fall treat

Different take on clam chowder includes versatile veggie favorite

With Tuesday marking the fall equinox, we may have to say goodbye to summer, but with a tasty corn chowder, we don’t have to say goodbye to golden summer corn.

Choco-lovers eat away at cancer

Chocolate Festival panders to Austinites with a sweet tooth, a generous spirit

The appeal of chocolate brought hundreds of people of all ages to the Monarch Event Center over the weekend for the Austin Chocolate Festival.

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Star infamous for controversy enjoys publicity

Tucker Max is not a shy person.

Don Graham

Texas expert illuminates cultural past

Professor Don Graham sees more than ranches in Texas' history, lifestyle

Don Graham is a witness to the evolution of Texas land once dotted with cotton and cattle, when more than half of the population lived on a rural expanse of a frontier land.

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Fossil Fun Day adds spin to ancient history

Kids growing up today will probably see the awful sequels to Jurassic Park before the original, a movie which helped a generation realize Earth’s incredible history.

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Josh Lambert

Music Monday: Local band enjoys wider prestige

Austin’s The Octopus Project has been playing its mélange of instrumental indie rock and bouncing electronica for almost 10 years now.

Movie Review: 'Hilarious' film overstays its welcome

Damon's performance is spot-on, but story goes on a half-hour too long

It’s difficult to know if “The Informant!” is actually based on a true story.

Designers seek versatility with seasonless styles

NEW YORK — The styles shown at New York Fashion Week were meant for next spring — not that you’d know it.

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Isaacson1

'Horse Boy' takes viewers for a ride

Documentary examines struggle with autism, unconventional journey

At age 2, Rowan began throwing unstoppable tantrums, did not speak at the appropriate volume and had difficulty making friends with children his age. The doctor told Rupert Isaacson and Kristin Neff, Rowan’s parents, that he suffered from autism.

Movie Review: Inspiring film tangled in reins of storytelling

It is hard to find a more inspirational story than that of Rowan Isaacson, the subject of the new documentary “The Horse Boy.”

Local dress shop embraces vintage, modern sensibilities

Leslie Gandy’s favorite mantra hangs on the racks, covers the plush seats and glitters in the light of her store: “Classic over disposable; timeless over trendy.”

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Faces of Austin: Fun and games, not just for kids

Ryan Harvey has been playing arcade games his entire life. As a Japanese major at UT, he became a regular at Einstein’s Arcade, and like most of its customers, he was devastated when it shut down.

Green

Pat Green reveals what he's for

The timing of Pat Green’s performance — during the same weekend as the Texas/Texas Tech football game is no coincidence. The Tech alumnus and former Austin resident couldn’t pass up the chance to return to one of his favorite cities and see his favorite team play.

Ann Leifeste

Austinites record reminiscences of Armadillo

In a small recording studio crowded with soundboards, microphones, a computer and a few chairs, Jim Franklin reminisced about the first poster he ever designed for a concert at the Armadillo World Headquarters.

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Ed Davis

Thrifty Thursday goes clothes shopping

Shopping at thrift stores can be either wonderful or miserable.

Joey Hood

Play Review: Performance exploits the sounds of silence

Last weekend marked the opening of the thought-provoking play “The Collection” at the Hyde Park Theatre, directed by and staring multiple B. Iden Payne Award-winner Ken Webster.

Paul Schneider, Aziz Ansari, Amy Poehler, Rashida Jones

NBC sitcom stars discuss upcoming second season

Though NBC has given Amy Poehler and “The Office” producers Greg Daniels and Michael Schur a second season of their show “Parks and Recreation,” many are still skeptical. The renewal was certainly great news for the cast and crew, but critical viewers were left wondering why.

Spring fashions feature classic black, less color

NEW YORK — Fashion for spring is back in black.

Hump Day: Gardasil's health benefits dubious

Since last January, “Hump Day” has sparked dialogue and lots of opinionated comments about sexual education by openly addressing topics from birth control to sex toys. We hope that by talking about sexual curiosities, we can lessen social taboos that often come attached to them. So, as a new semester begins, we’re jumping right back in where “Hump Day” left off. Bring on the comments, outrage and, most importantly, questions. We’re ready.

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Jackie Szeto

Barbecue spot does seafood best

Upon entering the recently opened Ho Ho Chinese B.B.Q., customers are greeted by the sight of roasted duck, pork and marinated chicken hanging in a glass case.

'Magicians' offers grown-up foray into fantasy genre

Children’s fantasy novels such as “The Chronicles of Narnia” and the Harry Potter series have experienced widespread success and international fame.

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Wheatsville

Wheatsville renovation 'keeps it weird' with local foods

Just to clear the air, despite appearances over the past year and a half, Wheatsville Food Co-op has always remained open during its renovations. All you had to do was brave prison-esque cyclone fences, plywood-covered windows, steep ramps, freshly poured slabs and other obstacles blocking the entrance. 1 comment

Remembering 'Ghost'

Swayze's greatest roles

"Ghost"; "Point Break"; "Dirty Dancing"

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Dan Geller & Dayna Goldfine

Ransom Center commemorates ballet company

The Harry Ransom Center is celebrating the controversial Ballets Russes, the infamous ballet company that used designs by Coco Chanel and Pablo Picasso, with a multifaceted film series beginning tonight.

Patrick Swayze

Swayze loses battle with pancreatic cancer

LOS ANGELES — Patrick Swayze, the hunky actor who danced his way into viewers’ hearts with “Dirty Dancing” and then broke them with “Ghost,” died Monday after a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 57.

Tasty Tuesday: Recipes may stave off sickness

Though the stairs of Waggener Hall can put an intense burn in anyone’s legs, nothing is more painful than being sick in college. The misery that accompanies runny noses, sore throats and unstoppable coughing fits is only compounded when you have to travel into a cafeteria or campus restaurant to get something to eat. To avoid having to bring a box of tissues and cold medicine to the dining hall, try some of these meal ideas to ward off the flu bug blues from the comfort of your own kitchen.

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CD Reviews: Latest rock 'n' roll releases earn mixed reviews

Times New Viking: Born Again Revisited;  Muse: The Resistance; The Dodos:Time to Die

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Book Review: Book of comedic interviews leaves readers in stitches

Mike Sacks has a good job. Last year, it involved spending hundreds of hours questioning some of the nation’s most well-respected and interesting comedic writers about things they’d never before been asked.

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Austin embarks on week of dining

With tongues wagging and mouths watering throughout the city this week, hungry Austinites will dine for charity during the third annual Austin Restaurant Week.

As premier draws near, Leno stoic in midst of hype

“The Jay Leno Show” doesn’t premiere until tonight, but it has already been talked to death.

Jonathan Meiburg

Austin musician drawn in by birds

Along with being the songwriter and vocalist behind the acclaimed indie rock of Shearwater, Jonathan Meiburg is really into birds. It was UT’s graduate program in ornithology that brought him to Austin, where he first joined Okkervil River and then moved on to playing in Shearwater full time.

Kosho McCall

Zen center offers peace to local residents

Austin's Buddhist Priests strive to minimize harm to their surroundings

Waking up at 5:45 a.m. each day, Kosho McCall dresses simply in a navy robe, pants and slip-on sandals.

1 comment

Entertainment Briefly: 09/14/09

Performing arts center changes name to reflect its mission

Joann Clements

Faces of Austin: Experienced Drag stylist remembers hairy times

Hairdresser has defied the ages, the trends and the ever-youthful freshmen

Joann Clements knows hair. A veteran stylist at Pro-Cuts on the Drag, she’s seen it all, be it the influx of students hoping to look like the latest hot celebrities or businesspeople from the Capitol stopping in to get a trim. She’s lived through the hair trends of the ‘90s, she has witnessed the cycles ebb and flow with the times and the tastes of the public.

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Chronicles of swine flu: the fearless and the flubies

There were murmurs that James, down the hall, was sick with swine flu. Which James? With uncharacteristic fearlessness, I made it my business to find out.

Kerry Martin

Local uses garage as home brewery

In the dingy garage of a Southwest Austin home, small kegs lay strewn across the ground amid pots, pans, buckets and empty glass containers of all sizes. Two bar stools sit in an aisle formed between three refrigerators and two meat lockers.

3 comments

Play provides perplexing, entertaining experience

For people well-immersed in Austin theatre, you know you can find a wide range of productions to entertain yourself with. If you’re longing for something grounded but still a tad out of the ordinary, look no farther than The Off Center’s production of “I’ve Never Been So Happy,” which opens tonight at Rude Mechanicals.

Items found in pantry can work as follicle fixes

Every 12-year-old girl knows there are countless at-home remedies able to achieve a variety of desired effects on one’s hair.

1 comment

Entertainment Briefly

Hugh Hefner and wife divorce, renegotiate monthly payments; President Obama’s mother the subject of 2011 documentary; Talk-show host replaces Abdul as fourth American Idol judge

Fall TV previews

After a summer of reruns, we are ready to start anew with fresh shows and the return of old favorites. Here are four of this season’s reasons to delay starting homework.
 

Emily Grace

Two exhibits hit Ransom Center

UT hosts largest Edgar Allen Poe exhibition in history, astronomy expo

The rapping and tapping on the Harry Ransom Center doors yesterday came not from English literature’s most famous talking raven but rather from visitors anxious to see the opening of the museum’s two latest exhibitions — the largest one commemorating the bicentennial of Edgar Allan Poe’s birth and the other a celebration of the history of astronomy.

1 comment

Hump Day: Clitoral confusion leads to steamy pleasurable peaks

Female body is haven for 'erogenous possibilities,'exploration worthwhile

Since last January, “Hump Day” has sparked dialogue and lots of opinionated comments about sexual education by openly addressing topics from birth control to sex toys. By talking about sexual curiosities, we hope the social taboos that often come attached to them can be lessened. So, as a new semester begins, we’re jumping right back in where “Hump Day” left off. Bring on the comments, outrage and, most importantly, questions. We’re ready.

2 comments

Acclaimed short film adapted to big screen

Shane Acker spent four years as a graduate student at the University of California, Los Angeles making an animated short film.

Animated film too flat for adults

Movie fails to grab audience's emotions, needs more plot depth

It’s a tough time for animated films. Pixar continues to produce one phenomenal movie after another and sets the bar so high that all other animation feels a little soulless and stale.

1 comment

Moo Moo’s

New stand a good stop for a tasty burger to go

Moo Moo’s Mini Burgers makes the most of its modest location with a mouthwatering menu and the savory satisfaction to back it up.

Tasty Tuesday: A touch of fruit spices up a breakfast mainstay

French toast is one of my favorite breakfast foods because I feel like I’m getting to eat dessert early.

Adam Bedell

Local musicians reinterpret avant-garde classical works

Museum of Digital Art brings public's focus to 'overlooked composers'

Line Upon Line and members of the New Music Co-op covered three avant-garde classical works for the Austin Museum of Digital Art’s Peformance No.13 on Saturday night, flirting with early electronic recording techniques.

2 comments

CD Review: Catchy hooks mask inconsistencies

Chevelle: Sci-Fi Crimes; Sondre Lerche: Heartbeat Radio; Taken by Trees: East of Eden

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Seth Lewis

Faces of Austin: Media frontier finds its savior

Seth Lewis might be the person who saves journalism. A former sports editor for The Miami Herald, he’s now a journalism doctoral candidate and assistant instructor focusing on new media and its implications in the field.

3 comments

Austin, UT provide options for those with food allergies

Grocery shopping is a pleasant enough experience for most of us — we soak up the air conditioning as we leisurely scan the aisles. The boxes of moist chocolate chip cookies in the bakery make our mouths water — we grab a box, and as an afterthought, pick up a quart of milk from the dairy section as well. It’s simple: We buy what we like or whatever looks good.

7 comments

Movie Review: Mike Judge film trumps archetypes of 'Office Space'

Who has not felt the blunt-force trauma of an idiotic boss?

Back into the office with ‘Extract’

Mike Judge, the creator of “Beavis and Butthead” and “King of the Hill” and writer and director of “Office Space” and “Idiocracy,” has been manufacturing cultural touchstones for years.

Entertainment Briefly: 09/04/09

Russell Crowe challenges columnist to bike duel; Michael Jackson mourned by Elizabeth Taylor, other celebs

James Holmes

Texan brings taste of Europe home

Chef James Holmes ditches politics for apron, restaurant ranked in nation’s top ten by Bon Appétit

Walking into Olivia on South Lamar Boulevard, a diner might catch a glimpse of chef and owner James Holmes cooking away.

4 comments

Site provides cheap books, candy and a fuzzy feeling

Summer vacation is over, and you probably just shelled out more on textbooks than you would on  a round-trip airplane ticket to Cancun. The last thing you want to do is spend more money on books, which is why fall is not the best time of the year to read for pleasure.

Poetry on the Plaza

Readings at Poetry on the Plaza provide a nice segue into the semester

University staff members recite poems of choice at first monthly Harry Ransom Center meeting

A cool September breeze paired with shade from the towering trees provided an appropriate setting for Wednesday’s “Farewell to Summer”-themed Poetry on the Plaza at the Harry Ransom Center.

Discover some comic relief within graphic novels

The school year has just begun, yet somehow, the coursework is already piling up.
The joy once derived from reading novels has turned into the lament of required reading. Fear not: There is salvation in the form of comic books. Rather then checking Facebook, comics are cheap, quick reads that can break up the monotony and stress of coursework.

Museum project promotes Latino artists through silkscreen prints

The old, squeaky wood floors and the stark white walls of the Mexic-Arte Museum act as the perfect counterpart to the striking Serie Print Project XVI exhibit that opened Aug. 14 at the downtown museum. The serigraph prints, better known as silkscreen, line the walls with layers of Latin influence.

Month of fasting unites family

Natural sunlight gives way to a fluorescent glow as a pink north Austin apartment turns golden, the sun setting out the window.

5 comments

Hump Day: Honesty about lifestyle is scary, but worthwhile

Editor’s Note: Since last January, “Hump Day” has sparked dialogue and lots of opinionated comments about sexual education by openly addressing topics from birth control to sex toys. By talking about sexual curiosities, we hope the social taboos that often come attached to them can be lessened. So, as a new semester begins, we’re jumping right back in where “Hump Day” left off. Bring on the comments, outrage and, most importantly, questions. We’re ready.

1 comment

Don Brimberry

Potter masters functional style

Local man uses ‘impeccable technique’ to create works of art

Entering local potter Don Brimberry’s studio is instantly relaxing — the dry, cool air and the fresh smell of clay are reminiscent of after-school art classes taught by soft-voiced, hippy-ish teachers.

9 comments

Influential artist brings reggae beat to local audiences

In reggae music, one man stands out as the genre’s founding father. One man shaped the recognizable sound that would spread across the world and live for generations, providing the soundtrack for everything from Caribbean political uprisings to your last pool party. No, it’s not Bob Marley – it’s Lee “Scratch” Perry, legendary 73-year-old Jamaican producer and artist and the man essentially responsible for the creation of reggae.

Elvis Costello to bring bluegrass to University

Concert celebrates album debut with wide range of genres, instruments

When the lights at Bass Concert Hall dim tonight, there will be no mistaking the trademark thick eyeglasses and dark suit.

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Avocado dip

Tasty Tuesday: Recipe provides simple game day snack

With football season quickly approaching, I am beginning to brainstorm ideas for fun snacks to bring to tailgates or TV-watching parties. It is a challenge because I want to make something that doesn’t require utensils, isn’t too messy and doesn’t include a plastic tray and hundreds of carrot sticks. Not that there’s anything wrong with carrot sticks.

1 comment

CD Reviews: New albums showcase hit tracks, dynamic style

Sunset Rubdown: Dragonslayer; Whitney Houston: I Look To You; The Arctic Monkeys; Humbug

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Entertainment Briefly: 08/31/09

‘Destination’ beats ‘Basterds,’  ‘Halloween’ to No. 1 spot; Autopsy of DJ AM still leaves some questions unanswered

Hot Sauce Festival fires up Austin

Chronicle-sponsored event attracts thousands to sample variety of salsas

Though the temperature outside was a cool 93 degrees, thousands of mouths were on fire at the 19th annual Austin Chronicle Hot Sauce Festival on Sunday at Waterloo Park.

Local scene newest hub for game developers

Austin developers lead business into new era with large projects, several successful companies

Austin has a long-lived reputation as a music city, but it might not be long before it is also viewed as a major hub for the video game industry.

Neil Petty

Music Monday: Local electro-funk musician Neiliyo talks shop

This week, The Daily Texan caught up with Neil Petty, the man behind “Neiliyo.” Combining chunky, Day-Glo beats from his laptop with a funk guitar and an infectious energy, Petty is a constant force in the downtown dance club scene.

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Apple’s Snow Leopard makes few minor upgrades to previous operating system

Mac released its latest operating system, Snow Leopard, on Friday to much anticipation despite the fact that the new system is little more than a more polished version of its predecessor, Leopard.

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Niyeli Cutler

The Phoenix offers classy, mature club experience

The bass booms softly amid the din of chatting club-goers lounging on plush sofas, red lights glowing from every corner of the room.

Tolly Moseley

Faces of Austin: The 'Austin Eavesdropper' speaks in her own words

Founder Tolly Moseley tells the story behind her fast-growing blog

People are strange. They’re also funny, interesting, inspiring and a host of other adjectives that could fill up every page of this paper.

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Classical composer to bring music to page

Waddle pays homage to Fitzgerald’s works for BookPeople series

Many people will never see the connection between the written word and the audible note, but P. Kellach Waddle is out to change that.

Weekend Picks

5 picks for the weekend events in Austin

Kismet Cafe

Low budget lunchtime on campus

I fondly remember the days when lunch referred not only to a meal but to a 30-minute retreat from responsibility — an oasis in between math and P.E.

Band picks a new name, sticks with its old sound

In reality, Monahans is a small city in the center of Texas’ Permian Basin. But for Greg Vanderpool, it is something more abstract.

New channel, new city, same show

“Project Runway,” the hit reality fashion competition show, has returned and is fierce as ever. With the season premiere last Thursday, however, audiences were in for some considerable changes.

Entertainment Briefly: 08/27/09

Author Dominick Dunne dies at 83 in his Manhattan home

Local music fest attracts big names

Watch out, Austin City Limits Music Festival and South by Southwest Festival. It looks like Fun Fun Fun Fest is here to stay.

"Singing in the heat" photo by Caleb Miller/The Daily Texan

Reggae musician Matisyahu plays a short concert on the drag to promote his most recent release

Reggae musician Matisyahu plays a short concert on the drag to promote his most recent releas

Cantina’s flavors blend perfectly, if sporadically

Tex-Mex: people either swear by it or flee from the globs of cheese.

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Sana Sabharwal

Students prepare for ‘the storm’

In many ways, the days leading up to the start of the fall semester are the calm before the storm: parking spots that were empty all summer are filled with moving trucks unloading box springs and bookcases, campus convenience store employees re-stock refrigerator shelves with new bottles of Dr. Pepper and Gatorade and incoming freshmen nervously pace the Six Pack in anticipation, maps in hand.

Hipsters

Going undercover among Austin’s hipster subculture

A tumult of beeps, buzzes and bass fills the low-lit Beauty Bar as a huddle of svelte bodies bounce up and down, lost entirely to the beat.

3 comments

Hump Day: A little saliva here and there never hurt anyone

Editor’s Note: Since last January, “Hump Day” has been sparking dialogue and lots of opinionated comments about sexual education by openly addressing topics from birth control to sex toys. By talking about sexual curiosities, we hope the social taboos that often come attached to them can be lessened. So, as a new semester begins, we’re jumping right back in where “Hump Day” left off. Bring on the comments, outrage and, most importantly, questions. We’re ready.

Entertainment Briefly: 08/26/09

Chris Brown sentenced to five years probation in assault case

Chris Brown sentenced to five years probation in assault case; Billboard names Beyonce its third ‘Woman of the Year’; After three Hollywood movies, Jet Li returns to Chinese film

A woman examines a tapestry

Blend of media works, mostly

Poetry, art come together in ‘A Couple of Ways of Doing Something’

The new Chuck Close exhibit at the Austin Museum of Art, “A Couple of Ways of Doing Something,” certainly lives up to its name: digital prints, photogravures and massive tapestries stand out among scores of staggering daguerreotypes.

Tasty Tuesday: Homestyle meal the ideal comfort

As the fall semester begins, I realize I have to get used to eating dinner around my schoolwork and other commitments.

5 comments

Ajay Miranda, a UT journalism graduate

Blogging to local fame

Amid the fog of cigarette smoke and the reverb-heavy cacophony of a show at one of the indie rock haunts along Red River, it’s rare that you won’t find a certain young man with black hair, square rimmed glasses, assertive eyes and the most conspicuous of accessories: a video camera.

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Entertainment Briefly: 08/25/09

Crypt above Marilyn Monroe’s grave fetches millions on eBay

Bat Fest

Bats put on a show for Austin

Festival draws tens of thousands, raises money for bat conservation

As the humidity settled heavily on the evening, one Saturday night event began in homage of one of Austin’s greatest oddities: the 1.5 million Mexican free-tail bats that live under Congress Bridge.

Gupta Abhishek

Students search for good deals at garage sale

Customers salvage used clothes, furniture at 'Trash to Treasure'

In a second-floor gymnasium at the UT Recreational Sports Center, hundreds of UT students and Austinites sorted through piles of used clothing and furniture Sunday morning at the fifth annual Trash to Treasure Garage Sale.

Beastie Boys drop plans to play ACL

Festival organizers scramble to make last-minute lineup changes

The year that ACL Festival organizers don’t have to deal with last-minute dropouts and lineup complaints from fans will be their favorite year ever. Unfortunately, 2009 won’t be that year.

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Music Monday: The personal side of the world’s live music capital

We’ve all heard Austin touted as the “Live Music Capital of the World,” but this grandiose title discounts the fact that it’s individual musicians that make it so. In order to get to know a more personal side of Austin’s music scene, each Monday we’ll ask a local musician 10 questions about their music and their life.

Entertainment Briefly: 08/24/09

Actor Antwon Tanner pleads guilty to NYC ID-theft scheme

Owner Juan Meza

Snapshot of Eating: in and around Central Austin

With literally hundreds of restaurants in easy reach, deciding where to eat around campus can be a difficult decision. Here is a short but savory list of campus establishments that will hopefully please your palate and bring flavor to your day.

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Til Schweiger, Samm Levine, and Eli Roth

Movie Review: 'Basterds' just might be Tarantino's greatest yet

No filmmaker today divides cinemagoers like Quentin Tarantino.

Director Eli Roth

Eli Roth becomes 'The Bear Jew'

Director Eli Roth has been subverting the horror genre since he broke onto the scene with 2002’s creepy, campy “Cabin Fever.”

Incubus

Incubus returns from hiatus for best-of compilation, tour

Taking a break is usually a bad sign for a band, evidence that either the creative well has run dry or conflict within the group is causing problems.

Robert Baldwin and Mary Lingwall

Bat bridge helps cheap date fly

When I told my boyfriend Robert about a thrifty date challenge a few of my coworkers had put me up to, I was sincerely impressed by his enthusiastic response.

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Gwen Kelso and Shannon Grounds

Play Review: Scottish Rite puts Shakespeare's daft humor on display

If you can recall your high school English classes, then you probably remember reading quite a bit of Shakespeare.

Mark Paulson, Beth Tacular and Phil Moore

Bowerbirds make 'precious' music

There’s no better word to describe Bowerbirds than “precious.”

woodstock

Book Review: Remembering legendary hippie Woodstock concert

Fueled by peace, love and drugs, event defined music for a generation

For all those who find themselves venturing to Austin City Limits every year — covered in sunscreen, battery-powered fans hanging around their necks and the unmistakable feeling that somehow they were transported to another planet — it’s easy to envision the muddy chaos that was Woodstock.

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Lourdes Rosenbaum spoons

Austin's Best: Ethnic Eateries

When it comes to dining in Austin, it’s not necessary to keep going to the same comfortable restaurants. Go out on a limb and try some really delicious foods at an unobtrusive, ethnic hole-in-the-wall. Here are a handful of our favorites.

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Hump Day: Gardasil ads could mislead

“Each year thousands of women in the U.S. learn they have cervical cancer,” says the young girl in the Gardasil commercials we’ve seen just about every day since the FDA approved Merck’s vaccine for four of the more than 30 strains of HPV in 2006.

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Emerging nonprofit inspires students

In an upstairs classroom in the Blanton Art Museum’s Smith building, 12 high schoolers sit and listen to a Blanton docent.

Spring rolls

Tasty Tuesday: Cool cooking in summer heat

As the end of the summer approaches, I find myself craving simplicity; the desire to get away from the complications of moving, buying textbooks and, most notably, the heat. With less than three weeks until the start of the fall semester, I’m boycotting turning on my oven until the first signs of cooler weather.

Wes Anderson

Studios to exhibit promising winter films for theaters

Summer is coming to a close. Many have faced the mass exodus from West Campus and is, more than likely, dealing with the form of homelessness that apartment complexes love to inflict upon young students.

Twang

CD Reviews: While 'Twang' is Strait-jacketed, Young Mammals offers new pop sound

Mainstream country is probably the most isolated genre of popular music. No matter what happens, it keeps to itself.

4 comments

Cheese lovers attend the 2009 Festival of Cheese

Cheesy convention a mouthful

Dozens of cheese-heaped tables filled the Governor’s Ballroom at the downtown Hilton on Saturday night, where the American Cheese Society held its annual Festival of Cheese. Gruyères and goudas, Muensters and mozzarellas, pepperjacks and provolones — about 1,100 varieties of the delicious delicacy were put on display for hundreds of guests to eat.

Scott Evans of Austin Homebrew

Homemade wine offers challenges, requires patience

Last Thursday, Austin Homebrew Supply gave a winemaking workshop as part of Slow Food Austin’s series of monthly culinary classes.

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Cadence Weapon performs

Display great way to byte into digital art world

Last Saturday, the Austin Museum of Digital Art held its 46th bimonthly Digital Showcase at Club De Ville, featuring a lineup of live electronic bands and digital art. Both international and local artists donned the stage and screens of the breezy Club De Ville patio.

Entertainment Briefly: ‘G.I. Joe’ weekend sales

‘G.I. Joe’ movie has kung-fu grip on weekend sales at box office

Thrifty thursday: 08/06/09

An Ikea trip is a perfect idea for those seeking fun, affordable date

If necessity is the mother of all invention, then only being allowed to spend $10 on a date is bound to breed some quirky romance.

Maile Meloy’s book “Both Ways is the Only Way I Want It,” Cover Art

Book Review: Minimalistic style makes ‘Both Ways’ sublime

“What kind of fool would only want it one way?” asks Fielding, one of the many conflicted characters in Maile Meloy’s new short story collection, “Both Ways is the Only Way I Want It,” in which she examines this theme in her diverse collection of 11 stories.

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Entertainment Briefly: 08/06/09

Abdul’s ‘Idol’ exit shakes up TV’s top-rated show; Screenwriter for ‘On the Waterfront’ dies in NY at 95

The Mohawk puts Warhol’s ‘Factory’ back into motion

Break out your Campbell’s soup cans and bananas, it’s Andy Warhol’s birthday!

Slug

A flip-side to the hip-hop block

Unique music artist talks about records, personal lyrics and wild shows

Who said hip-hop was dead?

2 comments

Vun Ziegler

Restaurant Review: New Chinese eatery boasts decent food and fair price

There are tons of places to get dim sum near campus, but newly opened Fortune Chinese Seafood makes it a unique experience. From the very low prices to a wide variety of menu offerings, it’s worth a visit.

Hump Day: Avoid premature withdrawal, know the facts about Guttmacher study

The Guttmacher Institute, one of the world’s preeminent sex and reproductive health think tanks, released a study in December based on new evidence supporting the efficacy of the withdrawal method at preventing pregnancy.

Tasty Tuesday: Classic salad not Child's play

Cooking legend Julia Child, perhaps the world’s most renowned chef, has been garnering a lot of press recently. This Friday marks the release of “Julie and Julia”, a film based on a book by Julie Powell. The movie depicts events in Child’s life juxtaposed with Powell’s own life as she attempts to make all 524 recipes in Child’s book, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.”

Tony Ciola

Pizzeria cooks pies with coal, tradition

Tony Ciola, owner and operator of Tony C’s Coal Fired Pizza, is 25 years old. Though he’s young for the typical restaurant owner, he says he was born into the business: Ciola’s great-uncle opened the original Ciola’s Italian restaurant in Virginia Beach, Va., in 1949, and the Ciola family has been in the business of making food ever since.

Modest Mouse

Latest Modest Mouse album is mostly mediocre

No One’s First and You’re Next; About Love; Tribute To

Lou Dobbs show now CNN 'nightmare'

NEW YORK — He’s become a publicity nightmare for CNN, embarrassed his boss and hosted a show that seemed to contradict the network’s “no bias” brand. And on top of all that, his ratings are slipping.

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Kick Butt Coffee

Brewed without benefit, new coffee shops graded

Whether it’s a sleep-deprived UT student or fast-walking downtown office employee, Austinites love coffee, a claim made evident by the plethora of coffee shops — both chain and independently-owned — that line nearly every street corner in the Capitol City.

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At least a thousand attend Cupcake Smackdown

Last Saturday, Austin saw its first Cupcake Smackdown, a family and pet event held at the One2One bar that celebrated the tiny treats and locals who bake them.

Glasvegas comes to Emo's

Since its formation in 2003, Glasvegas has been combining the dark attitude of 80’s New Wave revivalists like The Jesus and Mary Chain with the types of noise-rock manifestos made famous by bands like My Bloody Valentine.

1 comment

Things you will need to read “Infinite Jest”

Summer book challenge lightens load for readers

‘Infinite Summer’ makes 1,000-page novel less daunting with blogs, forum discussion

A summer online challenge has quickly made “Infinite Jest,” David Foster Wallace’s behemoth 1996 novel, this summer’s must-read book. It’s one of the most talked-about and difficult books in the last 20 years.

“A Map of Home” by Randa Jarrar

Exploring life and space, books journal humanity

“A Map of Home” by Randa Jarrar; T-Minus: The Race to the Moon by Jim Ottaviani

Texan staffer Erin Mulvaney and her date, Dan

Breakfast at the ‘Embassy’

Continental thievery forms basis for budget date, embarrassment

Some guys may think the perfect date ends with breakfast, so I decided to mix it up and begin my “thrifty date” bright and early with a bite to eat.

A little taste of Texas’ top burgers

n this month’s issue of Texas Monthly, the magazine published “The 50 Best Burgers,” a comprehensive list of the self-proclaimed best hamburgers in the state. On the list, eight out of the 50 burgers are in Austin. We sent our staff to test two out of the list’s top three burgers in the city.

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Playwright talks about technique, success, motives

Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, recent graduate of the MFA creative writing program at UT’s James A. Michener Center, has found a warm reception in literary committees and drama competitions with her play “LIDLESS.”

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Tidbits about his and her bits and pieces

Doing research for the “Hump Day” column has led me to some of the most interesting books I have ever read. With an excuse for reading books like “The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women” from cover to cover, I have seen myself turn into a receptacle for random facts about sex.

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Homemade granola photo by Carson Werner/The Daily Texan

Granola makes breakfast super

Despite any preconceived notion you may have, granola isn’t just for hippies.

Ashley Tisdale

Sugar Ray plays it safe with style, Tisdale blunders

Music reviews of Ashley Tisdale's new album "Guilty Pleasure," and Sugar Ray's album "Music for Cougars,"


 

1 comment

Cheery trailer serves movie-themed chocolates

Cheer Up Charlie’s draws inspiration from movie exploits of Willy Wonka

Remember that sobering moment in Mel Stuart’s “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” when you are so ready for Charlie to find the golden ticket and he doesn’t?

Entertainment Briefly: 07/28/09

Online auction includes love faxes, robe, phone messages

Cougars give chase to joggers

Whimsical 5K raises money for group fighting sexual violence

A Sunday morning run is not really unusual in Austin — the city is known for being one of the nation’s fittest. This Sunday’s inaugural Cougar Country Classic 5K, however, was slightly different.

5 comments

Horticulturist

Event remembers former first lady's life, achievements

Wildflower Center hosts Lady Bird Tribute Day featuring videos, tours

When it seems as though nothing can survive in the sweltering triple-digit weather, The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, filled with flourishing plants, is not hurt by the blazing Texas sun.

Local musician Chris Hawkes

Raunchy show attempts to rekindle the flame of Austin's unique culture

Drunk crowd laps up the obscenity laced music, comedy of 'Variety Show'

Just when you thought Austin was slowly bleeding out its old, unique character, a show of epic insanity designed to “bring back a little bit of what Austin used to be” pulls you out from the depths of coffee shop chains. “The Troy Dillinger Variety Show” owned Saturday night at the U.S. Art Authority, located next to Spider House.

Bikers

Biking group puts riders in gear

I pedal down Lamar Boulevard listening to the smooth sound of tire treads gliding on asphalt. Over Town Lake, I see to my left the pedestrian bridge lavished with bikes of every type.

7 comments

Chedd

Chedd's cheese shop at Triangle offers variety not found elsewhere

I’m a fan of cheese in all its glorious forms; my roommates tease me about having three different kinds of cheese in the refrigerator. When a friend asked me what souvenir she should bring back for me from Italy, she was surprised when I requested the finest wheel of Parmesan Reggiano she could find.

Jim Drain

Art exhibit features smoke, swine, skeletons

Display at gallery shows hybrid of medium and inspirational sources

Shrieking sobs, plastic pig masks and a veritable tower of office supply cabinets: These objects may sound as if they belong in some unlikely hybrid of “Office Space” and “Lord of the Flies.” But these seemingly disparate items represent one man’s take on theambivalence and uncertainty of the present.

the drug trade

Drugs still a hit in local market

Austin marijuana dealer says business is thriving despite economy

Shut away in a humble downtown apartment, local marijuana dealer “Kosmo” sits.

8 comments

Hump Day: Gender fluidity tends to be more viscous for men

Last September, The Daily Texan published “Out of the Closet, into a Minefield”, an opinion piece by openly bisexual physics sophomore Heath Cleveland.

1 comment

Jeff Sharlet

Book Reviews: 07/22/09

Books uncover expeditions into different worlds

‘Expose’ boasts thought, time, legitimate research on fundamentalist sect; Irish novelist weaves tale of strangers in ‘70s New York that may be best yet

Tasty Tuesday: Homemade cupcakes beat store-bought any day

As I was driving downtown last week, I noticed yet another new cupcake shop near the Second Street District. Delish Cupcakes (209 W. 3rd St.) marks the fourth independent cupcake shop to open in Austin.

Sylvia Orozco

Founder reveals why museum set down roots in Austin

Sylvia Orozco’s resume is definitely one to envy.

Fashion week finishes with style

Fashion show and awards ceremony boast a uniquely Austin atmosphere

As the sun sets Sunday on an unusually breezy evening, Austin’s fashion community strolls down a red carpet rolled out in front of the Long Center for the Performing Arts during the fashion show and awards ceremony that would culminate the city’s first everfashion week.

3 comments

Movies about space escape gravity's reach

Exactly 40 years ago today, the members of the Apollo 11 crew were on their way to being the first men to set foot on the moon.

Art enthusiasts

Art Review: Community center presents artistic opportunities

Space 12, a colorful artist collective and community center on Austin’s East Side, is the YMCA of the next generation.

Annie Ray is a local photographer

Capturing a city by freezing time

Annie Ray is kind of a big deal. Or, at least that’s what her Web site claims.

18 comments

Frances Osborne’s “The Bolter”

Book remembers boundary-breaker

Sackville’s scandalous life challenged Victorian-era views of place in society

Long before notorious party girls like Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan, there was Idina Sackville, whose scandalous behavior and tumultuous love life became notorious in England at the turn of the 20th century.

1 comment

Textiles and apparel junior Lauren Tullos walks with Texan staffer Francisco Marin on a date. Marin

Thrift proves being a cheap date isn’t necessarily bad

She’s 6 feet tall, brunette and gorgeous — so gorgeous, in fact, she occasionally does side work as a model in addition to being a fashion design student.

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Harry Potter works his magic

Sexual tension and scant exposition throw fans right in the action

When the first “Harry Potter” film came out, way back in 2001, there wasn’t too much to be excited about.

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Hump Day: Vibrators, dildos spice up couples’ bedroom aerobics

The first time I ever saw a dildo, I was about 10 years old.

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Tortoise

These genre-bending musicians visit Austin for the bars, food and boots

My first brush with true musical genius, exemplified in the Chicago-based band Tortoise, was years ago at a party.

Talking up virtues of homemade tacos

Austin’s taco fetish is out of control. From the traditional to the exotic, tacos are available at basically every corner (I can think of three places I could buy one within walking distance of where I am now.) It’s easy to see why tacos are so popular: They’re tasty, versatile, portable and, perhaps most importantly­­, cheap.

The Summer Acts! Festival

'Rabbit Hole' offers guests touching tale

Since The City Theatre began playing host to the Summer Acts! Festival on Thursday, a collection of six small shows have taken the stage — mostly original fare, such as a rock musical version of “The Odyssey” and another musical dramedy entitled “Home(less) Economics.”

Britt Daniels

Sweltering Spoon plays it again

Thousands of fans crowded outside Stubb’s Bar-B-Que Saturday night to see Spoon, a local quartet that has become a success story of Austin music. From its start, when frontman Britt Daniel played solo shows at Hole in the Wall while he was a UT student, to October 2007, when the band was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live, Spoon’s evolution from obscure local favorite to nationally recognized act holds a warm place in the hearts of Austin fans who can say “we knew them when.”

Fashion Week

Austin Fashion Week, July 13-19, includes a variety of events beyond the catwalk. Most are free and open to the public, and all guarantee great deals on self-improvement techniques, clothing and accessories. Free luxury items, especially in this economy, seem even better.

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Martha Keating

Vagueness obscures 'What Texas Means' exhibit

Artists in competition show what state means using different mediums

The significance of home is intimate and often anecdotal for individuals. So, when Austin Art Space asked Texan artists what their state means to them, a wide array of representations arose — from the obvious painted longhorn to obscure and confusing neon-colored lines streaked across a gray canvas.

Entertainment Weekly: 'Bruno' wins weekend box office, takes in $30.4 million

LOS ANGELES — Gay Austrian fashion devotee Bruno has landed the No. 1 spot at the weekend box office, though it’s uncertain how much staying power he has.

Spoon, a local Austin alternative rock act

Spoon's new EP got more than 'Nuffin'

Musically diverse album reflects band’s devotion to experimentation, spontaneity

Two years ago, Spoon was ubiquitous.

Volunteers prepare books for prisoners

Books allow convicts mental release

Project to educate and rehabilitate prisoners reopens in new location

On the streets of East Austin there is a place where books, prisoners and volunteers converge. After a four-month hiatus, the Inside Books Project reopened in a more diverse collective space to continue its goal of prison improvements through education.

Spoon

Music Review: Got Nuffin

Spoon's new album, Got Nuffin
 

Entertainment Briefly: Kathy Griffin brings bawdy comic act to UT's Long Center

Comedian Kathy Griffin returns to the Long Center for the Performing Arts tonight as part of her nationwide tour.

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Sinsations owner Morgan Satterfield

Austin sex shop will rise again

Erotic store caters to women and couples, makes patrons feel at ease

In this rough economy, the story of a business struggling to make ends meet or having to compromise in order to survive is not unheard of.

Bartenders at Annie

Restaurant Review: Restaurant has Creole atmosphere but menu variety

Annie’s Cafe & Bar opens doors again to serve great food, first-rate desserts

Austin is full of restaurants that cater to diners — places that care not only what goes into the entrees, but also about what makes the restaurant accessible and pleasing to all kinds of people, no matter their taste buds. Annie’s Cafe & Bar, a new local restaurant, embodies such versatility and awareness in its cuisine.

Up-and-coming rock band talks about love, new songs, Jackson’s death

If there’s one thing Shane Lawlor keeps coming back to when discussing his new music, it’s love.

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Hump Day: Pillow talk: how to lose a guy in a few questions

Engulfed in oxytocin-induced feelings of comfort, people frequently partake in intimate talk after sex — most commonly called pillow talk.

Drafthouse has your mid-week grindhouse fix

It’s officially summertime. It’s the time when we all make pledges to ourselves about how we will use our spare time wisely.

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This potato and squash dish

A casserole, by any other name

I think I ought to be called out on this recipe: Though it’s masked with a pretentious name, this dish is really nothing more than a dressed up casserole.

Tutto Theatre Company

Play Review: Comic production tackles absurdity of the stage with solid acting talent

A few weeks ago, the Tutto Theatre Company’s presentation of Mikhail Bulgakov’s “Black Snow” premiered at the Salvage Vanguard Theater.

Russell Cullen

Veggie hot dog contest stuffs Austinites

Competition was fun and intense as teams, individuals competed

What do you get when you combine veggie dogs, beer, carnival music and a dash of Austin’s weirdness? If not the makings of a pretty lame joke, then you can bet it’s the Third Annual Veggie Hot Dog Eating Contest hosted by iLoveMikeLitt.

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Peter O

Paramount's summer movie series plays them all again

Offers the chance to see legendary films as they were meant to be seen

Like anyone with a severe moving picture addiction, I spend a serious, and sometimes debilitating amount of time watching movies in my living room. I’m totally relaxed, relatively engaged and I enjoy every minute of it.

Pentagram

38 years old, Pentagram still rocking in obscurity

Washington, D.C.’s Pentagram has often been referred to as the “American Black Sabbath,” as both bands took the garage and psychedelic rock of the past in slower, darker directions.

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Aaron Black and Andrew Varenhorst

Intimate setting, good drama

I’ve been traveling to East Austin a lot recently.

Ernest Hemingway

Book Review: Memoirists tend to tell their own versions of reality

After a long day of family gatherings, forced religious experiences and altogether awkward conversations, I always leave my parents’ house thinking, “Well, that story goes in the memoir.”

Houston band Indian Jewelry

Band straddles line between chords and chaos

Indian Jewelry is constantly on the edge. One of the best experimental bands to emerge from Texas in the past decade, the Houston-based group always seems to straddle the divide between beauty and destruction.

Old 'X-marks-the-spot' game gets interactive twist

Around Austin are hundreds of clues that lead to secret, concealed boxes. More than likely, you have walked by one of these hidden treasures completely unaware of its existence. The treasure hunt is all part of a game called letterboxing.

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Todd Hansen and Scott Miller

Site offers a couch for bands

What do you get when you combine two former touring drummers, music fans and the rise of social media? For Todd Hansen and Scott Miller, the result was a national database of free places to stay for traveling musicians.

Hump Day: Cuddle or run? Don't blame it on neurobiology

Lying intertwined in the sweaty afterglow of a sexual romp can be one of the most emotionally fulfilling, monumentally disappointing or chillingly awkward moments of a sexual interaction.  From pillow talk and cuddling to grabbing the keys, finding your underwear and sheepishly hauling butt for the door, the vast array of post-coitus feelings can sometimes be difficult to manage.

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Movie Review: New gangster flick hits the jackpot

When you think 1930s gangsters, the likes of James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson come to mind, with their tough-guy looks and “You dirty rat” mentality.

The Really Free Market

If you’re looking for some clothes, shoes or random trinkets, but don’t have a lot of money, Austin’s Really, Really Free Market may be of interest to you. It’s free. Really.

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Independence Day is the perfect occasion for picnic indulgence

It’s hard to believe, but it’s almost July, and this Saturday is the Fourth, ensuring all the traditional festivities like fireworks, picnics and patriotic color overload.

Get Sum Dim Sum

Get Sum Dim Sum proves Austin has good Chinese fare

It has been said that if you want good Chinese food in Austin, go to Houston. Fortunately, the newly opened Get Sum Dim Sum does not fit that mold.

Wilco

Declining stars swing and miss, again

Wilco (The Album); Cradlesong

Death of Jackson sparks remembrance

Mastery of image, defeat of racial barriers endear ‘King of Pop’ to millions

I remember the first time I heard Michael Jackson. One summer in the early ‘90s, my sister and I stumbled upon a Jackson 5 vinyl that belonged to our mother.

Death of Fawcett sparks remembrance

Beautiful model, TV star Farrah Fawcett left her mark on 40 Acres

Last Friday, after battling anal cancer for several years, Farrah Fawcett died at the age of 62. Some remember her as one of “Charlie’s Angels,” others remember her as an icon of the sexually-charged ‘70s, still others remember her as a struggling actress dealing with the troubles of life after stardom, but most forget that she was a Longhorn.

Book Review: Lauren Conrad’s savvy obvious in dull novel

One time when I was sick, my boyfriend came over to cheer me up with MTV’s “Laguna Beach” series.

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Lauren Conrad, star of MTV’s “The Hills,” signed copies

‘The Hills’ star promotes book, thrills Austin fans

Lauren Conrad’s visit shows difference between MTV show and real life

Gaggles of prepubescent tweens held out their cell phones and cameras as they were ushered into a dimly lit room on the third floor of BookPeople on Lamar Boulevard on Saturday afternoon.

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Pitchman Billy Mays on the set for an infomercial

Advertising icon remembered for vivacity, beard

TAMPA, Fla. — Billy Mays, the burly, bearded television pitchman whose boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean made him a pop-culture icon, has died. He was 50.

Beatrice Thomas, left, and Alaina Chambers

Eco-friendly, functional art

Austin Green Art helps to reform lives with ‘green employment’

“This is Heaven,” said Randy Jewart, founder of Austin Green Art, standing proudly before an expanse of tattered windows, rusted tools and industrial ghosts.

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Hump Day: 06/24/09

Faking it: tossing him a bone leads to mutual regrets

This week, I am joined by Daily Texan columnist Ben Wermund to discuss the gendered expectations of orgasm and the acceptability of “faking it.”

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Transformers Movie Clip

Movie Review: Bay's new 'Transformers' full of action, groans

With “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” it’s clear that someone let director/master of destruction Michael Bay off the leash.

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New American Talent exhibition in the Arthouse.

Ikea chairs from hell add mystery to Arthouse show

Contemporary exhibit perplexes visitors, lacks emotional intensity

What do I know about contemporary art? Apparently, not much.

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Corn and Black Bean Salad

In-season corn is sweet treat

Corn and Black Bean Salad

Whiskey Business

Whiskey Business rocks Beerland

Staggering through tobacco clouds at 90-proof an hour, Austin’s musically confederate band, Clyde and Clem’s Whiskey Business, fills up a lovingly abused back patio table at the Hole in the Wall.

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Dream Theater

New album releases include Dream Theater, Yorn, Spektor

Dream Theater; Pete Yorn; Regina Spektor; Julianna Barwic

Kelsey Innis

CA native selects tunes

Late at night, disc jockeys in the isolated KVRX studio play “none of the hits, all of the time” for Austin listeners.

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Miles Jones points out

Traditional pizza at a great price

House Pizzeria serves tasty pizza made from flavorful ingredients

Pizza is a favorite meal among most college students.

New exhibit a modern, ancient mix

Francisco Matto's work explores, spans gap between modern and past societies

Only one word can be used to describe the Blanton Museum on Friday night: swanky.

Jenny Lewis, lead singer of Rilo Kiley

Singer Lewis goes solo, bares soul

Rilo Kiley frontwoman rocks to gospel and soul for a little side project

Jenny Lewis never fails to put on a show that is both physically and emotionally moving. Though the 33-year-old Lewis is normally found playing guitar and singing in the band Rilo Kiley, she is currently doing her own thing as a solo artist.

Entertainment Briefly: 06/22/09

Bullock’s ‘Proposal’ woos date crowds with $34.1M

Cameras roll after bells toll

When the last bell rings and school is finally out for the summer, many kids run home, kick their feet up in front of the TV and stay there for the next two and a half months.

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Away We Go

Movie Review: 'Away We Go' on a cheery romp to Montreal

It’s strange to think that only six months ago director Sam Mendes made “Revolutionary Road,” a film about how settling down will rob you of your ambition and dreams.

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The Proposal

Movie Review: High-caliber stars solicit the ineffectual 'Proposal'

In “The Proposal,” high-powered publishing house editor Margaret Tate (Sandra Bullock) faces deportation to her native Canada and must bribe her abused assistant, Andrew Paxton (Ryan Reynolds), into marrying her.

Singer Annie Clark

St. Vincent to help downtown move and shake tonight

If you haven’t heard of Annie Clark, better known as St. Vincent, now is as good a time as any. With the recent release of her sophomore album Actor, Clark is turning a lot of headsand attracting a lot of ears. 

Pack of Wolves bring metal to Austin

Four years ago, if you told me Austin was going to become a great town for metal, I would laugh so hard my guts would come spewing forth and I would resemble an Autopsy song. The Sword hadn’t made its mark yet, Averse Sefira rarely did shows and national tours often skipped Austin for San Antonio.

Norma Rios

There is joy in picking berries

Hill Country berry farm is organic 'mini-oasis,' just miles from city

Last Saturday, with thoughts of jam and cobbler in my mind, I drove an hour west in search of something more organic than the city could provide.  Tucked away in the Hill Country is a mini-oasis called Sweet Berry Farm, where determined visitors are invited to pick their own produce from rows of fruits and vegetables waiting to be unearthed.

Coarse culture reflected in abusive 'Stockholm'

When creating the interactive DVD “Stockholm: An Exploration of True Love” — a game that lets a player kidnap a young woman and then uses a limited number of available physical and psychological tools to make her “fall in love with [the viewer]” — Stanton Audemars didn’t seem to think his game was going to ruffle any feathers.

Woven Bones

Band has fingers crossed for success

Many bands in search of a signature aesthetic turn to old cultural artifacts. From early punk bands the Misfits’ and Cramps’ “B” horror film-fetish to the modern folk movement’s plundering of Native American dress and design, musicians have found inspiration in abundance through the ways of the past.

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Book-to-movie adaptations slowly changing

Lately, it seems that Hollywood has gotten incredibly lazy. Almost every movie coming out is an adaptation of a book.

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Black Sheep Lodge

Lodge satisfies hamburger hankering

South Lamar eatery serves delicious food and free booze while waiting on liquor license

After almost a year and a half of planning, Black Sheep Lodge finally opened on South Lamar Street.

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The Fantasticks

Play Review: "The Fantasticks" cheesy but well-performed

When I pulled into the parking lot of Austin Playhouse, I feared I was in the wrong place.

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Museum showcases Mexican art, gives glimpses of culture

Mexic-Arte displays more than 2,000 works from Hispanic artists

As you walk, bus or drive downtown, there is no doubt you will encounter a cultural explosion.

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Hump Day: Researchers gushing over idea of female ejaculation

The porn industry has an incredible ability to make even the most natural of sexual phenomena sound utterly disgusting.

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Blueberries

Blueberries, an easy dessert

One of my guiltiest pleasures is being a total food-blog junkie.

Jonas Brothers

Music Reviews: Disney predictability, dour love songs and gritty pop

Lines, Vines and Trying Times by the Jonas Brothers; Rhett Miller by Rhett Miller; Microscopic Metronomes by Wild Moccasins

'Badass-ery' on display at biker rally

Stunts, public indecency and alcohol make event most gnarly in Austin

Motorcycles are awesome. That’s what I learned this weekend. They’re fast, noisy and super sweet. From a young Marlon Brando’s iconic performance in “The Wild One” to the legendary stunt jumps of Evel Knievel, the American spirit is filled with images of leather-clad, motorcycle-riding awesomeness; and downtown Austin was packed with the best examples of this last weekend.

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Santigold

Santigold genre hops with style and flash

The gold is here! Santi White, also known as Santigold, has made a major name for herself in the music business with her debut album Santogold.

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Sonny Mehta, Sucharit Katyal and Vaibhav Jain

Austinites find Qawwali tunes at Barton Springs Pool

Settled under a shady tree, music group Riyaaz delighted Barton Springs Pool-goers with a taste of South Asian tradition on Saturday afternoon.

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Scottish indie band offers candid covers

The camera obscura is an early device used to project an image on a screen.

Somnio

Idea on the mark but food misses

Somnio's cafe on South 1st talks the talk, but food leaves a lot on the table

Eating out has always been a bit of a compromise for me. While it offers instant gratification for my stomach with food made with skills well beyond my own, sometimes I sacrifice not only the contents of my wallet, but also the ability to know exactly what goes into my food.

AMOA

Exhibit jogs memories through art

Three circles of green plastic tubing, representing brain neurons, dangle from the ceiling as you enter the exhibit “The Lining of Forgetting: Internal and External Memory in Art” at the Austin Museum of Art. At the heart of each sculpture is a video of artist Deborah Aschheim during one of her birthday parties in the 1960s.

Devin the Dude

Knievel's jump at ROT rally highlights weekend activities

With many things to do this weekend, the Texan’s Life & Arts editors have some suggestions for what you should be doing. This is a weekly series to keep you informed about weekend events.

Entertainment Briefly: Aerosmith teaming up with "Guitar Hero" for tour

NEW YORK — Aerosmith may be nearly 40 years old, but the group is staying connected with younger audiences.

David Lutes

Local singer rooted in past

Monday night at Momo’s, local musician David Lutes performed for a small crowd gathered inside the bar.

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An anti-beach book reading list to keep you busy

With beach season in full force, it’s inevitable that a female member of my family will soon hand me a novel with some sort of ridiculous romance theme.

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Faster Than the Speed of Life!

Musical Review: East Side indie musical attempts modern existentialism

If nothing else, a musical can usually provide an escape from the banality of the daily trudge. With all the lights, dancing, and catchy music — not to mention the over-exaggerated singing — what’s not to love?

Noveskey helps produce Language Room's first album

When you get to a point where the rigors of touring and writing music aren’t satiating enough, what’s a musician to do?

UT grad aims to be Austin's top banana

Inspired by 'Arrested Development,' founders want stand to spoon out frozen goodness

In a tiny wooden trailer at the corner of a parking lot on 9th Street and Lamar Boulevard, Anna Notario and Laura Anderson stand for six hours a day, seven days a week, dipping frozen bananas into a Crock-Pot full of melted chocolate sauce.

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Hump Day: Talking about sex key to end stigmas

“But why does it have to be about sex?”

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Yoga

Unlike hangovers, yoga in the mornings feels like victory

Summer evenings are typically reserved for hanging out and drinking a few cold ones. Summer mornings, however, are usually best for little more than sleeping off the night before. Instead of downing painkillers in preparation for Round 2, consider a more enlightening a.m. activity: yoga.

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watermelon lemonade

Weather for watermelons

Fruit's moisture and tenderness are perfect for Texas summers

When I was a kid, I would eat bowls of watermelon until I made myself sick, sitting on our front porch and spitting the seeds onto the sidewalk. Today, I try to practice the art of self-restraint, capping my fruit consumption before it ends tragically in a sugar coma and water-filled stomach.

Apple shows off new OS, computers and iPhone

Products premiered at Apple's annual trade show for developer

Rumors have run rampant the past few months about what Apple has been working on at their home base in Cupertino, Calif.

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Matisyahu’s Yiddish rap returns to Austin

On the last day of the 2006 Austin City Limits Music Festival, my friends and I sat in the grass, killing time while we waited for The Flaming Lips set to begin.

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CD Review: New Loxsly record fails to lift off until second half

After the release of the promising Flashlights EP last year, my biggest fear was that Loxsly would neglect its subtle, carefully constructed arrangements and enchanting textures for a more traditional indie-pop sound.

CD Review: Rebirth features more Lil' Wayne autotune torture

After months of speculation and rumors, the inevitable has happened. Lil Wayne’s Rebirth, Weezy’s so-called “rock” album, has been released.

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CD Review: A Sonic Youth adventure that ends too soon

As someone who predominately listens to and writes about experimental music, it’s embarrassing to confess that I’ve never really listened to Sonic Youth. Sure, I’ve heard a few tracks from its critically acclaimed album Daydream Nation and even seen frontman Thurston Moore play live, but the band’s monumental, decade-spanning catalog has always seemed too daunting to tackle at this stage in my life.

Charlie’s Austin Bar and Grill

Community tips its hat to pride

Thousands represent Austin's vibrant gay community, hear talk on Stonewall Riots' impact

When Masashi Niwano moved from San Francisco to Austin four years ago, he found the local gay community to be smaller than the one in his native city.

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Katherine McQueen

Austin exhibit lacks cohesion but has potential

Red, blue and green cloths dangle from iron hangers in the corner of the room. An infant-sized doll mimics the movements of a man on a TV screen. This is just the beginning of “Practice, Practice, Practice,” the new exhibit at the Lora Reynolds Gallery on Third and Nueces streets.

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Play Review: Entertaining 'Killer Joe' comes to Hyde Park venue

“Killer Joe” is sure to inspire feelings of unease.

The Fall

Book Review: McAdam's sophomore effort captivates

“Fall,” critically acclaimed author Colin McAdam’s sophomore novel, is arguably the best new work published in recent literary history.

Losing mum and pup

Book Review: Buckley writes poignant memoir of legendary parents

Last October, I saw Christopher Buckley in Austin at The Texas Book Festival. His then-scandalous endorsement of Barack Obama for president was making waves in politics, eventually leading to Buckley’s resignation from the political magazine “National Review,” which was founded by his father, the oft-hailed “Father of Conservatism” William F. Buckley.

Black Dice

Black Dice investigates melody

Noise band evolves sound, drawing from dancehall and dubstep

In my junior year of high school, my friend and fellow music fiend Josh handed me a plain white burned CD with CREATURE COMFORTS sloppily scrawled across it. That 2004 album by the Brooklyn experimental band Black Dice changed the way I perceived music.

The best hangover cure is a simple, inoffensive movie

The room is too bright. The light from outside is burning through your shut eyelids. Your head feels like it’s filled with the contents of an aquarium —  fish and pirate decorations included. Oh, and there’s also the pain on your left arm from that tattoo you got last night.

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Movie Review: 'Land of the Lost' begets simple plot, adult jokes

Will Ferrell and Danny McBride are predictable but very fun, entertaining

Back in the ‘70s, brothers Sid and Marty Krofft felt like screwing with the heads of a generation of youngsters bred on Saturday-morning programming.

Animal Collective

Animal Collective is gonna get wild tonight

Tonight will mark the third time Avey Tare, Geologist and Panda Bear get psychedelic on me.

The Hangover

Movie Review: This 'Hangover' needs two aspirin and originality

With dozens of frat houses and an entire seven-block stretch of downtown devoted to drunken debauchery, it wouldn’t be surprising if half of Austin had experienced something similar to the plot of “The Hangover.”

The Antlers self-produce success

Little known Brooklyn band The Antlers surprised even themselves when their sophomore LP Hospice sold out its first pressing. The Antlers self-produced Hospice with modest expectations, it’s an ambitious concept album focused on the themes of loss and desperation. Before the band knew it, they were signed to the boutique recording label Frenchkiss, home of bands like Passion Pit, Les Savy Fav and the DoDos.

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David Carradine 1

David Carradine found dead in hotel room

David Carradine, star of the 1970s TV series “Kung Fu” whose career roared back to life when he played the assassin-turned-victim in Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill,” was found dead Thursday in Thailand. Police said he appeared to have hanged himself. The officer responsible for investigating the dead that he had hanged himself with a cord used with the suite’s curtains.

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Richard Linklater

Austin filmmaker talks sequels, baseball

Richard Linklater, the Oscar-nominated director who crafted the spectacular visions behind “Waking Life” and “A Scanner Darkly,” is perpetually at work. At any given moment, he’s busy creating novel ideas to bring to the screen, whether it’s the disjointed and surrealist “Slacker” or “Fast Food Nation,” the horrifying exposé of the fast-food industry.

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The music you missed: Green Day and Eminem

CD releases and music news from the weeks you were at home

While the Texan might go on hiatus at the end of every spring semester, the music industry doesn’t take breaks, and kept chugging along while we laid on the couch watching reruns of “Home Improvement” to celebrate our freedom. Even though we were gone for less than a month, some fairly notable releases hit the shelves during that time off, some are great, most are bad. What kind of entertainment reporters would we be if we didn’t give these new albums a few words?

Drag Me To Hell

New movie returns Raimi to his roots

"Drag Me To Hell" brings back images from movies unrelated to comic heroes

Director Sam Raimi and gooey bodily fluids go together like a hot plate of chicken and waffles.

Porn star Sasha Grey nails newest role as escort

Steven Soderbergh's "The Girlfriend Experience" delivers highbrow goods

Last spring, rumors of Steven Soderbergh’s latest project, “The Girlfriend Experience,” had film critics and bloggers alike buzzing with energy that can’t really be classified as excitement.

West Campus Books

Textbook bargains just a phone call away

West Campus Books, headed by UT senior, offers alternative to University Co-op prices

Around 4 p.m., electrical engineering sophomore Will Jones’ phone rings. West Campus Books co-owner and engineering senior Scott North is calling to tell him that his textbooks are going to be picked up in 15 minutes.

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Hump Day: School's out, but safe sex should never go on hiatus

Sleeping ‘til the crack of 2 p.m., lounging poolside without a care in the world and completely losing your mind (and your dignity) from when the sun goes down until the wee hours of the morning: This is what college summers are for.

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Prudent Student: Three tips for living frugally over the summer

Summer is traditionally a time of decadence. Without the constraints of classes and school-year responsibilities, it’s easy to lose all sense of structure and self-discipline.

The Melvins of Aberdeen, Wash.

Latest tour marks Melvins' 25th year jammin' together

When you’ve been around as long as The Melvins of Aberdeen, Wash., how do you celebrate? By not only playing your breakout album Houdini live in its entirety, but also bringing back your old drummer, Mike Dillard, for jamming songs from your formative years.

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Franz Ferdinand

In stores this Summer

During the semester it’s easy to lose track of what’s going on in the music world. Now that summer’s started, it’s time to stop slacking. Over the next few weeks, keep your eyes peeled for these upcoming releases we think look interesting.

Shows to see to not miss out this summer

A decade ago, Spoon was just another indie Austin band — playing shows for the drink tickets, giving albums to fans for next to nothing and, most importantly, tirelessly working to master its unique sound. Now, Spoon is a nationally known act recognized in entertainment news sources such as Pitchfork and SPIN magazine, feature films and at the tops of Billboard charts. Making a triumphant return to Austin this summer for three dates at Stubb’s (June 9 to 11), Spoon isn’t playing just for drink tickets anymore. Tickets for any of the Stubb’s dates cost around $30. Not to say they’re not worth it (they are), but don’t you wish you had known about Spoon back in ’94?

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The Rev. Karen Thompson

Local church accepts members of all sexual orientations

The Rev. Karen Thompson sits at her desk with her office door left open. Outside, in the Cowan Hall area of the Metropolitan Community Church of Austin, church members sit at tables and study the Bible.

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Kevin Devine

Devine releases collaborative effort ‘Brother’s Blood’

Kevin Devine’s most recent album, Brother’s Blood, highlights the Brooklyn-based singer/songwriter as a fully matured artist.

Literature

In Stores this Week: 05/12/09

Literature; John Vanderslice

Stripping students

Students strip down for charity in annual Undie Run

Unique Austin event inspires nearly 2,000 clothing donations

On Friday night, hundreds of students got together, stripped down to their undies and ran across the 40 Acres. And no, it wasn’t just a normal weekend night in West Campus.

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Cruz Lane

Deaf performer draws crowds with inspiring dance routines

Cruz Lane shares music by signing, singing, dancing around Austin

Cruz Lane turns up his iPod to near-maximum volume and shoves the buds into his ears. Blaring Eamon’s “I Don’t Want You Back,” one of several hip-hop songs he performs, the fit 19-year-old begins dancing with Usher-like smoothness.

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Megan Fox and Shia LaBeouf

'Transformers' star promises explosions

LaBeouf speaks candidly about upcoming movie, college, favorite co-stars

With “Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen” little more than a month away from its release, Shia LaBeouf revealed in an interview with The Daily Texan that the new Michael Bay action blockbuster is, in fact, not Shakespeare.

Pygmy

'Pygmy' sure to haunt, delight fans

Palahniuk’s latest book comments on America with humor, intelligence

One of these days, Chuck Palahniuk is going to run out of gimmicks. The author, known for penning the generation-defining “Fight Club,” structures each of his novels around a certain technique.

Flight of the Conchords

Conchords sell out seats, not style

There’s a reason why Flight of the Conchords sold out last night’s performance at Bass Concert Hall — with nearly 3,000 seats at $38.50 a piece ­— in only 10 minutes. They’re simply hilarious.

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Johnstuart Winchell & Holly Curran

'Cinderella' set to lose her glass slipper once again at Ballet Austin

The Brothers Grimm brought their tales into a dark world of grotesquerie. Sergei Prokofiev transformed it into an enchanting macabre waltz with his ballet score. Stephen Sondheim transported it into a farcical musical comedy with “Into the Woods.”

Movie Review: Trekkies to boldly enjoy newest reboot

Return to the ‘Star Trek’ franchise to suit diehards and newcomers alike

Like Spock, the half-human, half-Vulcan crew member of the U.S.S. Enterprise, J.J. Abrams’ story of “Star Trek” is born of two worlds: the summer blockbuster and the mythology of the series.

Students find promotion success

Saturday night, Three 6 Mafia and Gorilla Zoe will pack Austin Music Hall and perform for both die-hard fans and new followers who feel the rappers’ latest singles.

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The Brown Note: Semester’s sour notes inspire 5 final bold predictions

The Note celebrates its last column with future assessments

When I started writing this column, I had no idea it would stir up so much controversy.

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dollar store

At dollar stores, frugality and frivolity

In times of economic hardship, finding useful items at discount shops becoming easier

When I was young, my family took frequent vacations to our hometown of Montreal to visit relatives

flight of the concords

Folk duo of HBO fame to play songs from eponymous show

New Zealand’s fourth-most- popular comedy duo — Flight of the Conchords — will make a stop in Austin tonight to perform its signature sub pop set at the newly renovated Bass Concert Hall for those who were lucky enough to snag a ticket in the few minutes before they sold out.

Boxing champion out of jail, in the ring

Kurtiss Colvin is on his way to becoming a nationally ranked amateur boxing champion this week

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Dylan peeks through the blinds

Gallery: A refuge, in its last days

After 13 years of providing therapy to children with autism, the Moore-Weis Children’s Center of Austin is closing. The school, currently in the process of donating furniture, books and even construction paper to fellow nonprofit institutions, has fallen under the weight of financial difficulties.

Angela Armendariz

Birds' barbers offer funky, affordable cuts

Local chain provides entertainment, ambiance and free beer to eclectic customer base

Haircuts are a pain. I’m either shelling out a month’s allowance to trim off a few inches or paying $10 for bad results. Through the years, I convinced myself that there was no place that offered affordable hair maintenance that wouldn’t hack my ’do to pieces.

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Hump Day: Spice up your lonely night with a secret sexual fantasy

It’s 2 a.m., and despite your best efforts, you returned from a night downtown only to crawl into bed alone. You wore very nice underwear, you shaved and you even hid a condom in your pocket. Nevertheless, here you are, with no one but yourself. So you bite your lip and close your eyes, and …

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Lady Gaga

For Lady Gaga, style, talent have powered rise to fame

The world became acquainted, or rather bombarded, with Lady Gaga last year when the singer’s infectious hit “Just Dance” hit radios. Since then, the native New Yorker has dazzled paparazzi and teenagers alike with her thumping techno beats, unique fashion sense and hair color ranging from lilac to platinum blond almost overnight.

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Children enjoy festivities

Traditions, recipes color Cinco de Mayo

One hundred and forty-seven years ago today, a vastly outnumbered Mexican army defeated the French for control of the Republic of Mexico.

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Austin-based post-punk band

Quartet bonds over booze, beats

Between the popular extremes of indie music — where reverb-heavy garage rock reigns supreme — at one end and electro-pop dominates the other, a wide void has emerged where post-punk bands like Joy Division and The Libertines used to be.

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Intelligence

In Stores this Week: 05/05/09

Intelligence; Isis; Hatebreed

‘Star Trek’ movie accommodates old, new fans

Director honors Trekkies’ standards, expands film’s appeal to broad audience

Since leaving “Lost” in 2005, J.J. Abrams has worked on films like “Mission Impossible 3” and “Cloverfield.” The producer and director is now preparing for the release of a new, updated version of the classic film “Star Trek,” which opens Friday.

Jaquon

Students mix, perform own beats

After-school program offers young musicians tools, advice to create hip-hop

Twelve-year-old Zechariah rehearses his opening lines with enthusiasm and confidence.

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Letter-writing recalls bygone age of penmanship, pen pals

Handwritten messages revive correspondence as art form, recreation

It’s 6 p.m on Monday. Rather than hacking away at a research paper, I’m contemplating my next Tweet.

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Built By Snow’s nerdy charm makes its fun music unforgettable

Serendipitous accident creates one of Austin’s most-watched bands

Since the January release of Built By Snow’s debut LP Mega, the local band’s steady ascent to prominence in the Austin music scene has been defined by its infectious brand of indie rock, as well as a love for all things nerdy.

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Texas Pom

Confessions of a would-be Pom Girl

Last Friday, I took out my belly button ring, did my best to camouflage my tattoo and reluctantly shaved off two weeks of pit hair that I had been working on for Eeyore’s Birthday Party — all to better my chances of making the UT Pom Squad.

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The Parlor Mob rocks on through the recession

Guitarist dismisses swine flu, Lil Wayne’s rock ’n’ roll record

The last time New Jersey hard rock quintet The Parlor Mob was in Austin, The Daily Texan spoke with lead singer Mark Melicia about his approach to rock ’n’ roll and how he handles the pressure of being compared to legendary artists like Robert Plant because of the group’s ballsy retro-rock tunes. So what’s there to talk about this time around?

Andrew Boze

Resentment of small-town life underlies folk lyrics

Student musician adapts music, material to adapt his outlook

Chewing gum and dressed casually in the college uniform of a T-shirt and jeans, Andrew Boze speaks with the comfortable ease and introspectiveness of a man who has become more carefree since moving to Austin.

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Meditation

Meditation group among free wellness classes, counters stress

What’s better than taking advantage of free UT resources? Taking advantage of free UT resources that can actually improve the quality of your life.

BBC 'Pride and Prejudice' writer to speak at UT

My boyfriend is in love with Colin Firth. He is in love with his British solidness, his strong silences and his ability to always come through in the end despite being terribly misunderstood.

US sitcoms find place on Indian television

A couple of weeks ago I was chatting with Ananth Krishnan, a former colleague at an Indian newspaper.

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Musical retelling of Grimm tales less than magical

Putting on a show by Stephen Sondheim is never an easy thing to do, but of all his musicals, the toughest may be “Into the Woods,” a retelling of the classic Grimm fairy tales. Foot in the Door, a troupe of mostly UT liberal arts honors students, is putting on an enjoyable, though occasionally frustrating, performance of the show.

Douglas, Stone to participate in second ‘Wall Street’ movie

LOS ANGELES — Michael Douglas and Oliver Stone may try to tell us that greed is still good with a sequel to their 1987 hit “Wall Street.”

Song's producer responsible for copyright, Lil Wayne says

NEW ORLEANS — Rapper Lil Wayne is suing the producer of a song he performed that allegedly sampled another singer’s work without permission.

Polaroids

A Polaroid trip down memory lane

The picture can’t be gone.

Sunshine Cantu

Austin City Limits 2009 lineup announced

Old, new to please fans of all genres; Dave Matthews Band, Kings of Leon among surprises

The weekend of the Austin City Limits Music Festival is a weekend of its own, separated from the rest by a rush of people and excitement gathered at Zilker Park to watch a myriad of bands rock the city. Even before the 2009 lineup was released yesterday, it was well-known that Pearl Jam and Sonic Youth were going to be in the mix. But yesterday’s announcement of Dave Matthews Band and the Beastie Boys as additional headliners caused a few gasps and many sighs. These bands may seem like dated choices, but they fall in line with Lollapalooza’s choice of Tool and Beastie Boys as headliners. Nonetheless, the lineup revealed many surprises as well as a variety of musical genres for all music-loving crowds to enjoy.

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Fischerspooner duo returns in the name of 'Entertainment,' bats

Casey Spooner wants to see bats. Yes, this half of the Fischerspooner duo wants to see the famous Austin bats under the Congress Avenue Bridge. Back in 2003, Fischerspooner pulled in a great audience in Austin — but alas, no bats.

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Hump Day:Talk show chat stirs a buzz about vibrator use

A few weeks ago, I happened to watch “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” and to my surprise, Oprah was not giving away 500 brand new cars or incredibly unnecessary bath products. Instead, she was discussing teen sexuality. 

Clayton Christopher

Local tea company makes a sweet deal

Owners optimistic after Nestle announces it will invest millions into Sweet Leaf Tea

As I sat in a class last week, I watched a classmate pop open a glass bottle of Sweet Leaf Mint & Honey iced green tea.

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Mates of State

Band 'mates' try to balance raising kids, making music

You’re driving along the highway with your best friend on a carefree Sunday afternoon. With your windows rolled down, a cool breeze strolls through your hair. From the car’s speakers you can hear Mates of State’s Re-Arrange Us, and it fits the scene perfectly.

Bob Dylan

In Stores This Week: 04/28/09

Bob Dylan; Blank Dogs; Heaven and Hell

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"Fuel" Art Cover

May proves good time to try new video games

Here’s a partial list of the most promising titles you’ll be playing this month.

Entertainment Briefly: 04/28/09

Snoop Dogg takes stand, denies hitting fan in Seattle

Horse statue

Art City Austin experience pleases all senses

As you strolled around the shores of Lady Bird Lake this weekend at Art City Austin, it was hard not to let your senses become overwhelmed.

A runway walk to remember

Textiles and apparel seniors display talent, unveil collections in annual fashion show

The showroom was bustling with crowds of people dressed fashionably, from the classic all-black ensemble to the current trend of head-to-toe neutrals. All were eagerly awaiting the night’s equivalent of graduation, in which, instead of the students in their cap and gown, models would be displaying their diplomas on a catwalk.

Movie Review: Surprise twists make revenge thriller ‘Not Forgotten’

“Not Forgotten” is not a typical crime thriller. Plunging into the mysteries of the occult on the Texas-Mexico border, it pulls the audience into a world of seedy streets, whorehouses and death-worshipping rituals.

Luminous fashion to hit the runway

The designs are complete. The models are chosen. The garments are fitted. The runway is set.

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The Brown Note: Lady Sovereign fails to rule the rap persuasion

Artist hits a foul note with disappointing album that fails like a ‘futher mucker’

My freshman year, I ran across that song “Love Me or Hate Me” by Lady Sovereign. I didn’t particularly enjoy it, but the horribly catchy nature of the tune ensured that it would take up residence in my head and never leave.

Eastside Cafe

The greatest brunch joints to cure your weekend hangover munchies


It’s Sunday afternoon, and you wake up with a headache. The previous night is just a blur.

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Summer sequel exhaustion may cause moviegoers to investigate indie films

Ah, the summer film season is swiftly approaching, and what’s one to do but prep for three months of consuming blockbuster action spectaculars and countless buckets of buttery popcorn?

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Napalm Death bucks corporate conformity

Metal band makes epic changes to create the hard grindcore genre

“Multinational Corporations,” the first song on Napalm Death’s groundbreaking debut, Scum, only had two simple lyrics: “Multinational corporations/genocide of the starving nations.”

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Fashion student draws inspiration from heritage

At 5 foot 10 inches, Textiles & Apparel senior Petra Lampertz is taller than the model wearing her designs.  She said her height, combined with a passion for art motivated her to choose a career in fashion.

Entertainment Briefly: 04/22/09

Miss USA contestant defends anti-gay-marriage comments

LOS ANGELES — Miss California says she stands by her anti-gay-marriage comments, even if they may have cost her the Miss USA crown.

Gaming developers extort players through downloadable content

1. ‘Skate 2’: Time Is Money pack;

2. ‘Street Fighter IV’: Shadaloo, Classic, Shoryuken, Femme Fatale and Brawler packs;

3. ‘Prince of Persia’: Epilogue;

4. ‘Resident Evil 5’: Versus Mode;

5. ‘The Elder Scrolls IV’: Oblivion Horse Armor

Hump Day:EDucation: Debunking 'the fallacy of phallus'

“Her fingers opened his suit, and he sprang out at her like an angry lion from its cage.”
This lusty sex-scene opener from Harold Robbins’s 1978 novel “The Betsy” is an appropriate introduction to an age-old phallus fallacy that plagues modern misconceptions of male sexuality.

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Austin Entertainment United

Students promote music industry careers

Austin Entertainment United aims to jump-start careers of aspiring UT musicians

Graduating seniors preparing for careers in the music business may feel their future is a bit bleak these days.

Disney

Disney's 'Earth' documentary suffers with sentimental narration

A lynx appears prowling in the frozen conifers of the tundra. Then a voiceover comes on from Mufasa himself, James Earl Jones, calling this lynx the essence of
wilderness.

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The cover art for Velocifero

Ladytron's album art abstract, refreshingly creative

Ladytron is not an explicit band. Its lyrics don’t come in the sleeves of its albums (if you still buy the physical ones, anyway), and the band’s album covers always feature abstract pieces of art. But Ladytron’s deep, electronica-infused sound, tinged with whimsical vocals, is impossible to miss.

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Susan Boyle

TV column: Susan Boyle proves to audiences that Britain's really got talent

Meek-looking woman sings her heart out; critics contend it may be staged

There is in this world perhaps one person who cringes in horror every time the name Susan Boyle crops up in conversation.

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Lavina

Book Review: Virgil's quiet character brought to life

Ursula Le Guin tells story of heroine, Lavinia, who struggles with patriarchy

Virgil’s “Aeneid” is incontestably one of the greatest works of literature in the Western cannon. Beautifully lyrical, meticulously constructed, epic poetry that evokes emotion during even the most gruesome of war scenes, Virgil captures Aeneas’ tragic adventures of almost 3,000 years ago in a voice that, to this day, inspires awe in each new generation of readers.

Oh No Not Stereo

In Stores this Week: 04/21/09

Oh No Not Stereo; Ruby Coast; Magik Markers; Tinted Windows

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Entertainment Briefly: 04/21/09

Oprah pulls show marking Columbine anniversary; ‘Today’ anchor will soon visit Iraq, Afghanistan war zones

Rock Wall

Purple haze settles over Auditorium Shores

Long-running reggae festival brings so-so music, quality products, plenty of pot to Austin

The sticky smell of good marijuana mingled with dust on a beautiful Sunday afternoon as hippies of all varieties hit their pipes in plain sight. I donned a sundress and spent the day at the Austin Reggae Festival as the weekend’s rainy weather came to an end.

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420 Mixtape

Firing up: top tracks to enhance experience

Marleyfest may have passed this weekend, but the stench of third-rate reggae still lingers. Unless you’re Frank Zappa, marijuana consumption and music-making have always gone hand in hand. For some tokes, though, you need a change from the typical Bob Marley and Incubus. Here are some choice cuts to enjoy with your friend Mary Jane.

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Not-so-promising summer offers 5 sure hits

Frankly, this summer can’t hold up to those of years past. A couple summers ago, audiences were treated to six movies that formed the third part in six  series. Although some of these threequels, like “Spiderman 3,” were disappointing to say the least, the behemoth blockbusters kept people going to theaters in droves.

Movie Review: ‘Flags’ creates portrait of Wilco from ashes of band’s final tour

Wilco is from Chicago. It formed there, it practices there, it calls Chicago home.

Angie Hamouie and Nikki Kordzik

Racy German theater strikes UT stage

Story of boy's early sexual prowess meant to jolt audience 'out of complacency'

Frank Wedekind’s “Fruhlings Erwachen” (“Spring Awakening”) has a history of provocation.

Rapper places entire album online for free downloading

Del The Funky Homosapien to rely on sponsorships, concert profits to compensate for gift to fans

Del The Funky Homosapien thinks he has a plan to overcome a music industry struggling to sell records.

The Brown Note: Flamboyant 'Idol' contestant's crooning a bit too self-indulgent

Despite vocal talent, Lambert's bizarre renditions and strange style don't quite seem to click

I won’t lie to you: I’ve been watching this season of “American Idol.”

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Robert McClure with puppet Princeton and Anika Larson

Play Review: Not-safe-for-children 'Avenue Q' titillates with puppets

Show may permanently affect the way audiences look at the Muppets

As the first act closed, the audience continued laughing through the end of the last song into intermission.

Zac Efron

Movie Review: '17' advocates abstinence in after-school style

Zac Efron must have been caught shoplifting or gotten several girls pregnant.

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State of Play

'State of Play' entertains despite cliched plot

“State of Play” has all the ingredients of an awful movie.

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Fashion student models clothing on architecture

Jessica Collado isn’t afraid of a challenge. Despite being a textiles and apparel senior, Collado has never been taught how to design clothing for men. That’s goal she has taken on for her collection, which will be shown at the end-of-the-semester fashion show starring the collections of graduating textile and apparel seniors. 

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Prudent Student

One hour of cooking provides for week’s meals

Easy single-pan recipes such as Thai curry allow for ready-made dinners

I refuse to let budget and time constraints force me into eating microwavable macaroni and cheese. Instead, I try to set aside an hour each Monday to cook dishes that I can heat up throughout the week. It’s healthier, sometimes cheaper and always more satisfying than the Easy Mac alternative.

Duo adapts complex sound to play live

Lymbyc System changes set lists, instrumentation to accommodate venues

It’s April now — only four months into 2009 and we’ve already lost our commitment to resolutions and are praying for next year to come. But there was a time when 2009 seemed exciting, and Lymbyc Systym remembers that time.

Movie Column: Hollywood cultivates diversity, taps global market

Any attempt to pin down Hollywood in the 2000s and attach to it a definitive identity is fraught with risk, since identities are fluid, messy and contestable.

Entertainment Briefly: 04/16/09

Kutcher, CNN wage Internet war for 1 million tweet followers; Blagojevich seeking to leave country, star in reality show

In Stores This Week

Neil Young, Fork in the Road; Metric, Fantasies

Entertainment Briefly: 04/15/09

‘Harry Potter’ movie to head to big screen 2 days early;

NASA names treadmill in space station for ‘Colbert Report’ star

Sonam Shahani

Miss UT Asia crowned at pageant

After four-round cultural competition, junior wins Miss Congeniality, $500 scholarship

Enthusiastic cheers and applause erupted from the audience when Sonam Shahani was crowned winner of the Miss UT Asia culture pageant Tuesday night.

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Hump Day: In the end, anal sex can be pleasurable, intimate for all

This past week, my work was cut out for me as I scoured campus in search of people willing to talk about anal sex.

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Barbara Formichelli

Art Bra Fashion Show celebrates women, Austin cancer survivors

More than two years after diagnosis, survivor to don lingerie to mark successes

Two and a half years ago, Amy Huss described herself as a boring soccer mom with a 3-year-old son and a baby girl on the way. Today, the housewife will prepare to take the runway in her bra.

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Wisconsin freshmen film their 'College Life'

In the taping of “College Life,” MTV’s new non-reality reality show, four University of Wisconsin freshmen were equipped with hand-held cameras and instructed to tape what they thought would make good TV.

Sonam Shahani

Miss UT Asia contestants gear up to take center stage

Sonam Shahani says she is not “high heels or pageant girl” material.

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PC:

Gamers can still play at an affordable price

In rough economic times like these, students often cut back on the nonessentials in life.

The Ettes

In Stores This Week: 04/12/09

The Ettes; Fastball; Death Cab For Cutie; Silversun Pickups; Wooden Shjips

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Niki Nallapati

Bengalis celebrate culture, coming of spring

Dance performances, food stalls attract South Asian community to new-year festivities

Ethnic dancing, vegetarian samosas and colorful saris were on display at the Bengali and South Asian New Year Festival on Saturday.

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Weirmaraner

Canine walk raises funds, attempts to break record

Service-dogs group hosts 3-mile event, looks to take back title

Not even the largest dog park in Austin could accommodate the thousands of canines that crowded streets downtown over the weekend. Dalmatians, Schnoodles and golden retrievers, among a plethora of other dogs, large and small, met for a good cause and an attempt to win back a world record Saturday morning.

Movie Review: Main character Miley is mediocre in new Disney flick

You have to give Disney credit for doing the seemingly impossible — “Hannah Montana: The Movie” was the No. 1 movie this weekend, despite its unlikable and mediocre main character.

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Entertainment Briefly

Co-creator of popular board game dies of cancer at 61

Read a book

A book might not be as exciting as your handheld – it doesn’t have a touch screen, vibrant colors or sound effects.

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Blue October’s music takes a happy detour

Justin Furstenfeld seems happier. Maybe it’s because he recently became a father. Maybe it’s because his band, the San Marcos-based alt-rock outfit Blue October, is riding a wave of success following 2006’s platinum-selling Foiled, an album anchored by hits like “Into the Ocean” and “Hate Me.”

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‘Observe and Report’ star, writer shed light on filmmaking process

Rogen scoffs at acting methods; writer fears for first major movie

The Daily Texan talked to actor Seth Rogen and director Jody Hill via conference call about their new movie “Observe and Report,” which opens today.

The Brown Note

A couple of years ago, I heard about a social networking Web site called Twitter via some tiny blurb I read in Wired magazine.

The Brown Note

A couple of years ago, I heard about a social networking Web site called Twitter via some tiny blurb I read in Wired magazine.

Stimulating jazz collaboration hits Austin

Ab Baars Trio teams up with Ken Vandermark for inventive concert

When two different artists collaborate, the result can either be bountiful or a mess of half-baked ideas. Luckily, the pairing of Amsterdam’s Ab Baars Trio and Chicago’s Ken Vandermark is definitely the former.

Fashion senior draws inspiration from her mother

Editor’s note: This is the fifth part in a series about textiles and apparel seniors and their fashion show held at the end of the semester.

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Michael Loredo

Keyboard produces fresh beats

Makers of MiKo instrument donate products to UT School of Music

Happy Perez has been making beats since his high school days.

Entertainment Briefly: 04/10/09

Britney Spears halts Vancouver concert for excessive smoke; ‘South Park’ ridicules Kanye West for boundless hubris

Gavin Degraw Concert Review

Gavin Degraw is not superstitious. He doesn’t believe pre-show rituals, or that eating only one color of Skittle will guarantee a good performance.

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Amelia Hausser Photo by Elizabeth Moskowitz/The Daily Texan

Fashion ventures come at a cost

Textile seniors invest $1,000 on average in pricey fabrics to create quality garments

Editor’s note: This is the fourth part in a series of stories about the textiles and apparel seniors and their fashion show held at the end of the semester.

Alice in Wonderland

Rehearsal shows ‘Alice’ offers bad sets, mixed acting

When Alyssa Potasznik was a high school freshman, her theater department put on a one-act production of “Alice in Wonderland.”

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Prudent Student: Financial bloggers teach students how to manage unique set of money woes

In the March 5 edition of the Prudent Student, I bemoaned the lack of frugal blogs tailored specifically to the college demographic.

Sri Atmananda School

School focuses on instilling sense of self

Sri Atmananda School practices hands-on teaching methods, hosts creative events

Behind the decorative iron fences that enclose a 9-acre historic property sprinkled with mansions and play areas, students of Austin’s nonprofit Sri Atmananda Memorial School perused the inflatable playgrounds and local vendor stands are listened to the school’s musicians as they waited for dusk to come and LanternFest to begin Saturday.

Hump Day: Choices about your first time should not rely on norms

Virginity is a touchy subject. In fact, for young people in America, virginity is one of the touchiest subjects.

Activist organization

Activist organization evicted from co-op

Due to code violations, Rhizome Collective forced to find new home

Piles of trash now line the sidewalk along 300 Allen St., where the quaint entrance to the Rhizome Collective’s warehouse was once dotted with plants.

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Awards honor select citizens for doing their part for the arts

Texas Cultural Trust recognizes former first lady, University alumni

As the sun was setting west of the Long Center for the Performing Arts on Tuesday evening, the patio area was filled with laughter and chatter coming from elegant women in long gowns and men in suits.

Entertainment Briefly: Chris Brown pleads not guilty to beating Rihanna in Marc

LOS ANGELES — Chris Brown pleaded not guilty Monday to threatening and assaulting his girlfriend, fellow music superstar Rihanna.

“Pride and Prejudice and Zombies,” book cover

Book Review: Killer zombies add humor, violence to Victorian classic

Author Grahame-Smith gives a nod to fan fiction in his Jane Austen spinoff

Imagine Jane Austen’s classic “Pride and Prejudice” — with zombies.

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Mike Stroud and Evan Mast

Ratatat duo sells out Stubb's, again

In the beginning, there were beats.

The Strange Boys

In Stores This Week: 04/07/09

The Strange Boys; Hotel Brotherhood; Yeah Yeah Yeahs; Black Dice; Amesoeurs

Sous-chef Jose Luis

Restaurant's flavor fusion delights the palate, wallet

Dobie's Sushi Caliente combines Mexican spices with classic Asian cuisine

Two chopsticks hold a jalapeno pepper. Underneath, the words Sushi Caliente on a banner look like heat waves, as if they’re about to catch fire.

Amy Cone, a burlesque dancer

Colorful cabaret diverts during dark times

After Shameless McFatty and Miss Songbird discussed (with much enthusiasm) the merit of such words as “masturbational,” six burlesque dancers strutted onstage with high kicks, cheeky grins and, beneath those ruffled frocks, matching underwear, which they flashed often.

Seinfeld employs insights, physical comedy in routine

Some friends and I were waiting to make a left turn exiting Robert Dedman Drive on Friday night after Jerry Seinfeld’s gig at Bass Concert Hall when four young men dressed in coordinated colors, like members of a ballet troupe, came jogging in our direction.

Perlman explores language of music

The warm, inviting tones of his violin coupled with Itzhak Perlman’s undeniable charm and humor transformed the daunting expanse of Bass Concert Hall on Sunday night into an intimate gathering of old friends united by the joy of classical music.

Theaters face high price of 3-D technology

The movie “Monsters vs Aliens” has continually advertised that it can be seen in 3-D, almost using the new technology as its only selling point. But after long anticipation, I was let down when the screening I saw didn’t even feature 3-D — Dreamworks had sunk countless millions into the new technology and used 15 of the most powerful computers on the planet to bring the movie to a new dimension, but the movie theater I chose was not properly equipped with digital projectors.

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Beverly Kearney

Symposium inspires by example

Mentor program brings in big names to influence, interact with students

The annual Texas Relays weekend is well-known for the excitement of the track meets and its notorious after-parties. 

Cay Crow

A night of pizza and pleasure

“Do you or someone you love have a vagina?”

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Apparel student prepares for senior runway showcase

Designer explains how Troll dolls and Girl Scouts inspired her

Stephanie Wagenman can take a break when she’s older. As a textiles and apparel senior at the University, Wagenman must complete a collection of four outfits for the department’s fashion show in April while also being a full-time student, ballet instructor and intern for a local designer.

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Book Review: ‘Stupid About Men’ encourages self-love first

Book provides helpful tips on surviving in the confusing world of dating

Most books written with the intent of helping young women in the difficult terrain that is modern dating are very poorly done and usually deeply entrenched in old-fashioned stereotypes.

Drummer reveals how Suffocation keeps it hardcore in the changing metal genre

Mike Smith admits his lack of new metal savvy helps make music unique

Is it possible to be completely involved and uninvolved in a music scene at the same time? Mike Smith, drummer for renowned New York death metal quintet Suffocation, just might be.

April showers bring infinite gaming hours

Considering the avalanche of great games that were released in February and March, April kind of sucks.

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Movie Review: ‘Adventureland’ proves personal, original

“Adventureland” opens with  a close-up of Jesse Eisenberg’s sincere face and doting grey-blue eyes. It hold this shot and tells us immediately that this film is different.

Austinite bloggers offer their valuable e-pinions

The Austin blogosphere is incredibly vast, covering niche topics like fixed gear bikes to the broad subject of politics.

Legacy of ’80s music lives on through new film, musical

NEW YORK — Two new works, the Broadway musical “Rock of Ages” and the new Greg Mottola film “Adventureland,” present opposite soundtracks for the Reagan era: While the stage production revels in hair-band kitsch, the more indie-minded “Adventureland” is nostalgic for the sounds of ‘80s underground.

Entertainment Briefly

Man with plan to crash ‘Stars’ was ticketed in Alabama MOBILE, Ala. — A man who authorities say tried to break onto the set of ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars” was ticketed on his way to California and let go, despite telling a police officer in Alabama that his plan to meet contestant Shawn Johnson was “a little bit crazy.

The Hill Country Nudists

Nudist club gets down to the essentials

Naked get-together among friends, couples is 'safer than going out to a bar'

As I head down the winding, tree-lined Highway 71 on Saturday evening, I can’t help but feel butterflies in my stomach. I am going to the home of John and Connie, who withhold their last names, to have my first social nude experience.

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Prudent Student: Budgeting site helps

If you want to save money, the obvious first step is to figure out what you’re currently spending.

Modern artist Ed Ruscha

Highway, text fonts influence artist’s prints

When my dad visited recently, I placed American modern artist Ed Ruscha’s retrospective (titled “I Don’t Want No Retro Spective”) within reach of the toilet.

Stephen Lynch

Singer-songwriter puts music first, comedy second

If you’ve never heard of him before, you might not pay much attention to the beginning of the title track from Stephen Lynch’s new album 3 Balloons.

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Gabe Crisp, Zach Householder, Phil Bozeman, Kevin Lane, Alex Wade and Ben Savage

Band takes deathcore to next level

A horrifying blast came from Knoxville, Tenn., a couple of years ago, and it can be said that the deathcore genre was forever changed.

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Casey’s New Orleans Snowball

Seasonal snow-cone shop keeps it cool

Owner of snowball store keeps customers coming back each summer for icy-cold treats

On the corner of Airport Boulevard and 51st Street, a little white house stood dormant and abandoned for six months. That is, until a stream of visitors broke the silence Monday
afternoon.

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Ditch the soap: Talking dirty can help bring the sexy back

Whether narrating or directing, filthy phrases worth the discussion

A few weeks ago I attended a sex-technique workshop at Forbidden Fruit, an intimate boutique specializing in creating erotic awareness.

English professor Susan Somers-Willett performs

Poetry slam performances combine rhyme and reason

Strutting in front of the table, English professor Susan Somers-Willett rhythmically swayed her hips as she proclaimed in her slam poem about Tina Turner, “You have tried to kill me, and you have failed.”

“Time Steps,” scene photo

Mini plays explore ‘mom-isms’, witty teenage angst

Picture hell as Mardi Gras, and it doesn’t look that bad.

Theatre and dance senior Yonatan Mendelsberg

Exhibit at Winship chronicles evolution of the vest

From the first floor, nothing seems different about the roof of the F. Loren Winship Drama Building’s theater area.

Choir of St. John’s College of Cambridge

Choir's performance a relaxing experience

St. John’s College Choir from Cambridge, England, didn’t just entertain an Austin audience Tuesday evening.

Arms reveals whimsical stories and artful music

Band's guitarist showcases solo project to Austin

In between the numerous South by Southwest shows lined up for Harlem Shakes, guitarist Todd Goldstein found time to showcase his solo project Arms.

Jan McCauley

Cohen Festival celebrates student talent

Works of art, ranging from plays to poetry, showcase campus creativity throughout week

Students will add intrigue to the usual university scene throughout the week as some dress in elaborate costumes and perform improvised sketches around campus as part of the Cohen New Works Festival.

Cohen New Works: ‘Fidel’ explores Cuban-American experience

One of the coolest aspects of the Cohen New Works Festival is that students are allowed a glimpse into the creation of plays and other works of art.

Top 5 list uncovers best tracks in hiding

From the Beatles on, secret song tradition enriches music history

As I was listening to Okkervil River in my car a couple of weeks ago, the song “No Hidden Track” from the album Sleep and Wake Up Songs started to play. The title is not ironic.

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Movie Column: Global influences bring changes to Bollywood

At the end of “Slumdog Millionaire” ­— a movie that The Wall Street Journal has hailed as the world’s first globalized masterpiece — the viewer is treated to a dance sequence that purports to be both a Bollywood-style homage and a pastiche of attraction.

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Photo Illustration

City to dim lights, cast ‘vote for Earth’

Austin to shut off residential, business electricity for hour-long global initiative

For one hour Saturday night, downtown Austin will not shine as bright.

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"The Last International Playboy" scene clip

New filmmakers view first movies as chance to learn

Siegelstein is a radio-television-film senior, trying to survive his senior year in college. Clark is a successful writer and a former editor at the high-brow publication The Paris Review. However, they both have one thing in common: They’re trying to make their first film.

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Leo Furmansky hops over a fixed-gear bicycle

Local fixed-gear cyclists unite

Nine fixed-gear bicyclists circled the paved area behind the Palmer Events Center like sharks surrounding a school of guppies, the tension thick and palpable. All of a sudden, one jutted out his leg against a fellow bicyclist, forcing him to fall off.

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Indigo Girls Album Cover

Album’s music monotonous, lyrics weak

Indigo Girls record fails to achieve past songs’

The Indigo Girls are famous for coupling catchy melodies with emotionally poignant and intellectually deep lyrics.

Movie Review: 3-D-designed flick comes off flat in 2-D

“Monsters vs. Aliens” is one of many new movies to get the digital 3-D treatment.

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Design student pulls ideas from her own style

A bright flower pattern adorns the cover. The inside is filled with sketches, magazine pages, swatches and collages of color and patterns.

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Paggi House’s food proves harsh on wallet and palette

The Paggi House, an historic Austin landmark dating back to the 1840s is nestled on a lofty hilltop in a newly gentrified alcove of overpriced condos.

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Liberal Arts freshman Vanessa Ramirez

Eschewing expensive campus markets

On-campus markets present an identity crisis for me as a prudent student.

Adam

Author offers fresh perspective on evolution of language

Scholar uses Darwinian theory to explain how humans began speaking

Many species are able to communicate simple messages, but only humans have developed a system of verbal communication (i.e. language) with the unique ability to exchange ideas about abstract concepts.

Nintendo unveils new ‘Zelda’ game during keynote

‘Spirit Tracks’ to come out later this year, company’s president announces

At Nintendo’s Game Developers Conference 2009 keynote Wednesday, Satoru Iwata, the company’s president, announced that “The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks” will be released for the Nintendo DS later this year.

Bad Credit No Credit

Band breaks rock ’n’ roll stereotype at South-by

Bad Credit No Credit’s frontwomen take a stand for female rockers

Thousands of bands performed in Austin last week during the South by Southwest music festival, yet only 388 of them had female members in their group

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Farmers, Carlos Mencia enjoy the Wild West

Austin Rodeo earns respect as more than Houston's little brother

As I stepped out of the portable toilet by the cattle stalls, I was hit by yet another unpleasant smell, worse than what the plastic prison provided.

Studies show kissing incites more pleasure than other sexual activities

College is a time for all kinds of personal exploration, and sexuality is indubitably one of our age group’s favorite exploratory topics.

Gaming Column: Quantitative reviews kill consumers’ own opinions

There is a cancer eating away at the heart of the entertainment industry.

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Zac Efron

Entertainment Briefly: 03/25/09

High School Musical’ star ditches  ‘Footloose’ remake; Colbert Nation wins contest to name space station room

Director Marc Webb

Film takes on myths of love with music

‘500 Days of Summer’ stars, director note importance of songs to movie plot, their lives

“500 Days of Summer” is a romantic comedy that doesn’t want to be. Detailing the 500-day relationship between Tom, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and Summer, played by Zooey Deschanel, the movie takes a hard look at relationships and our archetypes of love, especially the idealized way we approach it. Most importantly, it’s real.

Hollywood catches a bit of Bollywood film fever

Last year a posse of Indian actresses — major celebrities — were observed behaving like hyperactive teenage fans at the Venice International Film Festival. The object of their attention? George Clooney. Bollywood celebrities who would ordinarily be mobbed by their adoring fans at a coffee shop in downtown Mumbai certainly know their place in the pecking order.

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Lesser Gonzalez

Musician talks about his childhood Cuban roots, visual art influences

Artist recalls early interest in video art, reminisces

After performing at End of an Ear records Thursday during South by Southwest, Lesser Gonzalez — a visual artist, poet and troubadour rolled into one — sat down with The Daily Texan at a coffee shop and swigged his Jumex strawberry-banana juice.

Robin Williams

Actor faring well after heart surgery

NEW YORK — Robin Williams was recovering at the Cleveland Clinic after heart surgery that his doctors deemed successful, his publicists said Monday.

Approaching Normal

CD Review: "Approaching Normal" by Blue October

Look at the new Blue October album, Approaching Normal, this way: Rolling Stone gave it two stars. Keep in mind, this is the same publication that’s been pleasuring itself to U2’s latest flop, so let’s recognize the magazine as the irrelevant trash it’s quickly becoming and give Approaching Normal a chance.

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The Decemberists

CD Review: "Hazards of Love" by The Decemberists

If it’s possible to make a progressive folk record, one loosely structured around a single concept, with seamless track transitions and multiple recurring musical motifs, The Decemberists are the band to do it.

Harlem Shakes

CD Review: "Technicolor Health" by Harlem Shakes

After treating Austin audiences to a packed week of shows at South by Southwest, Brooklyn’s Harlem Shakes are finally back home to continue the celebration with today’s release of their debut album, Technicolor Health.

Auditorium Shores

5 to remember as the spotlight leaves Austin

The bright spot of South-by is often the experience itself

South by Southwest was one hell of a time. Here are my top five experiences from the past five days. See you again next year.

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Docs, new category among film highlights

Fantastic Fest makes its own appearance at SXSW with ‘Horseman,’ ‘Ong Bak’

With more than 100 films shown at South by Southwest, the odds of a complete movie-going experience were stacked against even the most ambitious theater-hopper. Intentionally avoiding the “soon-to-hit-theaters” category, the following are some of the highlights from three of the festival’s showcases.

SXSW - Tori Amos, Amanda Palmer and Primal Scream

Tori Amos, Amanda Palmer and Primal Scream serenade SXSW attendees.

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SXSW renews its rockin' reputation

Food, fun and fandango excite and overwhelm fans at mammoth music festival

South by Southwest is a complicated beast. Changing set times, $4 Lone Stars, hype that could crush an elephant and living on a diet of street vendor food are all part of the fest: It is not for the faint of heart.

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SXSW - Beach House, Cannabinoids w/ Erykah Badu

Fastball and Explosions in the Sky rock Auditorium Shores.

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Nathaniel Cardaci & Seth Whaland

SXSW spotlights DIY parties

Musicians rock in cozy spaces for community vibe

Behind the scenes of the official South by Southwest venues, a phenomenon called DIY (the catchy acronym for “do it yourself”) brews.

DIY at South-by

DIY at South-by

‘Miss March’ actors bare movie facts

Zach Cregger and Trevor Moore didn’t intend to make a road-trip, sex-oriented comedy.

Top 5 SXSW RSVP parties

I have never personally taken part in the SXSW day-party mayhem, but I hear it’s a blast.

Top 5 free SXSW night shows

As night settles on SXSW and all of the lucky badge holders stand in line to see Devo or the New York Dolls, the cool kids hit up some more unconventional venues.

Comedy portrays true love as real, but not easy

In many ways, the Marc Webb-directed “500 Days of Summer” is your typical indie romantic comedy. Tom, played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, is a sharply dressed (seriously, wool ties with every outfit) architecture student-turned-greeting card writer who meets Summer (Zooey Deschanel), a quirky, strong-willed woman just hired to be Tom’s boss’ new assistant.

Miguel Johnson & Nick Chaney

SXSW recognizes high school filmmakers for short

Professional filmmakers from around the globe work exhaustively to attain coveted screening time at the SXSW film festival.

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Deena Hyatt

Spam, clippings inspire musician

Performance artist incorporates props, interpretive dance into acts

Deena Hyatt, an Austin performance artist, does many things during a show.

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Top 5 SXSW films to watch

Here are my top picks for movies premiering at the SXSW film fest.

Top 5 SXSW favored Foreign Films

European and English-speaking films dominate the foreign films at this year’s festival, with the exception of a few documentaries and a couple of films here and there. Movies from the non-Caucasian-dominated parts of the world make up a bleakly small number, but here, nevertheless, are my top picks:

Top 5 SXSW Documentaries to watch

Top 5 SXSW Documentaries to watch

Demitri Martin

Demetri Martin’s simple jokes keep students laughing

Somewhere in a land far away, there is an anomaly lurking behind the velvet curtains.

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Unique SXSW band names

Colors, cocks, curse words and comas inspire groups’ quirky monikers

We dug through the South by Southwest line up and found some of the most creative, interesting and funny band names. Here they are.

SXSW food

SXSW entices with free food, booze

Some are drawn to South by Southwest for the music. Some are drawn for the film. But for others, it’s all about the free food.

Carrying condoms a spring break must

With spring break just around the corner, I’m sure you’re sitting in class counting down the minutes until your next nefarious trip to some haven of debauchery.

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Top 5 SXSW Twitters to follow

Forget Facebook, forget MySpace. People nowadays only care to read about your life in 140-character bursts.

Entertainment Briefly: 03/11/09

Jay Leno to perform free show for Michigan’s unemployed; Colbert leads poll of potential names for room in space station

Warren Hood

Fiddler’s son makes his own mark

Artist pursues music after deciding between passions of beats, basketball

Is musical talent learned, or is a predisposition to tempos, chords and scales, a trait written in permanent marker onto DNA? Hidden inside years of training, touring and the genes of Austin native Warren Hood lies the answer — both.

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Top 5 SXSW events

Mary Lingwall talks about “Humpday,” the movie!, Brooklyn punk invasion!, Local bands stealing the limelight from nationally over-hyped artists!, Second annual KVRXplosion and Slumberland/Cake Shop and VICE Records official showcases.

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The Meat Puppets

The Meat Puppets just want to rock

There are a select few bands, having weathered the roads and cranky record executives, that love to discuss their legacies, their overall greater importance in society.

Artist mixes genres, creates new classics with Nonclassical

A U.K.-based, club-night label that combines classical with electronic dance music, Nonclassical breaks out of the constraints of a traditional classical setting, uniting strings with turntables in clubs and sparking a new music scene in London.

Becky Orman

Contestants vie for Miss Austin title

Pageant participants devote time, energy to preparing for three-round competition

Miss Austin Texas USA contestant Amber Calderon thought her makeup was set Saturday evening. But 20 minutes before the pageant’s opening number, she experienced a makeup meltdown.

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From party scene to South by Southwest

Von Bondies lead singer discusses band’s origins, upcoming festival goals

As the Von Bondies creep up on their 10-year anniversary as a band, they are over the showcase jitters and anxiety of “getting discovered” that hover over the younger bands coming to the South by Southwest music festival for the first time.

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Patrick Bresnan & Ivete Lucas

Multimedia exhibit documents efforts to rebuild community after hurricane

Photographer and environmentalist Ansel Adams once said, “A good photograph is knowing where to stand.”

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Film workers rallying to strengthen Texas scene

Elliott Hostetter was unemployed for four months last year.

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Corto Maltese

Corto Maltese drops debut album

Celebrated local band’s latest work helps to finally transcend the fringe

“On the cusp” is a phrase that has defined Corto Maltese since the band formed in Austin toward the end of 2006. Despite gaining a loyal underground fan base, receiving praise from just about every media outlet in Austin and being featured in two films, Corto Maltese has remained a band on the fringe.

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Theresa Couch

Ballet fills unique Austin niche

At about 8 p.m. on most nights, dancers shuffle in and out of Austin Classical Ballet.

The Brown Note: Rock not Lil Wayne’s strength, apparently

Lil Wayne has gone insane (rhyme unintentional). After releasing the controversial but generally acclaimed Tha Carter III, Wayne, believed by many to be the best rapper alive today, decided he was going to make a rock album.

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‘Watchmen’ worries confirmed by film’s unsteady direction

The beginning of “Watchmen” takes a unique look at American history. In what could be described as “Forrest Gump” meets “Dick Tracy,” the film starts with a montage of dozens of graphic influences competing on the screen while Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are A-Changin’” plays in the background.

Blogs offer free advice on frugality

Blogs are to frugal culture what Shakespeare is to English literature. No one has embraced the frugal revolution quite like bloggers, and that makes sense: Blogs are free to write and free to read. Who would want to spend money on a book about saving money? There is actually a market for that, which Suze Orman has successfully tapped, but I prefer my personal finance advice to come for free and feed directly into my Google Reader. 3 comments

Fashion students bring runway to UT

Students finish their degrees by presenting clothing line to judges on the runway

Within the halls of the School of Human Ecology lies the University’s very own Project Runway. But despite being an extensive branch on campus, the textiles and apparel program remains unknown to many.

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VIKING

Metal band updates Viking myths in song

Metal is chiefly about conquering something ­— women, distant lands or even your emo-obsessed neighbor.

COMIC

Action-comedy comic comes to the big screen

The comic book world is diverse, ranging from superhero and love stories to horror and comedy. The dynamic nature of this medium is reflected in the movie “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,” which just recently began filming.

Entertainment Briefly

Chris Brown to face charges of making criminal threats. 'The Bachelor' claims his change of heart is genuine.

David Cotton

Backstage, booker leaves an imprint

With great care for his craft, live-music matchmaker pairs bands with city venues

On an unusually cold March night in Central Texas, a handful of strangers hovers patiently by the window at Home Slice Pizza. The bars are closed and the taxicabs are thinning out — only a dedicated few endure these temperatures for an early-morning snack.

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Hump Day: Sensual strip teases prove arousing for women, men

The notion of a woman doing a strip tease for a man has always disturbed me.

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MSTRKRFT to play SXSW, introducing music from ‘Fist of God’

MSTRKRFT didn’t enjoy South by Southwest enough last year, so this year, the band plans to give it another go.

DVD releases impress: Good (foreign), bad (Hollywood) and ugly (Chihuahuas?)

Three titles hit shelves that are worthy of note — for three completely different reasons.

The Good: ‘I’ve Loved You So Long’; The Bad: ‘Australia’; The Ugly: ‘Beverly Hills Chihuahua’

Fast and furious ‘Halo Wars’ legitimizes console play for real-time strategy games

Good real-time strategy games have long been nearly impossible to make playable without the classic combination of a mouse and keyboard.

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Guggenheim Grotto's second album catchy

Dublin band Guggenheim Grotto escapes into the fanciful poetics of a dreamer and a romantic in its sophomoric release Happy the Man.

The Jonas Brothers

Jonas trio wows preteen fan base

Brothers surprise the audience at movie theater with in-person appearance, answer questions

If kids paid as much attention to math and science as they do to the Jonas Brothers, this global warming thing wouldn’t be an issue. Plummeting economy? No problem.

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Austin kite flyers flock to Zilker Park for annual festival

Kites are the universal symbol of childhood — they span generations, countries and economic striations ­— and the hundreds of distinctive kites that floated across the sky at the 81st annual Zilker Park Kite Festival on Sunday showed the beauty of these uncomplicated delights.

Stephanie Wilson

Astronaut speaks on space mission, future of NASA

Alumna returns to UT to describe experience to engineering students

Her legs feeling heavy with each step, Stephanie Wilson found herself stumbling more than usual. Even walking in a straight line proved to be a difficult task.

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