January 3 – 9, 2017

BEFORE EMILY’S BAKERY. This was taken May 2, 1962. Do note the 31.9 cents per gallon gas price. It is of course Laurel and Mission Streets. Emily opened it in October of 1982. One could say that you still get gas there, but that wouldn’t be funny.                                                       

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE January 2, 2017

GIVE US LIBRARY, LIBERTY OR DEBTS.

Fine little film starring Spencer Williams. Take a break and watch…
Oft in the Silly Night (1929, Spencer Williams, Roberta Hyson, race film)
Amy Winehouse – Back to Black amazing live performance! Such a tragedy, what a life she could have had!!!

Why are so many loyal Santa Cruzans convinced that ex Mayor Cynthia Mathews and her loyal followers on last year’s City Council have plotted with Susan Nemitz (the new library director) to let the Downtown library go to hell and the homeless so they can justify building that new six (6) story parking structure on Cedar Street that’ll contain a spanking new 21st Century library?  Shelley Bodamer Manager of Collection Management Services at the library states that there’s “about $394,514 that’s budgeted for print items (books, etc). That must come out to about half a new book per citizen nowadays. And Nemitz has stated that the main function of our libraries has changed from books and reading anyways. The City went ahead and justified  purchasing a Bearcat armored vehicle for $251,000 but it can’t somehow come up with even the minimal care and housing for the homeless.

There are many locations both temporary and possible permanent where some kind of homeless services center could be located. Right now with this cold and wet weather our homeless have to go to the Library. The police have stopped them from staying near the levee. Until we hear and learn otherwise we can predict the City Council voices saying “Yes but the new six story parking structure that will have the library on the first floor will bring in revenue that we can use for our social services”. It’s the same claim they use to justify any/all growth and yet Santa Cruz does next to nothing for the homeless compared to so many other cities. They haven’t talked much about the more than $25 million ($25,000,000) the parking palace will cost. They don’t say much either about how it will encourage more, not fewer cars downtown. I have to thank all the folks who have emailed and stopped me on Pacific to talk about this. It’s going to be genuine proof of what, if any heart, empathy, decency or simple human kindness our Santa Cruz City Council has.

(Watch this space and the corner where the library sits.)

WIDENING HIGHWAY ONE. Just enough voters passed that Measure D and we’ll probably get that new auxilliary lane someday. Ralph Davila and others sent me this amazing and very believeable article from the New York Times. It tells how Los Angeles spent 1.6 Billion dollars and added one car pool lane to the nortorious 405 and 6 years later…it wasn’t worth it. Raed the article…http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/20/us/los-angeles-drivers-on-the-405-ask-was-1-6-billion-worth-it.html?_r=2

GREENSITE’S INSIGHT.

Gillian emailed to say, “No Greensite’s Insight this week due to a nasty respiratory virus. Returns next week”.  

Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

STEINBRUNER STATES.

WOULD YOU DRINK TREATED SEWAGE WATER?    COMMENT PERIOD EXTENDED

Thanks, Soquel Creek Water District Board of Directors, for voting to extend the Pure Water Soquel Environmental Impact Report Scoping public comment period 15 days to allow people additional time to access, read the 48-page Initial Study and submit comments.  Citizens now have until January 5, 5pm, to enter comments to: purewatersoquel@soquelcreekwater.org  or drop them off at the District Office at 5180 Soquel Drive, Soquel (there is an external payment box you can deposit letters in if the office is closed)

You can read through the Initial Study here: www.soquelcreekwater.org/purewatersoquel

Here are my greatest concerns, having read the document:  lack of full assessment of several valid alternatives(eg, water transfers and storm water percolation ponds for recharge such as are being used in Sweden, Israel, and other areas in the U.S.), assessing realistic need for temporary moratorium on new service connections until aquifer overdraft is reversed, possible effects on groundwater chemistry and micro-organisms (Orange County experienced spikes of arsenic), potential contamination of MidCounty Groundwater Basin with pharmaceuticals and endocrine inhibitors, allowing all citizens who rely on safe drinking water from the same aquifer to vote by ballot in a special election on this project, realistic geological ability to absorb 1.3 million gallons/day year round without pressurized injection wells, possible liquefaction and seismic hazards for nearby neighborhoods and Highway One, disturbance/destruction of tribal & cultural artifacts, emergency power back-up and system failure safeguards, hazards of chemicals and brine transfer system….well, that’s just a few.

The District is moving quickly to apply for grant funding for the Pure Water Soquel project, but not for studies of other alternative supplemental supplies.

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~Becky. (Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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#1 / Names Have Been Changed  
I have been writing a blog for eight years. I wrote the first of my blog postings in early January, 2009. I titled my new blog, Abrazos/365, in honor of Eduardo Galeano, author of a wonderful book, The Book of Embraces, which is titled El Libro de los Abrazos en Español. The title I chose was also intended to commemorate my intention to write one blog post every day. The “/365” part of the title was to demonstrate that commitment. Let me recommend Galeano’s book, by the way, as I did way back on January 25, 2009, repeating that good advice on December 31st of that year, and once again on January 1, 2011. In fact, I recommend ALL of Galeano’s books, in either English or Spanish. I am sorry he is no longer with us.

By the end of 2009, I had to confess my failure as to the daily blog postings. I determined to keep on, nonetheless, and I still wanted to bring discipline to the task, and to do one blog posting each day. I decided to keep the “/365,” but I also decided to change the name of the blog. As I explained on December 31, 2009, I changed the title of the blog to “reflect my continuing efforts to understand ‘the world’ by seeing it as consisting, in fact, of ‘two worlds,’ both of which we inhabit simultaneously, and one of which we create ourselves.” 

Starting in January 2010, this blog was titled, Two Worlds / 365. On January 1, 2011, I was happy to be able to say that I had, in fact, published one blog posting each day during 2010 (though I had to acknowledge that there had been some problems with the numbering). Given my success in writing something each day, I decided that my blog would continue to be published under the title, Two Worlds / 365 during 2011. On January 1, 2012, one year later, in a posting titled, “Just A Little Title Change,” I announced my intention to rename this blog once again, and to drop the “/365.” This was not because I had failed to maintain my commitment to publish one blog posting each day. I made a posting every day in 2011 – and without any numbering errors, either! As I said in 2012, I just decided to “relieve myself of that commitment.”  Starting January 1, 2012, and continuing through December 31, 2016, this blog has been called, simply, Two Worlds. The “/365” part of the title I had previously included clearly wasn’t needed. I haven’t missed a day since January 1, 2010, with or without the “/365” in the title. 

Today, at the start of what I think is likely to be a very consequential New Year, I have decided to change the title of this blog once again. Changing the title works backwards, as well as forwards, so the Two Worlds name will disappear entirely, just as the Abrazos title did. All the postings remain, and my ideas are not going to be any different, either.

Starting today, this blog will be called, We Live In A Political World. That’s a shout out to Bob Dylan, of course, who will presumably receive his Nobel Prize check sometime in early 2017, and who is supposed to give some sort of public presentation in connection with that. I am looking forward to that presentation, whatever that turns out to be. If you are not familiar with Dylan’s song, Political World, you can click the link for the lyrics.

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~Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney for individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. You can read his blog at  www.gapatton.net )

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SPIKE JONES and The City Slickers do “All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth”. One of my favorite orchestras. I saw them many times live in both Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y.

CLASSICAL DeCINZO. DeCinzo swears this one was never printed…and DeCinzo ” rains” supreme!!! Scroll below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “downward slope” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS CONCERT#3. Is titledMADE IN VIENNA” with music by Mozart, Haydn, and Schubert is the third concert in their season.  ‘Made in Vienna’ brings audiences traditional works, such as Haydn’s Trio in C Major for piano, violin, and cello, inspired in London, and composed after Haydn returned to Vienna. Hear well-known Schubert Lieder, including Rosamunde and Der Tod und Das Mädchen for voice and piano, composed in Vienna between 1817 and 1825.The second half of the concert features less common pieces by Mozart, including selections from 6 Preludes and Fugues (from Bach transcriptions) for violin, viola, and cello. They finish with Haydn’s Arianna à Naxos, a setting of the famous Greek mythological story of Princess Ariadne’s desertion by Theseus on the island of Naxos.  Originally written for voice and keyboard, this transcription features mezzo-soprano and string quartet. Solmaaz Adeli, Concert director and voice, Elizabeth Schumann, Co-concert director and piano, Shannon Delaney, violin; Rebecca Wishnia, violin, Chad Kaltinger, viola; and Kristin Garbeff, cello. The concerts happen at Christ Lutheran Church which is at 10707 Soquel Drive near the Calif. Highway Patrol turnoff from Freedom Boulevard in Aptos. Go here for tickets and directions… http://www.scchamberplayers.org/concert-three . These concerts are on Saturday, January 14, 7:30 pm and Sunday, January 15, 3:00 pm.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa’s working on secret things and will be back here next week. Check out her Lisa Jensen Online Express (ljo-express.blogspot.com). Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.   

JACKIE. I can’t honestly critique this film. Watching Natalie Portman portray Jackie Kennedy so perfectly as she went through those agonizing moments just seconds before the assassination and a few days after, just ripped me apart. It took just minutes into the film before I was back there in November of 1963 sharing her shock and horror as we all tried to face the reality of losing our president and all the dreams and hope that vanished with him. It’s a sad, monumental film. It also shows the cruel, condescending power of the males surounding Jackie in her time of need. See this film, no matter how old you are

FENCES. Denzel Washington and Viola Davis acted in August Wilson’s play “Fences” in 2010. Now Denzel directed this film version starring the two of them and most of the rest of that NYC cast. It’s drama after drama and is about a dysfunctional black family that takes place almost entirely in their small backyard. To watch the always articulate and brilliant Denzel play a black jerk who is forever down on his luck and is also mean, poorly motivated, and plain nasty was more than I could believe. I didn’t care for this film at all.

LION. A true story of a little 5 year old boy getting lost in India. At last we get to see Dev Patel portray somebody serious and he does an excellent job.  It’s a very cornball plot that you can guess every turn and twist, but still just because it’s India you do stay tuned in all the way through. Rooney Mara is his girlfriend for part of the plot and Nicole Kidman is the Australian wife who adopts him. It’s 100% feelgood and there are much better films out and around now, but it does have a certain charm.

PASSENGERS. Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt do as best they can in this spaceship drama about waking up too soon (90 years too soon) on a 120 year voyage to another planet to find a home away from earth. For obvious reasons it has to be love at first sight after Chris wakes Jennifer up early but “Hollywood level” problems arise and the plot goes lower and more predictable.  Nothing here you haven’t seen before.

LA LA LAND. It all depends on how much you remember the glorious and very bright and brilliant days of the Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, Betty Grable, even Barbara Streisand, Judy Garland, and especially Ginger Rogers musicals. La La Land works very hard to convince us that the world hasn’t changed since those days and tries earnestly to recreate the innocence, and obvious genius of those performers. Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone make La La Land fun and happy to a degree, but it’s not the same. The music and songs aren’t anywhere near as good and the photography of today’s LA doesn’t add much either, besides that Stone and Gosling are not professional dancers or singers like all of above.  It’s like having Eddie Redmayne play Tarzan.

MANCHESTER BY THE SEA. Casey Affleck single handidly sustains this deep, emotional film. It’s on the way to several awards and should win them all. It’s an intelligent, beautifically acted in depth portrait of people going through trauma and relationships. Along with Affleck there’s Michelle Williams, Gretchen Mol, even Mathew Broderick in a bit part and especially the 16 year old Lucas Hedges. It’s a cold and unrelenting film that demands your attention especially since you’ve gone through tragedies too. I’m going again, there’s just so much to watch and think about.

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

THE EAGLE HUNTRESS. Charming, cute, girl-empowering and all for the sake of tradition and making this very staged “documentary”. Male Mongolian tribes folk trained eagles to kill foxes in the old days probably because they needed the furs and meat. Now that everybody lives in houses, eats in cafeterias, and wears spin off clothing from Target, L.L. Bean, via China why still kill foxes?? But this cute 13 year old girl defies tradition with 100% help from staged camera work and a devoted dad…she too kills a fox. Besides the making of this film it also helps the tourist trade who visit the Mongol Mountains every year to watch the Eagle Hunt with vans, television, and lots of posters in English pushing the event.

ROGUE ONE: A STAR WARS STORY.  We can only guess that now that the Star Wars movie property is Walt Disney Property it would change, but not like this latest mess. Instead of being more cute, cuddly and cartoonish (like traditional Disney films)…Rogue One is darker, colder, meaner and full of war and killing. It has none of the charm, humor, humanity, mystery, history, tradition or fun quirkieness that the original Star Wars films brought us. The plot is tripe stuff about stealing Death Star plans. Darth Vader is back and James Earl Jones voice is too, but he looks thinner and smaller. The biggest afult for me is that it was filmed so dark it’s hard to see details, or look anywhere besides center screen. No great intricate space ships stay in view long enough to enjoy the fantasy. The acting is ok but there’s not much screen time for it to happen. Big disapointment.

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake. Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Starting the New Year properly on Jan. 3 Patricia Rain will be my guest telling us all about Vanilla. Then Becky Steinbruner returns to bring us up to date on Aptos Issues and water problems everywhere. Dr. Rachel Abrams guests on Jan. 10 talking about her new Rodale Book, “Body Wise.” It is about our “Body’s Intelligence“and health & healing. She’ll be followed by Gillian Greensite talking about wharves,  trees,  and environmental problems we are facing. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com    

She is terribly missed. This is a great interview with Carrie Fisher.

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.

“I like the cold weather. It means you get work done”, Noam Chomsky
“There are three reasons why I live in Scotland. First, I like silence, and you have to be a millionaire to buy silence in Italy. Second, I like cold weather. Third, in Italy I have too many relatives and know too many people, so I never get a quiet time”, Gian Carlo Menotti
“Be at war with your vices, at peace with your neighbors, and let every new year find you a better man”,  Benjamin Franklin
“First you take a drink, then the drink takes a drink, then the drink takes you”,  F. Scott Fitzgerald

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on January 3 – 9, 2017

December 21, 2016 – January 3, 2017

LIBERACE’S BROTHER GEORGE AT SANTA’S VILLAGE. May 9, 1959.  Not a genuine holiday photo but neither was Santa’s Village very genuine. That’s Hocus Pocus passing as Santa. Hocus was a local magician and showman with one million friends.                                                    

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE December 19, 2016

How the world mocks Donald Trump

Donald Trump hates his satirical portrayal on Saturday Night Live. Unfortunately for him, the rest of the world is making the same jokes.

Posted by QZ on Friday, December 16, 2016

BUT FIRST….many happy holidays to all our readers. The year was almost as wild and nutty as we know the next four years will be. Your emails mean a lot and I try to answer every one of them. Stay in touch and let me know what’s happening…I’ll do the same. BB

GAS LEAF BLOWERS BANNED IN SONOMA, WHY NOT IN SANTA CRUZ? Here’s a clip from The Sonoma News December 1, 2016 by staff writer Christian Kallen. “The final results came early, on Wednesday, Nov. 30, almost a week ahead of the Dec. 6 deadline for the Sonoma County Registrar of Voters to release the official election totals. When all the votes were counted, Measure V to ban the use of gas-powered leaf blowers inside city limits won by a scant 19 votes.  

TEN BIZZARRE INSTRUMENTS. I don’t care much for the slick presenation but check out the instruments.
THE TITANIC TUBA…who would guess, who would make such a thing???

It decided, presumably once and for all, an issue that has been plaguing the City of Sonoma for years, at least since Darryl Ponicson put up an information table about leaf blowers at the Tuesday Farmers Market five years ago. Even a 3-2 vote to ban the blowers by the City Council in March wasn’t the final word, as a public signature drive to put the measure to a public vote lead to last month’s election. The ban goes into effect Dec. 22. “I hope this means that the people who voted for the measure, and those that voted against, will come to appreciate the restoration of the quality of life in Sonoma as time goes on,” said Cecilia Ponicsan, who with her husband had been at the forefront of the years-long effort to ban leaf blowers.

For outgoing Mayor Laurie Gallian, who said she got into politics because of the environment, the vote was a bittersweet victory. “The magic of this story is the involvement of the community members behind it. Sonoma CALM, they are the real winners,” she said. “I was only asked to bring the item back and campaign for it – campaigning for myself for re-election, and campaigning for Measure V. I’m glad one of us was victorious!”

But for the landscapers who are asked to make Sonoma properties look tidy, the vote will have a very specific impact – and it could mean that Sonoma itself might look a bit different, too.

“I think we will have to use rakes and brooms,” said Fernando Coronel, who has been doing landscape work in Sonoma for over a decade. “Probably we can use electric blowers just to clean the cement, that’s all we can do.” Coronel pointed out that some of the tasks he is asked to do now, like clean out gravel beds and bark groundcover won’t be as easy. “It’s very hard without blowers. We take the gravel or the bark when we rake the leaves.” We need to organize and let the Santa Cruz City Council know a majority of us care about our health and our environment.

PESTICIDE DANGERS. Luisa Calderon from Safe Agriculture – Safe Schools and Organizer for Californians for Pesticide Reform states…”A 1/4-mile is not enough to protect from pesticide drift and illness. To protect public health and make sure agricultural pesticide illness is truly reduced, Santa Cruz County and the entire state need full-time, full-mile buffer zones around schools”. That’s why the headline…” Santa Cruz County has second most agricultural pesticide illnesses in the state”. Lets see what our Santa Cruz County Board Of Supervisors does about this….sure, I’ll take all bets, and give them a full year to do anything at all.

PEDESTRIAN GOOD NEWS. Debbie Bulger sends this in… “Good News for Pedestrians!”

The City of Santa Cruz has received a $968,200 grant for pedestrian projects at intersections throughout the City. “Mission: Pedestrian” wrote a letter of support for this grant. Data shows 71% of pedestrian and bicycle crashes in the City of Santa Cruz are at intersections. This project will increase pedestrian safety at 15 unsignalized intersections throughout the city by marking crosswalks, building bulb outs, installing curb ramps, and installing rectangular rapid flashing beacons among other measures. Not all the intersections will receive the same treatment. The grant was awarded by the Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP Cycle 8) a federal program administered by CalTrans. 

Intersections that will be made safer include eight along Soquel Avenue, two along Ocean Street, and King at Walnut among other locations. The following intersections along Soquel Avenue are also included: Caledonia, Pine, Pennsylvania, Doyle, Cayuga, Seabright, Marnell, and Mentel. The intersections along Ocean are at Leonard and Dakota.

 

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WARMTH, THE BANDThe Sentinel’s Wallace Baine ran a grand tribute to Don McCaslin who turns 90 this week in Monday’s Sentinel (12/12)   Wallace didn’t know any of the details behind McCaslin’s first gig with his historical jazz band “Warmth”. Here’s what I wrote in the Metro Weekly back in November 2001…. “DEMOCRAT POLITICS IN SANTA CRUZ 1972”. The photo above was taken early in the morning at the front door of the original Cooper House*. That’s Julian Camacho praying on the left; he was running for California State Senate. In the middle is Henry Faitz, a local attorney who ran for California State Assembly against Republican incumbent Frank Murphy. Next is Alan Cranston also praying , who ran for state controller. Right behind Cranston is old friend and near-legendary late jazz musician Phil Yost, who was there to play with Don McCaslin’s new group, premiering that day: Warmth. (Full disclosure: I ran Henry Faitz’s campaign against Murphy; we lost.)

(* PS. The Cooper House was NOT destroyed by the ’89 earthquake..it had been retrofitted and withstood the quake. It was torn down by its new owner to get the FEMA money).

VELCRO PLANNING

The final city council meeting for 2016 under the leadership of Mayor Cynthia Mathews contained no surprises: an unnecessarily packed agenda; the important item placed last on the agenda; public comment whittled down to a minute each person due to lack of time; public comment ignored; developers handed a sweetheart deal. Ho hum.

The important item under consideration was major modifications sought for the development project at 2120 Delaware Street. This project was approved by city council in 2008. It stalled due to the recession and has seen little progress since the recovery.  The land is zoned light industrial/commercial and the council at the time carefully weighed the pros and cons of allowing any residential use to intrude into the very small percentage of land left available and zoned for light industrial/commercial use. Approval was based on the proposal to allow two thirds of the land to remain commercial/industrial with one third dedicated to live/work residential space; perfect for small start-ups and small home-based businesses. This combo of home and work in one living space, obviating the need for a car, or so the theory goes, was the selling point for the council.  A large billboard at the empty site proudly proclaimed, “If you worked here, you’d be home by now.” Those of us who spoke against the project at the time cautioned against losing any of our scarce remaining industrial land. A self-sustaining town needs more than housing. It also needs light industry. Imagine the loss to our town’s economic base if an early council had decided that Harvey West would be ideal for housing and had rezoned a third of that important industrial/ commercial area as residential?  Those of us who opposed the 2120 Delaware Street project also wondered aloud how long it would take before the developers came back for “modifications?” A round of modifications was sought and granted in 2014. The original conditions of approval disallowed sequencing so the residential did not precede the commercial and thereby create conflicts with new residents complaining about the impacts of the subsequently built commercial. Redtree Properties, the developers, wanted to modify that condition since they claimed, live/work housing was easier to sell and investors weren’t interested in commercial at that time. Council gave them their modification. Those of us who spoke against this change to the original conditions of approval wondered out loud how long it would take before Redtree was back for more modifications?

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~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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IS LAW ENFORCEMENT BECOMING TOO MILITARIZED?
(plus, under the link, WOULD YOU DRINK TREATED SEWAGE WATER? and FOLSOM HISTORIC DISTRICT IS WORTH THE TRAVEL)

Well, let me just begin this week with a proposal that I recently presented to the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors regarding a conversation I had with State Assemblyman Mark Stone on this question.  When I asked Assemblyman Stone (he spoke to my daughter’s high school government class last month) about his thoughts on the two recent cases of law enforcement killing troubled young people in which one had only a garden rake and the other a pocket knife, he said that any changes in law enforcement procedures and trainings must come from the local community’s efforts.  That is why I spoke to the Board of Supervisors during Open Public Comment.

I pointed out the two cases of law enforcement quickly shooting to KILL the two troubled young men.  I pointed out that those rapid fatal actions are a result of training and “muscle memory” on the part of the officers.  When under stress, the human reaction is to respond in a way that is most familiar…”muscle memory” takes over.  I described to the Board an incident I remembered reading about a few years ago in the Santa Cruz Sentinel wherein a young man broke loose in the court room and attempted to flee.  An attorney present in the court room who had extensive Aikido training (a form of martial art), quickly maneuvered the young man to the floor, rendering him inactive but without harming him at all.  No guns were drawn.  No tasers were fired.  The situation was quickly under control without harm.  I remember reading this article to my children, who were studying Aikido at the time.

It is common knowledge that many of our law enforcement officers are freshly out of the military.  In the military, people are trained to shoot and kill.  They train extensively to respond with that action.  That creates their muscle memory.

I have read in local newspaper articles regarding the two recent killings that area law enforcement officers receive a few months of training before being put on active service duty.  I could not find any information to clarify that, but County sheriff deputy recruit requirements can be found at this link.

Can a person trained by the military for years to shoot and kill really lose all that muscle memory in a few months?  I don’t think so.  Neither did a couple of veterans that I asked about the issue.  They both said it took them eight to ten years to get out of the military muscle memory reactions, and that everyone is different in their recovery time.

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~Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website…Saturday, December 10, 2016

#345 / Away From The Battlefield

The United States’ Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) was featured in a day-after-Thanksgiving-Day story in The Washington PostThe Post’s story noted that JSOC is considered to be an “elite” part of our military establishment, a judgment enhanced, without a doubt, because JSOC was “the organization that helped kill Osama bin Laden…” . According to The Washington Post article, President Obama has now given JSOC “expanded power,” and JSOC has been authorized to “track, plan and potentially launch attacks on terrorist cells around the globe.” 

Wikipedia reports that “JSOC has an operational relationship with the CIA’s Special Activities Division,” which is responsible for covert operations, and that this covert operations division within the CIA “often recruits from JSOC.”
The new authority given to Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) by President Obama will be available, and will undoubtedly be used, by our current President-elect, Donald Trump, once he takes office next January. The expanded authority just provided to JSOC will permit JSOC to operate “away from the battlefield.” Since there really isn’t any specific “battlefield,” in the “War Against Terror,” which has been authorized by two different Acts of Congress (see below), JSOC’s “Special Teams” will now be able to operate worldwide, pretty much on a “fire at will basis.”

The case of Hedges v. Obama provides some background that is worth thinking about. The National Defense Authorization Act of 2012 (NDAA), augments the Authorization For the Use of Military Force enacted by Congress in 2001 (AUMF). These two laws, combined, will now allow the military to operate within the United States (or anywhere else) and to detain anyone whom the President has determined has given “substantial support” to any forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners.”

Just to make things crystal  clear, a person detained by the military under these laws is considered to be an enemy combatant. Such a person will not be entitled to a jury trial, or a speedy trial, or to confront his or her accusers, or to have access to the Writ of Habeas Corpus, which allows persons in custody to demand that government authorities be made to prove, to an impartial court, that the government has a legally valid reason to keep them in custody.

This is just a “heads up.” “Away from the battlefield” means right here!

Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. What the Dicken’s??? it’s UCSC and Christmas time. See below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Driving blind” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa didn’t send anything this week. But I’ll bet she loved “La La Land”. Check out her Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.   

LA LA LAND. It all depends on how much you remember the glorious and very bright and brilliant days of the Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, Betty Grable, even Barbara Striesand, Judy Garland, and especially Ginger Rogers musicals. La La Land works very hard to convince us that the world hasn’t changed since those days and tries earnestly to recreate the innocence, and obvious genius of those performers. Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone make La La Land fun and happy to a degree, but it’s not the same. The music and songs aren’t anywhere near as good and the photography of today’s LA doesn’t add much either, besides that Stone and Gosling are not professional dancers or singers like all of above.  It’s like having Eddie Redmayne play Tarzan.

ROGUE ONE: A STAR WARS STORY.  We can only guess that now that the Star Wars movie property is Walt Disney Property it would change, but not like this latest mess. Instead of being more cute, cuddly and cartoonish (like traditional Disney films)…Rogue One is darker, colder, meaner and full of war and killing. It has none of the charm, humor, humanity, mystery, history, tradition or fun quirkieness that the original Star Wars films brought us. The plot is tripe stuff about stealing Death Star plans. Darth Vader is back and James Earl Jones voice is too, but he looks thinner and smaller. The biggest fault for me is that it was filmed so dark it’s hard to see details, or look anywhere besides center screen. No great intricate space ships stay in view long enough to enjoy the fantasy. The acting is ok but there’s not much screen time for it to happen. Big dissapointment.

MANCHESTER BY THE SEA. Casey Affleck single handidly sustains this deep, emotional film. It’s on the way to several awards and should win them all. It’s an intelligent, beautifically acted in depth portrait of people going through trauma and relationships. Along with Affleck there’s Michelle Williams, Gretchen Mol, even Mathew Broderick in a bit part and especially the 16 year old Lucas Hedges. It’s a cold and unrelenting film that demands your attention especially since you’ve gone through tradegies too. I’m going again, ther;s just so much to watch and think about.

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS. Jake Gyllenhaal, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon and Laura Linney are simply perfect in their lead roles in this intelligent, puzzling, tense thriller. It wowed them at the Cannes Film Fest and it’s an impressive job of film making by director Tom Ford who knows what he’s doing. Jake and Amy are divorced, he writes a book based on their relationship that’s only half true. Plenty of violence, suspense, and a plot that will keep you 100% involved…that’s rare nowadays. Go see it…ends this Thursday 12/22.

THE EAGLE HUNTRESS. Charming, cute, girl-empowering and all for the sake of tradition and making this very staged “documentary”. Male Mongolian tribes folk trained eagles to kill foxes in the old days probably because they needed the furs and meat. Now that everybody lives in houses, eats in cafeterias, and wears spin off clothing from Target, L.L. Bean, via China why still kill foxes?? But this cute 13 year old girl defies tradition with 100% help from staged camera work and a devoted dad…she too kills a fox. Besides the making of this film it also helps the tourist trade who visit the Mongol Mountains every year to watch the Eagle Hunt with vans, television, and lots of posters in English pushing the event.

ALLIED. Gee, I thought that Brad Pitt was leaving Angelina Jolie because he fell in love with Marion Cotillard his co-star in this 1942 Casablanca war and spy semi-thriller. Other than that,  not many thrills or mystery or surprises…it’s mostly just a pretty WWII Casablanca wanna- be Hollywood movie. After I found out that Brad and Angelina are really splitting up  there was no way to remember anything else about this movie. 😉

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake. Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

OFFICE CHRISTMAS  PARTY. This gross, sexist, not-funny attempt at comedy should be banned from the industry except that it’ll make millions from the morons who like this genitalia- filled flick. It’s a perfect example of how low Hollywood will sink to make millions. Do NOT take the kids or allow them to even peek at this mess. I went because I couldn’t believe the bad reviews!!!

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz.” UCSC retiree Lincoln Taiz and Lee Taiz follow Lois and tell us about their new book, “Flora Unveiled” (plant sex).  I’ll be on vacation Dec. 27 and Sylvanna Falcon from UCSC’s Latin American and Latino Studies will interview UCSC Sociology professor Hillary Angelo. Starting the New Year properly on Jan. 3 Patricia Rain will be my guest telling us all about Vanilla. Then newly elected Santa Cruz City Council members Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown will give us previews of the future City Council issues. Dr. Rachel Abrams guests on Jan. 10 talking about her new Rodale Book, “Body Wise”. It is about our “Body’s Intelligence” and health & healing. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com    

The middle one isn’t super exciting; it’s a bit silly, but the other ones (and these things in general) just make me want to sweep everything off my kitchen table and find a glue gun or two.

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES. “HOLIDAYS”

“I once wanted to become an atheist, but I gave up – they have no holidays,” Henny Youngman
“I felt overstuffed and dull and disappointed, the way I always do the day after Christmas, as if whatever it was the pine boughs and the candles and the silver and gilt-ribboned presents and the birch-log fires and the Christmas turkey and the carols at the piano promised….. never came to pass.” Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar
“I think holidays create so much pressure because people feel they should be having a good time. But you shouldn’t. ” Craig Ferguson
“Nothing says holidays, like a cheese log”, Ellen DeGeneres

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
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All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on December 21, 2016 – January 3, 2017

December 14 – 20, 2016

PACIFIC AND COOPER STREETS. 7:50 am WINTER 1957. That’s of course the Cooper House on the right and Leask’s Department Store on the far left.  Also on the right had side as we’re looking at it….Santa Cruz County Bank, Montgomery Ward Catalog Store, Saddle Back Coffee Shop, Hotel St. George, Sportsmens Shop, Pet Shop, The Tea Cup Bar and restaurant. Then on the left, after Leask’s is Melvin’s Drugs, The Hardware Store and Cigar Store, Bubble Bakery and to sum it up…back then locals had plenty of reasons to shop downtown.                                                     

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE December 12, 2016

CHANGING OF THE CITY COUNCIL. Wouldn’t you think that with the farewell and last night of our recent City Council changeover that they would at least have had their proudly acquired “Lenco Bearcat” (Ballistic Engineered Armored Response Counter Attack Truck) in front of the City Hall with a lighted Christmas tree on top? That way we’d never forget who was in office  when our City acquired that so called and sneaky  “Peacemaker”??

STRANGE MUSICAL INSTRUMENT INVENTIONS. Absolutely amazing and a tribute to our minds and love of music.

FLUORIDE IN SAN JOSE For the 22,438 Santa Cruz County Voters who voted for Trump the news that San Jose is finally going for fluoridating their City Water must be devastating. Trump hates fluoridated water and as we know the oft backward Santa Cruz has also successfully fought against our City water being fluoridated for decades. Here’s an excerpt from Dana Milbank (frequent Santa Cruz Sentinel columnist)  from the Washington Post Nov. 25, 2016 in an article titled …

“TRUMP’S “NEWS SOURCE : ALIEN LIZARDS, FLUORIDE MIND CONTROL AND VOTER FRAUD”.

“As the Right Wing Watch website has documented, Jones has alleged that the U.S. government was responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks (Jones posted an old video Monday in which Trump appeared to suggest that aircraft alone couldn’t have brought down the towers), the Oklahoma City bombings and mass shootings such as Sandy Hook. Jones has said that ““chemtrails” from airplanes spread a “weaponized flu,” that juice boxes are part of a chemical-warfare operation to make children gay, that Justin Bieber is brainwashing children to create an American police state, that Obama murdered publisher Andrew Breitbart, that an “alien force not of this world” is targeting Trump, that intergalactic shape-shifting reptilian humanoids secretly control the world, and, of course, that water fluoridation is mass mind control”.

Personally, I’ve fought FOR fluoridating city water since the 1960’s and my KGO days when the John Birch Society worked so hard to convince us that Russian Communists were behind the fluoride plot. Every one of my dentists and all professional dental associations and doctors everywhere know how much good fluoride can do for age folks. But this is Santa Cruz; folks fight fluoride here…I’ve never figured it out.

COTONI – COAST DAIRIES NATIONAL MONUMENTAL DISASTER.”

You have to wonder why Traci Hukill and Eric Johnson (noted “Hill Trompers“) would say in Sunday’s (Dec. 11) issue that Coast Dairies still needs protection. They wrote…”Well then, what about the property itself? It’s fully protected, right? From oil and gas drilling, yes. From development, no. When the 5,800-acre Coast Dairies property was officially transferred to the Bureau of Land Management in 2014, its deed came with it. The deed prohibits commercial timber harvest and off-road vehicles, and it leaves the mineral rights safely with the Trust for Public Land, a conservation nonprofit. On the subject of development, though — houses, golf courses, stables — nothing. It’s time to protect the Coast Dairies property once and for all with national monument designation”. Yet we should all know that completely contradicts the deed restrictions that are in that editorial itself. It quotes the deed restrictions: One more thing about that deed: The first thing it says — before the ban on logging, before the ban on ATVs and dirt bikes — is that the property “shall be used and managed for open space and public recreation in a manner consistent with the protection and preservation of natural habitats.” That’s the very first thing.  How does a golf course, housing, whatever development is envisaged, not violate the deed language of “protection and preservation of natural habitats.”? The deed restrictions and language are binding on any owner of the property, the federal government or anyone they might decide to sell it to (which is highly unlikely anyway.) As one friend stated and I agree… “That the Sentinel published this self-contradictory propaganda is shameful”.

WILLIAM MANDEL DIED. William Mandel was a personal hero of mine. He was also a very long time broadcaster on KPFA in Berkeley. He was most known as the courageous guy who told the House Un-American Activities Committee is San Francisco… Addressing the committee members as “honorable beaters of children and sadists,” Mr. Mandel condemned their actions and motives at length. “If you think,” he said, “that I’m going to cooperate with this collection of Judases, of men who sit there in violation of the United States Constitution, if you think I will cooperate with you in any way, you are insane.” He lived to the ripe age of 99. He and Jessica Mitford* and her husband Bob Truehaft* guested on quite a few of the programs I produced at KCBS and KGO. The three of them also attended on of my wedding receptions!”

MORE ABOUT JESSICA MITFORD AND BOB TRUEHAFT. Jessica Mitford  wrote “The American Way of Death”. Treuhaft worked for “labor union” and “radical left” causes much of his life. From the early-to-mid-1940s to 1958 he and Mitford were members of the “Communist Party USA”, leaving the party after Khrushchev’s revelations about the Stalin era.” Hillary Clinton” worked as a summer intern with Truehaft’s Oakland law firm in 1971. In 1964, Treuhaft represented more than 700 “Free Speech Movement” students arrested during a two-day sit-in at the University of California in Berkeley. He and his firm also represented anti-Vietnam War protesters, “Black Panther Party”, the “Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee” (SNCC), the “Congress of Racial Equality” (CORE).

MUSICAL SAW AND THEREMIN. Don’t go away, these two actually play on key and it’s not that bad.”
WINTERGATAN… a marble machine like you’ve never seen before. [Webmistress piping in with a Sweden connection: Wintergatan (or Vintergatan) is Swedish for The Milky Way! It literally means “Winter Street”.]

CASUAL SAX ON PACIFIC. Next Sunday(Dec.18) we’ll all get a rare chance to hear the saxophone quartet Casual Sax play on Pacific Avenure in front of O’Neills. They tell us , “We like to say it’s a sax quartet with a math problem since there are actually five of us in the group (two baritone saxes). Pro’s and amateurs together they consist of Clark Baldwin, our band leader, plays soprano and alto saxes, Ralph Boroff, plays alto sax, David Shoaf, tenor sax, Sandra Whalen, baritone sax and their titular head Ken Koenig, plays baritone sax. They’ll be there from 11:30am to 1:30pm . And yes they even got a permit to play!!!

KROHN AND SANDY BROWN ON UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. We all know that the results of our Santa Cruz City Council race will produce some “interesting” results. To that end we’re starting the new year off properly. Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown will be on my first of the New Year’s Universal Grapevine on Tuesday January 3. Tune in KZSC 88.1 fm or online at KZSC.org the program starts at 7 with Patricia Rain talking about her favorite topic Vanilla. Then it’s Chris and Sandy from 7:30-8 p.m. Nope, we don’t take phone calls..not ever!!

DON MacCASLIN at 90 !!! The Sentinel’s Wallace Baine ran a grand tribute to Don McCaslin who turns 90 this week in Monday’s Sentinel.  Wallace didn’t know any of the details behind McCaslin’s first warmth gig. Here’s what I wrote in the Metro Weekly back in November 2001.

“DEMOCRAT POLITICS IN SANTA CRUZ 1972”. The photo above was taken early in the morning at the front door of the original Cooper House*. That’s Julian Camacho praying on the left; he was running for state Senate. In the middle is Henry Faitz, a local attorney who ran for state Assembly against incumbent Frank Murphy. Next is Alan Cranston also praying, who ran for state controller. Right behind Cranston is old friend and near-legendary late jazz musician Phil Yost, who was there to play with Don McCaslin’s new group, premiering that day: Warmth. (Full disclosure: I ran Faitz’s campaign against Murphy; we lost.)

(* PS. The Cooper House was NOT destroyed by the ’89 earthquake..it had been retrofitted and withstood the quake. It was torn down by its new owner to get the FEMA money).

PAVING PARADISE
Top-level city management staff and city council members would do well to heed the words of Nina Simon, executive director of the Museum of Art and History. At a recent Chamber of Commerce luncheon, Simon as invited speaker shared these words: “Instead of creating a program and selling it, start with the community and figure out how to do what they want.”

What a wonderful and novel concept! Think how much money, time and effort could have been saved if the city had first turned to the community and asked a simple question:  “What changes, if any, would you like to see done to your wharf?” Judging by the recent outpouring of sentiment opposed to the Wharf Master Plan, the resounding answer would most likely have been, “Change very little! Keep it as close as possible to what it is now.” But the city ignored the community, substituting for it, “stakeholders,” a small group who by definition has an interest, usually monetary, in the outcome. Lacking a firm community base of support, the city then proceeded down a slippery slope to “sell” its program, with false claims of tsunami damage to the wharf to gain federal funds for its SF urban design team, by skirting the required full environmental review for expediency, by keeping the project out of the public eye as much as possible until it could be slid under the sleepy eyes of the council close to midnight for final approval. Fortunately, this plan failed due to community vigilance and action. However the project is just postponed. There has been no change of heart; no self-examination of how to serve the community better by “starting with the community.”

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~( Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of “Save Our Big Trees” and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  “http://darksky.org”    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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THE OLDEST HOUSE IN APTOS HIHN SUBDIVISION IS GONE

It was hard to watch the demolition crew operator smash the last wall of the 140-year-old little yellow house at 8057 Valencia Street in Aptos Village recently.  Other than the mudsill wood directly on the soil, the virgin redwood timbers of the house were solid.

But that is not the picture that a local structural engineer gave to the County Historic Resources Commission last April when that group approved a demolition permit for the oldest house remaining in the historic Hihn Subdivision.  The new owner had visited the Commission about two years ago just after buying the historic NR-3 (very significant and eligible for the State Historic Registry) and assured that group that he would preserve the little yellow house.

Then he hired a local architect who happens to be a friend and neighbor of the structural engineer who helped the Aptos Village Project developers convince the Historic Resources Commissioners that the NR-5 (a lower level of historic significance due to structural alterations) Aptos Firehouse/VFW Hall was too hazardous and decrepit to try to relocate, as was promised to the public throughout the planning process.  The bulk of the photos showing rot and termite damage were from the porch area.  The Commissioners approved the demolition without any cost comparison of preservation vs. demolition.  A County building inspector red-tagged the structure.  And then….the developer, Pete Testorff, moved in his construction business office and ran it from the red-tagged, “hazardous” Aptos Firehouse for over three years until last February when I pointed out this interesting little situation to Assistant Planning Director Ms. Wanda Williams, who is overseeing the compliance issues of the Aptos Village Project.  She seemed surprised to hear that Testorff Construction was operating in a red-tagged building scheduled for demolition by the Historic Resources Commission due to extremely unsafe and hazardous condition, even though records show that she had attended several site meetings there (along with Supervisor Zach Friend).  Hmmmm….   Well, Testorff Construction moved out quickly, cut down the two heritage trees, and began demolition before acquiring a permit to do so.  My, my.

But I digress….the little yellow house on Valencia was posted as a “PARTIAL demolition” with addition of 20SF new construction.  So, most residents did not feel it necessary to take the morning off work to attend the public hearing on the issue in April, 2016.  I did, and was shocked to hear Planner Ms. Annie Murphy describe the project as a FULL DEMOLITION and re-build of similar structure.  It seemed very deceptive to me, and I testified that many people were under the impression that only a wall would be removed for an addition, that the wording on the notices did not explain that “partial demolition” really meant complete destruction.  I asked for an extension of time and re-hearing.

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~(Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).”

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website…from December 9, 2016.”

#344. DISRUPTION, POLITICS AND DONALD TRUMP.

If you have been following politics in the Silicon Valley, you will know about Congress Member “Mike Honda”. Honda has represented “California’s 17th Congressional District” in the Congress since 2001. The 17th Congressional District includes all or part of Santa Clara, San Jose, Cupertino, Sunnyvale, Fremont, Milpitas, and Newark. It is, in other words, a Congressional District that is at the very heart of the Silicon Valley.

Honda is a member of the “Democratic Party”, and has done a workmanlike job for voters in what is the only Asian American-majority district in the continental United States. In this November’s election, Honda was replaced by “Ro Khanna”, also a Democrat.

Reliable, hard working, and well-liked incumbents (like Honda) are not usually replaced by someone from their own party. Recent changes in California’s election laws have made this a bit easier, since the “Top Two” system, in a heavily Democratic District like the 17th Congressional District, will now usually pit two Democrats against each other in the general election, giving non-Democratic Party voters an increased chance to decide which Democrat will represent the District. Running against a Republican, Honda would almost certainly have won handily. Running against another Democrat, “Honda lost with about 40% of the vote, to Khanna’s 60%”.”

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~(Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, “Two Worlds at”  “www.gapatton.net”

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THAT VIDEO CLIP OF HIGHWAY ONE. If you scroll back a week you’ll see the You Tube clip of a racing, roaring trip soutrh on Highway One. I wondered in print, where it was filmed

Dan Dickmayer a relatively new Canadian emailed, “I still have not gotten(pardon my Nebraska vocabulary) to drive through the new Devil’s slide tunnel before Pacifica but its on my bucket list.  That youtube is the next best thing.  I think it is heading south”. Eric Rice stated, “The youTube video in this week’s column is of San Mateo County, starting at the southern end of Ocean Beach and traveling south through Pacifica, Devil’s Slide, Half Moon Bay, and ending just before Martin’s Beach south of Half Moon Bay”. Now we know, and it’s still good fun to watch.”

MUNCHING WITH MOZART. Every third Thursday (as per this Thursday December 15) there’s a free concert upstairs in the Main Library. Carol Panofsky creates and manages these. This Thursday there’ll be music by Schubert, Dvorak and Persichetti plus Moszkowski and Nystrom. Players include; Carol Panofsky, John Orlando, Ellen Khayat, Lynn Kidder, Stephanie Malone, Nicki Kerns, Dorothy Brown and Cheryl Dougan. It goes from 12:10 to 12:50. So get there early and munch amongst yourselves, but quietly.”

CLASSICAL DeCINZO. Takes an upper view of Christmas in those Monster Homes. See downwards.”

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Tweets” down a few pages. As always, at “TimEagan.com” you will find his most recent “ Deep Cover”, the latest installment from the archives of “Subconscious Comics”, and the ever entertaining “Eaganblog”.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “The Oscar season is in full swing, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express. The characters may not talk much, but their feelings run deep in the poignant, much-lauded Manchester by the Sea. Up next week: “La La Land!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

MANCHESTER BY THE SEA. Casey Affleck single handidly sustains this deep, emotional film. It’s on the way to several awards and should win them all. It’s an intelligent, beautifically acted in depth portrait of people going through trauma and relationships. Along with Affleck there’s Michelle Williams, Gretchen Mol, even Mathew Broderick in a bit part” and especially the 16 year old Lucas Hedges. It’s a” cold and unrelenting film that demands your attention especially since you’ve gone through tradegies too. I’m going again, ther;s just so much to watch and think about.”

THE EAGLE HUNTRESS. Charming, cute, girl-empowering and all for the sake of tradition and making this very staged “documentary”. Male Mongolian tribes folk trained eagles to kill foxes in the old days probably because they needed the furs and meat. Now that everybody lives in houses, eats in cafeterias, and wears spin off clothing from Target, L.L. Bean, via China why still kill foxes?? But this cute 13 year old girl defies tradition with 100% help from staged camera work and a devoted dad…she too kills a fox. Besides the making of this film it also helps the tourist trade who visit the Mongol Mountains every year to watch the Eagle Hunt with vans, television, and lots of posters in English pushing the event.”

OFFICE CHRISTMAS  PARTY. This gross, sexist, not-funny attempt at comedy should be banned from the industry except that it’ll make millions from the morons who like this genitalia- filled flick. It’s a perfect example of how low Hollywood will sink to make millions. Do NOT take the kids or allow them to even peek at this mess. I went because I couldn’t believe the bad reviews!!!

MOONLIGHT. For starters Moonlight  has a 98 % on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me who really not only enjoyed this tale of drugs, gangs, and love, but people who like deep, serious films loved it too. Set in Miami, this sharp, delicate, brilliant story of a Black man’s life is told in three parts. It’s best not to read too much about the plot and just watch with wonder as it unfolds. You’ve never seen a film like this one. Please go and go quickly. Landmark may not keep it too long if we don’t support it.”

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS. Jake Gyllenhaal, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon and Laura Linney are simply perfect in their lead roles in this intelligent, puzzling, tense thriller. It wowed them at the Cannes Film Fest and it’s an impressive job of film making by director Tom Ford who knows what he’s doing. Jake and Amy are divorced, he writes a book based on their relationship that’s only half true. Plenty of violence, suspense, and a plot that will keep you 100% involved…that’s rare nowadays. Go see it ASAP.”

HACKSAW RIDGE. Another extra bloody, super hero film from Mel Gibson.  A World War II Okinawa battle film about a Seventh Day Adventist (true story) who wouldn’t touch or carry a gun and rescued 75 wounded soldiers under extra heavy gunfire. Maybe too bloody, probably too goofy a hero, and yet…the battle scenes are some of the best I’ve ever seen onscreen. Go only if you like well made films that are over the top violent.”

ALLIED. Gee, I thought that Brad Pitt was leaving Angelina Jolie because he fell in love with Marion Cotillard his co-star in this 1942 Casablanca war and spy semi-thriller. Not many thrills or mystery or surprises…it’s mostly just a pretty WWII Casablanca wanna- be Hollywood movie. After I found out that Brad and Angelina are really splitting up  there was no way to remember anything else about this movie. 😉

LOVING. A great and inspiring true story of Richard and Mildred Loving and how and why their racially mixed marriage were convicted in 1958 and went all the way to the Supreme Court in 1967 and won!! Ruth Negga plays the Black American wife and Joel Edgerton is the dull, stoic, mechanic husband. It’s a fine film, and it’s sterile, lacking human-ness, or reasons why they love each other. It’s even inspiring, involves two well meaning jerk attorneys from the ACLU and once again…it’s just not very heart-felt.

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and We get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.”

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake.” Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to “WWW.KZSC.ORG”. . December 13 has Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discussing The National Film Registry choices” . PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. UCSC retiree Lincoln Taiz and Lee Taiz follow Lois and tell us about their new book, “Flora Unveiled” (plant” sex).  I’ll be on vacation Dec. 27 and Sylvanna Falcon from UCSC’s  Latin American and Latino Studies will interview UCSC Sociology professor Hillary Angelo. Starting the New Year properly on Jan. 3 Patricia Rain will be my guest telling us all about Vanilla. Then newly elected Santa Cruz City Council members Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown will give us previews of the future City Council issues. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at “bratton@cruzio.com”  

I think I’ve shown you before that I like beatboxing. This guy is from Australia, and he’s amazing 🙂

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.   “CHRISTMAS”

“Christmas isn’t a season. It’s a feeling”, Edna Ferber

“In the old days, it was not called the Holiday Season; the Christians called it ‘Christmas’ and went to church; the Jews called it ‘Hanukkah’ and went to synagogue; the atheists went to parties and drank. People passing each other on the street would say ‘Merry Christmas!’ or ‘Happy Hanukkah!’ or (to the atheists) ‘Look out for the wall!”, Dave Barry

“The main reason Santa is so jolly is because he knows where all the bad girls live”, George Carlin

“Oh look, yet another Christmas TV special! How touching to have the meaning of Christmas brought to us by cola, fast food, and beer….Who’d have ever guessed that product consumption, popular entertainment, and spirituality would mix so harmoniously?” Bill Watterson, “The Essential Calvin and Hobbes”

“If my Valentine you won’t be,
I’ll hang myself on your Christmas tree”.  Ernest Hemingway, “88 Poems”

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on December 14 – 20, 2016

December 7 – 13, 2016

SNOW ON PACIFIC AVENUE 1957. 7:46 am. A long time tradition of printing snow and Christmas scene photos this month. As you can almost see this is Church street and Pacific Avenue. It’s about in front of the Regal’s Cinema 9 across from O’Neil’s Surf Shop.                                                        

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE December 5, 2016

SANTA CRUZ CITY COUNCIL VOTES CRY FOR CHANGE. Just seeing Martine Watkins outdraw Cynthia Mathews is an indication that folks want to change the way our city is governed. A much bigger sign of wanting change is the election of progressives Chris Krohn back onto the City council and especially  Sandy Brown‘s election to the council. Drew Glover came in at only 604 votes (as of Monday 12/05) behind Sandy. I think Bernie Sanders cry for a “Brand New Council” was certainly heard and acted on. Let’s hope this signals the ending of Cynthia Mathews control over the downward spiral of growth and meaness. There’s going to be a huge party to celebrate all the work and dedication that went into those victories. It’ll be Friday, December 9th from 6-9pm at the 418 Project on Front Street along with laughs and fun there’ll be music by the marimba band, Kazunga and food by India Joze. This will be the start of something big!!!

HYPER DRIVE DOWN CABRILLO HIGHWAY. Not all that sure where this was shot but watch it and drive slowly.

COAST DAIRIES, A TOUR. Only a few weeks left before we learn about this possible loss of aready protected land into National monument status.

NEW LIBRARY AND PARKING LOT & STOP THE FARMERS MARKET??? Rick Longinotti sent an important message about the second attempt in just a few years to build a huge new parking structure downtown. It’s another  example of  Cynthia Mathews ongoing belief that all development and growth are wonderful, or even necessary. Rick stated, ” there is/ was a staff proposal for a 5-story parking garage at the lot where the Downtown Farmers Market meets.  Before taking action, the Council would benefit from reviewing advice that it received from expert parking consultants. 

On October 15, 2015, a joint meeting of the Downtown Commission and Planning Commission heard a presentation from three different consultants on how to address parking demand Downtown. It’s worth watching the video of this session. Go to this page and enter Santa Cruz Planning Commission in the search box.
 
The consultants all agreed that the cost of building new parking capacity is so high that it is cost-effective to implement “demand management” measures that provide incentives for people who work downtown to commute to work by means other than a car.  Janis Rhodes told the Commissioners that the cost of parking spaces in a new garage is so high that, “No agency will make enough on user fees to pay for that space. We’ve become very conservative—maximizing existing inventories before we step out into that arena of financing new resources.”
 
The Nelson-Nygaard company estimated the cost of building a new parking garage in Berkeley, “The cost to construct new parking garages in Downtown can be expected to be in the range of $40,000 per space. This equates to a total cost to build, operate and maintain new spaces of approximately $280 per month per space, every month for the expected 35-year lifetime of the typical garage.”  The City of Santa Cruz estimate for the cost of new spaces is even higher. The 489 net new spaces in the proposed garage (632 new spaces minus 143 space in the existing lot) would cost $33-$37 million. That’s $67,000 -$75,000 per space.
 
The good news is that there is a lot of potential to provide more customer parking without building a single new space. Many parking spaces are occupied by people with monthly parking permits. The City has 2916 parking spaces Downtown and sells 1831 monthly parking permits. These permits cost $30-$35 per month. The City would save a lot of money by paying downtown employees not to park, offering free bus passes, and credit at bike stores. And  the City could run a shuttle from Downtown to the enormous parking lots at the Boardwalk, which lay empty a large part of the year. 

The consultants offered the City a valuable message: Implement parking demand management incentives before you consider building new parking capacity. Rick concluded by saying “On Tuesday (Dec. 6 when the Council heard this) , let’s remind the City Council that our priorities are to reduce automobile use and greenhouse gases. You can’t get there by building new parking, then subsidizing it for users”.

108 SYCAMORE PROJECT. Down at the end of Pacific Avenue across from Lott’s Audio and right next to that Barry Swenson apartment complex (that has that too much water problem) is 108 Sycamore street. Reed Searle brings us some facts, data and ideas that demand attention. He states …

If you go look at the building you will see it is surely decrepit, but so was the historic La Bahia. There is an anomaly in the applicable code:  if tenants are evicted so the building can be remodeled, then the tenants must be replaced or rehoused.  But if the building is deemed dangerous by the authorities (without thought of whether it could be economically repaired) then there is no obligation to spare the house.  So all a landlord would have to do is to let the building become a safety hazard, opt to tear it down—-and in this case to change a 5 unit apartment building (the oldest concrete structure in the city) into a somewhat larger hotel.  And this could set one hell of a precedent for developing the whole beach area.

Then there’s a question of why this project wasn’t referred to the Santa Cruz Historic Commission. It is evident from the reference below (to the city attorney) that there is a problem with the code section;  But the code section is clear as is, even though I’m sure that wasn’t intended.

The first question involves the purview of the Zoning Administration (ZA).  If that purview is only to see whether a proposed project meets the technical requirements of the code, even if to allow the project involves shoe-horning, that is one thing—-it is pretty much a mechanical exercise.  On the other hand, if the ZA may determine issues related to policy, we are in a different ballpark. 

We all know that we have a serious housing problem. This application does present a policy issue that should be resolved by the City Council.  If this app is granted, we will have a precedent applicable to the entire area and will gradually exclude residents in favor of commercial interests.   If this is what we want there should be a clear statement by the Council. We do not help that by removing rental units and converting the property to visitor services.  Current use in the area is multi-family residential uses as well as commercial.  “Hotel uses are principally permitted” but so are multi-family residential. The General Plan encourages a mix of uses in his area.  

Replacement housing is normally required when housing units are being demolished.  But # 24.08.1380 grants exceptions and DN apply when the building people or fire marshal decides it is dangerous and needs to be replaced.  Why should it make any difference as to later use if

a building is demolished because the building is dangerous.  “This code section was reviewed by the City Attorney’s office in regards to this project and determined to be applicable. Therefore replacement housing is not required as part of this application.” says the report . About the possible height:  whatever  can be done to build a hotel can also be done with residential units.

The hotel plans call for an eleven (11) parking space garage.  The hotel rooms rooms, at 600 square feet with two bedrooms, bathrooms, living room and kitchenette, are completely compatible with long term rental housing.  What this means is that its use as a hotel is intended to be more economically rewarding than it would be possible as rental units.  It is basically the same issue as with vacation rentals. The plans also include 20 bike storage spaces on the roof deck—-not a nice view and it reduces the space on the roof for anyone desiring a view”. ( Reed Searle is a former attorney, a member of The Community Water Commission and other activist activities).

RACIAL HATRED NEVER WENT AWAY. Sandy Lydon guesting on my Universal Grapevine radio program last Tuesday 11/29, (archived at KZSC.org) had a special segment titled, “What The Hell Is Happening” (also available online now at Sandy’s Central Coast Secrets).  He talked about how we repatriated over 1,000,000 Mexican/Mexican Americans between 1929 and 1936. He spoke of the torch light mobs chanting “The Chinese must go” in downtown Santa Cruz in 1879 and the cross-burnings by the Ku Klux Klan at Lighthouse Point in the 1920’s. Then there was the anti-Filipino murder of a farm worker in the Pajaro Valley in 1930. There are photos of the Ku Klux Klan marching on Pacific Avenue, and more photos of the double lynching of Francisco Arias and Jose Chamales under our Water Street bridge in 1877. We do have an embarassing history, and with a revival looming in our very near future we need to be extra aware and sensitive.

BEST BUY BEGETS BITTER BACKSTABBING BATTLE. If you ever wondered why the sales staff at Best Buy loves you so much the instant you walk in the door you won’t be surprised to learn that any and all the regular salesfolk must meet a $300 (three hundred dollars) PER HOUR minimum sales quota!!! Salespeople in the computer and Television departments must meet an even higher quota PER HOUR. If they don’t meet it they are soon placed behind the checkout counter. That’s also why they aren’t too eager to turn you over to another clerk who might know more about your wishes.

FISH STORIES

I was struck by the front -page Sentinel article and photograph (12/4/16) of the couple fishing from the Santa Cruz Municipal wharf. They travel from Salinas twice a month to fish and grew up fishing from the wharf since they were kids. Fishing from the very same spot that her Dad fished, Jeri Gile was quoted as saying that “just being here I sense his presence.” Such sentiment apparently has no place in the hearts of the city’s economic developers. They point out that people will still be able to fish from the wharf under the expensive make-over should it ever become reality. True, but there are essential differences that matter. It’s obvious that the vast majority of folks who fish from the current wharf are working -class, of modest means. They park their vehicle next to their favorite fishing spot, open the trunk of the car for handy access to supplies, set up a couple of seats and spend the day with rod and reel and for many, childhood memories. Under the Wharf Master Plan this will not be possible. The design from the San Francisco based firm, ROMA, has the fishing area thirty feet away from the parked cars, separated by a 24 foot wide multi-use pathway for bikes, pedestrians, segways, whatever. Try casting in that confusion.  The old weathered wooden railings replaced by stainless steel. Try drumming up childhood memories on those surfaces.

I grew up fishing with my Dad in an area north of Sydney, Australia, known as Pittwater. An area of singular beauty, it has undergone a similar transition as Santa Cruz from a place where working class folks could afford a modest home and drop a mooring for a small boat, to a place where the same houses sell for millions of dollars and the area is nick-named, “The Golden Triangle.” While I could never afford to live there now, when I return for a visit, I can walk on the same piers, fish from the same spots, enjoy the same trees only bigger and feel the presence of my Dad. In other words, the community and its elected council have preserved the essential feel and nature of the place despite its shift into upper class price range. They don’t hire urban planners from Sydney to come and design makeovers that would change the essential character of the place just to squeeze out more money. If they ever did, I guarantee there would be swift and stiff opposition as there has been to the Santa Cruz city’s Wharf Master Plan.

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website…Monday December 5, 2016 #340 / OCEAN SCORES AND DARK POSTS ON FACEBOOK

On November 20, 2016, the Sunday New York Times printed an opinion piece titled, “The Secret Agenda of a Facebook Quiz.” The article was of interest to me, as someone who is an active participant on Facebook, where this Two Worlds blog is routinely republished. I have, from time to time, taken such quizzes, offered on Facebook – as perhaps some of my readers have, too. 

McKenzie Funk, the author of the Times‘ opinion piece, is a reporter who works on global environmental issues. He has an impressive resume that you can review by clicking the link. Funk’s article tells us that various “quizzes” found on Facebook are, actually, efforts by Cambridge Analytica, a Republican Party political consulting firm, to amass a psychological profile of Facebook users. 

According to Funk, the company now has a database of some 230 million adult Americans, and this database was mobilized during the Trump presidential campaign, and may well have played a part in helping Trump to win the election. 

The profiles being amassed by Cambridge Analytica are based on so-called “OCEAN” scores – psychological profiles that evaluate “how you rate according to the big five psychological traits of Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism.”

In the future (and probably already), Facebook advertisers, including political advertisers, can use the Cambridge Analytica system of OCEAN scores to send you “dark posts,” which are fine-tuned to appeal to a very restricted group, all of whom have the same psychological profile. Those with different profiles will get different ads.

Read all about it by clicking this link. Then, watch out! As Funk says, if you don’t understand what’s going on here, “you may … be responsible the next time America is shocked by an election upset.”  Hey, the last time was bad enough!!

(Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. Santa Cruz’s “Holiday Carriage Rides”, as viewed by DeCinzo see below just a few scrolls.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Student Driver” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “The best girl-power stories are true. Meet the 13-year-old heroine of the stunningly beautiful documentary The Eagle Huntress, a daughter of Mongolian nomads who defies tradition to master the male-dominated art of hunting with eagles, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express http://ljo-express.blogspot.com  Also, I am hourly expecting an update of the progress of my Beast book, so please stand by! ” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.  

MOONLIGHT. For starters Moonlight  has a 98 % on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me who really not only enjoyed this tale of drugs, gangs, and love, but people who like deep, serious films loved it too. Set in Miami, this sharp, delicate, brilliant story of a Black man’s life is told in three parts. It’s best not to read too much about the plot and just watch with wonder as it unfolds. You’ve never seen a film like this one. Please go and go quickly. Landmark may not keep it too long if we don’t support it.

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS. Jake Gyllenhaal, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon and Laura Linney are simply perfect in their lead roles in this intelligent, puzzling, tense thriller. It wowed them at the Cannes Film Fest and it’s an impressive job of film making by director Tom Ford who knows what he’s doing. Jake and Amy are divorced, he writes a book based on their relationship that’s only half true. Plenty of violence, suspense, and a plot that will keep you 100% involved…that’s rare nowadays. Go see it ASAP.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

HACKSAW RIDGE. Another extra bloody, super hero film from Mel Gibson.  A World War II Okinawa battle film about a Seventh Day Adventist (true story) who wouldn’t touch or carry a gun and rescued 75 wounded soldiers under extra heavy gunfire. Maybe too bloody, probably too goofy a hero, and yet…the battle scenes are some of the best I’ve ever seen onscreen. Go only if you like well made films that are over the top violent.

ALLIED. Gee, I thought that Brad Pitt was leaving Angelina Jolie because he fell in love with Marion Cotillard his co-star in this 1942 Casablanca war and spy semi-thriller. Not many thrills or mystery or surprises…it’s mostly just a pretty WWII Casablanca wanna be Hollywood movie. After I found out that Brad and Angelina were still together there was no way to remember anything about this movie. 😉

LOVING. A great and inspiring true story of Richard and Mildred Loving and how and why their racially mixed marriage were convicted in 1958 and went all the way to the Supreme Court in 1967 and won!! Ruth Negga plays the Black American wife and Joel Edgerton is the dull, stoic, mechanic husband. It’s a fine film, and it’s sterile, lacking human-ness, or reasons why they love each other. It’s even inspiring, involves two well meaning jerk attorneys from the ACLU and once again…it’s just not very heart-felt.

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and We get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake. Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

THE ACCOUNTANT & DONALD TRUMP MONEY. For some mysterious reason this lousy, nearly insane movie is back again playing in several chain and independent theatres. We should all remember that Steven Mnuchin of Wall Street’s Goldman Sachs is one of the film’s producers, is now Donald Trumps pick as our next Secretary of the Treasury!!! It’s just if you care where your money goes…that’s all. The movie??? Well… Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie. Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Keeping traditional, the winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. December 13 has Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discussing changing techniques in film development. PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. UCSC retiree Lincoln Taiz and Lee Taiz follow Lois and tell us about their new book, “Flora Unveiled” (plant sex).  Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com     

Here’s what they have in Canada…

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES. “WHARVES AND PIERS”

“Often undecided whether to desert a sinking ship for one that might not float, he would make up his mind to sit on the wharf for a day”
, Lord Beaverbrook

“A life spent at the edge of the pier is a life full of regret, a life full of fear.”
Ryan Lilly

“Voyage upon life’s sea, to your own self be true, And, whatever your lot may be, Paddle your own canoe”, Anon.

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on December 7 – 13, 2016

November 30 – December 6, 2016

SANTA CRUZ WHARF AND RAILROAD WHARF 1913. The railroad wharf shown here was gone by 1922. Wharves were a necessity back then for shipping and receiving goods and products by sea. It’s all part of our rich Santa Cruz History that the POW (Protect Our Wharf) group is trying to preserve.                                                     

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

Breaking news!

(Or rather, a piece the Webmistress missed – sorry about that! -G)

THE BIG HOLIDAY PARADE…SATURDAY AT 10 AM.

I’ve been asked to co-emcee the umpteenth annual Santa Cruz Holiday Parade this Saturday morning (Dec. 3)  with the ever popular-effervescent Kim Luke. The Downtown Association creates this great celebration. Together Kim and I will be telling just about everybody about the biggest community parade of the year. It’ll be videotaped by Peter McGettigan and will go on Facebook. Starting at 10am on Pacific Avenue, Kim and I will be at the reviewing stand in front of Forever 21.  The traditional holiday parade is the official kickoff for the winter holidays celebration. Bands, Dancers, Classic Cars, Synchronized Librarians, perhaps even a “Rootbeer Float” one never knows exactly what to expect at the Parade, but you can be sure to expect the whole community to show up and have a great time, and of course, at the end of the parade, Sitting in a horse drawn Victorian Carriage, the man of the hour is…(you know).

Meet you there, stop by and say hello.

DATELINE November 28, 2016

LOCAL CHANGES. Thanks in no small way to the hard work of Gillian Greensite our Santa Cruz City Council has backed off from approving the Pier 23- Disneyland tourist plans for our municipal wharf. If you want real details on Gillian’s long involvement,  check out her BrattonOnline articles in the April 14, 2016, October 24, 2016 and November 11, 2016 editions of BrattonOnline. Just go to the right hand margin and click on the proper archives. It’s a wonderful example of what Gary Patton and other activists always say about getting involved in your government’s actions. POW (Protect Our Wharf)

BEFORE THE FLOOD FILM. This Leonardo DeCaprio film is showing for free at Cabrilho College Thursday Dec 1st at 5 p.m. in the 450 Forum Building. There’ll be a discussion after the screening.
NEW ZEALAND EARTHQUAKE. This one just happened November 14, 2016. I’m still not quite sure how our elected officials have prepared us for OUR next one?

Because those crazy making election results aren’t final yet and because it looks like Measure D will barely pass there is a MEASURE D meeting of the Campaign For Sensible Transportation group on Saturday December 3rd at 10:30 a.m. to plan future actions. Get in touch with them for the location. Ted Benhari of FRIENDS OF THE NORTH COAST is concerned that President Obama will proclaim Cotoni – Coast Dairies just in the nick of his time as president. But just maybe the Friends ONC worries and concerns have gotten through to those powers that be? Watch that space. Richard Gladstone sends us a great and alternative concept of dealing with the President-elect Check it out. Gene Sharp talks about humor, ridicule and the world changing effects tactics not involve turning the other cheek work best.

SANTA CRUZ & SAN JOSE EAST? John Koster and Jeffrey Smedberg sent this emergency warning…

Stop Outsider Big Money speculator/developers from their continuing takeover of the Westside!  Our City Council already granted the Patel dynasty a Marriot brand hotel but they’re not satisfied and are now proposing to tear down the hacienda style Sunset Inn motel at Mission & Swift to put up a Hilton franchise highrise – just 2 blocks away from their other coup!!  Santa Cruz is being turned into San Jose East before our very eyes.  The working class locals don’t need it and don’t want it.  There is nothing in it for residents but a rapidly eroding quality of life. STAND UP AND FIGHT BACK by attending the public hearing at 7pm on Thursday, December 1st in the City Council Chambers, 809 Center St.  Come prepared to talk it down in responsible civic fashion!

EXEUNT GREY BEARS. This is the 43rd year that the Grey Bears has created the Holiday Dinner at the Civic Auditorium. I arranged,  staged  and supervised the entertainment and emceed the event for the next 42 years. Aside from getting mass produced, pre-packaged dinners from The Santa Cruz Diner instead of making each dish by hand with care and taste the present management has become too much to bear. I quit this year. Thinking back to Marcia Margolin, Thelma Dalman, Gary Denny, Kristina Mailliard, and especially Lynda Francis the ol’ Grey Bears just ain’t what it usta be. I miss them.

WESTERN SERVICE WORKERS BACK AGAIN. It’s holiday time and that means that the Western Service Workers Association is on Pacific Avenue trying to entice possible joiners and soliciting money. The WSWA has a very shady history look them up here and see what you think. From Local Wiki  … https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Labor_Federation . It says, “Western Service Workers Association (WSWA) is an organization dedicated to providing cooperative assistance and networking for low-income workers. They always welcome donations and volunteers. The group is an entity of The National Labor Federation (NATLFED), and the credibility of the WSWA has been called into question locally. While many volunteers for the organization will describe the help they have given members of the community, citing food donations to individuals and various ‘counseling’ services offered, critics of the organization question the manner in which the WSWA is funded, and how efficiently their services are carried out. One blog lists the organization as a political cult“. If you want to help the less fortunate go for The Salvation Army or better yet support and of the huge list of our local non-profits that work so hard.

“AN ABUNDANCE OF CAUTION.”

You can fight city hall but it takes effort and training. Close to the witching hour on  Tuesday November 22nd. the Santa Cruz city council voted unanimously to send the Wharf  Master Plan (WMP) back to staff for a complete Environmental Impact Report (EIR). Such a process could take up to a year. One question of interest is what did it take to achieve such a reversal of plans? A more important question in my mind is why does the city council not do the legal and right thing in the first place? Citizens have to go to extraordinary lengths to force staff and city council to follow the rules.

Indicative of a desire to get the WMP approved and out of the way as quickly as possible, mayor Cynthia Mathews and city Manager Martin Bernal had placed the item last on a packed evening agenda.  Those of us waiting to speak sat through 3 hours of public testimony and council deliberation on cuts to publicly funded social services such as child-care and another hour on the proposal to eliminate parking for Accessory Dwelling Units if they are built within a half mile of a bus stop. Both are serious and weighty issues. Around 11 pm, staff switched seats and the Wharf Master Plan deliberations began. Noting the late hour, senior economic development staff, Norm Daly offered to deliver a shortened version of his presentation. The Mayor urged him to deliver the long version. When that was over and the time had moved to around 11:30 the Mayor addressed the public and asked how many wanted to speak. Seeing about ten hands, she informed us we could have a minute and a half each. A few groans of protest at this short shrift for public comment were registered and ignored. We kept to our time limits and all expressed opposition to the WMP and urged council to send it back for an EIR. The last speaker was the Wharf manager who waxed enthusiastic support for the Plan. When his buzzer sounded signaling the end of his allotted time the Mayor urged him to finish his thought. Which he did, adding many more thoughts for many more minutes until some of us in exasperation called out “unfair!” Such is the bias at city hall.

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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TREATED WASTEWATER INTO OUR WATER SUPPLY…IT’S WHAT YOU CAN’T SEE THAT CAN BE DANGEROUS

It bothered me recently when Soquel Creek Water District Project Leader, Ms. Schumacher held up a clear glass bottle of transparent advanced treated sewage water and claimed it was pure.  “Pure Water Soquel” is the name for the proposed project by the District to inject treated sewage water directly into the area’s drinking water supply to stop salt water advancing inland, due to over 30 years of overdraft.  The water in the bottle was clear…but as we all know, it’s what you CAN’T see that is dangerous.

I have been thinking alot about Soquel Creek Water District’s preferred plan to solve the critical groundwater overdraft problem in our area.   I have recently spent a couple of Saturday mornings at the Cabrillo College Farmer’s Market talking with people about the idea of pressure injecting treated sewage water directly into the aquifer….and asking them to sign a petition to the Santa Cruz MidCounty Groundwater Agency to put the matter to ballot vote before all who depend on the Purisima Aquifer for safe drinking water.

Many people are concerned about the issue of removing a myriad of pharmaceuticals from the water before it gets injected into the aquifer and potentially contaminating everyone’s water.  Many people who are not customers of Soquel Creek Water District and therefore are unable to vote on the Board of Directors for that agency would very much like to have a say in what Soquel Creek Water District proposes to do that will affect the entire region’s water supply.

We all need to contact Soquel Creek Water District (www.soquelcreekwater.org) with our concerns and insist that all users of the aquifer be allowed to vote by ballot on whether or not the District should be allowed to inject the treated sewage water directly into our water supply.  In my opinion, we also need to insist on a temporary moratorium to reduce the rate of advancing seawater inland that will cause irreversible damage to the aquifer and destroy the area’s water supply.  Other area municipalities are taking this responsible action, as was reported in “The Mercury News” July 21, 2016 (page B1).

There are many reasons to question the wisdom of the injection quick-fix.  Various sources cite problems with advanced tertiary wastewater treatment, mostly concerning pharmaceuticals in the waste stream.  There is an excellent list of research abstracts on the matter here, showing some of the research results.  The print is small, but  you can get a good overview of what the current research shows.  In terms of pharmaceuticals, we need to be cautious.

click here to continue (link expands, click again to collapse)

~Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website… November 27,2016

#332 INSTEAD OF TYPING, TALK

Otis R. Taylor, Jr., who writes an “East Bay” column for the San Francisco Chronicle, has this advice for all of us:

“This is a shorthand way to make an important point about our politics today – and the politics we need to return to in days to come. Politics, Taylor is saying, properly understood, is not something we can practice in a “virtual” world. Politics is the way we create a “real” world, the world in which we most immediately reside, and that’s where our political activities need to take place. We need actually to talk to people, not just sign petitions and send messages over the Internet. To be an effective political participant, in other words, it is not enough to post to Facebook (or to sign a MoveOn petition, or to write a blog – and I do take Taylor’s advice personally).

What is required is real action in the real world:

  • Get drenched by the water cannons at Standing Rock.
  • Show up personally on the Capitol Mall, at the Inauguration protest.
  • Hit the streets with those protesting the next U.S. military adventure.
  • Actually attend the meetings of the City Council and the Board of Supervisors during which our elected representatives are making the crucial decisions about the future shape and character of our local community. Speak up! Watching it all go down on the government channel, and firing off an email to the Board or Council is not sufficient.
  • Organize or join a political group. Meet each week!  

A genuine and healthy politics takes place in the real world, and involves actual human beings

Taylor’s column is worth reading – and maybe you can get through the Chronicle’s paywall and actually read it. The link I have provided will get you to the full text, providing you aren’t stopped for being a Chronicle non-subscriber. But if you do get blocked by the pay wall, one line sums it up: INSTEAD OF TYPING, TALK!”

Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents individuals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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HIDDEN VALLEY ORCHESTRA. The Hidden Valley String Orchestra lives in Panetta’s valley near Carmel. All strings and no conductor!! Artistic Directors are Stewart Robertson and Roy Malan. They’ll be playing a concert here titled “Rule, Britannia!” . It’s a matinee of English Music by Parry, Elgar, Vaughn Williams, & Ireland featuring the Hidden Valley String Orchestra. It’ll happen Sunday, December 4, 2016 at 2:30pm with an afternoon Tea Reception to Follow. It’ll be at the Peace United Church at 900 High Street, Santa Cruz. Tickets Available at HiddenValleyMusic.org  it’s a rare chance to hear them in our neck of the woods.

CLASSICAL DeCINZO. DeCinzo takes a look at this country’s original immigration issues. Look down below a screen or two.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Climate Warming Hoax” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Set sail for adventure this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com), with Disney’s newest girl-powered cartoon feature, Moana. (Just don’t call her “Princess.”) Sunny, beachy, and full of the tropical colors, mythology, and folklore of the Pacific Islands, it’s the perfect antidote to the winter blahs!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.  

NOCTURNAL ANIMALS. Jake Gyllenhaal, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon and Laura Linney are simply perfect in their lead roles in this intelligent, puzzling, tense thriller. It wowed them at the Cannes Film Fest and it’s an impressive job of film making by director Tom Ford who knows what he’s doing. Jake and Amy are divorced, he writes a book based on their relationship that’s only half true. Plenty of violence, suspense, and a plot that will keep you 100% involved…that’s rare nowadays. Go see it ASAP.

HACKSAW RIDGE. Another extra bloody, super hero film from Mel Gibson.  A World War II Okinawa battle film about a Seventh Day Adventist (true story) who wouldn’t touch or carry a gun and rescued 75 wounded soldiers under extra heavy gunfire. Maybe too bloody, probably too goofy a hero, and yet…the battle scenes are some of the best I’ve ever seen onscreen. Go only if you like well made films that are over the top violent.

ALLIED. Gee, I thought that Brad Pitt was leaving Angelina Jolie because he fell in love with Marion Cotillard his co-star in this 1942 Casablanca war and spy semi-thriller. Not many thrills or mystery or surprises…it’s mostly just a pretty WWII Casablanca wanna be Hollywood movie. After I found out that Brad and Angelina were still together there was no way to remember anything about this movie. 😉

MOONLIGHT. For starters Moonlight  has a 98 % on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me who really not only enjoyed this tale of drugs, gangs, and love, but people who like deep, serious films loved it too. Set in Miami, this sharp, delicate, brilliant story of a Black man’s life is told in three parts. It’s best not to read too much about the plot and just watch with wonder as it unfolds. You’ve never seen a film like this one. Please go and go quickly. Landmark may not keep it too long if we don’t support it.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

LOVING. A great and inspiring true story of Richard and Mildred Loving and how and why their racially mixed marriage were convicted in 1958 and went all the way to the Supreme Court in 1967 and won!! Ruth Negga plays the Black American wife and Joel Edgerton is the dull, stoic, mechanic husband. It’s a fine film, and it’s sterile, lacking human-ness, or reasons why they love each other. It’s even inspiring, involves two well meaning jerk attorneys from the ACLU and once again…it’s just not very heart-felt.

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

BLEED FOR THIS. An almost exact copy of a Sylvester Stallone Hollywood boxing movie…except most of this movie is true. Miles Teller who was great in Whiplash can only go so far portraying a real human who was nothing like him.  Poor and young boxer gets in a car accident, wears a halo neck brace and is told he’ll never walk or fight again. Well of course he does just that. And being a boxing movie,(and real life) he even wins the fight. Only if you’re a boxing fan should you go see this. And how about that Andre Ward decision over Sergey Kovalev???

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and We get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake. Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

AMERICAN PASTORAL. A very, very poor adaption of Philip Roth’s Pulitzer winning book. Save your money and time, and read the book again. A fine cast with Ewan McGregor (also directed it) Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning (now older and much less entrancing) and a stiff, unfeeling naration by David Strathairn. The acting by all concerned is shockingly bad. The fake accents don’t work. Too many lines are shouted not emoted, the entire film lacks believable love or feelings.

THE ACCOUNTANT & DONALD TRUMP MONEY. For some mysterious reason this lousy, nearly insane movie is back again playing in several chain and independent theatres. We should all remember that Steven Mnuchin one of the film’s producers, is now and has been Finance Chair of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. It’s just if you care where your money goes…that’s all. The movie??? Well… Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie. Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Minutes after that, author and historian Sandy Lydon returns to talk about his future historical adventures. Keeping traditional, the winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. December 13 has Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discussing changing techniques in film development. PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. UCSC retiree Lincoln Taiz and Lee Taiz follow Lois and tell us about their new book, “Flora Unveiled” (plant sex)  Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com     

So, lately I’ve been binge watching all these DIY tips and tricks, how to get organized, genius life hacks, etc. At some point, these will start happening by osmosis, right? Right?!

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.  ‘EARTHQUAKES”

“Revolution is as unpredictable as an earthquake and as beautiful as spring. It’s coming is always a surprise, but its nature should not be”,  Rebecca Solnit
“You can no more win a war than you can win an earthquake”, Jeannette Rankin
“Playing polo is like trying to play golf during an earthquake”, Sylvester Stallone
“Stupidity is an elemental force for which no earthquake is a match”,  Karl Kraus

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on November 30 – December 6, 2016

November 22 – 28, 2016

SANTA CRUZ MUNICIPAL WHARF. Taken about 1910, this great photo shows just how much our wharf was used and needed by our early Italian residents. It’s only part of the wharf’s history that would be erased forever if our City Council succeeds in modernizing and “going tourist” with it.           

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE November 21, 2016

KLAUS NONI – TOTAL ECLIPSE. Tom Louagie sent this clip. Sort of a mix of Hedwig meeting Joel Grey from Cabaret.
FLYING KARAMAZOV BROTHERS & MR. ROGERS. Good thing the Karamazov’s aren’t still performing on Pacific Avenue, Cynthia Mathews and her trained clubbies would have them arrested.

OUR HISTORIC WHARF, SOCIAL SERVICES CUTBACK & OUR CITY COUNCIL.

It’s too late now but I hope everyone notices that our City Council decisions on making our historic wharf into another San Francisco’s Pier 23 and the secretly planned cutbacks to our social services are happening just AFTER the City Council elections. It’s another maneuever by Mathews and her sycophants to avoid these cruel and unusual political moves. We need to support Martine Watkins and help her avoid Mathews covert manipulations. And of course keep hoping that Sandy Brown’s lead as of “press time” grows and becomes permanent. Chris Krohn and Sandy Brown are wonderfully qualified, intelligent and independent people. Let’s also hope that Chris and Sandy can re-awaken Cynthia Chase’s sense of civic responsibility that she showed so vividly when she was with the Gemma Program helping the very folks who have been so poorly mistreated by the council these last years.

ORGANIZE THE RESISTENCE. Everybody including Community members from many organizations are invited. Especially those that are working for progressive social change with a goal of building a broad coalition to ensure the safety of our targeted populations and take action on the people’s priority issues. The meeting will be Tuesday, December 6, 6:30 pm at the London Nelson Community Center. The Santa Cruz for Bernie committee is organizing it. If you want to get involved…now’s the chance!!! Bernie’s Rousing Address last Wednesday at George Washington University was about the future of our country under a Trump administration.  There were technical difficulties with the live video broadcast, but now you can watch Bernie’s 18 minute speech.”Happy Trump Won” is a 4 minute video by Prince Ea that offers his unusual and ultimately positive perspective on the election.  Click to watch Why I’m Happy Trump Won. To The Students:  Keep Marching!  We’re proud of you! For more info. contact Jeffrey Smedberg:  santacruz4bernie@gmail.com

TRUMP JOKE. Ralph Davila while looking for an excuse to laugh, found this

Ok ..Trump is up late in the White House pacing the halls; the ghost of George Washington appears “Always tell the truth”; Trump feels better and a couple weeks later He is up late at night pacing and the ghost of Teddy Roosevelt appears and says “speak softly and carry a big stick” and Trump feels better for a month but then he’s up late pacing again and this time it’s the ghost of Abraham Lincoln and he says “Relax go see a play”.

WOLFGANG ROSENBERG, JIM FERRIS and MIKE FELIX. Mike Felix was an old friend from my 1960 KCBS days in San Francisco. Jim Ferris was a film veteran, longtime friend and also co-creator of UCSC’s Lifelong Learning community. Wolfgang Rosenberg goes way back in progressive local politics…SCAN, SCRAP, and many more He also gave me his own piece of the Berlin Wall. He was born in Berlin. Their passing leaves much to be missed.

LEE TAIZ QUOTE…Lee points out that here’s a political slogan that needs to be retired immediately:  “Love Trumps Hate.” Presumably, most people waving this around mean that love is in some sense more powerful than hate.  Unfortunately, the slogan can also be read as a endorsement of what, in fact, motivates many people, as demonstrated in the last election.  They really DO love Trump’s hate.  That is…”We love Trumps Hate” They don’t need to be admonished to keep it up.

ON BECOMING A CITIZEN.

Six months ago I decided to apply for American citizenship. After 41 years living in Santa Cruz as a permanent resident, there was no compelling reason to apply. My green card could be renewed every decade and folks seem to enjoy my Australian identity. “I just love your accent, where are you from?” I hear frequently and have fun responding, “I’m from Santa Cruz. I love your accent too!” No person of Mexican heritage ever hears that compliment.

So why apply to be a citizen after so long? The reasons built gradually. At first it was a simple choice between renewing my green card and applying for citizenship. Both involve filling out long forms, paying money and driving to an unpleasant Immigration office.  The advantages of citizenship are few but significant. As a permanent resident I am unable to vote despite paying taxes for 41 years (wasn’t there a revolution over that?), am unable to run for local political office, cannot serve on a jury although I can join the Armed Forces and can be deported if I am arrested. And then there was Trump. Despite the unlikely scenario at the time of his ever being elected President, citizenship would be a protection against the unimaginable.

Being a life-long procrastinator, I left it until the last day to fill out the 21-page application. That done, I sat back to wait for the USCIS (United States Citizen and Immigration Services) wheels to turn.  When I had to go to Salinas to have fingerprints taken for a background check, I was given a CD and booklet to study for the civics part of the future interview. That sparked a keen interest in American history. I checked out many books from the Garfield Park library on the revolutionary war period. White Australia had convicts but white America had men with the crazy notion that they could defeat the British Navy! And who pretended slavery didn’t exist as they fought for the rights of all men.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading about Jefferson being told to go away and draft the Declaration of Independence, who sulked when it was edited to “we hold these truths to be self-evident.” I started to view citizenship as something more significant.

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~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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THE TOWER IS GONE BUT THE WALL REMAINS…NEW WELL FOR APTOS VILLAGE IN 10 MONTHS.

Pacific Engineering completed drilling work on Soquel Creek Water District’s new Granite Way Well at the Aptos Village Project this week, and the drilling tower is now gone.  That was fast.  District engineer Mr. Taj Dufour told the Board last Tuesday that the drilling was complete at about 625′, roughly 100′ less than had been planned due to unanticipated dense geologic material that did not bear water.  The 20′-high sound wall remains.   Residents are really glad those walls were there during the drilling process.  According to District staff, their e-blast features a time-lapse documentation of the drilling process, but I have  been unable to access that information. Maybe you can.   The new well will come online, supplying water for the District at about the same time that the Aptos Village Project Phase I New Leaf Market opens…a coincidence?  HMMMMM…..

Well, last week’s Soquel Creek Water District Board meeting saw a new policy enacted regarding Water Demand Offset credits for new development.  Now, anyone wanting a new service connection will have to wait in a queu for the District’s limited number of offset credits available via toilet replacements and fee payments.  Now, each developer may purchase 0.5 Acre foot credit (that will be what most single family dwellings require) when their project comes to the head of the list of applicants, at which time they pay $27,500 (that is at the $55,000/Acrefoot offset fee rate), and half of that will go to toilet rebates (replacing toilets with newer 0.8 gal/flush models) and half to long-term conservation projects that the District will come up with later.  There are not any right now.  If a project is larger than 0.5 Acre feet, the developer can go solicit toilet replacements or come up with another creative project to save water.  Sounds complicated?  Maybe…and it will require considerable District staff verification, which staff admits has been a problem in the past.  I still vote for a moratorium until a reliable supplemental water supply gets put in place, but the Board doesn’t like hearing that.  By the way, the Stanford geo-physical imaging researcher who mapped the saltwater intrusion of the area also recommends a moratorium.

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~Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website…

#318 SEALE OF APPROVAL.

Bobby Seale was a cofounder of the Black Panther Party. For many political activists of the 1960s and 1970s, and I am including myself in that number, Seale was (and remains) an inspiring figure. It’s strange to find an interview with Bobby Seale on a website whose www internet address is “modern luxury,” but so I did. The interview was printed in San Francisco magazine, which is  one of those semi-glossy items handed out to visitors to San Francisco who stay at one or another of the City’s upscale hotels.

Bobby Seale is still giving out good advice. Particularly good advice, I’d say, for those who do not routinely stay in upscale hotels, and whose lives cannot fairly be called ones of “modern luxury.” What should we do about politics? That is what the interview was really all about. And Bobby Seale has a pretty simple answer, referencing what he and other members of the Black Panther Party were trying to do way back when: 

So the next move is to become part of the government? My objective was to get thousands of people across the country elected into political office to replace the right-wingers or racists in those seats. There was an objective behind the idea of getting elected: to change the racist laws manifested in city charters. That’s where I was coming from when I created the Black Panther Party. The young Black Lives Matter movement people have got to see this: You’re not going to get community control of the police until you get more and more control of some of these political seats. 

Do you think BLM activists should run as mainstream candidates or in third parties? You should run as whatever the heck you want. You just need a relevant agenda to the people’s needs. You have to be there where the laws are made. Starting at the city level, then the county level, and, as much as possible, at the state level and all the way to the federal level.

Bobby Seale’s advice is easy to sum up. Run as “whatever the heck you want,” as long as you have a “relevant agenda to the people’s needs.” The basic concept is really basic. Take over the government! Get more and more control of some of these political seats…”

(Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. Big Turkey Day!!! Scroll below and chack it out!!

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “moral victory” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “It’s not the kind of musical that comes with show tunes and a chorus line. But Jewel Theatre Company, and a great cast of singers, make an exhilarating show out of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Next To Normal, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). The exuberance of this production is what live theatre is all about.” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

LOVING. A great and inspiring true story of Richard and Mildred Loving and how and why their racially mixed marriage were convicted in 1958 and went all the way to the Supreme Court in 1967 and won!! Ruth Negga plays the Black American wife and Joel Edgerton is the dull, stoic, mechanic husband. It’s a fine film, and it’s sterile, lacking human-ness, or reasons why they love each other. It’s even inspiring, involves two well meaning jerk attorneys from the ACLU and once again…it’s just not very heart-felt.

BLEED FOR THIS. An almost exact copy of a Sylvester Stallone Hollywood boxing movie…except most of this movie is true. Miles Teller who was great in Whiplash can only go so far portraying a real human who was nothing like him.  Poor and young boxer gets in a car accident, wears a halo neck brace and is told he’ll never walk or fight again. Well of course he does just that. And being a boxing movie,(and real life) he even wins the fight. Only if you’re a boxing fan should you go see this. And how about that Andre Ward decision over Sergey Kovalev???

FANTASTIC BEASTS AND WHERE TO FIND THEM. The first Harry Potter spinoff from J.K. Rowling, and it’s only the first of four more Beast movies planned!! Eddie Redmayne and Colin Farrell are the only actors we know of. In this very dark, depressing, beast filled mistake. Set in New York City in 1926 it lacks any semblence of the charm, magic, character or even cuteness of Harry Potter’s world of Hogwarts and vicinity. Special effects produced beast like snakes, octopii, Dragons, Hydras, and more than 85 different types according to Rowland’s book. Redmayne and Farrell aren’t given a chance to be likable or empathetic. You probably catch my drift…don’t go.

MOONLIGHT. For starters Moonlight  has a 98 % on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me who really not only enjoyed this tale of drugs, gangs, and love, but people who like deep, serious films loved it too. Set in Miami, this sharp, delicate, brilliant story of a Black man’s life is told in three parts. It’s best not to read too much about the plot and just watch with wonder as it unfolds. You’ve never seen a film like this one. Please go and go quickly. Landmark may not keep it too long if we don’t support it.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and We get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.

AMERICAN PASTORAL. A very, very poor adaption of Philip Roth’s Pulitzer winning book. Save your money and time, and read the book again. A fine cast with Ewan McGregor (also directed it) Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning (now older and much less entrancing) and a stiff, unfeeling naration by David Strathairn. The acting by all concerned is shockingly bad. The fake accents don’t work. Too many lines are shouted not emoted, the entire film lacks believable love or feelings.

THE ACCOUNTANT & DONALD TRUMP MONEY. For some mysterious reason this lousy, nearly insane movie is back again playing in several chain and independent theatres. We should all remember that Steven Mnuchin one of the film’s producers, is now and has been Finance Chair of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. It’s just if you care where your money goes…that’s all. The movie??? Well… Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie. Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Christina Waters guests November 22 talking about her new book, “inside the flame“. After Christina, Sean Michael Conley discusses genealogy and their local chapter functions. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Minutes after that,  author and historian Sandy Lydon returns to talk about his future historical adventures. Keeping traditional, the winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. December 13 has Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discussing changing techniques in film development. PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. UCSC retiree Lincoln Taiz and Lee Taiz follow Lois and tell us about their new book, “Flora Unveiled” (plant sex)  Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com     

This guy is brilliant! I can’t stop laughing at some of these 🙂

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES. “REPUBLICANS

“In this world of sin and sorrow there is always something to be thankful for; as for me, I rejoice that I am not a Republican”,  H. L. Mencken

“I have been thinking that I would make a proposition to my Republican friends… that if they will stop telling lies about the Democrats, we will stop telling the truth about them”,  Adlai E. Stevenson

“Coming to terms with Donald Trump as the Republican nominee is like being told you have Stage 1 or Stage 2 cancer. You know you’ll probably survive, but one way or the other, there’s going to be a lot of throwing up”,  Christopher Buckley

“The only difference between the Republican and Democratic parties is the velocities with which their knees hit the floor when corporations knock on their door. That’s the only difference”,  Ralph Nader

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
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BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on November 22 – 28, 2016

November 14 – 20, 2016

TIM EAGAN’S PROFOUND STATEMENT.

Tim Eagan has been drawing cartoons for over 30 years. His Deep Cover cartoon SUCH AS THIS ONE  (see above) have ripped our politics apart since 1994. This “Slinkin’ Monument” (my title) is one of his very best. BrattonOnline is very proud and happy to carry every Eagan cartoon possible, every week.

DATELINE November 14, 2016

WHAT NOW? Hours and hours watching most of the news channels secretly hoping and believing that something was wrong. There had been a mistake, or maybe something big and positive would happen…but NO. We have to live with the fact that all the hopes we had when Obama was elected are dead, over with, finished and America is in reality, just the way we never like to admit.  Looks like Chris Krohn was elected to serve with Cynthia Mathews on the City Council, what’s that about? That’s a genuine tough job he has and he’s got a lot of support and he’s is one of our few citizens who can do it. Keeping the death penalty in California…why? There’s 14,500 Trump supporters in Santa Cruz, and we have to admit that too. Rick Longinotti tells us there are 10’s of thousands of votes still to be counted and not until November 14 will we know the final count  on Widening Highway 1.

PAUL McCARTNEY AT THE WHITE HOUSE. Watch this awe-inspiring 2010 performance at the White House. Stay with it to the end…it’s a touching tribute to the Barack Obama presidency we won’t forget!

BOYCOTT TRUMP SUPPORTING BUSINESSES. If you care about whether you support businesses that support Donald Trump, and in case you believe boycotting sends a message check out this list. Coors, Home Depot, Pep Boys, Nascar, Hobby Lobby, Fairmont Hotels, Formula One, Bally’s Casino, UFC, Icahn, Swissotel, and plenty more

Go here to read the Arbiter News about boycotting…  and also.. Boycott Trump: A list of businesses to avoid

HAPPY HAPPENING!!!  Leaving the Del Mar theatre after seeing Moonlight (you should too!) I heard a nutty street duo calling themselves the Kangaroo Rat Music. They consist of only an accordion and xylophone and are just excellent. What really drew me to listen and watch them for a very long time was the first number I heard them playing….drove me crazy, I knew that “tune”  I’d heard it a million times, and could almost sing along. What was it? Where’d I heard it before? I had to ask them…’ twas the theme from “Game Of Thrones”!!! Jeez. I could say only in Santa Cruz would you hear a street group playing “Game Of Thrones” but they probably tour a lot.

SELF PUBLISHED BOOKS. Ny REVIEW. “More than half of the books published annually in this country are self- published (400,000)” says a letter in the latest issue of New York Review of Books. The letter goes on to complain that the self published books are rarely given any Library of Congress numbering or cataloging. They are also rarely reviewed by main American reviewing journals. It says that the “houses” that help these self publishers should offer that official cataloging, and the Library Of Congress should pursue these books and make them universally accessible. Just a thought, because I’m almost ready to write my book!

GENOCIDE OF OUR LOCAL NATIVE INDIAN POPULATION. The latest issue of the New York Review of Books (Nov. 24) has a review of a new book “An American Genocide: The United States and The California Indian Catastrophe 1846-1873”  by UCSC Historian Benjamin Madley. Details of times, places, names and statistics on the murder/genocide killing of native peoples in Northern Central California between 1846 and 1873. Mass killings by Gold miners, U.S Military State Militia, small town posses and ordinary citizens who hunted natives on weekends. UCSC Historian Martin Rizzo knows Benjamin Madley and is trying to get him to come to Santa Cruz. Maybe we can create a book signing and a guest shot on Universal Grapevine. Even Berkeley’s famed historian Alfred L. Kroeber (Ishi’s “friend” ) had a hand in this tragedy. Amazon books says, “Between 1846 and 1873, California’s Indian population plunged from perhaps 150,000 to 30,000. Benjamin Madley is the first historian to uncover the full extent of the slaughter, the involvement of state and federal officials, the taxpayer dollars that supported the violence, indigenous resistance, who did the killing, and why the killings ended. This deeply researched book is a comprehensive and chilling history of an American genocide”.

LEAF BLOWERS & MORE INFO. Jim Elmore sent this link to give us some info and statistics re the dangers of living near and using gas leaf blowers. http://www.nonoise.org/quietnet/cqs/home.htm . Back in 2009 Jim sent a letter to Cynthia Mathews our nearly permanent mayor, and all of our then City Council  … it said…

10 October 2009
City of Santa Cruz
809 Center Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Attn: Cynthia Matthews, Mayor
Re: Noise and Air Pollution – Leaf Blowers

Dear Ms. Matthews:

As a thirty-four year resident of the city, I am dismayed by the noise and air pollution that has overtaken us in the form of gas powered leaf blowers and lawn mowers. I am now retired and one of the projects I am working on is a book: peace and quiet enhances my productivity yet almost every day and sometimes several times a day, that peace is disturbed by gas-powered noise and pollution makers. So, my ox is being gored, but in the bigger picture, this is what is happening to all of us.

Bad for the environment, bad for people, bad for the landscape, bad for the community. My Santa Cruz is a leader in so many ways; we need to act on this pollution problem.

I’m sure you’re knowledgeable regarding this subject but I would appreciate it if you would bring up the matter at a council meeting if it hasn’t already been mentioned.

Following is something I found on the net—Citizens for a Quieter Sacramento—which gives so many reasons for abolishing leaf blowers. Ref: http://www.nonoise.org/quietnet/cqs/leafblow.htm. Please read the section where: Grandmother Proves Rake and Broom as Fast as Leaf Blowers.

We re-landscaped our front yard four years ago and I found that the landscaping crew that we hired to maintain our yard used a blower which did nothing but blow the leaves elsewhere and remove the “gorilla hair” that was protecting the plants and kept the moisture in the ground. We asked them to stop using it; if they needed to clean the walkway, please use a broom.

Thank  you for your attention to this matter.     Sincerely, James R. Ellmore.

As we can guess nothing was done or has been done by our city council.  Jim added last week… “Maybe something will happen this time. In our case, we have not allowed them ever since we started having had periodic gardeners; they use brooms and rakes.  I did buy an battery-powered leaf blower but they ended up not using it.  There was resistance at first; “I like to do a great job and leave it very clean and without using a blower, it is not as efficient and will take more time.” My answer was that everything does not have to be perfect, nature is messy.

“DON’T MORPH THE WHARF!”

The Wharf Master Plan is headed to council. Next Tuesday, November 22nd, the current council will vote on whether to approve the Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND) which the city had to revise and re-circulate for a month due to the failure of its original MND to adequately study the impact of this massive project on nesting birds at the wharf. This inadequacy had to be pointed out by members of the public.

The revision acknowledges that some nesting birds exist and others perch on the wharf but vastly understates the documented 117 bird species that have been sighted at the wharf, 69 species in the past 4 months alone. Similarly lacking is a comprehensive study of marine mammals and only a sketchy mitigation for their protection. For example, if no marine mammals are sighted for 15 minutes then pile driving can commence. The MND makes no mention of Humpback whales which a group of us watched breach and spout within a few hundred yards of the wharf last week. The inadequacy of the MND to study the environmental impacts of the planned construction and changes is clear. What is less clear is how the city council will vote. Why is it that the city of Santa Cruz stands out like a sore thumb when it comes to proper environmental review of its major proposed projects?  The city of Santa Cruz also stands out in its dismissive attitude towards the public. Consider that the city of Capitola, also poised to make changes to its wharf, reassured the public that they will be listened to before any changes are proposed and that no major changes are contemplated. By contrast, the city of Santa Cruz obtained federal funds to the tune of a million dollars from the Department of Commerce for tsunami relief (the tsunami had no impact on the wharf) and gave that to a San Francisco design firm that developed the Wharf Master Plan in exchange for the million dollars. Only the inside circle had input. The public was and is still largely unaware of how dramatically the Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf will be changed if this project is approved.

With little if any publicity, responses to the original MND were few. By contrast a petition opposing the makeover of the wharf and calling for an EIR has gathered 631 signatures in just 3 days. This seems a more reliable measure of public sentiment than the responses from insider stakeholders. You can find the petition and sign it here.

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~ Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild.

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WATER AND TRAFFIC…..GET EDUCATED AND GET ACTIVE!

Well, last week brought many surprises to us all, but the upshot is that citizens simply must wake up and get active in community issues.  That’s what Ms. Medea Benjamin said as well, at her inspiring talk last Saturday at Louden Nelson Center.  Many thanks to the local organizations that made her visit possible. So, what about water issues in our beautiful Santa Cruz County?  The state has declared our area “Critical Overdraft”, meaning that the local water suppliers have been pumping out more water than is being replenished in the Purisima Aquifer, and now the salt water of the ocean is creeping inland and potentially destroying the water supply.  Does that make you nervous?  It should.  

Last week, Soquel Creek Water District officials Mr. Ron Duncan and Mr. Bruce Daniels made a presentation to the Santa Cruz County Planning Commission to help them understand the critical problem the District faces in supplying new development with water.  They hold great hope for the plan to inject treated sewage water into the aquifer to push back the advancement of salt water.  They also talked a bit about the possible river water transfers from Santa Cruz to the District’s areas of Capitola, Aptos and Soquel.  

Well, I have many questions about those plans and maybe you do, as well.  How will the injection sites be monitored?  It is, afterall, against state law to pump the treated sewage water back out of the aquifer any sooner than two months after injection.  What about pharmaceuticals in the waste stream that cannot be tested for or removed?  What about the difference in chemistry between the treated water (hydrogen peroxide is typically used as a disinfectant but is extremely reactive and was responsible for the arsenic spikes in the water Orange County supplied to customers after injecting treated sewage water).  What about the difference in water chemistry between the north coast creeks and San Lorenzo River water that would, the District’s studies show, potentially cause problems within the supply pipes and possibly customer plumbing?  Fresno is in serious trouble right now, said Soquel Creek Water District Engineer Mr. Taj Dufour at a recent Board meeting, because of this very issue (he was surprised it had not hit the media).

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~(Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes.

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website… Saturday, November 12, 2016

#317… A FACEBOOK FIASCO.

The San Jose Mercury News ran a story in its Sunday, November 6, 2016 edition that was titled, “Facebook expansion approved.” Here is a brief excerpt from the article: 

Menlo Park has approved Facebook expansion plans that will add 6,550 employees, roughly 1 million square feet of office space and a 200-room hotel along the Bayfront Expressway. 

While some residents and city officials expressed concern about the toll on housing and traffic such a large expansion could take, the City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved the 301-309 Constitution Drive project. It also approved an agreement that calls for Facebook to either build 20 below-market-rate units or pay $6.5 million in fees into a city fund dedicated for such housing. So, 6,550 new employees and 20 new housing units that an average or below-average income person could afford. 

This is happening everywhere, including in my own home town of Santa Cruz, where ordinary income people are being driven out of their housing because they are outcompeted by persons with Facebook-level salaries. In fact, this decision in Menlo Park will make housing prices worse in Santa Cruz, because some of those new 6,500 Facebook employees will locate here. The Facebook fiasco in Menlo Park will increase the likelihood that the so-called “Corridor Plan,” in Santa Cruz, which proposes to put high-rise housing along every major transportation corridor in the City, will in fact go through. When elected officials try to increase city revenues, without paying any attention to what that means for their existing residents, the result is a disaster for the community. 

Based on the election results in Santa Cruz, on Tuesday, voters in my city haven’t gotten the message”.

(Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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OUR STATE PARKS.  Julie Sidel,  Interpreter 1 for our Santa Cruz Mission State Historic Park wrote BrattonOnline… “Let’s revisit that train stop and straighten out our parks history! “Teddy Roosevelt did take the train up to the redwoods. The location was the grove that is the center of Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park today. But at that time it was privately owned Welch’s Grove. His comments congratulating Californians on our first state park were directed at California Redwoods State Park, which we know today as Big Basin Redwoods State Park. That is our oldest state park (1902), and the first California state park purchased by tax dollars via legislative authority. (Yosemite had been signed over to California as a park by president Lincoln in 1864. By 1906, it was a National Park, no longer in the state.) Thanks for your photos, your history, and for doing what you do!” Julie Sidel. Thanks Julie.

CLASSICAL DeCINZO. Ever alert DeCinzo exposes the secrets behind shopping for food in Santa Cruz….see below a page or two.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Slinkin Memorial” at the top of the column this special week.  And the webmistress snuck in a favorite from the vaults – this one is from November 2012, just after the previous election. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

MUNCHING WITH MOZART. These free concerts happen the third Thursday of every month. This Thursday 11/17 features…

VIOLIN WITH PIANO. That’s Brian Johnston on Violin and Ben Dorfan playing Piano.

They’ll play…
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) Sonata in B-flat, K. 378. Allegro moderato, Andantino sostenuto e cantabile, Rondeau–Allegro
Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958) The Lark Ascending
Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924) Sicilienne op. 78

Again that’s Thursday, November 17th.  12:10 – 12:50. Santa Cruz Main Library Downtown Branch – Meeting Room

SANTA CRUZ CHAMBER PLAYERS CONCERT NOVEMBER 19, 20. The next concert in their 2016-2017 series is titled “Music That Elevates the Soul“. It features The Black Cedar Trio playing flute, cello and guitar. You’ll hear musics by Bach, Haydn, Takemitsu, Cowell, Gardel, Tan Mi Zi and Hsieh. It happens this SaturdayNov. 19 at 7:30 and Sunday Nov. 20 at 3 p.m. These are good, fun concerts to attend (I’ve been going for decades) informal, all great seating , lus music not often heard around these parts. It’s at the Christ Lutheran Church, 10707 Soquel Dr, In Aptos. Go here for a map and info… http://www.scchamberplayers.org

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Black lives matter in Moonlight, an eloquent coming-of-age drama that explores issues of race, culture, and love in unexpected ways, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). Also, join me in a fond farewell to the one and only Leon Russell, whose rockin’ boogie-woogie piano provided much of the soundtrack to my misspent youth. Rock on, Leon!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

MOONLIGHT. For starters Moonlight  has a 98 % on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me who really not only enjoyed this tale of drugs, gangs, and love, but people who like deep, serious films loved it too. Set in Miami, this sharp, delicate, brilliant story of a Black man’s life is told in three parts. It’s best not to read too much about the plot and just watch with wonder as it unfolds. You’ve never seen a film like this one. Please go and go quickly. Landmark may not keep it too long if we don’t support it.

ARRIVAL. Amy Adams has always been an excellent actor and she’s even better in this pretty sophisticated science fiction spellbinder. 11 alien speceships hover around earth just a few feet above ground while Amy and Jeremy Renner attempt to communicate with them. It’s a thoughtful film and it’ll make you wonder just how would anybody relate to aliens (and vice versa) Like the Trump victory the world is in a state of shock over these visitors. No killings, violence or cheap cliches…a fine film. I forgot to add that like so many Special effects films nowadays it is photographed in a very dark style. (Saves money I guess)

AMERICAN PASTORAL. A very, very poor adaption of Philip Roth’s Pulitzer winning book. Save your money and time, and read the book again. A fine cast with Ewan McGregor (also directed it) Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning (now older and much less entrancing) and a stiff, unfeeling naration by David Strathairn. The acting by all concerned is shockingly bad. The fake accents don’t work. Too many lines are shouted not emoted, the entire film lacks believable love or feelings.

THE ACCOUNTANT & DONALD TRUMP MONEY. For some mysterious reason this lousy, nearly insane movie is back again playing in several chain and independent theatres. We should all remember that Steven Mnuchin one of the film’s producers, is now and has been Finance Chair of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. It’s just if you care where your money goes…that’s all. The movie??? Well… Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie. Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

THE HANDMAIDEN….warning…you have to love Asian/Korean subtitled films especially ones directed by Chan-Wook Park before you can enjoy this one. Ever since taking three or more years of film classes from UCSC’s Earl Jackson (now teaching in Korea)I am a complete devotee of films by Chan-Wook Park. The sex, violence, even murder in his films are so unique, so subtle,and sensitive that they take on different meanings. Oldboy, Sympathy for Lady Vengence and Snowpiercer must be seen to be hallowed. This latest masterpiece contains three versions of the same plot. Con-artists out to cheat a wealthy woman of her estate. It has a 94 on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me.

CERTAIN WOMEN. A genuine women’s film with three separate stories going deep inside the frustrations of three or four women as they deal with our society. Laura Dern is a Montana attorney frustrated by the lack of respect in her taking the case of a potentially suididal man. Michelle Williams keeps her family frustrations hidden as she tries to add life, love and a future to her husband and daughter. Kristen Stewart floats and drifts through an insecure part of her life while new actor Lily Gladstone tries to add love, respect and friendship to their tenous relationship. Slow moving, intense, even boring at times, you’ll think about this delicate film lang after it’s over. Kelly Reichardt directed it and once again proves she creates great films unlike any other director.

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and we get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.

DENIAL. A subject like denying the holocaust has about as much relevance as alien kidnappings, the earth is flat, and denying climate change. And this is a very serious film starring Rachel Weisz, Tom Wilkinson (one of his very best roles), and the evil and believable Timothy Spall. Courtroom, Auschwitz, anti-semitism, Adolf Hitler, and it’s all true. It’s full of suspense, and you’ll think a lot about a Trump- run USA.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACK. It’s actually one of the better action –merciless- blood filled- escapist movies. There’s a semblence of a plot that makes even Tom Cruise seem human at times!!! It only got a 39 on Rotten Tomatoes so maybe Cruise’s Scientology friends haven’t gone yet!!! The skimpy plot has maybe a daughter for Cruise, several incredibly manic  mindless,  brutal killings BUT some scenes are very exciting. But you must really this type of film before paying to see it.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. . Nov. 15 has Deborah Muth talking about her new book on Scotts Valley history. Attorney Bob Taren returns that same November 15 to share views on THAT election. Christina Waters guests November 22 talking about her new book. After Christina, Sean Michael Conley discusses genealogy and their local chapter functions. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Minutes after author and historian Sandy Lydon returns to talk about his future historical adventures. Keeping traditional, The winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discusses changing techniques in film development. PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com   
 

Distraction and entertainment. That’s what I’m up for at the moment – how about you?

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.     “ELECTIONS”

“Free election of masters does not abolish the masters or the slaves”,  Herbert Marcuse

“Half of the American people have never read a newspaper. Half never voted for President. One hopes it is the same half”, Gore Vidal.

“When one with honeyed words but evil mind
Persuades the mob, great woes befall the state”, Euripides, Orestes

“Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters”, Abraham Lincoln

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on November 14 – 20, 2016

A PRESIDENT VISITS SANTA CRUZ!!! Teddy Roosevelt came here on May 11, 1903. He  gave a speech on Pacific Avenue and went up to Big Trees to declare it our first California State Park. This is about where The Regal Cinema 9 sits today.                                

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE November 7, 2016

OUR NEXT TRAFFIC SOLUTION? Ignore the narration just watch the diamond pattern traffic flow!!
MYTH CALIFORNIA 1982. I’d never seen this clip…such memories.
DOCTOR STRANGE. Benedict Cumberbatch as we’ve never seen him…plays Dr. Stephen Strange.

TRUMPING OF SANTA CRUZ. Writing this on the Monday before Election Day really makes me wonder just how far to the Right Santa Cruz politics has changed. I’ve been voting here since 1970 and have never seen or heard or read such a negative mess ofTrump – like political happenings. There was much more of the stealing of political signs and the wildly nasty statements on Nextdoor.com.  Back in the day The Santa Cruz Sentinel could be depended upon to attack and zing County Supervisor Gary Patton and Mayor, County Supervisor Mardi Wormhoudt at least once every week and of course there’s last years Sentinel’s low blows to Leonie Sherman. This campaign The Sentinel leveled even more poisonous and lower down attacks on the four city council candidates who promise change in our City Council priorities. We live in a very different divided Democrat oriented community, if we can still call it that.

ANOTHER HISTORICAL MARKER ON WEST CLIFF. What’s with yet another addition to “stuff” along West Cliff Drive. Now they want to add a memorial stone to honor Michael Anthony Sweeney just about where they had that exercise equipment on the much threatened West Cliff. Sweeney seems like he was a fine fellow and was related to Elihu Anthony an early Santa Cruz developer. He developed The Anthony Block at the north end of PacificAvenue and was a buddy of Fred Augustus Hihn. But shouldn’t we have more rigorious rules before we let folks erect their memorials in such a beautiful and scenic location? What about a replica of Fred Swanton’s historic outhouse? How about Charlie Canfield’s first car (bronzed), or Barry Swenson’s horse? Maybe the new City Council could look into this???

EVIL LEAF BLOWERS ALL AROUND US. Roni Shepherd was very kind and shared an article from the Nov. 4 Sants Cruz Sentinel by Kathryn McKenzie. Among other things it said about gas powered leaf blowers… “Somebody has to lead the way to ban leaf blowers,” he wrote. “Just as health organizations led the way restricting smoking using second-hand smoke as the vehicle; it will have to be health organizations that lead the way to banning dust/carcinogenic particle-blowing leaf blowers.” So what’s so bad about leaf blowers? There are three major issues with gas-powered blowers: the pollution, the noise, and the fact they blow particulate matter around that could impact respiratory health. Like any other gasoline powered appliance, leaf blowers spew hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide, but more so in the case of leaf blowers. A 2011 test done by car experts at Edmunds found, amazingly, that a consumer-grade leaf blower emitted more pollutants than a large SUV. The California Air Resources Board concurs, stating that one hour of operating a leaf blower, compared to an average large car, emits 498 times as much hydrocarbons, 49 times as much particulate matter, and 26 times as much carbon monoxide. As for the noise, it’s something no one likes, and in fact could damage your hearing. Leaf blower noise measures 70 to 75 decibels from 50 feet away and higher at a closer range. The World Health Organization recommends levels of 55 decibels or less, and prolonged noise levels over 75 decibels have been found to cause hearing loss.

And then there’s that particulate matter issue. Not only do leaf blowers blow leaves, but also dirt, dust, and whatever tiny bits of things are on the ground and sidewalk. This could include everything from toxins such as lead and pesticides to molds and fungus.

With all of that going on, no wonder that there’s an anti-leaf-blower movement going on across the country. Hundreds of municipalities have banned or restricted the use of gas-powered leaf blowers; much more information is available at Noise Free America, noisefree. org. (Incidentally, Carmelby- the-Sea was one of the first cities in the country to ban leaf blowers — way back in 1975.) I’m about to run out of room for today, but next week I’ll expand more on alternatives to gas-powered blowers and what else can be done to remedy this issue. Read more about Gas blowers at pardonmygarden@att.net

MUDDYING THE WATERS

Transparency in government or the lack thereof is important on a local as well as a national level. The democratic process is fragile and its survival depends on those in power acting with integrity with an informed populace holding them accountable. I had a recent experience with the city that confirms what others have experienced: if you support their agenda all is fine but if you are critical of their agenda, the going is not so smooth. Here is some background on the issue and my experience with negotiating the tangled web of city politics.

The Cowell Water Quality Group (CWG) was formed by city council at the initiative of council member David Terrazas over a year ago to respond to Cowell Beach’s top ranking on Heal The Bay’s Beach Bummer List with an F grade for the past 7 years. In other words, the state mandated water testing during the summer months ranks Cowell Beach as the most polluted in the state. Not good news for a tourist town! While the ranking is appropriate given the water quality data, public perception that the whole beach is a sewer drain is not. People jump to conclusions and incorrectly assume that the outfall from Neary Lagoon is a sewer outfall and everyone has their pet perspective on the source. I understand the city’s frustration with such misinformation and have done my part to clarify for folks the parameters of the problem. I serve on the CWG as the Sierra Club representative. It has been a challenging experience. I have found it frustrating that the CWG group has studiously avoided conducting DNA microbial source testing to determine which species is/are contributing to the high fecal indicator bacteria levels that are limited to the summer months and usually limited to the west side of the wharf up to the east side of the Dream Inn. Rather than taking a scientific approach with multiple DNA source testing that experts would recommend, the group has taken a shotgun approach by assuming that the source of the problem is birds. Months have been wasted on anecdotes and opinions. After a year of such deliberations, the  recommendation to council which received approval, was to spend $50,000 to install stainless steel rigid mesh where the pigeons roost along the entrance and first part of the wharf.  I presented to council the Sierra Club’s position that it would be wiser to conduct DNA source testing prior to allocating dollars on hypotheticals but was ignored. The mesh was installed over the summer and the pigeons moved further down the wharf.

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~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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MORE NEWS ABOUT RANCHO DEL MAR…AND A BIT ABOUT AQUIFER OVERDRAFT STATUS.

I have continued to research the status of the Rancho del Mar Center upgrade status this past week.  I was finally able to speak directly with Mr. Bruce Walton via telephone but did not get much information.  He said Terra Mar Center’s policy is “No Comment”, only stating that the Center’s improvement plans are “a work in progress”.  When I asked about any possible Community meetings in the future, he replied that nothing is currently scheduled (although apparently Supervisor Zach Friend has also inquired about this) because it would not be productive until there is a solid plan to present to the public.  He did say there will be “no wholesale change” in the basic Rancho del Mar Center design, there will be mostly renovations.  He would not discuss any future tenant deals. I would encourage any citizens who are interested in the future plan to contact Mr. Walton to make sure our Community interests stay on Terra Mar Center’s radar:  “Bruce Walton” BWalton@trcretail.com

I also visited the County Planning Department to review files for the two Assessors Parcel Numbers (APN) for the Center: 039-221-11 and 039-221-12.  Anyone can monitor building permit application status at the Santa Cruz County Planning Department website.  At the Assessor’s Office, one is able to access a good deal of information regarding a parcel, such as owner name and address, taxes and assessments. and changes in ownership and reappraisals.  I was amazed to learn that the total 2016-17 property tax assessment for the two lots composing the Rancho del Mar Center total $637,238.57.  One only has to compare that sum with the existing property tax assessment of $12,560.14  for the portion of the Aptos Village Project that is slated to  become home of the New Leaf Market to better understand why the County government is SO anxious to push the Aptos Village Project through.   Once again, folks, just follow the money….

Well, I follow that, but I also like to follow the water issues.  

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~Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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From Gary’s Two Worlds website…

#312 THE LESSER EVIL.    Monday , November 7, 2016

I went to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia last July, as an official delegate for Bernie Sanders. I was an alternate. I wrote about the Convention at length, here in this Two Worlds blog, and I wasn’t very happy about the way the Convention was conducted. I did six different blog postings from Philadelphia, and I invite anyone who hasn’t read them already to go back and take a look at my contemporary comments. My final post can be accessed right here

As a delegate for Bernie Sanders, I was naturally disappointed that he didn’t get the Democratic Party nomination. Other delegates for Bernie Sanders felt the same way, and there has been a fair amount of debate among former Sanders’ delegates about whether or not to support Hillary Clinton. On that question, I’m with Bernie. He’s voting for Hillary. I am, too. Other people have different views, and some of the debate can be sampled in this recent article from In These Times. The article is titled, “Up For Debate: The Lesser Evil.”

I have a comment about “The Lesser Evil” concept. I think it is profoundly wrong to import the categories of “Good” versus “Evil” into a discussion of politics. It’s misleading. Those categories are “religious,” not “political.” “Evil” should be avoided (evil actions, evil thoughts). Big or little, greater or lesser, it is never right to support or vote for “Evil.”

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~(Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. “It’s a Wonderful Life” starring Jimmy Stewart and DeCinzo. Scroll lower down.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Post-Voting Clean-up” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Discover a sly entertainment of sex, larceny, double-crosses, and female liberation — that would be The Handmaiden, by Korean bad-boy director Chan-wook Park — this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). Skip this one if you’re squeamish about sex onscreen, but otherwise, enjoy the plunge into Park’s perverse, yet weirdly moral worldview. Also — if it’s still Tuesday when you read this — get out there and VOTE! (Hint: I’m NOT with Him.)” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.  

THE HANDMAIDEN….warning…you have to love Asian/Korean subtitled films especially ones directed by Chan-Wook Park before you can enjoy this one. Ever since taking three or more years of film classes from UCSC’s Earl Jackson (now teaching in Korea)I am a complete devotee of films by Chan-Wook Park. The sex, violence, even murder in his films are so unique, so subtle,and sensitive that they take on different meanings. Oldboy, Sympathy for Lady Vengence and Snowpiercer must be seen to be hallowed. This latest masterpiece contains three versions of the same plot. Con-artists out to cheat a wealthy woman of her estate. It has a 94 on Rotten Tomatoes, so it’s not just me.

AQUARIUS. Even though the film is set in 1980 in Recife, Brazil (their largest metropolitan city), it seems more like it all takes place in Santa Cruz…another beach side city. Sonia Braga perfectly remembered from “Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands” and “Kiss of The Spider Woman” plays a 65 year old hell bent for leather woman fighting her way into older ages, and still staying in touch. It’s almost too easy and unavoidable to Santa Cruzans to imagine Sonia Braga living in an apartment she owns in the La Bahia while Charlie Canfield, The Boardwalk and Barry Swenson pull the dirtiest tricks in the book to get her to sell so they can develop some new stucco piece of trash building and make millions. Just as we are seeing our historic La Bahia being developed, our municipal wharf being “modernized?, the inflatable basketball arena being made permanent and losing our soccer field so too do we watch as this strong, principled woman stand up for her rights.See this film ASAP and vote for Sonia Braga for a lifetime Oscar or something even better!!!Hurry…it ends Thursday 11/10.

CERTAIN WOMEN. A genuine women’s film with three separate stories going deep inside the frustrations of three or four women as they deal with our society. Laura Dern is a Montana attorney frustrated by the lack of respect in her taking the case of a potentially suididal man. Michelle Williams keeps her family frustrations hidden as she tries to add life, love and a future to her husband and daughter. Kristen Stewart floats and drifts through an insecure part of her life while new actor Lily Gladstone tries to add love, respect and friendship to their tenous relationship. Slow moving, intense, even boring at times, you’ll think about this delicate film lang after it’s over. Kelly Reichardt directed it and once again proves she creates great films unlike any other director.

DOCTOR STRANGE. I had to work very hard all through this latest Marvel Comic special effects spectacular to remind myself….it’s a comic book, it’s a comic book. etc. It doesn’t make any sense, there’s little logic in any character’s role and We get to see Benedict Cumberbatch do his American accent (it’s flawless). Not only does Cumbarbatch play Dr. Strange but Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, and the always wonderful Tilda Swinton all do their damndest to out do any/all previous Marvel Comic special effects silliness. Dr. Stephen Strange’s hands are ruined in a car accident and he goes to Kathmandu and tons of mysticism to repair his surgeon’s hands. Go only if you truly believe in comic books…then you’ll love it.

DENIAL. A subject like denying the holocaust has about as much relevance as alien kidnappings, the earth is flat, and denying climate change. And this is a very serious film starring Rachel Weisz, Tom Wilkinson (one of his very best roles), and the evil and believable Timothy Spall. Courtroom, Auschwitz, anti-semitism, Adolf Hitler, and it’s all true. It’s full of suspense, and you’ll think a lot about a Trump- run USA.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

THE ACCOUNTANT. Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie.

Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACK. It’s actually one of the better action –merciless- blood filled- escapist movies. There’s a semblence of a plot that makes even Tom Cruise seem human at times!!! It only got a 39 on Rotten Tomatoes so maybe Cruise’s Scientology friends haven’t gone yet!!! The skimpy plot has maybe a daughter for Cruise, several incredibly manic  mindless,  brutal killings BUT some scenes are very exciting. But you must really this type of film before paying to see it.

GIRL ON A TRAIN. Emily Blunt stars in this heavily/crazily adapted book to film release. You’ll figure it all out about three-quarters of the way through the flash back-fast forward sections. What’s also a problem is that (on purpose) some of the women look like each other! Ex-wives, murder, drinking, cliches galore. I think you’d be better off reading the book. I’ll bet most of your friends have.

MRS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN. Tim Burton who was born in Burbank in 1958 has made cinema greatness by directing  Beetlejuice, Pee Wee Herman, Edward Scissorhands, James and The Giant Peach. Miss Peregrine is a mess, and unfathomable, confusing, pointless. And even sad and painful..DO NOT TAKE OR SEND CHILDREN…it is not a children’s movie, or yours either. Besides all that, the film is heavily critized for having one very evil character in it…played by the one Black actor in the cast Samuel L. Jackson.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. Voting Night Nov.8 we have former Mayor Celia Scott discussing politics and elections the first half hour. Then, former Santa Cruz County Supervisor Gary Patton also talks about local and national elections, issues, and politics. Nov. 15 has Deborah Muth talking about her new book on Scotts Valley history. Attorney Bob Taren returns that same November 15 to share views on THAT election. Christina Waters guests November 22 talking about her new book. After Christina, Sean Michael Conley discusses genealogy and their local chapter functions. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Minutes after author and historian Sandy Lydon returns to talk about his future historical adventures. Keeping traditional, The winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. Jennifer Horne from UCSC’s Film Dept. discusses changing techniques in film development. PAMF’s Dr. Paul Ware follows Jennifer to tell us some of his theories about health and the role food plays. On December 20, author Lois Watson talks about her popular book, “Growing Up In Santa Cruz”. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com  

This is amazing, and no politics! I hope you vote, though.

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES. “THANKSGIVING”

“After a good dinner one can forgive anybody, even one’s own relations”, Oscar Wilde,

Thanksgiving dinners take eighteen hours to prepare. They are consumed in twelve minutes. Half-times take twelve minutes. This is not coincidence”, Erma Bombeck

“Here in Britain, of course, it’s Thank Fuck We Got Those Weird Jesus Bastards On The Boat Day”, Warren Ellis

“Superficial social niceties are far different from the deep emotion of thanksgiving”, Alexandra Katehakis,

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on

November 2 – 8, 2016

ALMOST WORLD FAMOUS “PORNOGRAPHIC” STATUE ON HIP POCKET BOOKSTORE. The Hip Pocket Bookstore preceeded Bookshop Santa Cruz and was in about the same location as Bookshop is now. This statue by Ron Boise was erected September 10, 1964. There are so many stories about it…and check out Wallace Baines and Ralph Abraham’s recent books.                                            

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE October 31, 2016


DAUGHTER HILLARY & NEW YORK CITY MAYOR BILL DI BLASIO. (See photo)

On her last business trip to NYC my daughter Hillary Bratton almost literally bumped into New York City Mayor Bill Di Blasio. Knowing he was working hard for Hillary Clinton she asked if she could take a picture. As you can see, he did more than that. She said he’s easy going, kind and has a great sense of humor. (He’s also 6’5″.. she’s 5’7″). I looked up his political bio…you should too. Amazing, and some incredibly progressive principles. Plus a long record of working with and for Hillary Clinton. He’d be a great president, or maybe a vice president. Read his Wikipedia info. Wish we had local candidates with his record.

(Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton was 13 years old when we named my daughter Hillary, and quite unknown at the time…even in Berkeley).

WILD TURKEY SOUNDS. I just hadn’t heard how a wild turkey sounds…have you??
GHOSTLY AND BEAUTIFUL SOUNDS WITH MUSIC.
It’s called “Flowers For Body Snatchers”. Listen quietly, and even with my small desk speakers  it’s captivating….and beautiful.

NO ON “D” DEMONSTRATION AND THE MONEY BEHIND THE MEASURE.

Highway Expansion Is Not Healthy

No on D Campaign Asks Voters to Consider the Impact of Big Money in Local Politics

During the last week of the campaign season, The No on D group, Widening Won’t Work, will hold a public demonstration in front of one of the major corporate donors to Measure D, the Palo Alto Medical Foundation that contributed $25,000 to the Yes on D campaign Rick Longinotti, chair of the group, says, “This is the most expensive Santa Cruz County ballot campaign in memory. Contributions to Yes on D total more than $380,000. We believe it is important for County residents to understand who is behind the financing of this measure.”

Public records show who is behind the Yes on D campaign:

  • Over half the contributions come from the construction industry and unions.
  • Half of all contributions come from outside the county.
  • 97.8% of Yes on D funds comes from large contributions of $1000 and over.
  • There are no legal limits to campaign contributions for ballot measures.

Measure D is a 30-year half-cent sales tax, expected to raise revenue of $500 million dollars, more than $100 million of which will fund expanding Highway 1 for auxiliary lanes (lanes that end at the next offramp).

According to Longinotti, “No amount of special interest money can alter the conclusion of last year’s Caltrans report that the widening project won’t relieve congestion.”

Longinotti explains why the No on D group also choose Graniterock for a demonstration on Tuesday November 1st. “I spent over twenty years working in electrical construction, and I disliked working on projects that increased energy consumption. Let’s put people to work on transportation projects that offer real solutions to congestion and help us break out of our dependency on fossil fuels.”

On Friday, Nov. 4th at noon at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation (Sutter Health) the No on D campaign will present a copy of the book “Urban Sprawl and Public Health” to the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, at which has contributed $25,000 to Yes on D. PAMF offices are  located at 2025 Soquel Avenue by Capitola Road across from Jeffrey’s Restaurant. The book describes the enormous health impacts of automobile dependency, including injuries and deaths from collisions, chronic asthma due to air pollution, obesity, and diabetes connected to the decline of walking, and the crumbling of neighborly connection due to the spatial isolation of auto-dependent communities.

TOP CONTRIBUTORS TO YES ON D. Click here to see such familiar names as PAMF, Seaside Corp, SEIU, Land Trust, Graniterock, Redtree, even Sorensons, Colligan, Physicians Medical Group, Plantronics,  and on and on…

Source: Santa Cruz County Elections Department

California Alliance for Jobs – Rebuild California Sacramento $50,000.00
Northern California Carpenters Regional Council Issues PAC Oakland $25000.00
Plantronics Santa Cruz, CA $25000.00
California Alliance for Jobs – Rebuild California Sacramento $25000.00
Palo Alto Medical Foundation for Healthcare, Research and Education Santa Cruz $25000.00
CA Legislative Board United Transportation Union Sacramento $20000.00
Service Employees Int’l Local 521  Issues PAC Sacramento       $20,000.00
Santa Cruz Seaside Company Santa Cruz      $15000.00
Operating  Engineers Local 3 Issues PAC Alameda $10,000.00
John Colligan             Capitola $10000.00
Land Trust of Santa Cruz County Santa Cruz $10000.00
Graniterock Watsonville      $10000.00
United Contractors San Ramon $10000.00
Northern California District Council of Laborers Issues PAC Sacramento $10000.00
Granite Construction Watsonville $5,000.00
Santa Cruz County Business Council Freedom $5,000.00
Allen Property Group Aptos $7,500.00
Sorensen’s Resort Hope Valley $5,000.00
Redtree Partners LP Santa Cruz $5000.00
David Lyng & Associates, Inc. Capitola $5000.00
Physicians Medical Group of Santa Cruz Scotts Valley $5000.00
Geo. H. Wilson, Inc. Santa Cruz $5000.00
Reiter   Watsonville $5000.00
David Olson, Inc. Watsonville $2500.00
Don Chapin Company Salinas $2500.00
Joseph J. Albanese, Inc. Santa Clara $2500.00
Rebele    Aptos $2500.00
RRM Design San Luis Obispo $2500.00

Reminder… Yes, I printed these before and the rest of need reminding…tell your friends…

ARBORETUM…Tom Karwin wrote and sent this in. (For still more details listen to our interview that happened on Universal Grapevine Tuesday November 1st. It’s archived for two weeks).

A New Approach for the UCSC Arboretum

Tom Karwin, October 2016

The UCSC Arboretum began when the UCSC campus began, just over fifty years ago. A favored project of the founding chancellor, Dean McHenry,theoriginal director, Professor Ray Collett (who received only a tiny stipend and a very small budget), and an enthusiastic cadre of volunteers from the campus faculty and staff and the community. This was an ambitious project for volunteers to build a nationally important collection of trees and shrubs at California’s largest public garden. The following years saw significant developments: the collection grew to national prominence, as expected; paid staff took over most of the work; and expenses (for salaries, mostly) grew beyond the reach of vigorous fund-raising effortsand the minimal funds budgeted by the campus.

Consequently, the Arboretum has a large and growing debt. Despite vigorous ongoing fund-raising efforts, the debt keeps growing and the Arboretum is unable to meet fully the ongoing expenses, or to repay the debt, other than through a dramatic and hypothetical increase in philanthropy.

The university can’t just “write off” the debt, which is real money that could only be deducted from the academic program. Closing the Arboretum seems very unlikely. It is campus property, and to abandon (or bulldoze) a highly regarded plant collection would be both a great embarrassment to the university and an offense to science.

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BOOKSHOP SANTA CRUZ’S BIG “50” Friday, November 4. For way beyond 30 years our Hot Damn String Band has played for Bookshop Santa Cruz’s Birthdays. We played right next to the rocking horse when the “Shop” was across the street. One year we even played downstairs with the textbooks. Most of those years writer Jim Houston played string bass and sang with our group. We also played over in front of Neal’s house on a flatbed truck along with Tom Scribner and Lacy J.Dalton to entertain hundreds of customers who brought in their own books to donate to the “Shops” recent loss after the ’89 earthquake. We’ll be back again this year on Friday night with Annie Steinhart on fiddle, Jim Reynolds on guitar, Dave Magram banjo, Dore Coller mandolin, Gary Cunningham on string bass, and if all goes well… I’ll be playing washboard. You should be there, we start at 7:30. Then around 8 pm. there’ll be some talks, best wishes, and I think Sam Farr will be there too. It’s a big deal for any bookstore nowadays to have a 50th Birthday Party. The Hot Damn String Band will play again right after the speeches, free cake and ice cream and glorious frivolity. Next year the Bookshop might even mention the name of our band in their promotions!!! (I think the Damn may offend them???)

CYCLOCROSSED THE LINE

Some things clearly cross over into the profane. The Space Billboard scheme from 1993 comes to mind. This plan to launch into low orbit a Mylar, illuminated billboard, of the apparent size and brightness as the moon and be visible from Earth, thankfully never got off the ground. Of course some found it a fun idea and advertisers drooled but for most people it was a desecration of something sacred. This analogy occurred to me as I watched the transformation of peaceful Lighthouse Field into a cyclocross course for a bike race involving 250 Elite, Masters and Junior competitors from 9am until 4pm on October 22nd.

At first I had trouble figuring out what was happening as vans of people in the Field laid out yards of blue tape, steel poles and green plastic netting along the trails. All sorts of possibilities crossed my mind, none involving a bike race. Like many others, I have come to accept as given, this peaceful oasis of nature in the midst of an increasingly urbanized Santa Cruz. Of course Lighthouse Field has been given a bad rap of late due to the neglect by the State Parks to do their duty to keep out campers, keep the Field clean and enforce the laws to protect people and wildlife. When pressed, supervising rangers claim a lack of resources and budget cuts for the neglect but somehow they managed to have two rangers in attendance at the cyclocross race. That’s two more than I’ve seen in the Field in years.

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~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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NEWS FROM RANCHO DEL MAR SHOPPING CENTER…ANOTHER TWO BITE THE DUST…

Those of you who frequent the Rancho del Mar Shopping Center in Aptos have no doubt noticed an increasing number of empty stores.  The closing of the Aptos Cinema last winter got the attention of many, and prompted a high number of citizen calls and e-mails to local publications and the Second District County Supervisor. Well, in the past two weeks, two more stores emptied out and are now vacant.  That makes the Center about 50% vacant. Aptos Bike Station relocated to Capitola.  Kentucky Fried Chicken is gone.  What will become of the existing merchants?  What does the current property owner, Terra Mar Centers (based in Carlsbad, CA) intend to to with the Rancho del Mar Shopping Center?  

Last April, representatives of Terra Mar held a community meeting at the Seascape Resort to update the public and gather input.  CEO Mr. Bruce Walton was surprised by the  300+ people who attended and were very vocal about what they hoped to have and NOT have come to the Aptos Community.  Mr. Walton explained that Terra Mar Center had purchased the Rancho del Mar Center in 2014, along with 31 other shopping centers.  He said there would probably not be major changes made to the Center, mostly modernizing existing facilities and making the Center more accessible for those with mobility disabilities.  The theater would probably not return, he said, because Terra Mar had not been able to locate a replacement tenant for such a venue.  Many in the audience had suggestions for entertainment tenants and other types of businesses they would like to see in the Rancho del Mar Center.

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~(Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website…

#301…”SOME GOOD ADVICE FROM TOM

Tom Hayden died on Sunday, October 23rd. In the obituary published in the Tuesday, October 25th edition of the San Francisco Chronicle, Tom was quoted as offering the following advice: Mr. Hayden maintained that a citizen was obliged not only to vote, but also to disagree with those he had voted for. “Dissent has been crucial to positive social change throughout our history,” Mr. Hayden said. “The American Revolution, abolition, women’s suffrage, the labor movement, the environmental movement. Where would we be as a country without that kind of dissent?” 

I think Tom is dispensing some very good advice here, with his observation that we may well need to disagree with those politicians for whom we have voted. In that spirit, and having already voted for Hillary Clinton, let me suggest that there is some wisdom to be gleaned from a commentary published in the October 22, 2016 edition of The New York Times, and republished in my hometown newspaper, the Santa Cruz Sentinel, on October 25th, the date I read that Hayden obituary in the Chronicle.
The commentary I am citing, titled “The Dangers of Hillary Clinton,” was written by Ross Douthat, a columnist whom Wikipedia properly characterizes as a “conservative voice.”

Below, I am providing a lengthy excerpt from Douthat’s commentary, providing a warning that I believe is consistent with what Tom Hayden has said about disagreeing with those candidates for whom we have voted.

In the Democratic Primary Election, Hayden did support Clinton over Bernie Sanders, to the distress of people like me, who were hoping that Sanders would be the candidate to go up against Mr. Trump. I think it’s important, after Hillary Clinton is elected, as it seems ever more likely that she will be, not to lose sight of Hayden’s warning. We may well need to disagree with Clinton as President, and to oppose her policies, particularly on the issues of war and peace.
Here is Douthat (with my running commentary inserted):

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~Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

(Brattonote…Tom Hayden and Bill Monning were guests on my Universal Grapevine October 30, 2008).

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. “Like father like daughters and sons” see DeCinzo a few pages below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Operation Obama” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “The Japanese anime Miss Hokusai, is strictly for fans of the genre, often great-looking but woefully uneven in the storytelling department. But find out why its subject, O-Ei Hokusai, daughter of the maser 19th Century painter, and unsung artist on her own right, is worth discovering, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). ” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

Due to a mysterious malady which put me out of order for a few days, I didn’t see any new movies this week. AND or but…I want to suggest a much better alternative than any films currently on our big, local screens.

It’s watching a number of a specific, great, exciting, relatively unknown HBO Latin America Series. It’s been around for years and there are dozens of these series that rival or surpass any American TV series…even “The Sopranos”. There are cheap ways to subscribe to HBO instead of linking to it on the highly expensive Comcast (which I do!!)

The acting,the photography, the plots are far ahead of the typical fare we are used to. The Series have been filmed in Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Argentina (and are all subtitled). Comedies, thrillers, action, family dramas…everything. Here are my favorites which I’ll compare with any of your favorites: Capadocia.  Praemar. Epitafios. Sr. Avila. O Negocio. Profuegos. Magnifica 70. Mandrake. Carnavale. Right now I’m in the middle of a new one, Dios. Inc.

Some series are two seasons long, others run way up to 5 seasons and more. Brilliant stories, and even the opening and closing photography behind the credits are amazing.

DENIAL. A subject like denying the holocaust has about as much relevance as alien kidnappings, the earth is flat, and denying climate change. And this is a very serious film starring Rachel Weisz, Tom Wilkinson (one of his very best roles), and the evil and believable Timothy Spall. Courtroom, Auschwitz, anti-semitism, Adolf Hitler, and it’s all true. It’s full of suspense, and you’ll think a lot about a Trump- run USA.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

HELL OR HIGH WATER. Jeff Bridges, Ben Foster and Chris Pine make this one wonderful, exciting, involving, and well acted film. Go see it ASAP. Cops and bank robbers in Texas, internal conflicts, evil bank laws and practices, and ethics and morals are all integrated. It’s hard t o believe that “Hollywood” could still make a film this good after all these years of junk.

SULLY. Tom Hanks, Laura Linney and Aaron Eckhardt do their dependable, professional jobs in this formulac Hollywood treu life drama. Plenty of tension, a great true story that we knew most of already. It’s how airplane Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger landed that passenger plane in the Hudson river and saved everybody’s lives. Speaking of airplanes, you might t hink about right wing director of the film Clint Eastwood and that  the executive producer of Suicide Squad and Sully is  Steven Mnuchin who is Donald Trump’s finance director, if  it matters who you give money to!

THE DRESSMAKER. Kate Winslet leads the cast which includes Liam Hemsworth and a snarly, memorable, mugging Judy Davis.I don’t know if it’s supposed to be a comedy or tragedy set in an Australian cowboy town. It’s foolsh, non-sensical, and has no reason to exist. Stay home instead.

THE ACCOUNTANT. Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie.

Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACK. It’s actually one of the better action –merciless- blood filled- escapist movies. There’s a semblence of a plot that makes even Tom Cruise seem human at times!!! It only got a 39 on Rotten Tomatoes so maybe Cruise’s Scientology friends haven’t gone yet!!! The skimpy plot has maybe a daughter for Cruise, several incredibly manic  mindless,  brutal killings BUT some scenes are very exciting. But you must really like this type of film before paying to see it.

GIRL ON A TRAIN. Emily Blunt stars in this heavily/crazily adapted book to film release. You’ll figure it all out about three-quarters of the way through the flash back-fast forward sections. What’s also a problem is that (on purpose) some of the women look like each other! Ex-wives, murder, drinking, cliches galore. I think you’d be better off reading the book. I’ll bet most of your friends have.

MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (take # 3). This movie should be sued for using the same title as the earlier classics starring in 1960 Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, James Colburn, Robert Vaughn and of course Eli Wallich. Then there’s the genuine Akira Kurosawa classic “Seven Samurai” from 1956 (which both of above films ripped off), that starred Toshiro Mifune. The new one has Denzel Washington as the big honcho and he’s about as impressive a leader as Pee Wee Herman would be, but he’s not as funny. Don’t go.  

MRS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN. Tim Burton who was born in Burbank in 1958 has made cinema greatness by directing  Beetlejuice, Pee Wee Herman, Edward Scissorhands, James and The Giant Peach. Miss Peregrine is a mess, and unfathomable, confusing, pointless. And even sad and painful..DO NOT TAKE OR SEND CHILDREN…it is not a children’s movie, or yours either. Besides all that, the film is heavily critized for having one very evil character in it…played by the one Black actor in the cast Samuel L. Jackson.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks… (See next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. November 1st has Georgia Johnson and Connor Jang Editors-in-Chief of City on a Hill Press talking about their newspaper after which gardening expert Tom Karwin discusses UCSC Arboretum issues. Voting Night Nov.8 we have former Mayor Celia Scott discussing politics and elections the first half hour. Then, former Santa Cruz County Supervisor Gary Patton also talks about local and national elections, issues, and politics. Nov. 15 has Deborah Muth talking about her new book on Scotts Valley history. Attorney Bob Taren returns that same November 15 to share views on THAT election. Christina Waters guests November 22 talking about her new book. After Christina, Sean Michael Conley discusses genealogy and their local chapter functions. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Keeping traditional, The winners of Bookshop Santa Cruz Young Writers Contest read their entries the full hour on December 6. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com  

This is great. Joss Whedon has a thing called Save The Day, encouraging people to vote. 🙂

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monsnippetsga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES.  “FLOODS”

“The only thing that stops God from sending another flood is that the first one was useless“, Nicolas Chamfort

” The flood of print has turned reading into a process of gulping rather than savoring”,    Raymond Chandler

“Are you upset little friend? Have you been lying awake worrying? Well, don’t worry…I’m here. The flood waters will recede, the famine will end, the sun will shine tomorrow, and I will always be here to take care of you”. Charlie Brown to Snoopy

“The flood of money that gushes into politics today is a pollution of democracy”, Theodore White

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on November 2 – 8, 2016

October 24 – 30, 2016

MAIN STREET (now Pacific Avenue) and the intersection of Mission and Willow Streets. Circa 1880. Pacific Avenue now goes right up north through those buildings behind the trolley car. Nowadays on the left side we have Bank of The West, Ron Lau’s empty lot, Lulu Carpenter’s Original location, and Mr. Goodie’s Antiques.

photo credit: Covello & Covello Historical photo collection.

Additional information always welcome: email bratton@cruzio.com

DATELINE October 24, 2016

CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS. It’s really time to take a more careful look at where the big money is going in this next City Council election. Check out this list and see how many candidates Pamela Comstock gives money to, check out David Terrazas contributions, look who’s backing Robert Singleton, and that Martine Watkins has many, many of our biggest developers and investors behind her. J.M. Brown’s political and moneyed backers all know they can count on his votes.

HITLER REACTS TO TRUMP GETTING THE REPUBLICAN NOMINATION.

Think ahead and realize what keeping this City Council and Cynthia’s  Sycophants in office will mean. More of the same police practices, continuing financial favors for developers, to hell with the homeless, never mind the environment. Bring on Corridor stacking, and on and on. What again was the reason we moved here…to see this kind of unthinking growth? To be this cruel to our growing middle class? We do need a Brand New Council…think about it (and the health of your conscience).Vote for Chris Krohn, Drew Glover, Steve Schnaar and Sandy Brown we need their honest, caring, and devoted attention. Read about these very courageous, and energetic candidates and remember they are on Bernie Sanders side.http://www.brandnewcouncil.com

HILLARY CLINTON IN SANTA CRUZ. It seems strange that the Sentinel wouldn’t bring up and inform our newcomers about Hillary Clinton’s visit to Santa Cruz back in 1996. Karen and Darrell Darling (right wing Democrats) had a son, Adam. He worked with Washington officials including Commerce Secretary Ron Brown. Ron and Adam were killed in the crash of an  official flight over Bosnia. Hillary came here to attend Adam’s memorial and also dedicated a special placque to him in the Soquel Cemetary. The Sentinel did say something about this back in February, but it does show that very human side of Hillary. Besides that, we don’t get and never have had many presidential candidates or presidents visit here.  Not only that but The New Yorker just endorsed Hillary Clinton. They wrote an unprecedented story about that endorsement, check it out… . It also goes into detail about us electing our first female president and what it will mean.  

KSBW TV’S EDITORIAL OVER THE POLICE KILLING OF SEAN ARLT. Sherry Conable sent this link to a very unusual editorial from KSBW.

She also added… “On October 16th, at 3AM, Santa Cruz resident Sean Arlt was killed by gunfire from a Santa Cruz Police Officer in the neighborhood where he lived on the Westside. Sean was 32 years old and the loving father of a four year old. He was brandishing a metal rake when he was killed. So far, the audio recording of the event, the video recording, and the ames of the officers involved have not been released.There was aan attempt to get many citizens to speak to our City Council last Tuesday (10/25) Those attending were hoping to ask the Council for..

  1. greatly increased transparency about what happened.
  2. a truly independent investigation by an outside agency (not the Santa Cruz County District    Attorney’s office)
  3. a commitment to develop new policies and training of law enforcement personnel so that this cannot happen again.
  4. a City committed to compassion, understanding, justice and decency for all citizens, and nonviolent intervention when intervention is needed.

Sean, who struggled with the effects of a mental illness, also wrote a book of poems entitled “the Love Manifesto” – it is full of deep, thoughtful, inspired, loving, and caring words for the family, community, and world that he was part of.”

(Editorial comment…writing this on Monday 10/24, we can only guess what our present Santa Cruz City Council will say or do about this tragedy. Pay attention to this council reaction, and how much longer do we want their cold and uninvolved treatment of our community???)

RUSH TO JUDGMENT

The Wharf Master Plan is on the fast track for city council approval.  This $40 million modern makeover of the wharf includes 3 new warehouse-style buildings up to 45 feet in height, two expanded walk-bikeways, one on the east side (facing the San Lorenzo river) and a dropped down walkway on the western side of the wharf under the windows of the current restaurants. The viewing holes for the sea lions will be covered up. Other changes include a new landing for large boats at the wharf’s end and a doubling of the current wharf businesses by adding upper stories and infilling with a goal of more take-out food. All this with essentially no increase in parking except what can be achieved through restriping and narrowing the width of the current parking stalls.  If you are not aware of this significant change to an iconic Santa Cruz landmark that is because the city appears bent on getting the environmental review to the current council as quickly and as quietly as possible.

In August, while in Florida, I wrote about discovering that the Wharf Master Plan’s environmental review was on the next-day’s city council agenda. A quick email to council objecting to their lack of attention to federally protected bird species, notably Pigeon Guillemots that fly from Puget Sound to the Santa Cruz wharf each year, and also copied to astute environmentalists, resulted in a number of emails to council addressing bird and lighting issues and calling for an Environmental Impact Report (EIR). In response, obviously advised by their attorneys, the city postponed the issue and released a revised Mitigated Negative Declaration (MND) for public review focusing on the bird and lighting issues but no EIR. The review period for the revised MND started on October 18th and ends on November 16th.  You can access the revised document here.

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~Gillian Greensite is a long time local activist, a member of Save Our Big Trees and the Santa Cruz chapter of IDA, International Dark Sky Association  http://darksky.org    Plus she’s an avid ocean swimmer, hiker and lover of all things wild).

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HOW COME YOU AND I ARE BEING ASKED TO SUBSIDIZE
BARRY SWENSON BUILDER & THE APTOS VILLAGE PROJECT?

Last week’s Department of Public Works meeting with prospective bidders for the Aptos Village Phase I Improvements was interesting.  Contractors from as far away as San Luis Obispo and Hayward attended.  About eight citizens (all from Aptos) also were there protesting the fact that County taxpayers are being expected to pay for improvements that are to support the Aptos Village Project.

In spite of being told by DPW Traffic Engineer to “go somewhere else”, we followed along on the project tour and heard the questions the contractors posed.   For example, we learned that the new bus stop location will force control boxes too close to the rail lines, violating standard set back requirements.  We also learned that the winning contractor must complete ( within 48 hours) the removal of 200′ of track, excavation to 32″ deep, replacement of rock ballast, and replacement of Trout Gulch Road crossing pads.  

We asked how the public will be notified of this 48-hour intersection closure and how will traffic be routed during that time?  “We’ll work that out” said County Senior Traffic Engineer, Jack Sohriakoff.  Citizens implored all contractors at the meeting to make a real effort to notify the Community of all project schedules and work plans. The winning bid will be approved by the County Board of Supervisors November 15, and work could begin next February or March.

Another gem we learned was that Phase II of the improvements are now in the works. We asked Mr. Sohriakoff if citizens will get an opportunity to review the project?  “We’ll work that out” he said again.   According to information on the Regional Transportation Commission website, the design will be finalized in December, 2016.  That really does not leave much time for citizen input, does it?

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~(Becky Steinbruner is a 30+ year resident of Aptos. She has fought for water, fire, emergency preparedness, and for road repair. She ran for Second District County Supervisor in 2016 on a shoestring and got nearly 20% of the votes).

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PATTON’S PROGRAM. From Gary’s Two Worlds website… October 18, 2016, #292.
ON VOTING.

I am quoting from an article that appeared in the October 16, 2016 edition of the Santa Cruz Sentinel. The article reported on a meeting at which John Laird, California Secretary of Resources, and formerly Mayor of the City of Santa Cruz, provided information on the many ballot measures facing California voters on November 8th. 

And who was it who said, “your vote doesn’t count…?” That would be Morgan Smith, “a 20-year-old Santa Cruz resident and recent political science graduate at UC Santa Cruz.” While saying that “your vote doesn’t count for anything,” Smith does, I gather, advise voting nonetheless. It is Smith’s contention that a person’s vote “counts as a statistic,” and that “the more statistics you generate, the bigger an impact it has on politicians when they’re deciding what to do.” Please let me correct the record. Voting counts! It happens that I teach in the Politics Department at UC Santa Cruz, though I don’t think I ever ran across Morgan Smith. I was also elected to the Santa Cruz County Board of Supervisors five times, and lost an election to the California State Assembly, so I have some practical experience. Believe me, when I campaigned for office, in elections that were always quite close, it became obvious to me that voting “counts.”

In fact, voting can be seen as an amazing kind of “trick,” by which we, as a collective group of individuals, mobilize our small increments of individual power (our individual ability to do work) into the kind of massive power that builds dams and bridges, goes to war, and determines what the rules will be that govern our common life. 

Each of us has the ability to do work and to accomplish things. We mobilize our personal power, individually, in all of our daily activities; none of us, however, using only our individual power, has the ability to accomplish any large project. If we, collectively, want to build a dam or a highway, to go to war or to make the peace, we need to act in common. And how do we actually do that, in fact?

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~Gary is a former Santa Cruz County Supervisor (20 years) and an attorney who represents indivuduals and community groups on land use and environmental issues. The opinions expressed are Mr. Patton’s. Gary has his own website, Two Worlds at  www.gapatton.net

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CLASSICAL DeCINZO. DeCinzo delivers on… Policing the cemetery, a few scrolls below.

EAGAN’S DEEP COVER. See Eagan’s “Hillary’s Cover-up” down a few pages. As always, at TimEagan.com you will find his most recent  Deep Cover, the latest installment from the archives of Subconscious Comics, and the ever entertaining Eaganblog.

SIDEREAL THEATER COMPANY’S PRODUCTION OF NEIL LABUTE’S “bash latterday plays”. I’m repeating this review…the play is that good!!!! It’s rare in Santa Cruz to see live plays with as much intensity and as perfectly acted as this production. As long time readers know I see most of the live plays in town and do not review, critique, or mention them if they don’t work. This “bash latterday plays does indeed work. Three separate stories told in three scenes, and you won’t forget a minute of them long after you leave the theatre. Only two performances left Friday & Saturday Oct. 28 & 29. No more tickets online…at the door only. It’s at the Broadway Playhouse where the Lord’s Last Supper used to be. If you like live theatre and deep, thoughtful drama do not miss this experience.

LISA JENSEN LINKS. Lisa writes: “Help celebrate 50 years of Bookshop Santa Cruz in the heart of our community, this week at Lisa Jensen Online Express (http://ljo-express.blogspot.com). And speaking of books, find out what’s new with my next novel!” Lisa has been writing film reviews and columns for Good Times since 1975.

DENIAL…THE OFFICIAL TRAILER. Timothy Sprall opens the show!!!

DENIAL. A subject like denying the holocaust has about as much relevance as alien kidnappings, the earth is flat, and denying climate change. And this is a very serious film starring Rachel Weisz, Tom Wilkinson (one of his very best roles), and the evil and believable Timothy Spall. Courtroom, Auschwitz, anti-semitism, Adolf Hitler, and it’s all true. It’s full of suspense, and you’ll think a lot about a Trump-run USA.

A MAN NAMED OVE. A Swedish film with subtitles. Whew…93 on Rotten Tomatoes!!! It’s worth every tomato too. The film centers on 59 year old Ove and his attempts at suicide. He fails many times and dreams back to his near perfect and lovely wife who died, and why he wants to join her. He’s beyond crabby, he’s angry, mean and yet, and yet, there’s something so magnetic and powerful and redeeming in him that you’ll watch and wait for his every move. It’s a wonderful film…and I think he’s older than 59, and I remember 59 fairly well. Rolf Lassgard who plays Ove is actually 61 and has been in many films and even played Puck in a production of Midsummer Night’s Dream!!

JACK REACHER: NEVER GO BACK. It’s actually one of the better action –merciless- blood filled- escapist movies. There’s a semblence of a plot that makes even Tom Cruise seem human at times!!! It only got a 39 on Rotten Tomatoes so maybe Cruise’s Scientology friends haven’t gone yet!!! The skimpy plot has maybe a daughter for Cruise, several incredibly manic  mindless,  brutal killings BUT some scenes are very exciting. But you must really this type of film before paying to see it.

HELL OR HIGH WATER. Jeff Bridges, Ben Foster and Chris Pine make this one wonderful, exciting, involving, and well acted film. Go see it ASAP. Cops and bank robbers in Texas, internal conflicts, evil bank laws and practices, and ethics and morals are all integrated. It’s hard t o believe that “Hollywood” could still make a film this good after all these years of junk.

SULLY. Tom Hanks, Laura Linney and Aaron Eckhardt do their dependable, professional jobs in this formulac Hollywood treu life drama. Plenty of tension, a great true story that we knew most of already. It’s how airplane Captain Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger landed that passenger plane in the Hudson river and saved everybody’s lives. Speaking of airplanes, you might t hink about right wing director of the film Clint Eastwood and that  the executive producer of Suicide Squad and Sully is  Steven Mnuchin who is Donald Trump’s finance director, if  it matters who you give money to!

AMERICAN HONEY. If you watch this film as an almost three (3) hour documentary it’ll be more understandable. One poor girl makes herself homeless and joins a group of other teens driving and moteling through the Southern USA selling magazines. It’s probably generational but the music, the motivation, the point of the film and their lives and their choices left me bored. I don’t care that much about what a teenager’s lifestyle is like…not that lifestyle.  Do note that Krystal, the leader of the group is Riley Keough, who is Elvis’s granddaughter.

THE ACCOUNTANT. Ben Affleck plays an autistic criminal bookeeper who is also a ruthless killer, and yes, that makes as little sense as does 98 % of this murder filled mess of a movie.

Anna Kendrick, J.K. Simmons, Jeffrey Tambor and even John Lithgow all do what they can in such a miscast cast that makes you feel like you’re watching an audition session, that nobody cares if they get the parts or not. You won’t believe the plot, or the acting, or the fact that you paid money to see this flick. ps. Jack Reacher is better…if you like these type flicks.

DEEP WATER HORIZON. A big cast with Mark Wahlberg, Kate Hudson, John Malkovich, and an extra grizzly Kurt Russell. It’s about the 2010 oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico and how greedy, cruel, and devious the BP (British Petroleum) corporation was/is?? about sacrificing human life for the big buck. Lots of technical oil terms, plenty of time to think about our local ocean frontage (and fracking) then comes the explosion…it’s great, it’s exciting, it’s long, it’s tense and it’s done just perfectly. Wahlberg is believable, go see it.

GIRL ON A TRAIN. Emily Blunt stars in this heavily/crazily adapted book to film release. You’ll figure it all out about three-quarters of the way through the flash back-fast forward sections. What’s also a problem is that (on purpose) some of the women look like each other! Ex-wives, murder, drinking, cliches galore. I think you’d be better off reading the book. I’ll bet most of your friends have.

MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (take # 3). This movie should be sued for using the same title as the earlier classics starring in 1960 Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, James Colburn, Robert Vaughn and of course Eli Wallich. Then there’s the genuine Akira Kurosawa classic “Seven Samurai” from 1956 (which both of above films ripped off), that starred Toshiro Mifune. The new one has Denzel Washington as the big honcho and he’s about as impressive a leader as Pee Wee Herman would be, but he’s not as funny. Don’t go.  

MRS PEREGRINE’S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN. Tim Burton who was born in Burbank in 1958 has made cinema greatness by directing  Beetlejuice, Pee Wee Herman, Edward Scissorhands, James and The Giant Peach. Miss Peregrine is a mess, and unfathomable, confusing, pointless. And even sad and painful..DO NOT TAKE OR SEND CHILDREN…it is not a children’s movie, or yours either. Besides all that, the film is heavily critized for having one very evil character in it…played by the one Black actor in the cast Samuel L. Jackson.

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UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE. Each and every Tuesday from 7:00-8:00 p.m. I host Universal Grapevine on KZSC 88.1 fm. or on your computer, (live only or archived for two weeks…see next paragraph) and go to WWW.KZSC.ORG. On October 25th Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge Paul Burdick returns to discuss the workings of the court system. Then Jinx Deruisa and Roy Malan talk about The Santa Cruz Chamber Players new season. November 1st has Georgia Johnson and Connor Jang Editors-in-Chief of City on a Hill Press talking about their newspaper after which gardening expert Tom Karwin discusses UCSC Arboretum issues. Voting Night Nov.8 we have former Mayor Celia Scott discussing politics and elections. Then former Santa Cruz County Supervisor Gary Patton also talks about local and national elections, issues, and politics. Nov. 15 has Deborah Muth talking about her new book on Scotts Valley history. Attorney Bob Taren returns that same November 15 to share views on THAT election. Christina Waters guests November 22 talking about her new book. After Christina, Sean Michael Conley discusses genealogy and their local chapter functions. Sean Van Sommeran emerges on Nov. 29 to tell us about the Pelagic Shark Research Foundation. Do remember, any and all suggestions for future programs are more than welcome, so tune in, and keep listening. Email me always (and only) at bratton@cruzio.com  

Some things make me proud to be Swedish…

NEW UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVE FEATURE. Stuff changes at KZSC a lot. If you missed either of the last two weeks of Universal Grapevine broadcasts go herehttp://www.radiofreeamerica.com/dj/bruce-bratton You have to listen to about 4 minutes of that week’s KPFA news first, then Grapevine happens.

UNIVERSAL GRAPEVINE ARCHIVES. In case you missed some of the great people I’ve interviewed in the last 9 years here’s a chronological list of some past broadcasts.  Such a wide range of folks such as  Nikki Silva, Michael Warren, Tom Noddy, UCSC Chancellor George Blumenthal, Anita Monga, Mark Wainer, Judy Johnson, Wendy Mayer-Lochtefeld, Rachel Goodman, George Newell, Tubten Pende, Gina Marie Hayes, Rebecca Ronay-Hazleton, Miriam Ellis, Deb Mc Arthur, The Great Morgani on Street performing, and Paul Whitworth on Krapps Last Tape. Jodi McGraw on Sandhills, Bruce Daniels on area water problems. Mike Pappas on the Olive Connection, Sandy Lydon on County History. Paul Johnston on political organizing, Rick Longinotti on De-Sal. Dan Haifley on Monterey Bay Sanctuary, Dan Harder on Santa Cruz City Museum. Sara Wilbourne on Santa Cruz Ballet Theatre. Brian Spencer on SEE Theatre Co. Paula Kenyon and Karen Massaro on MAH and Big Creek Pottery. Carolyn Burke on Edith Piaf. Peggy Dolgenos on Cruzio. Julie James on Jewel Theatre Company. Then there’s Pat Matejcek on environment, Nancy Abrams and Joel Primack on the Universe plus Nina Simon from MAH, Rob Slawinski, Gary Bascou, Judge Paul Burdick, John Brown Childs, Ellen Kimmel, Don Williams, Kinan Valdez, Ellen Murtha, John Leopold, Karen Kefauver, Chip Lord, Judy Bouley, Rob Sean Wilson, Ann Simonton, Lori Rivera, Sayaka Yabuki, Chris Kinney, Celia and Peter Scott, Chris Krohn, David Swanger, Chelsea Juarez…and that’s just since January 2011.

QUOTES. “PUMPKINS”

“I would rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself, than be crowded on a velvet cushion”, Henry David Thoreau

“Only the knife knows what goes on in the heart of a pumpkin”,  Simone Schwarz-Bart

“I think people fetishize glasses in general. You could put glasses on a rotting pumpkin and people would think it was sexy”, Tina Fey

COLUMN COMMUNICATIONS. Subscriptions: Click and enter the box in the upper right hand corner of each Column. You’ll get a weekly email notice the instant the column goes online. (Anywhere from Monday afternoon through Thursday or sometimes as late as Friday!) Always free and confidential. Even I don’t know who subscribes!!

Snail Mail: Bratton Online
82 Blackburn Street, Suite 216
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Direct email: Bratton@Cruzio.com
Direct phone: 831 423-2468
All Technical & Web details: Gunilla Leavitt @ godmoma@gmail.com

BEST OF VINTAGE STEVEN DeCINZO.

Deep Cover by Tim Eagan.

Posted in Weekly Articles | Comments Off on October 24 – 30, 2016