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  • The U.S. economy counts on you to borrow money and stay in debt for a credit score. But what if you were taught to never owe anybody anything?
  • For the first time ever, the UAW launched a strike against all Big 3 automakers at once, starting with three locations in the Midwest.
  • Hundreds of sanitation workers are on strike in San Diego county, leaving garbage piling up in Chula Vista and Clairemont Mesa. Contract negotiations between sanitation company Republic Services and the local union broke down on December 17. It is Christmas week and–no surprise–traffic is up at the airport. But the threat of the omicron variant looms over California and the entire country. Plus, a report on how veterans are using poetry and prose to work through the stress of war.
  • Threadbare demos on a new reissue of 1998's Overcome by Happiness illuminate Joe Pernice's songwriting paradox: Brill Building pop woven from homespun scruff, sarcastic but always sure-footed.
  • The author of The Road, Blood Meridian and No Country For Old Men embodied a strong Southwestern sensibility, writing often about men grappling with the existence of evil.
  • One year ago, President Biden signed the Inflation Reduction Act into law, directing hundreds of billions of dollars to speed the transition away from fossil fuels.
  • All concert attendees must be vaccinated and face masks must be worn indoors. Peter Boland has been playing music and writing songs his whole life. His first solo album was called Frame, released in 2002. It earned a Best Americana Album nomination at the San Diego Music Awards. His band, The Coyote Problem, won the Best Americana Album prize for both their albums, Wire in 2005 and California in 2007, at the San Diego Music Awards. Subsequently, Peter “fired” himself from his own band and released his solo album, Two Pines, also nominated for Best Americana album. Peter, in addition to being a singer/songwriter/musician, is also a speaker, writer, and philosophy professor, and has said “In my mind, all of these various modes of expression root back to a common core – the hunger to understand and the passion to connect. To me, philosophy, spirituality, and art are healing modalities – we turn to them to salve our wounds, bind our broken places, and cultivate our growth. Whether in song, in prose, or in oratory, I simply want to open up to the grandeur and depth of being alive.” Rupert Wates was born in London. He signed an exclusive publishing deal with Eaton Music in the late 1990s and has been a full-time songwriter ever since. He moved to the United States in fall 2006. Since 2007, he has won over fifty songwriting awards. He has released eleven full-length CDs. Each has received outstandingly good reviews, and has been played regularly by radio stations in the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Israel, Australia, and The Netherlands. In 2015 and 2016, over twenty of his songs were recorded by other performers, and two tribute albums to his material were recorded by independent artists in Nashville and Los Angeles. Rupert averages 120 live shows per year, for audiences totaling around 3,500 annually, in America, Canada, and Europe. Everyone who hears him responds to his acoustic, melodic, haunting songs that ring true. Follow on Rupert Wates on Facebook!
  • From the gallery: Quint Gallery presents a group exhibition of new sculptural work by Adam Belt, Christopher Puzio, and Chris Thorson. In these new sculptures, Belt, Puzio, and Thorson each concentrate material into essential compositions and forms, engaging in dialogue around labor-intensive process and fabrication. Some of these sculptures activate the space through the use of shape and shadow, while others activate an awareness of the light in the space in which they are exhibited. The exhibition will be on view from Aug. 6 to Sept. 17. There will be a conversation with the artists on Saturday, Aug. 13 from 5-6 p.m. moderated by Jacqueline Marino, followed by a reception. About the artists: Adam Belt’s practice has developed around perception within the scope of scientific revelation and natural phenomena through sculpture, site-specific installation, drawing, and painting. His newest series, Phase Forms, is a distillation of material and form into an essential mass removed from symbolism. The addition of white pigment to layers of polyurethane resin becomes akin to painting in three dimensions, and produces varying degrees of opacity, translucency, and transparency. Each block responds uniquely to changing light conditions, at times appearing weightless and transitory in a given space. Christopher Puzio’s wall sculptures reflect a shift in scale from a background of working in public sculpture and architectural intervention, but a continuation of interest in the way material and nature organizes itself into patterns. In these wall works, Puzio bead-blasts stainless steel to create a non-reflective effect which repels corrosion and absorbs light. Components of similar shape and varying size are welded together to divide space in a given form, reminiscent of mid-century modern breezeblocks which blended design with function. Shadows of repetitive patterns form on the wall, permitting the surface on which it is hung to become an extension of the sculpture. Chris Thorson’s Projectiles and Blunt Instruments distill common consumer products into solid cast bronze sculptures that shift in potential purpose. Sunscreen bottles, mouthwash, Neosporin: commercial items which are sold to protect, may now be a threat due to their substantial weight. In these works, function is displaced and is only recognizable through form. A departure from her body of work that hinges upon verisimilitude, these surfaces are oxidized through polish and patina, recording varying levels of corrosion and distress that are unnatural to their original container of glass or plastic. Related links: Quint Gallery on Instagram Quint Gallery visiting information
  • In a sequel to Miles Morales: Spiderman, writer Jason Reynolds crafts a response to censorship in the classroom. He speaks to NPR's A Martinez about his second Spiderman novel.
  • Advocates say that the increase signals that an eviction crisis is emerging in the region amid efforts to strengthen tenant protection.
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