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Tue Oct 7

Passing On The Pen

Intergenerational Queer Storytellers

at GLBT Historical Socieyt (6:30pm) Literary Arts

This month's Passing on the Pen series features novelist, journalist and critic Paul Reidinger along with Lucy Jane Bledsoe whose work includes fiction, nonfiction and books for children.
Tue Oct 7 & Wed Oct 8

Armistead Maupin Reads Isherwood's The Berlin Stories

at Modern Times Bookstore (Tue @ 7:30pm)& The Booksmith (Wed @ 7:30pm)Literary Arts

Acclaimed novelist Armistead Maupin discusses The Berlin Stories, the 20th-century fiction classic written by Christopher Isherwood—the first major openly gay writer, that inspired the Broadway musical and Oscar-winning film Cabaret.
Wed Oct 8

So Many Ways to Sleep Badly

Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore's New Book

at City Lights Books (7:30pm)Books

Sycamore's new novel is about struggling to find hope in the ruins of everyday San Francisco, unveiling a gender-bending queer world where nothing flows smoothly...
Wed Oct 8

The Center / Books Inc. Book Group Meeting

New Book: At Swim, Two Boys

at Three Dollar Bill Cafe (7pm)Books

Books Inc. in the Castro in association with the SF LGBT Center and Three Dollar Bill Café is pleased to announce our next Book Group selection: At Swim, Two Boys by Jamie O’Neill.
Wed Oct 8 - Sun Oct 12

Moby Dick! The Musical

at Theatre Rhinoceros (8pm & Sun @ 3pm)Theatre

The runaway cult hit makes its San Francisco debut, starring the incomparable Matthew Martin and his camp cohort Mike Finn. See what happens when a drag headmistress and her cross-dressed minions put on a musical of Moby Dick to save their beleaguered girls’ school.
Wed Oct 8 - Sun Oct 12

The History Boys

Directed by Ed Decker

at The New Conservatory Theatre (Wed - Sat @8pm, Sun @2pm) Theatre

A delightfully witty comedy of eight boisterous school boys hoping to gain admittance to England’s most prestigious universities. This Tony Award-Winner is a wickedly funny look at history, the pursuit of knowledge, and the utter randomness of life.
Thu Oct 9 - Sat Oct 11

Vampire Lesbians of Sodom with Sleeping Beauty or Coma

A Charles Busch Double Bill

at Stagewerx Theatre (8pm) Theatre

Vampire Lesbians of Sodom tells the saga of two fatally seductive vampiresses whose paths first collide in ancient Sodom. Sleeping Beauty or Coma is based on the fairy tale of Sleeping Beauty and is set in the swinging mod London of the 1960's ...
Fri Oct 10 & Sat Oct 11

Big Dipper: The Bear Musical

at Shotwell Studios (8pm)Theatre

Pull up a barstool and enjoy this world premiere musical comedy celebrating all things furry. Full of jokes, music, and beer, this is not your typical night out at the theater. See you at Big Dipper!
Sat Oct 11

Queer Families = Healthy Families

A Conference About LGBT Parenting

at SF LGBT Community Center (9am-5:30pm) Community

Please join us for a day of exploring a range of issues to LGBT parents and their families. Workshops will address topics such as insemination, adoption, legal issues, attachment dynamics, gender issues, queer families of color, transgender parents, queer dads, and school advocacy.
Sat Oct 11

Cockblock

San Francisco's Most Homolicious Queer Dance Party

at Rickshaw Stop (10pm-2am) Clubs

A Homolicious Queer Dance Party for dykes, trannies, lezzies and friends with DJs Nuxx & Zax. COCKBLOCK is San Francisco's HOTTTEST Queer dance party for Homos & friends.
This Week's Features
This Week's Articles
Room for Squares
By Philip Wong (Oct 03, 2008)
Oh boy! It’s National Coming Out Week. Quick. Everybody, let’s all make like Clay Aiken and make a totally astonishing, never-in-a-million-years-would-anyone-have-guessed proclamation. Ready? On three. One. Two. Three. “Yes, I’m gay!”
Pinkyswear
By w. matthews (Oct 03, 2008)
Oh what a whirl! Since the last time we spoke, the stock market crashed, the world seemed to tumble towards its demise, and I tried my hardest not to get a nasty rash with no avail. After the craziness from Wall Street to Folsom Street, I could barely sit up to make it to my computer screen and send out this message to you! However, as you can tell, I somehow muddles through!
The Swankier Sister of the Potrero Hill original
By Michelle Chan (Oct 03, 2008)
Opened in Spring 2008 by the team that brought us Plouf and Chez Maman, Chez Papa Resto is the swankier version of the original Chez Papa Bistrot in Potrero Hill. Located in the newly-renovated Mint Plaza, the resto's large outdoor patio injects some life to what was formerly a sketchy alleyway, and its flavorful burgers (of Chez Maman pedigree) have downtown office workers declaring it their favorite new lunch spot.
Funner Than Fun
By Jialin Luh (Oct 03, 2008)
As evidenced by reality TV shows like Life of Ryan and Rob and Big, as well as the proliferation of skate company ads plastered everywhere including MUNI buses, it’s pretty obvious that the skateboarding industry has changed drastically from its beginnings to mainstream commercialdom. Though many have started skating hoping to achieve fame and fortune, there are still people in it for the unadulterated love of skateboarding. Local company YOURSeLF Skateboarding Co. was created for the latter.
Youth, Imagination and Transformation
By Nirmala Nataraj (Oct 03, 2008)
The new exhibition at indie arts space Intersection for the Arts predictably foregoes gallery gambits and examines the power of public art to create communal transformation. The concept of public art, at least in the art world, has largely been confined to high-brow ideas of site-specific installations meant to evoke eyebrow-raised reactions.
True Romance
By Rossiter Drake (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

The best thing that can be said for Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist is that it knows its audience. If that sounds like faint praise, let me explain. Teenagers in movies often fall into one of two categories: sex-crazed dopes who wind up at a wild keg party or sex-crazed dopes who wind up on the business end of a lunatic’s machete. Rare is the movie that bothers to speak their language, show some compassion for their follies and give them futures not involving the morgue or Stifler’s mom.
See It for Simon Pegg, Stay for the Satire
By Mel Valentin (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

In How to Lose Friends & Alienate People, the fictionalized adaptation of Toby Young’s non-fiction book of his time as a contributing writer for Vanity Fair, actor-writer-comedian Simon Pegg plays another narcissistic, self-flagellating, man-child. What connects each character (beyond Pegg, of course), is their painfully awkward, if often hilarious, journey into the adult world of responsibility and a long-term, usually a long-term romantic relationship.
Underwhelming is More Like It
By Mel Valentin (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars

There’s a moment in Flash of Genius, a “based on a true story” drama, where the lead character, Bob Kearns (Greg Kinnear), the inventor of intermittent windshield wipers who sued major auto manufacturers in the 70s for stealing his ideas, when on the brink of finally winning financial compensation for his invention, consults his family on what to do next. He can accept $30 million dollars, but only if he drops his demand for an apology and due credit for his invention. Having fought so long and at great personal and professional expense, he refuses. It’s a praise-worthy moment, but...
In God’s Country
By Rossiter Drake (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Religulous may not win many converts, but it poses an age-old question in simple, teasing terms: What if the fundamental tenets of Christianity, Judaism and Islam amount to nothing more than artful fiction? It’s a question those of great faith might be loath to consider, but it’s hard to fault comedian and professed agnostic Bill Maher for asking.
In a world gone blind, what if you were the only one who could see?
By Matt Forsman (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Over the years, we’ve seen just about every kind of epidemic imaginable on the big screen. We’ve seen viruses that turn people into flesh eating zombies, viruses that cause near instantaneous internal hemorrhaging, and viruses that turn people in mutant superheroes. In Blindess, we ‘see’ a very different kind of virus; one that merely handicaps everyone in the form of taking away their vision. Exactly how one’s humanity and character is revealed in the face of such tragedy is the thrust of Fernando Meirelles’ (City of God) latest effort.
An Uninspired, Conventional Western
By Mel Valentin (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars

After the revisionist Westerns of the 70s ran their course, it wasn’t until Clint Eastwood’s 1992 Oscar-winning Western, Unforgiven, that Hollywood began to take the genre seriously. A few misfires, however, left the genre moribund. Last year, however, saw the release of two Westerns, 3:10 to Yuma, a remake of the 1957 film starring Christian Bale and Russell Crowe, and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, an adaptation of Ron Hansen’s novel starring Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck.
Simplicity Equals Complexity
By Matt Crawford (Oct 03, 2008)
Four years after their last LP, Stereolab is back with Chemical Chords, a nod to 60s pop arrangements with layered horns, strings and vibrato guitar providing the backdrop for Laetitia Sadier’s soft French and English delicate vocals. Tim Gane (guitars/keyboards) spoke with SF Station during the band’s New York tour stop. Stereolab will perform at the Fillmore on October 21st and 22nd.
Released on Matador Records, 10/28/08
By Sarah-Jayne Couhault (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

When Lou Reed first released his Berlin album in 1973, Rolling Stone referred to it as a “distorted and degenerate demimonde of paranoia, schizophrenia, degradation, pill-induced violence and suicide”. Some 30 years later, the magazine named it one of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
Released on Deaf Dumb and Blind, 9/9/08
By Martin Malloy (Oct 03, 2008)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Contrary to what the name invokes, this group is not from Japan and they’re not a duo. The group is comprised of Brighton, UK’s David Best (vocals, guitar), Steve Lewis (synths), Matt Hainsby (bass) and Lee Adams (drums). The group are self-proclaimed fans of 70s Krautrock groups and 80s synth-based bands.
Released on 4AD, 10/7/08
By lynne angel (Oct 03, 2008)
A lot of things can happen in an NYU dorm room. Grab yourself a couple of fresh-faced teenagers, a vast and ever-expanding metropolis, and a lack of overall guidance coupled with the egotistical invincibility of a young, eager mind. Though, if you happen to be Fred Nicolaus and Daniel Rossen, in lieu of the typical academic and social roommate rivalry and middle of the night oh so alone panic attacks, you begin a musical romance that not only outlasts your college days but also, for your second performance, lands you on Late Night with Conan O'Brien. Not too shabby.
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