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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Privatizing WA Liquor Carries a High Cost, Says Opponent

Posted by Cienna Madrid on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 3:20 PM

As I posted last Friday, we have three bills in the state legislature pushing to privatize WA liquor sales (SB 6204, SB 6839, and SB 6840), their sponsors arguing that the role of government isn't to peddle booze. In the midst of state and local budget crises, privatization would generate over a $100 million a year in additional revenue, advocates say. But even if it didn’t, they argue it’s more appropriate to be cutting employees’ health care and pension plans at 315 state liquor stores than to lose more teachers.

What's the other side of the debate?

Jim Cooper, vice president of the Washington Association for Substance Abuse and Violence Prevention, testified against state senator Sheldon’s bill (SB 6204) and thinks the revenue argument for privatization is bullshit (my words, not his). Successful privatization, he argues, would mean thousands of new liquor stores would flood the state, which would drive up underage drinking rates.

Right now the WSLCB brings in $850 million in revenue from selling booze, a little less than half of which goes to state state and local governments ($332.7 million in 2009). Currently, the state gets money from both liquor markup and taxes, but if liquor stores go private, the state loses out on markup.

If we were to privatize liquor stores—thereby putting the state simply in the business of selling licenses— Cooper says the state would have to open up between 3,000 and 6,000 new stores to generate the same amount of revenue we are now. He adds, "We have to sell that much more booze to generate the same amount in taxes."

Then there's the case to be made regarding increased underage drinking. The liquor enforcement officers and police regularly execute compliance checks, sending teenagers into liquor stores to try and buy alcohol. “In state stores,” Cooper continues, “compliance is above 90 percent, in private stores, it’s below 70 percent.”

“We know from research that when you have a higher liquor density, there are higher rates of youth and adult abuse of alcohol," says Cooper. "In the 12th grade we have 60 percent using alcohol in last 30 days [according to AskHys, which sponsors Healthy Youth Surveys throughout Washington]. In 10th grade, the percentage is about 35 or 40. With higher access, there’s more availability, and a direct correlation to more youth drinking."

Cooper adds, “It’s an American myth" that European kids can handle their liquor. "Several states in the EU are looking to change their drinking age to 21 because of high rates of abuse.”

Which is partly true: France, Australia, Scotland, Italy, and Scotland have all explored raising their legal drinking ages in the last few years to curb youth binge drinking—but most to 18 or 19, not 21. Only France succeeded in raising its drinking age from 16 to 18 in 2009.

“The bottom line is, there’s no huge revenue increase for the state unless we drastically increase the amount of liquor we sell,” says Cooper. “We don’t know what it’s going to cost in prevention and treatment when alcohol abuse goes up that much.”

The Rise of the Camel Burger

Posted by Charles Mudede on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 2:52 PM

It's what's for dinner:

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(CNN) — A new fast food sensation has hit the Emirates' culinary scene.

Right now, Dubai diners can't seem to get enough of the "camel burger."

"It's a sensation," Ramesh, restaurant manager at "Local House" the restaurant chain behind the burgers told CNN. "Everyone's bored of beef and chicken. So, as soon as the word got out, we had queues of customers eager to give it a try."

Not only are the exotic burgers a novelty, they are also a healthier alternative to their beefy American cousins, the restaurant claims. The $6 "camel quarter-pounder" is virtually fat and cholesterol-free, according to Ramesh.

The day will come when everyone is bored of beef, chicken, and camel meat. When that day happens, what animal will we turn to for the revival our excitement?

The photo is by David Dennis.

What Are Your Favorite Anti-Love Songs?

Posted by Eric Grandy on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 2:40 PM

Let us know over on Line Out.

Not Essential Reading: The Little Green Book of Absinthe

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 2:28 PM

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Sometimes subtitles kill: The Little Green Book of Absinthe is subtitled An Essential Companion with Lore, Trivia, and Classic and Contemporary Cocktails. I'm interested in the history of absinthe, so I thought I would take the book out for a spin. I was curious about how it came to be outlawed in the United States and how—in the Bush administration no less—it came to be legalized again. Though I am always skeptical about gothy, artist types who push the absinthe thing way too hard, it does feel like something different than boring old alcohol.

Unfortunately, Little Green is the furthest thing from "Essential." The history of absinthe is glossed over in the first twelve pages (with a few info-boxes spread through the book later on), and the rest of the book is just a bunch of recipes for absinthe cocktails. This isn't a problem if you're looking to make, say, a G.W.'s Cherry Tree (absinthe, cherry liqueur, cherry sorbet, and cherries). But if you're reading this book to learn about, say, lore and trivia, you'll come away disappointed. If you're looking to read about the history of absinthe, you'll have to look somewhere else. But if you're looking for sickly sweet-looking absinthe cocktail recipes, this looks like a great start. For bartenders and serious party-throwers only.

It's Cute When Republicans Try Comedy

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 2:16 PM

The GOP have made some hi-larious internet cards for St. Valentine's Day:

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Ha HA, Republicans! Good one! Total burn!

Dorks.

h/t xom.

"Real-Life Avatar"

Posted by Grant Brissey on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 1:36 PM

A friend tipped me off about this post at Arthur, which likens the successful uprising of the Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) against two governments, (Papua New Guinea, and Australia) a division of mercenaries, and a giant mining corporation to the story of Avatar. It's a great parallel, and for this you don't need $20 or 3-D glasses or any of that shit.

Here's the first five minutes or so of The Coconut Revolution, which documents the BRA and the Bougavillians. It's not on Netfilx, and Scarecrow doesn't have it, but you can watch the whole thing here. You can also apparently buy it here. Not to take away from the first five minutes, but you should watch further in to get to some amazing-type stuff. Maybe wait until your boss takes his two-hour lunch or something. These dudes started out fighting helicopters and guns with bows and arrows, then got trapped with a gunboat blockade around the island, and they still came out on top. Look at how they make fuel. Look at how the leader carries two machine guns even though one of his arms is all fucked up. Look at the shot of a kid carrying a rifle past a long-ago sabotaged earth mover. I want to join these people.

Here is some text quoted from somewhere:

This is an incredible modern-day story of a native people’s victory over Western globalization. Sick of seeing their environment ruined and their people exploited by the Panguna Mine, the Pacific island of Bougainville rose up against the giant mining corporation, Rio Tinto Zinc. The newly formed Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA) began fighting with bows and arrows and sticks and stones against a heavily armed adversary. In an attempt to put down the rebellion the Papua New Guinean Army swiftly established a gunboat blockade around the island, backed by Australian Military personnel and equipment. With no shipments allowed in or out of the island, the People of Bougainville learned to become self-dependent and self-sustained.

Take that, Cameron!


h/t: Danny Noonan

Match Book: Mysterious Foreigners and World War II

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 1:32 PM

Readers ask me for book recommendations in Questionland all the time. Match Book is about helping you find the right book, at the right time.

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Books with Pace, Plot and Setting. Recommendations?

Some of my favorite things to read are true stories of world war II especially submarine patrols, short poetry, Raymond Chandler, mysteries that take place in Nordic countries (Per Wahloo is great, not Henning Mankell for some reason). I've read the Stieg Larsson books (so-so).

I'd like something in that realm. or something completely new with those characteristics so that I branch out a bit.

That's a tall order I know. So thanks.
CB C@L

Howdy CB C@L:

Well, it's not a true World War II story, but you should give Every Man Dies Alone by Hans Fallada a shot. It's a novel written by an author who participated in German underground activities against the Nazis. You can read more about it in my interview with Alan Furst, who has written ten espionage novels set in World War II that you might find interesting, too. (A counterpart novel to Every Man is Irene Némirovsky, whose recently discovered novel Suite Francaise is the French side of the story.)

You might enjoy Fred Vargas's Inspector Adamsberg mysteries, too. They're very French and not Nordic, but there are some similarities to Wahloo's work.

And I think everyone should give Richard Stark's Parker novels a try. They're revenge crime fiction, and they're brutally, brilliantly written novels.

Are you about to go on a long vacation? Have you read everything by your favorite author but you still want more? Do you want to learn about a new subject, but don't know where to start? I can help. Ask me for book recommendations on Questionland

McIck*: McDonalds Introduces the McItaly Burger

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 1:16 PM

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The McItaly is made with all-Italian ingredients and recommended by the Italian government, and everybody's mad (especially, and very understandably, the Slow Food people).

Now, courtesy of the Daily Telegraph, the definitive review:

Rachel Diacono, 17, on holiday from England, told Reuters she wished she'd gone for a pizza instead.

"I love trying out different McDonald's in every country I go to—France is great—but here it's like they couldn't be bothered to make the effort. They should have put mozzarella and sun-dried tomatoes in or something," she said.

Note: The McItaly (like every fast-food product known to humankind) resembles its glamour shot above only vaguely. It actually looks like this.

*Can I say that? Or will McDonalds sue me?

Wasted Seahawks Fan Still Sore About Super Bowl XL

Posted by Unpaid Intern on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 1:11 PM

Posted by Sarah Anne Lloyd

Last Tuesday around 8:04 p.m., Seattle cops responded to an assault at the Downtown Emergency Service Center Supportive Housing, which provides housing to homeless individuals with chronic alcohol addiction, on Eastlake Ave. According to a police report, two men were hanging out discussing the Super Bowl when the suspect overheard their conversation and "became angry for an unknown reason, but [the victim] thinks it may have been because they were talking about the Colts and Saints."

The suspect, according to the report, is "a known Seahawks fan." The victim told police that the suspect started yelling at him stating, "I'm going to kill you," while "swinging a small portable stereo by its cord in the direction of [the victim]," the report continues. The victim told police that the stereo almost hit him twice but missed, and that he "did not believe [the suspect] would actually kill him, but was afraid of being hit by the stereo." After a little while, the suspect just walked away.

Police then contacted the suspect, who was "very intoxicated and wearing a Seahawks NFC championship cap." The suspect insisted he didn't do anything, but an on-site manager told police he'd been picking fights all evening, and said, "we tried to keep him distracted." The man was arrested for assault.

An Overwrought Soundtrack and No Volver

Posted by David Schmader on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 1:01 PM

..but other than that, Paul Proulx's 7-minute montage of the films of the 2000s is remarkably well done.

Holy cow that Dark Knight scene is amazing.

Thanks for the heads-up, MetaFilter.

Man Assaults Woman for Not Giving Him a Cigarette

Posted by Unpaid Intern on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:50 PM

Posted by news intern Sarah Anne Lloyd

Last Tuesday, a Nordstrom employee went out for a smoke break on 6th Avenue; she "lit her cigarette and the suspect approached her and put his face right in front of her face and asked for a light," a Seattle police report says. She said she didn't have a light, so the suspect asked for a cigarette, but she refused to give him one. According to the police report, the man then "became very upset and cocked his hand back as if he was going to hit her," so she pulled her head back so only the man's fingertips hit her. The man started to run southbound, but when he heard her yelling to the "valet guys" to call 911, the woman said he came at her again, calling her a "bitch" and a "cunt".

The woman said she tried to run across the street to the "valet guys," but there were too many cars, so she "stood on the sidewalk and braced herself as the suspect approached her," the report continues. She told police that the suspect "again got right in her face and this time spit in her face." The man, according to the report, escaped southbound on 6th Avenue. The report says, the suspect "had blond hair and was wearing a gray zipper hoodie and green baggy cargo pants" and "had a very noticeable bruise under his left eye."

Captain America Versus the Teabaggers

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:34 PM

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NEWSFLASH! Teabaggers are outraged. Wait, that didn't come out right. How about this? NEWSFLASH! Teabaggers are outraged by a funny book. Publius's Forum outlines the latest issue of Captain America, in which the Captain (and his partner, The Falcon, who is black) have to engage with a Tea Party in order to infiltrate a "white supremacist, anti-government, survivalists type" group called The Watchdogs.

Publius is outraged for many reasons, but here is the first: "Naturally, the people in these crowds are depicted as being filled with nothing but white folks." Um? The only non-whites I've ever seen at Tea Parties, either in my own experience or from watching videos, have been onstage, speaking. An all-white teabagger crowd is probably the most realistic thing going on in that issue of Captain America. And Publius goes on:

So, there you have it, America. Tea Party protesters just “hate the government,” they are racists, they are all white folks, they are angry, and they associate with secretive white supremacist groups that want to over throw the U.S. government...Nice going Marvel Comics. Thanks for making patriotic Americans into your newest super villains.

Captain America has advanced the liberal agenda several times before, of course. Once, he fought Ronald Reagan, who had turned into a snake-man, and once he was in the room when a disgraced Richard Nixon shot himself.

(Thanks to Matt Hickey for the tip.)

More Marriage Equality News

Posted by Dan Savage on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:28 PM

Efforts to strip same-sex couples of their right to wed failed today in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Flickr Photo of the Day

Posted by Aaron Huffman on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:23 PM

Posted to The Stranger's Flickr pool by kjten22

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Marriage Equality Activists In New York City...

Posted by Dan Savage on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:16 PM

...are planning a protest designed to drive home the absurdity of denying marriage licenses to gays and lesbians. Same-sex couples are going to apply for marriage licenses this Friday morning at the City Marriage Bureau in New York and, after their applications are rejected, one opposite-sex couple—a gay man and a lesbian—will apply for and receive a marriage license. Here's the plan for the action this Friday in NYC:

A gathering of same-sex marriage equality proponents for a press conference and rally in the park opposite the bureau; The application—and subsequent rejection—of several same-sex couples hoping to obtain a marriage license inside of the bureau; The application—and subsequent approval—of a lesbian and gay man, whom according to New York State law may legally marry each other, for a marriage license; and a significant act of civil disobedience to rival the lunch-counter sit-ins of the 1960s, in which black Americans asserted their rights of equal treatment by society at large.

If part of that plan sounds familiar—a gay man and a lesbian getting a marriage license?—it's because a co-worker and I did it here back in 2004...

The clerk called over her manager, a nice older white man, who explained that Amy and Sonia couldn't have a marriage license. So I asked if Amy and I could have one—even though I'm gay and live with my boyfriend, and Amy's a lesbian and lives with her girlfriend. We emphasized to the clerk and her manager that Amy and I don't live together, don't love each other, and don't plan to have kids together, and that we're going to go on living and sleeping with our same-sex partners after we get married. So could we still get a marriage license? "Sure," the license-department manager said, "If you've got $54, you can have a marriage license."

...

Amy and Sonia and I didn't show up at the county building last Friday because we were planning to sue. We came to make a point about the absurdity of our marriage laws. Amy can't marry Sonia, I can't marry Terry—why? Because the sanctity of marriage must be protected from the queers! But Amy and I can get a marriage license and enter into a sham marriage, if we care to, a joke marriage, one that I promise you won't produce children. And we can do this with the state's blessing—why? Because one of us is a man and one of us is a woman. Who cares that one of us is a gay man and one of us is a lesbian?

So marriage has to be protected from the homos—unless, of course, the homos marry each other.

The New York activists—a new group called Queer Rising—is also planning acts of civil disobedience for Friday. I'm all for it. I'm all for gay men and lesbians obtaining marriage licenses to demonstrate the absurdity of bans on "gay marriage" and I've already called for acts of civil disobedience. It's time, people.

Meanwhile in Iran...

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:06 PM

A "wave of arrests":

Though the government has refrained from arresting the principal leaders of the opposition, the category of people it has pursued has grown broader over time. While a number of well-known reformists were detained shortly after the contested presidential election in June, the ranks of those imprisoned now include artists, photographers, children’s rights advocates, women’s rights activists, students and scores of journalists. Iran now has more journalists in prison than any other country in the world, with at least 65 in custody, according to Reporters Without Borders.

Only two days until the anniversary of the Iranian Revolution...

Lunchtime Quickie: Touch My Tuts, Rape Me in My Thighs...

Posted by Kelly O on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 12:05 PM

...come on, give me water dessert!

Here Comes Google Buzz

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 11:43 AM

Mashable has the story on Google's latest attempt to turn Gmail into a social networking hub: Google Buzz. It's kind of confusing:

So, apparently, it's like Twitter, Google Wave, and Facebook all at once in your e-mail, and you can connect to Twitter (but not Facebok) with it. It remains to be seen if yet another interface is what the internet needs, but Google at least has an enormous captive audience. You can try Google Buzz right now; it's live in your Gmail.

Yesterday The Stranger Suggested: Collide-O-Scope

Posted by Matthew Cooke on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 11:20 AM

Meet Matthew Cooke, a Stranger reader who has vowed to do everything The Stranger suggests for the entire month of February. Look for his reports daily on Slog. —Eds.

Contemplating an event like last night’s film festival at Re-bar, I am reminded again of the incredible breadth of human endeavor. Our endless curiosity drives us into the deepest, darkest corners of the psyche, and before you know it, Herve Villechaize is dry-humping Danny Elfman’s sister-in-law while a man in his underwear floats above them holding lit candles between his toes.

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You know you’re in for some wild shit when Kelly O recommends it, and I wish I’d had the energy to be there for the whole thing; no doubt, I missed some seriously bizarre cinema. But it was a Monday night and after working all day, not to mention a long week of Stranger-recommended events, I didn’t have much left.

Nevertheless, I soldiered on downtown, ordered a drink, and watched the crazy happen for an hour or so. As fate would have it, I got there right at the beginning of the Villechaize opus, “Forbidden Zone,” and while the parade of lunacy unfolded onscreen, I had a recurring sense of déjà vu. I couldn’t tell if it was the guy in the giant frog costume or the horny Grandpa wearing a propeller beanie, but something was undeniably familiar.

Then Danny Elfman showed up (as the Devil, natch), and it was all clear to me. I was once a pretty big Elfman fan you see, and was aware of this movie even though I didn’t recognize it from the title. Now that I have finally seen it, I am fulfilled. Praise the Lord!

So yes, I approve of last night’s recommendation, despite the Monday night aspect. What the hell else is there to do on a Monday? I suppose The Stranger could recommend sitting on your ass and recovering from the Super Bowl, but wouldn’t you rather watch a boy who thinks he’s a chicken be decapitated, only to have his still-living head grow wings and offer additional plot commentary?

Of course you would.

Today The Stranger Suggests

Posted by The Stranger on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 11:00 AM

Theater

'my dear Lewis'

Kyle Loven, a recent transplant from Minneapolis, has brought his gorgeous and brooding puppetry to Seattle—lucky us. Loven uses finger puppets, marionettes, shadow puppets, video projections, and household objects to tell his story about a dying old man and his fraying memory. Lewis's aesthetic is equal parts Edward Gorey, Samuel Beckett, and Czech surrealism, and even when its narrative jumps the rails into total obscurity, his stage pictures (and surprising use of household materials) are a joy to watch. (Annex Theatre, 1100 E Pike St, 800-838-3006. 8 pm, $10.)

BRENDAN KILEY

Shut Down! Bamboo Garden in Bellevue

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:55 AM

The health department has shut down Bamboo Garden in Bellevue (note: not vegetarian favorite Bamboo Garden in lower Queen Anne, which has different ownership) for this slew of violations:

Potentially hazardous foods at unsafe temperatures
Improper cooling of potentially hazardous foods
Foods not protected from cross contamination
Poor personal hygiene
Handwashing facility unavailable
Toxic items not properly stored
Equipment/utensils not properly sanitized

Updates on reopening (and future closures, shudder) may be found over here.

The White Stripes vs. the Air Force

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:55 AM

Remember that Super Bowl ad for the Air Force Reserve? The one that looked like a Mountain Dew commercial set to an elevator-cheese cover of "Fell in Love with a Girl"? Remember how everybody was all "the White Stripes gave the Air Force permission to use a shitty version of their song for a Super Bowl ad? What the fuck?"

Turns out the White Stripes didn't give anyone permission to use a shitty version of their song for a Super Bowl ad.

The Air Force Reserve was unavailable for comment.

How's That Hopey, Changey Stuff Working Out For Childhood Obesity?

Posted by Dan Savage on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:39 AM

The problem isn't what we're feeding our kids. The problem is what we're feeding ourselves. Adults are reluctant to make "better, healthy choices" for their kids because they don't want to make better, healthier choices for themselves. Kids aren't going to eat fresh fruits and vegetables, and opt for skim milk or water with meals, so long as mom and dad are sitting there scarfing down bags of chips and sucking down Cokes.

And people aren't going to make better choices so long as we're subsidizing the production of cheap, sugary, crap snack-and-fast foods. Soda should be taxed like alcohol and snack-and-fast foods should be taxed like cigarettes, i.e. not so heavily taxed that they're completely out of reach (people still drink, people still smoke), but taxed heavily enough that people can't afford to live on corn syrup and crap.

Anyway, the White House launched its "fight against childhood obesity" today—and somewhere Sarah Palin is preparing two-pronged attack—a Tweet and a Facebook status update—denouncing the White House's efforts as a hopey, changey socialist plot to indoctrinate our children and destroy our country by preventing American children from developing adult-onset diabetes in their early teens like God intended. And when the predictable and imbecilic attack comes the Democrats will stand there helplessly with their dicks in their hands.

Reading Tonight: Wills to Power

Posted by Paul Constant on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:22 AM

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Four readings tonight.

At Third Place Ravenna, Christina Dudley reads from her novel Mourning Becomes Cassandra. It's about a Christian who moves in with some friends and decides to mentor a "prickly, dog-whispering 15-year-old." If you are a prickly 15-year-old—dog-whispering or not—you might want to go to Secret Garden Books tonight. Heather Brewer reads from The Chronicles of Vladimir Tod: Eleventh Grade Burns, which is the fourth installment in a young adult vampire series. No, not that young adult vampire series.

Geoffery Canada reads at Kane Hall. Canada, the President and CEO of the Harlem Children's Zone, wants to completely revive inner cities all at once. Oddly, this is the same debate that takes place in the French action movie District 13: Ultimatum, which is now playing at the Varsity.

The reading of the night, though, is at Town Hall. Garry Wills is a big damn deal. Bomb Power: The Modern Presidency and the National Security State looks at the office of the president and how it's become over-reliant on nuclear weaponry.

The full readings calendar, including the next week or so, is here. And if you're planning on staying in and you're looking for personalized book recommendations, feel free to tell me the books you like and ask me what to read next over at Questionland.

When Do You Write About the Ex-Wife?: Biography Rears its Ugly Head

Posted by Jen Graves on Tue, Feb 9, 2010 at 10:02 AM

A few weeks ago I wrote about the premiere performances of Olivier Wevers's new dance company, Whim W'him, at On the Boards; I was unimpressed (and very much in the minority).

Sunday a new strain of commentary popped up on the subject: Spectrum choreographer Donald Byrd wondered on his blog about how Wevers's use of women in the piece changed if you knew (as some in the audience did; all you had to do to know was follow dance in Seattle) that the woman in question—who was humped, then stuffed in a trash can—was Wevers's ex-wife, and that the humper was Wevers's current husband. (Via Jeremy Barker.)

Byrd ultimately comes down on the side that this does not really feed into whether the dance was good or not, but he sure spends some time teasing it out before he does—referring to other choreographers, including Bill T. Jones, for whom biography has been an important factor (and for which he's been roundly criticized). And Byrd raises the important point that "the non-aesthetic" and the "aesthetic" continue to enjoy a terrifically uncomfortable relationship—much more uncomfortable, surely, than a dancer and the ex-husband choreographer whose company she willingly performs with.

I'm not a purist by any means. The aesthetic and the non-aesthetic are like crazy lovers: nobody else can do to them what they can do to each other.

But in this case I left the biography alone for a simple reason: For me Wevers's symbolism wasn't nuanced enough to analyze in the first place, let alone to follow its trail of crumbs into the murky zone of biography.

In other words, the lady being humped and the lady being trashed did not affect me either way because they were poetically DOA. Stuffing a lady in the trash in an affecting way would be a topic of conversation: Maybe it's misogynist, maybe not—depends entirely on the context.

That's a level of analysis it's unnecessary to do unless certain basics are met.

Here's what I did write about gender and Wevers's choreography, in case you want to take another look.

After the performance, I was part of a KUOW conversation about it next door at the Sitting Room that included Wevers. Bizarrely, when I asked him how one of the dances was different when it was set on a man and a woman rather than, as in a previous incarnation, on two women, he told me the gender didn't make any difference. When I expressed disbelief (haven't we established that colorblindness/genderblindness are nothing more than forms of intellectual and imaginative disability?), he informed me that his definition of gender must simply be more fluid than mine. Hmm. I will take that challenge, Mr. Wevers, and we should discuss it further. I shall wear pants. But in the meantime, this exchange raised yet another unflattering aspect to the performance: The female dancers had plenty to do, but the character of what they did felt limited, under-explored, off. Wevers felt a little like a novelist who can't quite write women, or who isn't that interested in trying. The flip side of this is that Wevers's choreographic focus on men (as well as, recently, PNB's) is marvelous, and especially so given ballet's history of focusing on the ladies. In dance, as in the world, we've only just begun to figure out what men and women can really do, rather than what we thought they were capable of. I want more of that. A partly improvised male solo in the middle of the evening's Mozartean selection (this piece to a segment of the Requiem) was stunning.

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