Slog

News & Arts

Line Out

Music & Nightlife

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

KOMO's Marlee Ginter Might Be [a Damn Fine Journalist]...

Posted by Dan Savage on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 11:00 PM

People all over Seattle react to the news that KOMO's Marlee Ginter might be [a damn fine journalist].

While We Were Obsessing About...

Posted by Dan Savage on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 9:21 PM

...the goat blowing community, dentists, old ladies eating cat food, cats and robots getting together, the coming war between the skaters and the BMXers, and Magic Underpants Inc., apparently the stock market took a tumble.

Port Commissioner Gael Tarleton: We Didn't Raise Taxes

Posted by Erica C. Barnett on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 6:46 PM

Last night's meeting of the 43rd District Democrats was the usual mix: Young up-and-comers (including a sharply groomed 43rd District Rep. Jamie Pedersen) and gray-haired old-timers sat in stiff-backed folding chairs munched on bowls of chips and tiny bags of Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies and Planter's peanuts, and read "Eat the State" during slow moments. Two differences: Booze—a liquid smorgasbord that included Corbett Canyon Merlot, Mike's Hard Lemonade, Kokonee beer, and a raspberry-champagne concoction I failed to commit to memory—and a surprise appearance by Seattle Port Commissioner Gael Tarleton, who defended the Port's much-criticized decision to increase the amount of money it collects in property taxes next year, and blasted Port critics for calling it a tax increase.

"We are not raising King County’s taxes by 11 percent," the black-pantsuited Tarleton told 43rd District members. "That is so wrong that it’s almost impossible to figure out how it happened." The distinction Tarleton was making— the Port actually lowered its property tax rate, although the total amount it will collect increased 11 percent because of rising property values—might be true, but it could seem like a semantic distinction to property owners facing higher property tax bills than ever before. The peanut gallery in the back row—made up of several onetime political candidates, various gadflies, and a consultant or two—snickered audibly as Tarleton insisted, somewhat defensively, "We are one of the few government agencies that are not losing money." The fact that the Port of Seattle can tap property taxes—unlike every other port on the West Coast—undoubtedly has something to do with that.

KOMO: Local Goats "Getting Fluffed"

Posted by Dan Savage on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 6:26 PM

So says KOMONEWS.com meteorologist Scott Sistek...

goatsgettingfluffed.jpg

Hm... you don't say...

Be sure to tune in at 11 for a special Stranger News Team Update: KOMO's Marlee Ginter might be [a damn fine journalist]—just like the Center for Sex Positive Culture "might be" spending your hard-earned money. Like Ginter, the Stranger brings you instant reactions from misinformed passersby. At 11.

Black and Gay

Posted by Jen Graves on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 5:45 PM

Chad Goller-Sojourner says Prop 8 organizers failed, at a basic level, to understand or consider black politics. It's more complicated than black homophobia, he writes:

Had they found an interracial gay or lesbian couple (of which there are many) to serve as their spokespeople, they may have had better luck. Or at the very least, the black member of such a couple might have suggested they run with the Rosa Parks (back of the bus) or Brown v. Board of Education (separate is not equal) comparisons. Because, at the end of the day, anyone who has ever spent any time in the black town square, (aka barbershops and beauty salons), knows that the responses and opinions to a comment like, "Did you know so-and-so is gay?" pales in comparison to a comment like, "I heard so and so is messing with a white girl."

His full essay, new on Seattlest, is here.

Lieberman and the Democrats: Closer than Ever!

Posted by Eli Sanders on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 5:00 PM

So he tells Katie Couric:


Watch CBS Videos Online

"It Like Petting Fuzzy Rainbow Made of Kittens"

Posted by Jonah Spangenthal-Lee on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 4:45 PM

And now, your end of the day moment of zen:

Star Trek 90210

Posted by Paul Constant on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 4:42 PM

Via my new favorite love-to-hate Republiblog, Dirty Harry's Place ("a conservative look at film, punk"):

Daily Kos vs. the USS Mariner

Posted by Jonah Spangenthal-Lee on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:53 PM

There's an ugly, vitriolic messageboard brawl going on at Daily Kos and the USS Mariner sports blog over a $10,000 college scholarship for bloggers.

Dave Cameron—of the USS Mariner sports blog—and Kos's David Mauro are both up for the same scholarship and things have gotten nasty.

Kos bloggers have been pimping the living shit out of Mauro—there's something like 30 entries urging Kos readers to vote for him—and posting crap like this:

"It would be a crime against humanity for an excellent progressive blogger to lose to a guy who blogs about the damn Mariners"

See also: here, here and here.

Cameron's currently down 1,000 votes and it's going to take quite a bit for him to get back on top. Voting ends tomorrow (I think) so if you're a local sports fan—or just want to stick it to Kos—throw a bone to a guy who does a fantastic job of covering our soul-crushingly awful baseball team.

Seattle's Best Dentist

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:50 PM

2598479501_f2f0de4a03_m.jpg

Megan Seling and I both find ourselves in need of a new dentist, and we don't seem to have that issue of Seattle Magazine around here. Megan says: "He/She must be nice. I'm a big baby when it comes to dentists." I would add as another qualification that he/she must be a dentist that is only a dentist.

To elaborate: Some years back, a molar needed to be excised from my head, and I was referred to a dentist in downtown Seattle. Upon arrival, I was installed in a consulting room with some sort of assistant, a young man of Ken-doll looks and blindingly white teeth. The Ken-doll provided me all the gory details on the post-extraction option of a dental implant, in which they drill a hole up into your jawbone and screw a fake tooth into it; he had a giant model of this, which only served to make it seem more completely terrifying. Meanwhile, behind him on the back of the door to the consulting room hung a terrycloth robe. He finally finished, smiled eye-hurtingly, and asked if I had any questions, which I took as an opportunity to ask about the robe. Oh, he said, Dr. So-and-So (I can't remember his name or I'd absolutely give it) has a dual practice of dentistry and liposuction.

Isn't that an unusual dual practice? I inquired.

Oh, he didn't know about that, he said, and smiled as if his smile was a sensible-question-remover.

For whatever reason, I did not flee. The dentist/liposuctionist proved to have a comforting manner, assuaging my obvious nerves by assuring me the extraction (of the tooth; liposuction was not mentioned) would only take a moment. Several large doses of anaesthesia were injected into my palate and its surrounds. As my tooth was being pulled, it shattered, and the dentist yanked it out shard by shard with what I swear were regular household pliers as a large, German-looking dental hygienist lady held my head down for leverage, and tears poured uncontrollably down my face. It didn't hurt so much as feel like they were breaking my jaw.

So, I would like a dentist who is just a dentist—Megan, too, I expect. Know a good one?

Photo by mraaronmorris from The Stranger's flickr pool.


Chewing the Fat

Posted by Lindy West on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:31 PM

Fat.jpg

Tomorrow night, courtesy of One Pot, beloved Stranger food writer Angela Garbes will be interviewing author Jennifer McLagan about her new book Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, accompanied by "fat-centric" cuisine from Cremant's Scott Emerick. It is, apparently, not quite sold out yet, so make haste!

Details here.

Film: Not Dead Yet!

Posted by Lindy West on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:16 PM

In the face of an ever-more-fucked economy, SIFF announced today that they're receiving two hefty arts grants:

SIFF is honored to be the recipient of grants from The Wallace Foundation, and The Academy Foundation of the Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences. SIFF will receive $750,000 to be used over four years from The Wallace Foundation, and $30,000 for the 2009 calendar year from The Academy Foundation of the Academy of Motion Picture Art and Sciences.

The Wallace Foundation grant will allow SIFF to engage and broaden audiences through interactive technology, community outreach, and programs developed in partnership with leading community arts organizations. Focusing on diversifying specific areas of its targeted audience demographics, SIFF will use this grant to develop programs with the goal to meet or exceed the King County demographic percentages with non-white minorities including African American, Hispanic, and Asian/Pacific Islander audiences.

The $30,000 received from The Academy Foundation of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was granted to SIFF for the purpose of community outreach that specifically targets and provides free ticketing for under-served communities. Through this program, SIFF intends to distribute more than 10,000 free tickets during the 2009 Seattle International Film Festival to populations throughout the Pacific Northwest.

Old People Forced to Eat Cat Food

Posted by Wm.™ Steven Humphrey on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:05 PM

Perhaps the saddest byproduct of our struggling economy is how it will undoubtedly affect the older generation. When times get really tough, those who won't be able to support themselves will be forced to take extreme measures in order to find sustenance. For example, this grandma who has obviously been forced to eat cat food. But here's the really sad part... NOW SHE LOVES CAT FOOD!

I MEAN, REALLY REALLY LOVES IT!
Watch.

We Can Rebuild It. We Have the Technology.

Posted by Paul Constant on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:03 PM

Slog Tipper Brinsonian directs us to the BBC Archive Project, in which a couple of BBC surveyors examine whether or not the network should look into producing a science fiction drama. This is the report that eventually led to Dr. Who. What's remarkable is how cool and sociological the survey is. Some observations: "SF is overwhelmingly American in bulk," "SF ideas are short winded," "Characterisation is equally spare. People are representative, not individual," "It doesn't appeal much to women and largely finds its public in the technically minded younger groups."

ShoeRobot.jpg
"KLIK!-WILL-YOU-READ-SCIENCE-FICTION-NOW-THAT-I-HAVE-TAKEN-YOU-SHOE-SHOPPING?-KLIK!"

Brinsonian prefers this bit of literary criticism, about what they determine to be a subgenre of SF called "Threat and Disaster:"

"Two exceptions to 'Threat and Disaster' are Arthur Clarke and C.S. Lewis. The latter we think is clumsy and and old-fashioned in his use of the SF apparatus, there is a sense of condescension in his tone, and his special religious preoccupations are boring and platitudinous."

I am completely charmed by these reports.

The Stranger Suggests

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:02 PM

Kidd Pivot, who will perform this weekend at On the Boards, should've been a Stranger Suggests. But there's never room for everything.

Its choreographer Crystal Pite has worked with the world-famous Nederlands Dans Theater and danced for William Forsythe—whose polarizing One Flat Thing, reproduced was recently performed at the ballet, where it inspired wild applause, dozens of angry walkouts, and this gushy Theater News column about sex and cancer, machines and cocaine.

And Pite/Pivot's performance at On the Boards last year (Farther Out) is still stuck in my head.

Kidd_Pivot.jpg

Snapshot_2008-11-19_14-57-26.jpg

From an old Slog post about Farther Out.
http://www.thestranger.com/images/buttons/formatting/bold.gif

Farther Out is, nominally, about an astronaut who is assaulted by an alien. It’s also about telling the same story several different ways. It’s also about a writer (the astronaut) in front of her typewriter, wrestling with an idea (the alien). There is a great looped and fucked-with voiceover by Annie Dillard. There is a typewriter suspended from the ceiling that the astronaut spins, then releases, then dances beneath. The alien moves like an alien—with the stop-motion specificity of a bird or a breakdancer—and the astronaut moves like her whole body is moonwalking.

There are surprises. There is tap dancing. There is . It’s theatrical and smart and fun.

In the comments to that post, Jim Demetre contradicted me, saying: "Farther Out may be the most tedious thing I've seen at On the Boards since Laurie Anderson performed there a few decades ago. It was as pretentious as it was uninteresting, a shame since the dancers had some real skill."

At last Pite provokes debate, which is more than most choreographers can do. I can't wait to see what debates she'll provoke this time.

If you want tickets, see here.

Endless Virtual Narcissism

Posted by Sam Machkovech on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 2:17 PM

There are typical things people love doing in video games—killing, solving puzzles, jumping up and down, getting pissed. More so than those, they love looking at themselves.

The Wii proved this two years ago from today, loosing "Miis" on a world starved for more mirrors. The Wii lets you craft a little 3D dude or lady, which you then take as your player character into Wii Bowling or whatever. Games have done character creation before, but with the Wii, it was the first thing you did when you powered the console, so it was a root experience. Therefore, nobody bowled as the generic brown-haired boy. Why do something so stupid, when you could spend 20 minutes perfecting your virual nose instead?

So Microsoft's choice to update its Xbox 360 menus today, complete with virtual people-makers, probably isn't a coincidence. And the update as a whole is pretty slick, but let's get the navel-gazey stuff outta the way:

slogxboxawesomes.jpg
The Official Slog Guild, L-R: Brandi, Cindy, Sam M., Brianna, Diane, Sally, Brittany, Jonah S.L., Leslie, Shannon

If the Wii "make yourself" feature seemed silly, this one seems doubly so; MS hasn't released any games in which your dude bowls, dances, or gets into slapfights. He/she merely stands around the screen, reminding you that you indeed exist. Though if there's anything worth pointing out, it's that this mode's programmers are total fucking hipsters. Your clothing options are limited to layered, untucked, trendy, and Urban Outfitters-approved garb (along with what looks like Kurt's tee from the "Smells Like Teen Spirit" video). Way to go, friends in Redmond; the whole of Xbox Live will soon look like Capitol Hill.

The main brunt of the change is a menu update that borrows from the iPod's album-flipping mechanic. Hard to go ape over a menu, but this stuff shortens the time between menus and gameplay, so it's fine by me.

Better than that is the "community games" portal, which has finally been opened after months of teasing. This means garage developers can now create and submit their own Xbox games by using dirt-cheap tools and licenses from Microsoft. Once submitted for review, if enough other garage developers give a thumbs-up on MS's forums, that game'll go live on XBL in 72 hours. I tinkered with a couple of the games—one was a compelling, double-gravity version of puzzle game Columns; the other was an even worse version of Too Human. Every community game can be tried out for free with a reasonable time limit, and the full versions didn't appear to top $5. Assuming the community servers stop crapping out soon, this portal is a potential tide-turner, full of free and dirt-cheap experiments.

And Jonah and I are in agreement about the new Netflix portal. After confirming your Netflix info on an Xbox, you can load your PC's "instant queue" on your TV. This was possible before, but never so seamlessly, and while the video isn't HD-pristine, the on-demand nature and wide film/TV show selection make up for it. As a bonus, friends who share a Netflix membership will someday be able to watch movies together through the new Xbox "party" system. MST3K junkies, watch out.

ps3home.jpg

Oh, I suppose I should mention—I was over at Sony's PR HQ yesterday. I received an invite, timed just before this whole Xbox 360 refresh thing, to talk about their forthcoming Home service. Guess what? It's got virtual avatars, too! (I'm afraid neither me nor my guildmates were given sufficient time to build yet another self yesterday, sorry.)

Continue reading »

Who Could Possibly Convince Freaky Right-Wing Americans That Obama Isn't a Muslim Terrorist?

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 1:51 PM

Why, a Muslim terrorist!

In a message purportedly from Ayman al-Zawahiri, the al-Qaeda deputy accused US President-elect Barack Obama of betraying his Muslim roots.

He likened him to a "house slave" - who had chosen to align himself with the "enemies" of Islam.

Mr Obama has said stamping out al-Qaeda "once and for all" will be a top priority during his administration.

UPDATE
Yeah, yeah, it's already been posted twice today. Whatever. I can't keep up.

We're all just old memes, shuffling inexorably towards the trash icon of history.

Your Inauguration Day Plans

Posted by Dan Savage on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 1:37 PM

cafepressedebate2.jpg

People packed into Cafe Presse—and other bars, restaurants and clubs—to watch the debates. People packed into the Stranger's election-night party at the Showbox—and other bars, restaurants, and clubs all over town—to watch returns on election night.

showboxelectionnight.jpg

So what are people planning to do on Inauguration Day? Barack Obama—please, Baby Jesus, keep him safe from violent bigots and perverted goat blowers—will be sworn in as our 44th president at 9 AM local time on January 20. Since we all can't travel to Washington D.C. for the big event, lots of us will be watching on TV. So would you rather watch Barack Obama take the oath of office at home, all alone, in your PJs? Or would you rather pack into someplace cool and watch Barack Obama take the oath of office with hundreds of ecstatic people?

We're thinking about booking a slightly grand space somewhere that serves food (and champagne), putting up some giant-screen TVs, and making an early-morning party out of Obama's swearing in ceremony—which, let's not forget, is also George W. Bush's swearing-out ceremony. But unlike our election night parties and most debate-watching parties, though, this one won't be free. We're thinking tickets, sold in advance, somewhere between $30 or $40—which would cover the cost of breakfast, rental of the room, and the huge-ass TVs. And if there's any money left over we'll add to pile raised by our Strangercrombie auction and send it over to the needy foster kids served by Treehouse.

But before we book a room, Sloggers, we need to know if this be an event you would get out of bed on the morning of January 20th and pay $30-40 to attend.

Is it?

Blooks?

Posted by Paul Constant on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 1:10 PM

One of my current pet peeves is blogs that have been turned into books. The A.V. Club lists 27 such books, and reviews them for content and whether you can get the same information by just reviewing the blog's archives. It's a much more thorough look than I ever would have the intestinal fortitude to undertake.

As a sample, here is their take on my least-favorite blog that has been turned into a book, ever:

4. Hot Chicks With Douchebags (hotchickswithdouchebags.com)

Hot-Chicks-With-Douchebags.thumbnail.jpgThough he defines a douchebag as "An unattractive or offensive heterosexual male characterized by some or all of the following characteristics: overly gelled hair, popped collar, bling, orange tan, overwhelming aura of arrogance," Jay Louis readily applies the term to the spectrum of skeevy, shiny men who populate his blog Hot Chicks With Douchebags. Though the questionable classification of "hot chick" seems mainly based on cup size and lack of clothing, the men to whom these supposed objects of desire cling are unquestionably worthy of mockery—even if the term "douchebag" is as overused and nebulous as "hipster." And the word gets a workout in Louis' book adaptation, which flogs the joke to death with a lengthy classification of douche-types (such as The Fratbag, The Gangstabag, and The Eurobag, which is somehow different from The Greasy Euro-Douche), a glossary of mostly made-up terms (douchepocalypse, scrotifact, woo hotties), and anecdotes of Louis' own close encounters with douchedom. It's a sort-of funny gag that wears extremely thin over 200-plus pages, especially once you realize that, like hipsters, those most likely to call out and mock so-called douchebags most likely have a whiff of doucheness themselves.

I can't do any better than that. It's a great post, and you should read it all.

On Relistening to the Shins' Third Album at the Gym Last Night, a Year and Nine Months After Giving It a Negative Review in The Stranger

Posted by Christopher Frizzelle on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:58 PM

Also discussed: the new ratings system—no more stars!—in The Stranger's album reviews.

You've Come a Long Way, Baby

Posted by Charles Mudede on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:54 PM

This old image...
illustra_rockwl.problm.lg-2.JPG
...has a strange connection to this recent image:
slide_660_13193_large-1.jpg
But Sasha Obama, pictured between two towering Secret Service agents, is a different kind of problem that the country has to live with.

Harry Potter Likes My Brother's Band

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:45 PM

image4614175g.jpg

From a CBS interview with Daniel "I-used-to-be-Harry-Potter-but-now-I-wave-my-wand-in-Equus" Radcliffe:

Another fan was curious about Radcliffe's taste in music.

"There's a great — there's a band called The Wedding Present, who have just released a song — who have been going for ages, I think. They just released 'Hope Loves Betty,' which is great. Now I'm struggling to think. Holy Ghost Revival, a band. They have a song called 'The Gospel According to Judas.' They're sort of between, there are bits of Bowie and glam rock. I can't think of any more at this particular point in time," he said.

Our little sister is going to be sooooo jealous that this kid:

daniel-radcliffe.jpg

Is a fan of this singer:


A digression: I think that video was shot shortly after my we'd returned from a two-month European tour for which I agreed to roadie/sell merch (if you asked my brother) or chaperone (if you asked my mother). It was a trip of waking up in strange places: on a cot in Stockholm with a Swede's feet in my face, in a bed in London with two ladies who weren't there when I'd fallen asleep, on the freezing and barely-carpeted floor of a (concrete, uninsulated) squat in Munich as two beefy German goth-punks snorted crank off a table two feet from my head. In those two months, I learned to sleep like a soldier.

Ken Griffey Jr. Goes to Bat for the US Government

Posted by Jonah Spangenthal-Lee on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:30 PM

KenGriffeyJr.jpgHe has thrilled sports fans for over twenty years with his hitting and fielding exploits. But can Major League baseball star Ken Griffey, Jr. hit a grand slam for the State Department?

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice named Griffey a public diplomacy envoy Tuesday, tasking the All-Star slugger with spreading “the values of the United States” in large part by helping to spark “interest in America and in our culture.”

“Public diplomacy must be a dialogue,” Rice said after meeting with Griffey in Washington. “This dialogue must extend to every citizen in every country, especially to young people.”

She noted that Griffey is uniquely qualified to engage young people given his stature as one of the best-known players in what is arguably the country’s most famous sport.

Former baseball star Cal Ripken Jr., figure-skater Michelle Kwan and actress Fran Drescher have also chosen to become public diplomacy envoys in recent years.

Griffey’s first trip as a diplomatic envoy will be to Panama in January.

Does this mean Junior's not coming back to the Mariners?

KOMO's Marlee Ginter Might Be [a Damn Fine Journalist]

Posted by Dan Savage on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:30 PM

r_1227125509_marleesucksgoats.jpg

Or she might be preparing a followup to her shoddy, sensationalistic, sex- and fact-phobic hit piece on the Center for Sex Positive Culture. A reader forward this email exchange...

From: Billy Vacation
Sent: Tue 11/18/2008 10:03 PM
To: Ginter, Marlee <mginter@komotv.com>
Subject: You should lose your job.

Ms. Ginter,

You are a horrible, unethical journalist. You should be ashamed of yourself for the despicable lies that you are trying to pass off as news. Most people in Seattle just think you are stupid, now you have lost all credibility. I really hope you get fired and sued for your piece on the Center for Sex Positive Culture.

Sincerely,

Billy Vacation

Ginter wrote Billy V. right back...

"Ginter, Marlee" <mginter@komotv.com> wrote:

Thank you so much for responding! This story has gotten wonderful response so much so it would be great to get some of the writers to speak further about this. I'm assuming you're a member of the club as you're clearly interested in writing about it.

I'd love to talk further with you for a possible follow up!

Thanks!

Marlee Ginter
KOMO 4 News Reporter

Billy Vacation isn't a member of the Center—nor am I, for that matter—and he isn't interested in meeting with Ginter. He doesn't trust Ginter not to misrepresent him or twist his words the same way she twisted those of author Brian Alexander. (Alexander was interviewed at KOMO a year ago when his book, America Unzipped, was published. In that original interview, Alexander spoke favorably of his visit to the Center, and backed its education mission. Ginter removed Alexander's words from their original context, tossed in some ominous sound cues, and made Alexander look like he was crusading against the Center. Alexander wrote to Ginter demanding an apology. Ginter hasn't responded to Alexander.) If anyone else has written to Ginter and received a response, please forward your exchange to me.

Finally, I don't have any proof that Marlee Ginter [a damn fine journalist]. But she might be [a damn fine journalist], just as Dan Lewis's hard-earned money "might be going" to the Center for Sex Positive Culture. Anything that might or could be happening, according to KOMO, even things that seem unlikely to be happening (Marlee Ginter [being a damn fine journalist]) or are actually not happening (the Center for Sex Positive Culture taking your tax dollars, Marlee Ginter and KOMO issuing a correction and apologizing for this piece), are "facts" fit for broadcast. So... is Marlee Ginter [a damn fine journalist]? She might be. She could be. So let's just say that she is—why the hell not?

Marlee Ginter: [damn fine journalist]. Now I'm off to get some shocked quotes from misinformed passersby. Film at 11.

Every Crisis an Opportunity

Posted by Eli Sanders on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:15 PM

Rahm Emanuel, describing some of the things the incoming Obama administration is likely to move on quickly. It's not a list for the politically timid:

@SEAshows

The Stranger's Twitter Feed of Seattle Shows
  • Loading Tweets
    loading

Follow @SEAshows
 

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC
1535 11th Ave (Third Floor), Seattle, WA 98122
Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use