Ghosts Run Mild in ‘Phantom of the Theatre’

0
Raymond Yip Wai Man’s Phantom of the Theatre has all the easy-to-digest charm of a Disneyland attraction. Also most of the built-in limitations. The China/Hong Kong production, made for HK’s Distribution Workshop, expends a large of amount of care and money on its sumptuous sets and costuming, but the scenario — written by Hana Li Jing Ling, Sakura Yang Mei Yuan, and Manfred Wong — is a slick and forgettable pastiche of well-worn Hollywood and Hong Kong spook-house routines. It’s interesting mostly as a lackluster place-holder in the career of director Yip, and as a dispiriting reminder of the standardization of big-budget Asian spectacles. The previously wild and unpredictable Crown Colony has become Burbank East. Other-worldly troubles plague the budding moviemaking career of Gu Weibang (played by Tony Yang Yo Ning), who wants to shoot a horror film in a haunted Shanghai theater, circa 1930s. Actors and crew are bursting into flame at inopportune moments, which hampers Gu’s on-set romance with starlet Meng Si Fan (Ruby Lin). Blame it on a suspicious fire years earlier and the accompanying revenge curse. In a bit of dialogue that may or may not poke fun at contemporary Chinese government authoritarianism, a character reminds the crew: “Films cannot promote superstitions and aberrations.” Perish the thought. But that doesn’t prevent filmmaker Yip (Young Bruce Lee, The Warlords) from having fun with haunted mirrors and people’s glowing charcoal innards.

Well Go USA Entertainment, the releasing company that is distributing Phantom of the Theatre, has put out an impressive string of high-gloss picture shows, including Tsui Hark’s The Taking of Tiger Mountain, Wilson Yip’s Ip Man 3, and Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin, one of last year’s best films. It also tried to sell something called Bikini Girls on Ice. Not even ice-skating ghosts in bikinis could save Phantom of the Theatre.

Meat Market

Oakland band Meat Market writes infectious, hooky pop punk, and the band recently released its latest album, Dig Deep — a long-anticipated follow-hop to its 2012 self-titled album. The new record is rife with punchy, fast-paced major chord riffs and happy-go-lucky rhythms. The group has a goofy, self-effacing sense of humor that gives them an underdog appeal, and Dig Deep — the title of which is an allusion to the introspective nature of its tracks — contains lyrics that the socially awkward introverts among us will surely relate to: Into this hole I will go/Find comfort in what you know, as the hook of “Hole” goes. To celebrate Dig Deep, Meat Market has a show at Crate in Downtown Oakland with garage-pop band Younger Lovers — the project of Oakland queer punk auteur, author, and dancer Brontez Purnell. Fellow punk band Yi and screamo band Lofter join them on the bill, along with DJ Doggie Chow.

Dig Deep by Meat Market

The Compound Gallery 8th Anniversary

The Compound Gallery started in a dilapidated liquor store on San Pablo Avenue in 2008. In 2010, it moved to its current location in North Oakland (1167 65th St.). And in 2014 it expanded from one to two buildings, totaling 12,000-square-feet of gallery space and art studios serving seventy artists. On Friday, May 7, The Compound Gallery will be celebrating its eighth anniversary with a full night of technical demonstrations from some of its resident artists. The lineup of seven free workshops include laser-cutting, risograph, calligraphy and letterpress printing demos. Meanwhile, throughout the night, there will be an opening for the show Paper Pushers, held in the Main Gallery. The show features artists from across the country working in the mediums of letterpress, screen and block printing, and illustration. And in the Fabrefaction Gallery, there will be a reception for Birdsong is Not Made By Machines, a new solo show from Appalachian-born artist Jeremiah Jenkins, which will explore the intersection of natural evolution and technological innovation. You’ll likely want to arrive early in order to see it all.

Elephantine and The Seshen

There are few summertime activities more satisfying than catching some live music at a park while sipping a cool, refreshing beverage. And that’s the kind of atmosphere you can expect at Yerba Buena Gardens Festival, a summer concert series in the outdoor area of the venerable SoMA arts institution. For the May 7 edition, Oakland bands Elephantine and The Seshen are slated to perform. Elephantine is the new project of musician, entrepreneur, and activist Zakiya Harris, who creates rich neo-soul steeped in Afro-futurist philosophy. While Harris is also a solo artist, she recently joined forces with fellow powerhouse vocalists Tossie Long and Solas B. Lalgee and several other musicians, and together, they make big, ecstatic tracks with life-affirming messages. The Seshen, a multifaceted seven-piece band with a similarly soulful vibe that incorporates electronic elements and jazzy instrumentation, will also dazzle audiences with virtuosic musicianship.

UK 2 Da Bay

While grime — a genre from the UK that combines elements of hip-hop, garage, and jungle — has always had a following in the United States, it’s currently becoming even more popular thanks to Kanye West and Drake’s interest in the artist Skepta. These North American superstars have collaborated with the grime heavyweight within the past several years (and Drake has championed his work through his label, OVO Sound), earning him a growing stateside fan base. As a tribute to Skepta and the grime subculture, the promotional outfit O-Ting is throwing a grime-themed dance party featuring DJ JackIzBack, UnityBoomShots, and New Star Regents at Alena Studios in West Oakland. The party will be a treat for diehard fans, as it’s pretty rare to hear grime at an Oakland club, as well as new listeners looking to expand their horizons.

Oakland Official Handling Coal Controversy Personally Invested in Fossil Fuels

A high level Oakland official advocating that the city council hire a consultant to help them decide whether or not to reject plans for a coal export terminal is personally invested in fossil fuel companies. Anti-coal activists say the investments are inappropriate, and they’re worried the official could be steering the consulting contract to a company that will rubber stamp fossil fuel activities in Oakland.

The consultant, Environmental Science Associates (ESA), often works in cooperation with fossil-fuel companies and local governments to draft environmental-impact statements for projects. Anti-coal activists say, however, that ESA has no experience in the field of public health, which they claim is the most relevant area of expertise. But they’ve been unable to convince the city to hire a different expert.

Part of the reason is Assistant City Administrator Claudia Cappio. Cappio picked ESA for the job and wrote in a report to the city council that ESA is the only company with the necessary expertise to quickly get it done. Cappio rejected a proposal submitted by Human Impact Partners, a public health consulting firm based in Oakland, to study the health effects of coal. Cappio also expanded the proposed contract with ESA to include analysis of other fossil fuels in addition to coal, despite protests from environmental groups that this could open a backdoor for oil companies to expand operations in Oakland. The city council will vote on the contract with ESA at their meeting tomorrow night.

“We find it very troubling to learn that Claudia Cappio, who has been running the show for the city since last September, has investments that can benefit from shipping coal in Oakland,” said Michael Kaufman of the No Coal in Oakland coalition. “Cappio should never have been allowed to take charge of the city’s process and choose ESA — an organization with no public health expertise — for a no-bid contract to review the most important public health question to face the city in recent years.”

According to city records, Cappio’s investments include a utility company that has an active business relationship with Bowie Resource Partners, the coal company that has been trying since at least 2014 to gain access to Oakland’s waterfront to export millions of tons of coal to foreign markets. Cappio also owns stakes in a railroad that would benefit if Oakland allows coal exports through the city. She also owns stock in an oil and gas pipeline company that recently tried to turn part of the Port of Oakland into a fossil fuel terminal.

Cappio was hired by the city last year, and among other responsibilities, she is helping the council navigate the controversial proposal by developer Phil Tagami and former Port of Oakland Executive Director Jerry Bridges to ship coal through Oakland on trains and export it from the Oakland Bulk Oversized Terminal (OBOT), which Tagami’s company CCIG is building at the former Army Base.

A clause in the city’s contract with CCIG permits the city to block activities that could have negative health and safety impacts. Anti-coal activists say this empowers the city to block the coal plan. But Cappio and other city officials have said that it is first necessary to hire an expert to help the council make this decision so that it is legally defensible.

When Cappio was hired by the city last year, CCIG issued a newsletter written by Tagami praising her. “Cappio is a welcome arrival for the Oakland Global project,” Tagami wrote. “The hiring of Claudia Cappio was lauded by Governor Jerry Brown, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf, and local builders who believe that Cappio’s experience and know-how will serve Oakland well as development gains momentum.” Tagami’s profile of Cappio directly followed an equally glowing profile of Bridges, the CEO of Terminal Logistics Solutions (TLS), which is in contract with CCIG to operate the OBOT coal terminal. In March, Bowie Resource Partners CEO John Siegel disclosed that his company owns a “vested interest” in TLS.

In a required disclosure form Cappio filed with the city last month, she listed owning at least $100,000 of stock in Berkshire Hathaway, the holding company run by Warren Buffet. One of Berkshire’s largest subsidiaries is Pacificorp, a utility that does direct business with Bowie Resource Partners. Pacificorp owns ten coal-fired power plants in the western US, including a power station in Utah that purchases 2.8 million tons of coal from Bowie each year. Last June, Bowie and Pacificorp struck a deal in which Pacificorp will purchase coal for this power plant until the year 2029 from Bowie. As part of the deal, Pacificorp also sold 50 million tons of Utah coal reserves to Bowie. Pacificorp made $1.02 billion in profit last year for its parent company Berkshire.

Berkshire also owns the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad (BNSF). BNSF had $4.6 billion in revenues last year from shipping coal, about 22 percent of the company’s total, and at least one mine owned by Bowie is served by BNSF. BNSF could also end up delivering fossil fuels to the OBOT terminal if ESA finds no significant health and safety impacts, and the council doesn’t block the coal plan.

Beyond coal, Cappio also owns stock worth at least $10,000 in Kinder Morgan, an oil and gas pipeline company. She also owns shares worth at least $10,000 in the Vanguard Energy Fund which has stakes in dozens of oil and gas companies.

Like Bowie, Kinder Morgan has also sought to build fossil fuel export facilities on Oakland’s waterfront. In 2014 Kinder Morgan teamed up with Tagami’s CCIG in an effort to convince the Port of Oakland to turn the Howard Terminal into a fossil fuel hub. The port commission rejected the plan because CCIG provided insufficient information, and because of “environmental concerns.” Vying for the same real estate was Bowie Resource Partners, but the Port also rejected Bowie’s bid.

Altogether Cappio’s investments in companies with links to the coal, oil and gas industries total at least $120,000, part of her personal investment portfolio worth a total value ranging somewhere between $818,000 and $8.9 million. (State transparency laws don’t require reporting exact dollar values.)

But Cappio is confident her personal investments don’t run afoul of any rules, or impact her work for the city council.

“I have reviewed my investments and at this time I do not have any financial interest that would require me to declare a potential conflict of interest under the [Fair Political Practices Commission] Conflict of Interest regulations,” Cappio wrote in an email to the Express.

But the No Coal in Oakland coalition said Cappio’s investments in fossil fuel companies show that she doesn’t take the health and safety threats of coal, oil and gas seriously enough. And they’re worried that the contract with ESA is therefore meant to justify the coal export proposal rather than bolster the city’s case to block coal.

Anti-coal activists have pointed to ESA’s role in helping Valero with a controversial oil-by-rail project as an example of how ESA “helps” fossil fuel companies. In 2014 ESA wrote an environmental impact study for Valero’s proposal to expand its operations in the City of Benicia. Although the study noted that approving the project would result in approximately 100 train cars of crude oil passing through Sacramento on their way to Benicia each day on a busy commuter corridor, and within a quarter-mile of 27 schools, ESA found no significant risks. The Sacramento Bee reported that the ESA study “minimizes risk from oil trains.”

“Cappio has presented ESA as the only organization capable of reviewing the evidence, but she didn’t even talk to local public health experts with national reputations who want to do this work,” said Kaufman. “We can’t trust the city’s evaluation process with Cappio and her handpicked consultant in charge.”

Not all environmental groups share the same concerns about the ESA study, however. The local chapter of the Sierra Club said they couldn’t comment on any possible conflicts regarding ESA or city staff, but that time is running out for Oakland to take action, and a delay could do more harm than good.

“The people of Oakland have been waiting for over a year for the city council to protect their health and safety by banning coal exports,” said Brittany King of the Sierra Club’s San Francisco Bay Chapter. “The current timeline makes it possible for the council to meet all their deadlines and vote on an ordinance to ban coal before the summer recess. If we delay even further, this process could get pushed past the election, denying voters the opportunity to know where their councilmembers stand on this crucial issue.”

Town Business: Coal Conflicts; Local Green Energy; Soda Pop Tax

Coal Conflicts: Oakland officials want to hire an outside consulting firm to  help determine whether or not there will be significant health and safety impacts from a proposal to ship millions of tons of coal through the city. If the consultant finds negative health and safety impacts from fugitive coal dust, or other risks, then the council might block developer Phil Tagami and former Port of Oakland Executive Director Jerry Bridges from turning a marine terminal they are building at the old Oakland Army Base into the largest coal export facility on the West Coast.
The city administrator’s office has selected Environmental Science Associates (ESA) to conduct the study, and is recommending that the council hire ESA under a no-bid contract.
But anti-coal activists are actually opposed to the city hiring ESA. The activists claim that ESA doesn’t have expertise in the fields necessary to understand the health impacts of coal. Furthermore, anti-coal activists also say ESA has a conflict of interest, and will likely rubber stamp the coal export scheme. Coal opponents claim that ESA normally works with fossil fuel companies to help them gain approval for projects like oil shipments via rail and pipeline.
City officials say, however, that only ESA has the kind of expertise needed to wade through thousands of pages of documents and other records to figure out just what might happen if the coal scheme becomes a reality.
Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf already hit pause on the contract with ESA back in February, after anti-coal activists told her the contract’s scope of work was too limited. This time, however, Schaaf supports the contract with ESA.
But there’s another potential conflict of interest that could impact the decision to hire ESA. The Express will elaborate in a news story later today. Stay tuned.

Local Green Energy: Years ago, Oakland studied whether it was feasible for the the city to set up a public energy authority that could purchase electricity on the open market, and also use ratepayer funds to upgrade Oakland’s energy infrastructure – or even to build new power-generating assets like rooftop solar. The final report for that effort said it was too tall an order for Oakland to accomplish. Facing more pressing issues like the foreclosure crisis, budget cuts, and the loss of redevelopment, Oakland backed off.
But all the while, the local green energy concept has been incubating. And recently Alameda County officials revived the proposal, and have drawn in numerous cities, including Oakland, to discuss what a local green energy authority might look like.
On Tuesday night, the council will hear a report updating them on the progress that Alameda County has made towards launching a local, renewable-focused energy program that would include Oakland.

Soda Pop Tax: The council is expected to vote this week to put a sugar-sweetened beverage tax on the November ballot. The tax, one cent per fluid ounce of drink, could raise as much as $10 to $12 million annually, all of which would be spent on health programs to try to get Oaklanders to drink less corn syrup-infused junk.
Soda pop industry giants (“Big Soda” companies like Coca-Cola, Pepsico, and their lobbying group the American Beverage Association) recently hired “one of the preeminent political law, government law, and lobbying firms in the country” to help them defeat Oakland’s sugar-sweetened tax. Last week, Big Soda filed paperwork with the Oakland City Clerk’s office to establish a political action committee that they’ll soon be pouring money into. So we can expect to see ads saturating billboards, bus stops, BART stations, and the airwaves — probably a few million dollars worth, given the size of the market and the profits at stake — decrying what Big Soda is already trying to define as a “grocery tax” that will hit consumers hard.
And perhaps there’s a kernel of truth in Big Soda’s claim: the sugar-sweetened beverage tax will probably be passed on to the consumer, so it’s a regressive way of taxing children and the poor to fund health and education programs.

Flag burning, hotel-lobby rappelling, ‘Latinos for the wall’—welcome to Donald Trump’s Bay Area appearance

A team of East Bay Express reporters will recap, analyze and riff on Donald Trump’s big luncheon at today’s California GOP convention in next week’s issue. Be sure to pick it up. Until then, three lessons learned:

[jump] Flag burning at a Trump rally is controversial: I’m told lighting up the American flag is not uncommon at Bay Area and Oakland actions (I’m the new guy here). But this flag-burning video incited all sorts of anger (and Racist Twitter):


The burning occurred after Trump’s speech concluded, around 2 p.m., on the lawn out front of the Hyatt Regency in Burlingame.

My take on incendiary U.S. flags as a form of civil disobedience isn’t important. What is is how traditional media uses video and images of such actions, and how the broader population reacts. Hint: They lose it.

Using mountaineering skills at a protest, most impressive: Three men clandestinely made it to the sixth floor of the Hyatt Regency, used climbing ropes to edge out over the hotel atrium, and hung two banners with the words “Stop Hate,” displayed to the cheers of protesters out front the hotel. Two convention attendees snatched one banner before the activists could hang it, and Hyatt employees grumbled as they fished the other banner down. Again, impressive.

[image-11]


Trump was rattled: As numerous media outlets reported, Trump’s caravan was unable to exit from the freeway in Burlingame. So, his vehicle just pulled to the shoulder, Trump emerged, hopped a cement barrier, shimmied under a fence, and snuck in to the Hyatt via a rear entrance. This delayed Trump’s speech by more than 45 minutes. When he finally arrived, he compared his adventure to “crossing the border.”

Sorry, Donald: More than 100 bodies are found each year along migration routes, according to the Los Angeles Times. What you experienced was what normally people have to do when they get a flat on Highway 101.

Anyway, his speech, a mishmash of greatest hits (the wall, Lyin’ Ted, Crooked Hillary), was rushed, if a bit frazzled. Not frantic, but perhaps hastened by the protesters. Also, it’s not much a speech, but instead more a braggadocio. His talk was devoid of issues. It’s all about winning here, and polling there—the political equivalent of the final outro song on a hip-hop record.

Again, look for more Donald Drumpf in next week’s issue. Some photos to tide you over:

The line to see Trump. Secret Service provided security.

Nary a Trump poster inside the Hyatt. Seriously.

Hillary cornhole, coming to a craft brewery near you?

This guy (don’t worry, East Bay, he’s from Sacramento).

[image-10]Protesters block Trump from exiting the Hyatt after his speech.

This Weekend’s Top Five Events

Thanks to Queen Bey, this week has been blessed. Finish it off right. [embed-1] Here’s how:
A Celebration of Prince
Dearly beloved / We are gathered here today to get through this thing called life, preaches Prince in the sermon-like intro of “Let’s Go Crazy.” In retrospect, much of Prince’s music was hauntingly prophetic, with lyrics about mortality dazzlingly cloaked as celebratory pop. The iconic musician’s untimely death at the age of 57 shocked fans across the world last week. Prince played by his own rules. In addition to being a musical genius, he defied gender norms and proudly displayed his love for the Black community. He was a generous humanitarian that donated to a variety of social justice and environmental causes. He used pop to spur social change, and his work touched several generations. There are many ways to grieve, but one is to celebrate his life at Mezzanine on April 30, with DJ Apollo and D Sharp spinning Prince jams all night. The party is free, but there will be opportunities to donate to three causes Prince supported: The Elton John AIDS Foundation, Sheila E’s Elevate Hope Foundation, and Music for Minors: Music Education for Bay Area Youth.— Nastia Voynovskaya
Sat., April 30, 9 p.m. Free. MezzanineSF.com


Yellow No. 5, Bruh: A Solo exhibition by Eli Thorne
Oakland artist Eli Thorne’s 2014 Mills College MFA thesis installation looked like a parody of an Olympian gymnastics gym. Bars crisscrossed each other to form a tower mounting a net filled with yellow tennis balls. Heavy, concrete balls hung from thick blue ropes attached to a wall with a metal bar. And royal blue flags dangled from the ceiling. The installation pinpointed an amusing aesthetic that registered immediately as athletic, yet didn’t actually mimic any existing athletic gear. Now, for a solo show at Royal NoneSuch Gallery (4231 Telegraph Ave.) entitled Yellow No. 5, Bruh, Thorne is going in on normative notions of masculinity with the same style of parody and a similar focus on sports culture. For the show, Thorne will be entirely transforming the space into a hyperbolic metaphor for male-ness made up of materials associated with home gyms, jocks, caffeine and male entitlement. Yellow No. 5, Bruh opens on Friday, April 29, with a reception from 7–10 p.m.— Sarah Burke
April 29-May 28. free. RoyalNoneSuchGallery.com


Independent Bookstore Day
On Saturday, April 30, Independent Bookstore Day will once again be taking over local bookshops. To celebrate, bookstores will be hosting a grab-bag of literary festivities. Diesel Bookstore (5433 College Ave.) will release Record Store Day-style, limited-edition products. Among the rare literary goods will be X is For…, a new record featuring Carolyn Pennypacker-Riggs made as an accompaniment to local author Kate Schatz’s best-selling children’s book Rad American Women A-Z. Meanwhile, Schatz will appear in person at Books Inc. Alameda (1344 Park St.) to promote the record. And at Books Inc. Berkeley (1491 Shattuck Ave.), there will be a photo booth, with costumes for dressing up as your favorite literary character (think Harry Potter robes). Pegasus Books Downtown (2349 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley) will take part as well, offering an ask-me-anything session with author Mary Roach, who is currently working on a new book, titled Grunt: The Curious Science of Humans at War.— Sarah Burke
Sat., April 30. Free. IndieBookStoreDay.com


Local Connection Pop-Up
As much as the Bay Area is rightly celebrated for its vibrant farm-to-table food culture, life as a farmer in Northern California is difficult — all the more so, if you’re a young, small-scale farmer just starting out in the profession who has yet to establish a prominent presence at the most prestigious farmers’ markets or the trendiest restaurants. The Local Connection Pop-Up is designed to help bridge that gap. Held at Swan’s Market (510 9th St., Oakland) on May 1, the $40 prix-fixe, buffet-style dinner will use meat and produce supplied by four farms run by young, new-to-the-profession farmers — Hikari Farm in Watsonville, Sol Seeker Farm in Tres Pinos, and Jellicles Farm and Baia Nicchia in Sunol. The farmers will be on hand to answer questions, and, in keeping with the theme, the chefs cooking the meal will be a team of young, up-and-coming sous chefs and line cooks from prominent East Bay restaurants such as Ramen Shop and AS B-Dama. Tickets are available via Eventbrite.com. — Luke Tsai
Sun., May 1, 5-8 p.m. $40

To Kill A Mockingbird
To Kill a Mockingbird For more than sixty years, Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird has compelled audiences with its astute portrayal of racism and injustice in Depression-era Alabama. In 1970, ten years after the novel was published, playwright Christopher Sergel began working on a stage adaptation that took him twenty years to complete. Sergel’s adaptation is now headed to Berkeley Playhouse, with previews beginning April 28 at the Julia Morgan Theater (2640 College Ave., Berkeley). The play is the first-ever non-musical produced by Berkeley Playhouse, which has focused exclusively on musical productions in the nine years since its founding, and will be directed by Berkeley Playhouse’s producing artistic director, Darren A.C. Carollo. Two sets of young actors ranging in age from nine to fourteen will take on the roles of protagonist Scout Finch, her brother Jem, and their friend Dill Harris, while Steve Rhyne will play Scout and Jem’s father Atticus, a lawyer much-beloved by audiences whom Lee modeled after her own father.— Sarah Elizabeth Adler
Through May 22. $17-$60. BerkeleyPlayhouse.org

If your pockets are feelin’ light and you’re still yearning for more suggestions, we’ve got a ton, and these ones are all FREE! We’re Hungry: Got any East Bay news, events, video, or miscellany we should know about? Feed us at Sa*********@************ss.com.

More Discriminatory Hiring Signs In Berkeley

Another set of hiring signs has Berkeley workers upset. According to photos sent to the Express, two signs were posted in the front window of the soon-to-be opened restaurant the Berkeley Social Club (2050 University Avenue), one of which was written in English and asked for kitchen staff and servers, while the sign, written in Spanish, mentioned only cooks and dishwashers.

[jump] North Oakland resident Pablo Traverso works around the corner from the soon-to-open restaurant. After seeing the signs, he e-mailed the listed address on Tuesday, April 26 asking that the signs be changed so that all available positions are advertised in both languages, but Traverso said he has yet to receive a response.

“It’s a shame that an identical situation happened at Pappy’s and was repeated by a unopened business,” said Traverso, referring to a story the Express wrote in January about a similar set of signs posted inside Pappy’s Grill & Sports Bar in Berkeley. “You see these discriminatory hiring business practices in the East Bay restaurant industry.”

“I bet the owner doesn’t realize they are inherently being discriminatory,” Traverso continued, “and if they do realize, that’s even a larger problem.”

As it turned out, the restaurant owners at the unopened Berkeley Social Club said they did not know what the signs were saying. Bee Saipinthong, the owner who answered the phone number listed on the signs, told the Express there had been no prior complaints, and that the business would remove and change the signs immediately. She said she asked someone else to produce the signs for her, but did not identify that person.

“We will take the sign off. We didn’t have any intention to do that,” said Saipinthong. “I know Berkeley is conscious about this, from my heart I don’t have any intention to offend anybody.”

Ghosts Run Mild in ‘Phantom of the Theatre’

Raymond Yip Wai Man’s Phantom of the Theatre has all the easy-to-digest charm of a Disneyland attraction. Also most of the built-in limitations. The China/Hong Kong production, made for HK’s Distribution Workshop, expends a large of amount of care and money on its sumptuous sets and costuming, but the scenario — written by Hana Li Jing Ling, Sakura Yang...

Meat Market

Oakland band Meat Market writes infectious, hooky pop punk, and the band recently released its latest album, Dig Deep — a long-anticipated follow-hop to its 2012 self-titled album. The new record is rife with punchy, fast-paced major chord riffs and happy-go-lucky rhythms. The group has a goofy, self-effacing sense of humor that gives them an underdog appeal, and Dig...

The Compound Gallery 8th Anniversary

The Compound Gallery started in a dilapidated liquor store on San Pablo Avenue in 2008. In 2010, it moved to its current location in North Oakland (1167 65th St.). And in 2014 it expanded from one to two buildings, totaling 12,000-square-feet of gallery space and art studios serving seventy artists. On Friday, May 7, The Compound Gallery will be...

Elephantine and The Seshen

There are few summertime activities more satisfying than catching some live music at a park while sipping a cool, refreshing beverage. And that’s the kind of atmosphere you can expect at Yerba Buena Gardens Festival, a summer concert series in the outdoor area of the venerable SoMA arts institution. For the May 7 edition, Oakland bands Elephantine and The...

UK 2 Da Bay

While grime — a genre from the UK that combines elements of hip-hop, garage, and jungle — has always had a following in the United States, it’s currently becoming even more popular thanks to Kanye West and Drake’s interest in the artist Skepta. These North American superstars have collaborated with the grime heavyweight within the past several years (and...

Oakland Official Handling Coal Controversy Personally Invested in Fossil Fuels

A high level Oakland official advocating that the city council hire a consultant to help them decide whether or not to reject plans for a coal export terminal is personally invested in fossil fuel companies. Anti-coal activists say the investments are inappropriate, and they’re worried the official could be steering the consulting contract to a company that will rubber...

Town Business: Coal Conflicts; Local Green Energy; Soda Pop Tax

A Union Pacific train laden with coal passing through the Sierra Nevada foothills toward the Bay Area in August 2015. Credits: Tom Anderson Coal Conflicts: Oakland officials want to hire an outside consulting firm to  help determine whether or not there will be significant health and safety impacts from a proposal to ship millions of tons of coal through the city....

Flag burning, hotel-lobby rappelling, ‘Latinos for the wall’—welcome to Donald Trump’s Bay Area appearance

A team of East Bay Express reporters will recap, analyze and riff on Donald Trump's big luncheon at today's California GOP convention in next week's issue. Be sure to pick it up. Until then, three lessons learned: Flag burning at a Trump rally is controversial: I'm...

This Weekend’s Top Five Events

Thanks to Queen Bey, this week has been blessed. Finish it off right. Here's how: A Celebration of Prince Dearly beloved / We are gathered here today to get through this thing called life, preaches Prince in the sermon-like intro of “Let’s Go Crazy.” In retrospect, much of Prince’s music was...

More Discriminatory Hiring Signs In Berkeley

Hiring signs in the window of soon-to-be opened Berkeley Social Club at 2050 University Avenue. Credits: Pablo Traverso Another set of hiring signs has Berkeley workers upset. According to photos sent to the Express, two signs were posted in the front window of the soon-to-be opened restaurant the Berkeley Social Club (2050 University Avenue), one of which was written in...
19,045FansLike
17,709FollowersFollow
61,790FollowersFollow