Most Popular
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool"
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Sex Edition
Our second-annual issue dedicated to all things sex.
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How Not to Be a Rap Star
Flying high on Ecstasy, Grey Goose and his own hype, Paul Mussan blew through 100 G's in six months.
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A college drop-out abandons a lucrative tech career for a life of inner-city poverty and hopes to save an urban school district from oblivion
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept
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Ambush at Channel 5: One TV type gets a dose of her own hidden-camera-style investigation and finds it "uncool" (22)
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Kansas Citys Corona Cantina #1 still has some problems to work out, but well raise a few bottles to the concept (15)
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Booty Crawl (10)
We find our nemesis and a lot of booze during a Waldo bar hop.
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No one feels sorry for Councilman Terry Riley as much as Terry Riley (7)
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China Syndrome (7)
For a real immigration debate, just look at what happened when the Chinese invaded Mexico.
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At the Barn Players, Tim Cormack and a Stage Full of Black-Clad Women Rate a Complex Nine.
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Steven Eubank and Justin Van Pelt rock in Hedwig and the Angry Inch
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Barry Williams is just too normal In Married Alive!
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The Unicorns new Jerome Stage is the perfect place to get intimate with women who live a world away
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theater
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Who Knew? Boring High School Confidential Show was Filmed Here
01:20PM 03/11/08 -
Daily Briefs: Taxidermy, Big 12, the Beatles
10:10AM 03/11/08 -
Gals, These Guys Know What’s Best
06:48AM 03/11/08 -
Concert Review: Holy Fuck
12:16PM 03/10/08 -
Monday Music Junkie: Del tha Funkee Homosapien, Cajun Dance Party, Elbow and More
11:35AM 03/10/08 -
Michael Bublé Musicans Tonight at River Market Brewery
02:22PM 03/07/08
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National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
For days after Hurricane Rita, a Texas prison was hell on earth.
By Chris Vogel -
SF Weekly
The Candidate
Our columnist knows Ralph Nader's running mate all too well.
By Matt Smith -
Village Voice
Project Runaway
What becomes a gossip columnist most?
By Michael Musto
Art Exhibitions
Published: January 10, 2008
American Soil In the elegant and subtle new Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, architect Kyu Sung Woo has designed a light-filled space whose primary duty is to showcase art, not itself. Inaugurating the first-floor galleries is an exhibition in which diverse images suggest landscape in its broadest possible sense. Los Angeles artist Tomory Dodge creates monumental and unknowable landscapes that examine the sometimes real and sometimes fictional places on society's outer edge. New York artist Brad Kahlhamer's large works on paper resonate with multiple ideologies: In "Waqui Totem USA," Kahlhamer piles skulls, stylized totem figures, eagle heads and a small painted scene from The Searchers into a densely packed image. Chicago artist Angelina Gualdoni paints buildings in precarious and sometimes creepy settings; her gorgeous, liquid treatment of the paint heightens the decaying impact on once-utopian buildings and places. In her focused mapping, Brooklyn-based Nicola Lopez suggests the fractured nature of attempts to plot out urban areas, which can change almost overnight, or to map ourselves into any one place. Through Jan. 27 at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, 12345 College Boulevard in Overland Park, 913-469-2344. (Dana Self)
Charlotte Street Foundation Awards Exhibition James Trotter's exuberant installation includes multiple drawings in his cartooning style and a site-specific piece involving a wooden platform and dozens of plastic toys, decorations, Mr. Peanut plastic banks, vintage games and similar items. The piece suggests the intense interest that we have in things. Jessica Kincaid's small, beaded tapestries similarly emerge from a personal tradition — she collected beads as a child. Cody Critcheloe's video incorporates components of punk, dance, MTV and other significant cultural markers; despite its deliberate flamboyance, the piece has a humanizing earnestness to it. A quiet and steady counterpoint to the visual and likable cacophony of Critcheloe's and Trotter's pieces is Emily Sall's large wall installation, "BOOM-BURG," made from adhesive vinyl attached to the wall. Deceptively simple in appearance, the piece is a complex approach to spatial relationships. Each artist's strength is illuminated by proximity to the others; each piece tends to dominate the space but doesn't overpower or crowd the others. Through Jan. 19 at Grand Arts, 1819 Grand, 816-421-6887. (Dana Self)
Past, Present, Future Perfect: Selections From the Ovitz Family Collection It's interesting to see what powerful and moneyed art enthusiasts collect. Creative Artists Agency co-founder and former Disney president Michael Ovitz and his wife, Judy, began collecting art in the 1970s. Their Ovitz Family Collection is based in Los Angeles. The H&R Block Artspace doesn't provide this sort of context, which would help viewers understand the Ovitzes' intent and vision. Of particular note are a monumental Jules de Balincourt painting in the front gallery and some Julie Mehretu paintings, but here's an insider tip: Go upstairs for Dan Flavin's seminal fluorescent-light sculptures. There, colors wash over the wall, showing off Flavin's devotion to the properties and aesthetic possibilities of light. Like Marcel Duchamp before him, Flavin declared that an ordinary object — in this case, a light tube — could stand on its own as a work of art. Through Feb. 2 at the H&R Block Artspace (by appointment only Dec. 15-Jan. 5), 816-561-5563. (Dana Self)
Time in the West Mark Klett, Byron Wolfe and Mark Ruwedel photograph the landscape of the American West to investigate its various histories, which commingle and shift over time. They also mine the rich vein of historical images by Timothy O'Sullivan (a Civil War and geological survey photographer) and the more famous Eadweard Muybridge, Edward Weston and Ansel Adams. Klett's 1980 "Ellen Above the Green River: Where O'Sullivan Stood Over 100 Years Ago" depicts a modern woman standing on the same flat-topped boulder where O'Sullivan stood, scanning the gorgeous panorama carved out by the river before her. Ruwedel's photographs recover the look and feel of 19th-century photography but show the land reclaiming itself. In "Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific #20," soft grass has grown over the rail lines that once bisected the country from the upper Midwest to the Pacific Ocean. The tracks have gone fuzzy and lush, but the land is still fractured and changed forever. Through March 2 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak, 816-751-1278. (Dana Self)







