Caption contest: MileHiCon 43’s Star Trek dance floor

MileHiCon 43 went down over the weekend at the Hyatt Regency Tech Center, and photographer Stephen Cummings was there to capture what SciFi fans do in their down time. Among his pics was this gem. Feel free to write your own caption for it in the comments section below. The…

Food Day activities will bloom at the Denver Botanic Gardens

Denver’s Food Day activities are rooted at the Denver Botanic Gardens, 1007 York Street, which has partnered with several community groups for an eleven-hour extravaganza that’s part of a nationwide campaign to promote affordable food in a sustainable way. The activities, which will run from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m…

Remembering Our Fallen at Aurora Municipal Center

In the cavernous central hall of the Aurora Municipal Center are portraits of the 85 men and women from Colorado who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan. In the corner of each of their service portraits is a photo that their family submitted to the project called Remembering Our Fallen,…

Let zombicaturist Stan Yan bring out the bogeyman in you

At tomorrow’s pre-Zombie Crawl Afraid of the Dark reception for the Bogeyman Art Show at MacSpa, you can commission comic artist Stan Yan to create an on-the-spot zombie makeover for you on paper, which you can then hang on your wall and remember that important day forever, dead or undead…

This Weekend in Stoke: Make the ’80s Ski Party last all weekend

Come out of the closet, gapers! Hot pink and electric blue ski and snowboard gear from the 1980s lives forever thanks to events like tonight’s 8th annual 80s Ski Party at Mile High Station, 2027 West Lower Colfax Avenue, where they won’t even let you through the door unless the…

Doomsday countdown, day five: Harold Camping’s third try

If there’s any lesson we can take from our look back this week at a number of apocalyptic prophesies (apophesies, as I like to call them) in advance of what Harold Camping is predicting to be the end of the world today, it’s that they all have one key component…

Top ten Twilight Zone references in pop culture

The groundbreaking sci-fi series The Twilight Zone is still socially relevant, and it’s also inspired much social satire since it first appeared on television sets in 1959. The homage and spoofs range from many Simpsons episodes to a Melvins song to the Theater Company of Lafayette’s Return to the Twilight…

10 things to do for $10 this weekend, October 21-23, 2011

This weekend is all about spooky running and walking, apparently — with both Scream Scram and the Zombie Crawl lighting up the 16th Street Mall with masked, athletic nuts. If that’s not really your thing, don’t worry, because we’ve also got some good old fashioned comedy, shopping, art shows and…

Five socially relevant episodes of The Twilight Zone

Over half a century after Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone first aired, people are still captivated by the sci-fi show. So in advance of the Theater Company of Lafayette’s production of Return to the Twilight Zone (Volume 8), A Parody, which opens tomorrow night at the Mary Miller Theater ,…

For Denver artist Penney Bidwell, life is a carnival

The story behind the group show Carnivalesque, on view at the Niza Knoll Gallery since September, isn’t always bright and happy, as organizer and participant Penney Bidwell knows all too well. She comes from a family of carnies that goes back three generations on her father’s side, and as the…

Occupy Facebook: The five worst anti-protest memes

So, if Facebook is the future of social discourse, it should be no surprise that it’s been a forum for Occupy Wall Street discussions and visual arguments. Pictures, cartoons, graphics — anti-Occupy Facebookers have taken to the virtual streets of Zuckerberg’s city to fight Occupy Wall Street supporters. Some of…

How to get my job: Reptile Caretaker

It takes a certain type of person to step into an alligator pen or to play with a giant snake, but Jay Young of Colorado Gators Reptile Park in Mosca does just that, every single day. We caught up with him to see if our fantasies of living in reptile…

Ke$ha rules, journalism drools

There are two distinct periods in the average American’s life: high school and not-high school. For me, the farther I get from those formative ninth-through-twelfth-grade years — 1994 to 1998 — the cooler they seem to have been. Today, when I look back at say, 1995, my eyes glaze over…

Reader: Princess Diana showing up in Egypt is no pyramid scheme.

What if Princess Diana wasn’t killed by that car wreck in Paris? What if she survived, and re-invented herself as a commoner in Egypt, where she attempted to solve the mystery of what happened to Ankhesenamun, King Tutankhamun’s wife? What if? That’s the unlikely premise behind The Lost Queen of…