Today in Stoke: Pre-season Spring deals on 2011/2012 ski passes

Many Colorado ski areas announced pre-season discounts on 2011/2012 season passes this week. Yes, we know there are still three or four good weeks of Spring skiing and shredding ahead of us, and that Arapahoe Basin will be keeping the dream alive until at least the end of May, but…

Paper, scissors, mohawk: Paper Fashion Show 2011

Feathers. Coral. Corsets. All made of paper, all on display last night at the Paper Fashion Show competition at City Hall in downtown Denver. With over 60 jaw-dropping entries, the Paper Fashion Show was a spectacle unlike any other. Pieces went from chic to quirky to star-struck to hot mess,…

Month of Photography continues with Down the Rabbit Hole at Hinterland

Sabin Aell of Hinterland took up the challenge of Denver’s Month of Photography by putting out an international call for entries for work that is “wild, uncontrolled, different, luminous, beautiful, sparkling, in the flow.” It’s a tall order, but that’s exactly what came up out of the ground for jurors…

Sarah Vowell on Hawaii, monarchy and Unfamiliar Fishes

At 3 p.m. on Sunday, Sarah Vowell will sign copies of her latest tome, Unfamiliar Fishes, at the Tattered Cover LoDo, 1628 16th Street. We caught up with Vowell about her inspiration for the book, what she learned and how this book fits into her previous body of work…

Comment of the day: “TOO MUCH GOVERNMENT”

It was pretty damn lame on Tuesday when the Denver Art Museum cut down Talia Kauk’s unauthorized installation of 1,000 paper cranes in front of the Hamilton Building and threw it in the trash — and I said as much in the post I wrote on it, where bitched about…

Sucker Punch is this week’s most ridiculous trailer

If you can take anything from the eyeball-overload trailer of Sucker Punch, it’s that the movie seems to hinge on some kind of dissociative-identity fantasy world: In order to overcome her real-life oppressors, a girl must first defeat the enemies in her own mind and learn some important lessons about…..

10 things to do for $10 this weekend, March 25-27, 2011

We’re not entirely sure what happened to Denver’s usual March storm, but since it seems to have forgotten us this year, we’re going to celebrate the only way we know how: on the cheap. Since we spent most of our money stockpiling canned goods for the annual snow-in, we’re out…

Randomized piano: Timothy Flood brings some crazy musical instruments to Core

Timothy Flood is into deconstruction. And right now, he’s into musical instruments — specifically, pulling them apart and rebuilding them into things that basically perform the same tasks, but in radically different ways and for totally different purposes. How different? Try this on for size: One part of the installation…

Before you hit up Anomaly Con: How to steampunk anything

With Anomaly Con, Denver’s first big steampunk convention, people are probably wondering what the best way to prepare for the big day might be. Others might simply be asking, “what the hell is steampunk and why should I care?” Don’t worry, we have answers for all that and more, including…

Comment of the day: “Why pay to drink from the gutter?”

Trey Parker and Matt Stone, the longtime brains behind South Park, Colorado’s most famous semi-fictional mountain town, took it all the way to Broadway on Tuesday when The Book of Mormon opened to glowing reviews. The musical, a sendup of Mormon culture starring two “elders” on a mission trip to…

Today in stoke: Vicariously walk 4,680 miles in Andrew Skurka’s boots

If you need some inspiration for your next epic trek (or just prefer to live vicariously through the tales of others), stop by Neptune Mountaineering in Boulder, 633 South Broadway Suite A, tonight at 8 p.m., where Boulder-based adventurer Andrew Skurka will share a multimedia presentation documenting his recent Alaska-Yukon…