The Westword.com blog shortcut, September 24 edition

No clowning around. No need to search for more blogs. We’ll hook you up. Cafe Society opens the dictionary to one of food writer Jason Sheehan’s favorite F-words. Other than “fun,” that is. In addition, contributor Kimberly Berkey cracks the Blake Street Vault as Neighborhood Flix takes its final curtain…

Kristi Burton would like a few minutes of your time to talk about fetuses

Kristi Burton, abortion-law killing machine. In this week’s Westword, Adam Cayton-Holland introduces you to Kristi Burton, the young activist behind Amendment 48, otherwise known as the Personhood Amendment, otherwise known as a 22-year-old’s play to overturn Roe v. Wade. Check out his story, and click “more” to read Burton’s pitch…

Cruisin’ Oldies 950 brings back Randy Jay, Hal Moore

Randy Jay. KRWZ/950 AM, dubbed Cruisin’ Oldies, has been on the air since early September — but at this hour, the station is broadcasting live. The midday host is Bill Press — not the political commentator for Fox News, but a veteran DJ most recently heard on Majic 102.7 in…

Adam Cayton-Holland, deep in the heart of Texas

Just look how fat this state is… To contradict a lame joke I made in a column that all Texans are big and fat, Angelica Huffman wrote me a letter that is, well, big and fat. She pointed out that not all Texans are racist, as I also said they…

Student’s anti-Obama shirt returns Colorado to culture war crosshairs

Daxx Dalton’s anti-Obama shirt. Eleven-year-old Daxx Dalton’s suspension from an Aurora school after wearing a homemade T-shirt calling Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama “A TERRORIST’S BEST FRIEND” has led to bays of outrage in the conservative media and blogosphere. But there’s nothing surprising about how the story has circulated, nor…

Break out the party hats: Today is Denver’s REAL birthday

William Larimer: Not an official general, not an official city founder. Now that the Democratic National Convention has come and gone, Denver’s getting ready for another big shindig: Its sesquicentennial birthday party. As the (recently much-repeated) story goes, on November 22, 1858, General William Larimer, a town promoter from Kansas,…

This show really is for Girls Only.

Barbara Gehring and Linda Klein created Girls Only. Photo by Terry Shapiro. “Did you just come from Mahler?” the dressed-up couple asked my mother as we all boarded the elevator to the Denver Center parking garage. “No, Girls Only,” my mother told them. They both perked up. “Really? What’s that…

The Westword.com blog shortcut, September 23 edition

Ask a Mexican’s Gustavo Arellano is asking. There’s no place like the home page — but these blogs are pretty nice, too. Cafe Society asks readers to offer advice about where Ask a Mexican columnist Gustavo Arellano should eat Mexican food during his Colorado visit this week. Also on tap:…

Inflation, low pay and the high cost of prison bumwad

Prices are going up for prisoners, too. Anyone who’s paid a grocery bill in the past few months knows that higher energy costs have driven the price of almost every other commodity steadily upward. (It doesn’t count if your manservant paid that bill, by the way.) But the price hikes…

Denver Post belatedly tackles Obsession DVD controversy

The Clarion Fund logo. As noted in this More Messages blog and a subsequent followup, the decision by more than seventy newspapers across the country, including the Denver Post, to insert DVD samplers of the film Obsession; Radical Islam’s War Against the West into September 14 editions prompted complaints from…

Gary Glitter’s profane return to Broncos games

Gary back when he really did glitter. For years, Gary Glitter’s irresistibly neadrathalic ditty “Rock and Roll Part 2” has been a part of live sports events all over the world, including Denver Broncos home games. (See the music video after the jump). But a Broncos season ticket holder tells…

Rocky, Post page ones judge financial crisis differently

The financial disaster currently looming on the horizon is front-page news throughout the country, as can be seen on the portion of the Newseum website that displays newspaper covers from coast to coast on a daily basis. But in Denver, the two dailies see the story in different ways. The…

America’s favorite sport? Shootin’ at stuff

Load ’em up. Football is generally regarded to be America’s favorite spectator sport, followed by NASCAR, baseball, basketball and so on. But judging by the magazine rack at a south suburban King Soopers, such popularity doesn’t necessarily translate to magazine readership. The rack contained twelve — count ’em, twelve –…