Weekend in Film: A Mighty Heart through Zoo

John Cusack grasps for reality in 1408. This weekend is a big one in movies, with eight films opening here in Denver. It’s the good, the bad and the ugly on the big screen. The Good: Bamako: This film-fest fave puts nothing less than economic injustice on trial, arguing the…

Tag Team: More Graffiti News

As graffiti crews like RTD and TKO fight over wall space around town, Buffalo Exchange, at 230 East 13th Avenue, was giving it away on Tuesday, June 19, to the first aerosol-can carrying, rubber-glove wearing tagger to show up. And word spread fast. In just a few hours more than…

Warrior of Peace

The ceremony began with a blessing and the lighting of the sage, then an eagle’s feather was presented to a “warrior of peace,” a guest that Denver has welcomed to help end wars before, a guest that the city welcomes again to bring peace to our city’s streets. Although despair…

Weekend Update

Just in case you’re all dressed up with nowhere to go, here are a few late-breaking events we heard about too late to include in this week’s Night and Day calendar:…

Wonderful World

[jump] Last night, I chose like many others to come out for air in the dusk of a torrid solstice eve; in my case, I chose to stroll through Frances Wisebart Jacobs Park, a little patch of green amid a myriad of apartment and condo complexes south of Leetsdale Drive…

Yeah, I’m “4real”

A couple in New Zealand has been banned from naming their kid “4real”. I don’t see anything wrong with it. I knew a kid named Skillet. How he got that name I will not say, because I would be fired faster than Imus. –Crystal Preston-Watson New Zealand: ‘4real’ not a…

Defining HD

It’s a truism in journalism: Writers often learn as much from readers as from research. An example of this phenomenon took place after the publication of “Going Public,” a June 14 column about Colorado Public Radio, and complaints by former board member Frances Koncilja about the direction in which the…

The High Cost Of Dying

Thankfully, newspaper reporters aren’t paid by the word. But if you calculate their salaries based on their annual output, then a hack general assignment writer at a mid-sized daily makes around thirty to fifty cents a word. A slightly more highbrow writer, one who cranks out stuff for slick newsweeklies…

Caption contest! Caption contest!

Here’s one to get the ball rolling: “In anticipation of the 2008 Democratic National Convention, Denver police today began experimenting with various methods of controlling protesters.” –Jared Jacang Maher…

Tagging Up Denver

He is tattooed and pierced, with heavy, sad eyes and a translucent mustache. He walks with a combination of swagger and caution, his hands sunk deep in the pockets of his baggy jeans. He is in his mid-teens — not a little kid and not an adult. Old enough for…

Post Staffers Are Under Pressure

Lucky thing journalists are trained to work under difficult circumstances. If they weren’t, Denver Post reporters would have been practically paralyzed for the past two months. The anxiety began ratcheting up on April 23, when editor Greg Moore announced that economic shortfalls necessitated the issuance of a buyout package —…

Till Death Do They Part

When Aurora police officers entered his home, Ramon Ruiz was making himself what looked like a breakfast smoothie. “Where’s Ginny?” they asked. No one had seen Ramon or his new bride since their wedding four days earlier. Ramon, standing barefoot in his kitchen amid broken wine bottles and scattered white…

Drinking and Reading Liberally

Coloradans do not believe in moderation. As proof, consider that this small state boasts a dozen chapters of Drinking Liberally, the second-largest showing outside of California for the four-year-old group that’s now 212 chapters strong, with each of them devoted to “promoting democracy one pint at a time.” And this…

Dog the Bounty Hunter

Friday was going to be one pill of a day for meth-sucking Hawaiians living in the city of Denver. Because Duane Chapman, better known as Dog the Bounty Hunter, was coming back to the city where he got his start for a “speaking engagement” that day. And Dog eats meth-sucking…

Letters to the Editor

“Going Public,” Michael Roberts, June 14 A Question of Balance I laughed out loud while reading about Ms. Koncilja’s “fears,” particularly the highlighted quote that “public radio has a responsibility to all of its listeners.” I have to wonder if the board spends time on fairness and balance so that…

Dale Chihuly Makes a Match With 1401 Lawrence

Dale Chihuly’s Icicle Creek Chandelier (left) in Leavenworth, Washington, and Victoria and Albert Rotunda Chandelier in the V&A Museum in London. Images from Fire by Portland Press. (Photos by First Look.) Dale Chihuly is making Colorado his second outpost — or at least he should. The Seattle-based glasswork artist has…

Viva Italia

Carpaccio di bue dressed in lemon and oil, whole peppers stuffed with cheese and prosciutto, buffalo mozzarella with fresh tomatoes and roasted peppers draped with marinated Italian anchovies, grilled salmon with roasted potatoes and garretto d’agnello—spring lamb braised in red wine, served with grilled eggplant and potato puree. Laura touched…

The End of Denver Post Cuts — For Now

Here’s something else you won’t read about (yet) in the Denver Post. On June 12, Post editor Greg Moore (pictured) sent out a memo to troops revealing that two more employees, assistant city editor Diane Alters and computer-assisted-reporting editor Jeff Roberts (no relation), had been dismissed in cost-slashing actions. In…