Oct 15-21, 2009

Oct 15-21, 2009 / Vol. 21 / No. 42

Lola’s Burger and Yellow Mustard Orthodoxy

Lola, the modern diner on Yale, is the subject of this week’s Café review. Lola’s exceptional burger is made with a certified Angus beef patty, tomato, a pickle and cheddar. The sandwich is served on a moist sweet bun that has been toasted. For a dollar, you can add some…

Artist of the Week: Tina B., Who Says Poets Can Be Funny After All

Each Wednesday, Rocks Off arbitrarily appoints one lucky local performer or group “Artist of the Week,” bestowing upon them all the fame and grandeur such a lofty title implies. Know a band or artist that isn’t awful? Email their particulars to introducingliston@gmail.com. About six months ago, we interviewed a performance…

Vegan Cinnamon Rolls

This week I baked vegan cinnamon rolls. Before I started the project, I envisioned myself exhausted at 2 a.m. with my arms and forehead coated in flour, waiting for dough to rise for the second time before baking. I had never baked with yeast before and was anxious about an…

Obscure Wine Grapes: Mourvedre

Mourvedre is a highly tannic red wine grape that is often blended with easy-drinking fruity Grenache. Two of my favorite French wines, Chateauneuf de Pape and Bandol, are made with blends that include this sturdy red wine grape. Mourvedre (pronounced something like moo-VAHD) is the French name for a grape…

Health Department Roundup: Hotel Edition

Inspecting a hotel kitchen is a tall order, and hotel food services are usually represented on any given bi-weekly tally of health code violators published by the Houston Health Department. Those hotel restaurants ordered to clean up their acts this month in our fair city include: The Intercontinental Hotel Houston…

Want to Levitate the Pentagon? These Songs Might Help

On this date in 1967, some 50,000 protesters marched on the Pentagon with the intention of levitating it and exorcising any “evil spirits” within. The effort was led by Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman, poet Allen Ginberg, and Ed Sanders and satirically-minded rockers the Fugs. As we all know, the exorcism worked,…

Mid-Week Match-Up: The Mayor’s Race, Such As It Is

Most of Houston seems blissfully unaware that there’s a mayor’s race going on. This year is supposed to be one of the the years with a hot election — the incumbent is term-limited, so it’s an open seat likely to lead to six years in office — but, for reasons…

Crisper Drawer Cast-offs: Cauliflower Casserole

I’m trying to get invited to John Seaborn Gray’s house for shepherd’s pie. I’m betting it tastes great. His Shameless Chef column reminded me of Andrew Schloss’s cookbooks Almost From Scratch, Homemade in a Hurry and Cooking With Three Ingredients. Schloss’s premise is that great chefs don’t cook from scratch…

Sampler Plate: This Week In Food Blogs

Each week, we put together a sampler plate of the most interesting links from both local and national food blogs. Know a blog we should be paying particular attention to? Leave the address in the comments section below. Guns and Tacos: Hilarious and topical (with pictures and captions that always crack…

Cinema Arts Festival Houston’s H BOX Ain’t No X-Box

Films are once again being seen at the Alabama Theatre, thanks to Cinema Arts Festival Houston’s H BOX by Portuguese architect/artist Dider Fiuza Faustino. A series of looped videos and short films are shown in the portable screening room (constructed from connecting panes of glass and aluminum, the BOX can…

Mango Smoothies, Onion Rings and Donuts

Hillcroft — that magical street where the adventurous soul can find the weird, wild and wonderful cuisine of India and the Middle East. Udipi Café at 5959 Hillcroft is just off 59, tucked between a gas station (go figure) and a jewelry store (go figure again). This restaurant came recommended…

Dancing With the Stars: Damn That Michael Irvin!

It’s the halfway point of the season! Tom Bergeron said so! I wish he’d said that the night before, when I was glumly pondering how many more episodes this season would foist upon an innocent populace. But there you go: only a few left. Here’s hoping someone gets really hurt…

Cougars Better Not Be Looking Past SMU, Sumlin Says

“We’ve got our work cut out for us,” Houston Cougars head coach Kevin Sumlin said yesterday about the team’s game with the SMU Mustangs this weekend. And though that’s pretty much coaching cliché number one, Sumlin is hinting at the actual truth this time out.The Mustangs, though 3-3 on the…

Stirred and Shaken: Catbird’s Truck Stop Cappuccino

Bartender Matt Trimble of Catbird’s (1336 West­heimer, 713-523-8000) is an impressive man. Before taking his current job, he undertook a weeks-long bicycle odyssey from Houston to New York, sleeping on the side of the road and surviving on his ability to charm strangers. He dates an exotic journalist who makes a…

Free Rice-Cookers Help Out Burmese Refugees Here

A crowd of Burmese refugees gathered in the parking lot Sunday afternoon at the Sun Blossom Mountain apartment complex on Ranchester Drive — which was the subject of our recent cover story on Houston’s refugees — and waited for John Glenn to shout their names.A local company, Roguescene Houston, had…

The Great East Texas Ten-Ton Oil Pump Heist

On one hand, you have to tip your John Deere hat and salute this little feat of deep East Texas Redneck ingenuity and derring-do. On the other hand, you just have to wonder WTF they were thinking.The Web site of Jasper radio station KJAS picks up the tale: According to…

Donut Patrol: Boudin Kolaches

Spicy pork filling on the inside, moist sweet dough bun on the outside — a boudin kolache and a hot cup of coffee is as good as a Houston breakfast gets. We first learned about boudin kolaches last week from the reader who calls him or herself Sepatown. They are…

Our Top 5 Food Texture Issues

For most people, the mouthfeel of a food is every bit as important as the way the food looks, tastes and smells. A bright-red apple can glisten with promise, but one bite that’s mealy will result in that apple being thrown in the compost pile. A delicate little bunch of…

The Top 5 Food Jingles Of All Time

Every time you begin to relax, your mind snaps to them. They pervade your days and nights until you think you can’t possibly take it anymore. They’re created by evil minds so genius, you’re still somehow fond of them. They’re jingles. The following upbeat commercial tunes are a few of…

Banh Cuon: Barbecued Pork Noodle Rolls

This is an order of banh cuon thit nuong I got at a restaurant called Thien Thanh on Bellaire across from Hong Kong City Mall. Banh cuon is a very cool Vietnamese dish that Tuscany Coffee barista David Bueher told me about. It’s made by wrapping rice noodle sheets around…

Five Decent Bands Named After Star Wars Terminology

Since the release of the first Star Wars in 1977, through the subsequent sequels and disappointing prequels, pop culture has been awash in Force-related mania. People name their children Luke and Leia, family pets get monikers like Yoda and Anakin and folks even get SW tattoos. Almost every part of…

The Shameless Chef: DIY Shepherd’s Pie

Welcome to the first installment of The Shameless Chef, a new feature that will provide simple, hearty, creative recipes for the average person. Because, let’s face it, real cooking is not for normal people. Real cooking requires difficult-to-come-by things such as “knowledge” and “ingredients.” It frequently features confusing directions, like,…

Pumpkin Pie Blizzard at Dairy Queen

On a recent drive through central Texas in search of unknown barbecue finds, my friend and newbie food explorer Alison chimed in from the back seat as we drove through the small town of Smithville, Texas. “Hey, did you guys see that Dairy Queen sign back there? It said ‘Pumpkin…

Aeros Are Struggling To Start The Season

The Houston Aeros are consistent about two things this season. They’ve played six games this season. All six games have been on the weekend. The Aeros have won three of those games, and they’ve lost three of those games. They’re also consistent about the fact that when it comes to…

ManKind Project Finally Gets Around To Responding To Us

When the Houston Press first wrote about the ManKind Project, a secretive so-called men’s-help group, following the suicide of a man who had attended the organization’s initiation weekend, MKP’s leadership declined to comment. Now, more than two years later, the group finally decided to speak up in the form of…

Up, Up and Away: Songs for Balloon Boy’s iPod

Last week, America was captivated by the saga of Falcon Heene, the six-year-old boy we were told was floating across Colorado in his father’s experimental weather balloon. We were so riveted, in fact, that media outlets struggled to find airtime for other equally important stories, like Madonna getting sued and…

Taco Truck Gourmet: Sabrosita

This huevos con chorizo taco was a little a pricey at $1.75 — it was also a little too salty, but the spice level of the chorizo was excellent. I got a topping of red salsa, onions and cilantro. I also sampled three homemade tamales, one with a spicy pork…

Iced Coffee at Home

Iced coffee goes by quite a few names. Whether you call it Black Gold or Texas Tea, cold coffee helps us beat the heat around these parts. And it keeps us sane during our mild winters too. Here’s how to make it at home:…

If Halloween Is Coming, So Are Offensive Costumes

The “Illegal Alien” costume causing uproar amongst immigrant rights activists, anti-immigrant supporters and free speech advocates is the first major faux pas of this Halloween season. While anti-immigrant supporters are scrambling to find the costume, immigrant rights activists are calling for a public boycott of the suit.”We feel it’s dehumanizing…

How To Make The Perfect: Grits

We’re starting a weekly series on how to make the perfect [insert food here]. While none of us are experts on everything, some of us are pretty darn close on at least a couple of things. Stay tuned each week as the Eating Our Words bloggers detail how to make…

Dancing With the Stars: Do The Hustle!

It’s week five of Dancing With the Stars, but I don’t know how many are left. I don’t have the commitment to count the couples and do the math, plus there could be special eps or extra fillers or reunion shows or who knows what all. Basically, I know there’s…

Pop Rocks: Tips For Strip-Mining Our Childhoods

Spike Jonze’s live-action version of Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are led the box office this weekend, grossing over $32 million. Last month, another children’s book adaptation, Sony Pictures’ version of Judi and Ron Barrett’s Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, scored similar numbers for its first three days.WTWTA…

Where Are We Eating?

A red-checkered tablecloth. Two bowls of pasta. A sunny afternoon in a cafe. Or is it? Can you figure out where we’re eating this week? ​Leave your best guess in the comments section below…

The Top 20 Freaks You’ll Meet at Ren Fest

We went to the Texas Renaissance Festival in Plantersville this weekend to attend our cousin’s wedding, and wouldn’t you know we brought a camera along to document through our drunkenly narrow and judging eyes all the WTF-ery walking amongst the trees. Secretly we wish we could also don a pair…

Bayou Body Count: Where Have All The Killers Gone?

As the temperature slowly begins to dip, so too it seems that the number of murdered bodies found in and around Houston are fewer and fewer.But that certainly doesn’t mean there’s no action for the police.On Wednesday at about 8:30 p.m., a 37-year-old woman and her roommate began arguing in…

Top 10 Places to Eat in Rice Village

10. Croissant Brioche 2435 Rice Blvd., 713-526-9188 While the café is cluttered with tightly packed tables and the service can be somewhat, ahem, European, the pastries, soups and sandwiches are delicious. The truly amazing coffee alone is worth a visit. 9. Chicken Kitchen 2516 Rice Blvd., 713-523-2323 Fresh rotisserie chicken…

Fightin’ Joe Barton, Taking On The BCS System

Texas congressman Joe Barton has decided that there’s something else besides Barack Obama’s mere existence that sends him into a frothing, seething fit of anger.It’s college football’s bowl system.We’ve gotten an announcement from something called Playoff PAC, a political action committee created to address the single most pressing issue of…

FDA to Ban Raw Gulf Oysters in the Summer

You won’t be eating raw live Gulf oysters in the summer anymore if a promised FDA ban takes effect. At the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference meeting in New Hampshire on Saturday, an FDA official announced that as of 2011, the agency would no longer allow fresh, live oysters from the…

Master P

Plinio Sandalio is the pastry chef at Textile Restaurant on 22nd in the Heights. He invited me into his kitchen for a short interview about all things Plinio. Eating Our Words: What would you say your signature dessert is that screams “Plinio Sandalio made this”? Plinio Sandalio: I don’t know…

Buzz Beer: Real Ale Coffee Porter

Last autumn, when you could only get smooth, creamy, Real Ale Coffee Porter on draft, I named it one of my Top Ten Texas beers. This year, I was delighted to find it in bottles. I wasn’t so delighted by the $9 price tag at the Bunker Hill HEB, but…

Aftermath: Buddy Guy, Silly but Still Scorching at House of Blues

Of all the still-living bluesmen whose careers were firmly established before the likes of Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, etc. came along in the mid and late ’60s, the knock on Buddy Guy is that live, he is the most inconsistent. Conventional concert wisdom says an evening with Guy…

A Homeless Night To Help The Homeless

Want to experience the joys of homelessness — sleeping under the stars, free dinner — without any of the risk (or just support the cause of trying to end the problem)?On November 14 local non-profit SEARCH Homeless Services will host its second annual “SleepOut” event, in which participants organize teams…

It’s Funny, What They Graffiti’d On The Obama Mural

The Obama murals across the street from The Breakfast Klub have welcomed downtown commuters for a year now.Not everyone likes them, apparently.Someone took spray-paint to the signs over the weekend, writing “Puppet” over Obama’s face and adding to the “Yes We Can” the words “lose our freedom.””Puppet”? Please don’t tell…

Donut Patrol: Breakfast and a Floor Show

There’s a picture window in the front of Shipley’s Donuts on North Main where you can watch the baker rolling out the dough for each new batch of donuts. While you’re standing in line, you can look over to the right and see the donuts coming out of the fryer…

Texans Finally Put Two Halves Together; Defense Finds Pulse

After three weeks of the season, the Texans were on a pace to allow more total yards and more yards rushing than any team in NFL history.So who the hell are these guys? And more importantly, have the guys calling the shots figured something out?The Texans’ defense pitched a third…

Whirlwind Weekend: See What You Missed

It seemed the entire city was out and about this weekend, as the first gorgeous weekend of fall brought beautifully blue skies and perfect temperatures. Check out what you missed this weekend by spending the day on a patio somewhere, sipping a latte (silly you). The third annual No Holds…

Big-Shot Beckham Wimps Out In Houston Debut

David Beckham made his Houston debut Sunday afternoon at Robertson Stadium, as the Los Angeles Galaxy came to duel it up with the Dynamo. Although neither team scored, the game did have some intrigue.In the 81st minute, Beckham slid into a reckless tackle on Dynamo’s Ricardo Clark. That led to…

Chef Chat: John Signorelli of The Remington

Colorado-bred John Signorelli is executive sous chef at the Remington Restaurant (1919 Briar Oaks Lane), located inside the five-diamond Hotel St. Regis on the West Loop. The Remington was rated one of the top 100 hotel restaurants in America in a 2006 Zagat survey, based on food quality, décor and…

Coogs Doing Their Part; The Fans Better Do Theirs

The Houston Cougars came out in front of a nearly non-existent Superdome crowd on Saturday and got business done, defeating Tulane 44-16.Of course, it wasn’t easy. At least for a half, as the Cougars battled a slow start and poor kicking to lead at only 9-6 after the first half…

Landowner’s Challenge at West Alabama Ice House

The West Alabama Ice House recently hosted the final round of the “Win Texas Land” promotion sponsored by Lone Star Beer. The premise is simple: Pass various tests which prove your true Texan-ness and win some Texas land. Three finalists participated: Corey Lossing of Ingleside, Laurence Dodd III of Leander…

Texas Traveler: Galveston Ghosts

Dash Beardsley is a legend, both in his own mind, and in real life. The Robert Plant look-alike, owner and operator of Ghost Tours of Galveston, shows up for tours wearing a floor-length black duster, silver rings on every finger, and sunglasses. At 8 o’clock at night. Before the tour…

This Week In Deliciousness

Welcome back to the weekly roundup at Eating Our Words, where we never roll less than three sous-chefs deep, y’all. Paul Knight started off the week by attending the Grand Opening of Lucky Strike Lanes and sampling their grub. We’ll spare you the inevitable bowling puns. Get it? “Spare”? No,…

Five Clips In Memory of L.A. Punk Documentarian Brendan Mullen

Brendan Mullen, documentarian of the early L.A. punk scene, died this past Monday at the age of 60. From the basement of a porno theater to The Decline of Western Civilization, the Scottish-born implant helped chronicle early American West Coast punk both orally and through the written word, ending his…

Donut Patrol: Quality with Freshness

The lady behind the counter at the Donut Wheel at Bellaire and Boone across the street from Hong Kong City Mall swore that the glazed donuts were fresh out of the oven. They weren’t. They were totally mediocre. I also sampled a buttermilk donut — the one that looks like…

Openings and Closings

Word hit this week that Las Alamedas — the landmark Spanish restaurant that mysteriously shut down earlier this year — will be reopening again soon, but not in the same location. The owners have leased a space in Katy’s La Centerra, the town square-style development near Cinco Ranch. The restaurant’s…

Tonight: Booze-Free Folk With Eliza Gilkyson at NiaMoves

If you’re into no-booze, no-talking, listening-room shows, NiaMoves, the yoga studio/concert venue just north of downtown, has a good one tonight with Eliza Gilkyson. Gilkyson may be a folkie, but she always digs deep lyrically and musically. Her music is not for the faint of heart or the lace-doily crowd…

Gettin’ Snatch? Slayin’ Puss? Yeah, Pepsi Has An App For That

One day, someone ridiculously wise (or someone that was obviously getting ripped a new asshole by the media) once said, “No press is bad press.” Unfortunately, that old adage probably isn’t applicable to Pepsi, and won’t be in this lifetime.We suppose we shouldn’t be too surprised that Pepsi developed an…

Sampler Plate: This Week In Food Blogs

Each week, we’ll put together a sampler plate of the most interesting links from both local and national food blogs. Know a blog that we should be paying close attention to? Leave the address in the comments section below. Great Food Houston: Ruthie compares and contrasts the “free and reduced…

Take Har Mar Superstar Seriously or Not? Your Call.

This guy has nothing on Har Mar Superstar. The R&B singer and Ron Jeremy lookalike has worked the pink-manties look for the better part of this decade. He is, after all, a self-styled lover. Fresh off his cameo as a rival roller derby coach in Whip It (and his excellent…

Caffeine Deficiency? Call the Coffee Ambulance

Katz Coffee Company just bought a new “Transit” van and outfitted it with flashing safety lights and a wacky paint job. They call this high-profile delivery vehicle “the coffee ambulance.” Katz custom-roasts proprietary blends for some of Houston’s top restaurants, including t’afia, benjy’s and Empire Coffee. Its mellow, medium-dark espresso…

Five Spot: The Hot Boyz Are Reuniting, Watch Your Knees

Welcome back to Five Spot. Every Friday, we’ll examine a recent bit of music news and, sometimes awkwardly, tie it to a bit of Houston rap. It’s five videos and occasional cussing. Send tips to introducingliston@gmail.com. Note: A regular reader passed along a story that interested us greatly, so for…

Listology: Chase Hamblin Chooses His Favorite One-Hit Wonders

Chase Hamblin performs with Robert Ellis and the Small Sounds, 8 p.m. tonight at Walter’s on Washington, 4215 Washington, 713-862-2513 or www.4215washington.com. Easybeats, “Friday on My Mind” Anxious changes, solid backbeat and sweet harmonies, this is a killer track. Amazing Australian ’60s hit written by George Young, who went on…

With Drayton, Astros’ Manager Search Is Sure To Suck

For some reason, Astros fans appear to be more concerned about the transfer of Jose Cruz from one useless job to another useless job than they care about whether the team actually gets a decent manager. Believe it or not, the manager of a team is far more important to…

Upcoming Events

This weekend is full of food events, whether you want to travel or stay close to home. The annual Texas Renaissance Festival is in full swing already, with more turkey legs and steins of ale than you can swing a mace at. But if that’s not your thing, we’ve got…

The Week In Photos

We’ve got a cold, wet winter ahead of us this year, so the photographers in our Flickr pool have been hitting the streets and enjoying Houston’s mild fall weather while it lasts. Enjoy some of our favorite reader-submitted photos from the last week below. For more information about any of…

Late Night Scene: Taqueria la Tapatia

On Saturday nights, Taqueria la Tapatia has the craziest music mix. For every two Tejano love songs played, they play one song — to use the term loosely — of throbbing, Eurotrash techno. Let’s just say it’s an odd soundtrack for a burrito. Given a choice, I’ll take the Tejano,…

The Office: Fundamentals

In the wake of last week’s wedding extravaganza, The Office got back to its roots this week in a great way, proving that this ensemble is so strong and the storytelling still so entertaining that it can produce a great episode with two of its key players out of the…

FlashForward: Who Cares?

If FlashForward gets just a little cheesier, it’ll qualify as full-on camp. It takes itself very seriously without having the engaging story to back up its self-obsession, and the fleeting attempts at characterization via humor come off as lame and lifeless. Short version: Lame, son. This week’s “Black Swan” was…

Donut Patrol: The Glaze of History

When Lawrence Shipley Sr., Lillie Shipley, and Helen Shipley posed with employees at the original Shipley Do-Nuts bakery at 1417 Crockett Street in 1936, glazed doughnuts were selling for five cents a dozen. Shipley’s Donuts are an old Houston tradition, but are we loyal because of nostalgia or because of…

Vietnamese Steak and Eggs… Holy Cow!

Tan Ba Le Baguette on the corner of Beechnut and Boone is an excellent lunch destination. This Vietnamese diner specializes in street vendor dishes at an affordable price. Ordering here is simple: Walk up to the counter and ask for steak and eggs. The steak-and-eggs combo was traditionally sold to…

Tonight: Thorriors Unite! (at Rudyard’s)

Tonight at Rudyard’s, we’ll be a part of the lusty and bearded throng throwing themselves in front of Valient Thorr and Early Man, with local cats the Hell City Kings and Golden Axe acting as support. Those two Houston bands alone would be enough rock and roll for one night,…

Food Fight: Battle Frites

​French fries, truffle fries and now frites. That’s right: a fried potato trifecta is now in play at Eating Our Words. Why the obsession with deep-fried starch around here? As if the question even need be asked… Because fries are delicious, whether you dip them in mayo or ketchup, dust…

City Is Trying To Scare Up BARC Funds By Hassling Veterinarians, One Says

In a move to raise revenue for a new adoption center, the City of Houston is ordering veterinarians to provide clients’ names and their pets’ licensing information. According to a September 28 letter from Administrative and Regulatory Affairs Director Alfred Moran to Houston vets, those who don’t comply are subject to a fine of…

Top 5 Cheesiest Soft Drink Commercials

Coca-Cola Hilltop Commercial Thirty years ago, Coca-Cola imagined itself as the arbiter of world peace. Let’s just buy the world a Coke and everything will be hunky-dory. Today, America is often despised as a “Coca-Cola” culture, and Coke itself is blamed for the skyrocketing rates of obesity and diabetes in…

Aftermath: Muse, Openers Only In Name at Reliant Stadium

Muse took the Reliant stage around 7:30 p.m., when concertgoers were still slowly trickling in to Reliant Stadium. The place was most likely less than half full (or half empty, depending on your outlook) yet Muse’s thick, epic sound filled in the gaps nicely. After making their entrance to Sergei…

The (Alleged) Tragedy Of How The Astros Are Treating Jose Cruz

So Jose Cruz is no longer the first-base coach of the Houston Astros. Now can someone please tell me why everybody is so upset? Seriously, what’s the big deal?The guy was the first-base coach. His job consisted of patting Lance Berkman on the ass and showing the pitchers where second…

A Chat with Karen Racine of Absinthe Brasserie

Walk into Absinthe, and it’s almost guaranteed that Karen Racine will be pouring your drink. Karen, or at least someone she’s related to. “I actually own the bar going on six years. My sister and I own this, and she and my brother-in-law own Bowl. We have a staff of…

Dragging Bowl: Bland Food, Hip Surroundings

The shrimp is perfectly cooked and the pad thai is edible — if you squirt a whole lot of Sriracha hot sauce in it. I love the giant aquarium and the cool ambiance at Dragon Bowl Asian Bistro at 11th St. in the Heights. Beer by the bottle, good-looking clientele…

Flashback: U2 and Muse at Reliant Stadium

Rocks Off is a little slow getting started this morning, because we’re still shaking off the effects of the extraterrestrial satellite that fell to Earth in the vicinity of 610 and Kirby Wednesday night. The humanoids who came out – two squads; a trio and a quartet – seemed to…

Glee, Episode 7: Inevitable Conclusions

I’m beginning to think that Glee never should have gotten the back-nine pickup from Fox, instead being held to 13 episodes for this season instead of a full 22. It’s not that the show doesn’t deserve to tell its story. It’s that too often, episodes are nothing but filler that…

George H.W. Bush To Aggies: Please Don’t Be Aggies When Obama Visits

President Obama is headed to College Station Friday, at the invitation of former President George H.W. Bush, to speak about community service and whatnot.Obama, having already spoken at Notre Dame earlier this career, apparently decided to find an even more hostile environment. (Next stop: Bob Jones University! Then Al-Qaeda headquarters…

Checking in at Stanton’s City Bites

Seems like every year about this time there’s a flurry of blog posts and buzz about an “undiscovered” burger joint called Stanton’s City Bites (1420 Edwards St.). Of course, Stanton’s has been around forever, but it seems to keep a relatively low profile in the ongoing Houston burger wars. Hardcore…

Marge Simpson In Playboy Two Franchises On The Way Down

So it seems Marge Simpson is appearing in Playboy: Simpsons matriarch Marge Simpson is gracing the cover of Playboy magazine, becoming the first cartoon character in the publication’s history.The November issue sees Marge posing on a chair with the distinctive Playboy Bunny logo. It marks the 20th anniversary of The…

Viewer Request Program

Cinema Bomar’s Viewer Request Program showcases a simpler time, when half the fun of shopping was dressing up and predictions of the future included a holo-TV in every home. For today’s screening, the collectors of 16mm “industrial, educational and ephemeral film” – who, with the rest of the Domy Books…

“22nd Annual Día de los Muertos”

Lawndale Art Center’s “22nd Annual Día de los Muertos” marks one of the most spectacular holidays of the year in Houston. Among the engaging aspects of the Mexican remembrance of loved ones is the retablo tradition of creating devotional paintings to honor the dead. In August, Lawndale Arts Center passed…

E. L. Doctorow

E.L. Doctorow has a way with history. Ragtime and Billy Bathgate, just two of his many titles, are stuffed with the sort of delicious details that make the past come to luscious life. His most recent story burrows into the strange, dark mysteries of the Collyer brothers, America’s most famous…

Festa Italiana

Expect to hear plenty of Sinatra tunes at the 2nd Annual Italian-American Idol Song Competition, a highlight of today’s 31st Festa Italiana. Along with the amateur singers, Aaron Caruso (from Broadway’s Be My Love) will perform. There’s plenty of time between songs to try the hand-tossed pizzas, play some bocce…

Dance Infusion

Uptown Dance Company Artistic Director Beth Gulledge-Brown premieres her latest work, The Moment, at today’s Dance Infusion. The piece is performed by guest artists Alexander Pandiscio and Lauren Ciobanu, both members of the Houston Ballet. Gulledge-Brown’s Dancing Days, featuring the music of Led Zeppelin, and Ray Dones’s The Beauty of…

Little Shop of Horrors

The simple request “Feed me!” never sounded so menacing as it does in the Texas Repertory Theatre’s production of Little Shop of Horrors. The doo-wop musical spoofs the over-the-top sci-fi thrillers of the 1950s with a story about a man-eating plant from outer space. (She’s named Audrey II, and she…

“600 sq mi: Hidden”

“600 sq mi: Hidden” is a photography exhibit that invites you to stop and ponder what you’ve missed. “Houston is such a sprawling and complex place that interesting or beautiful things can be easy to overlook,” says Houstonist.com Editor Jim Parsons. The local blog’s annual, reader-submitted photo exhibit focuses on…

Richard Alston Dance Company

In July, the pioneering choreographer Merce Cunningham died. Today in Houston, his primary philosophy – that it is worthwhile to dance for the sake of dancing, as opposed to telling a story or expressing human emotion – lives on in the form of London’s Richard Alston Dance Company, visiting Houston…

Magnolia Park Centennial Celebration

Join the residents of Houston’s East End as they mark the 100th anniversary of the founding of Magnolia Park. The historically Hispanic neighborhood, which started off as a tiny city before it was gobbled up by Houston, boasts churches, schools, parks and civic organizations that have been active for more…

Rocky Horror Show

Spend Halloween with the trippy transvestite Dr. Frank N. Furter and his crew of misfit malcontents at The Rocky Horror Show. Oh, and don’t forget Brad and Janet! ACE Community Theatre’s production of the musical uses the Broadway revival score, which includes an extra song for Brad — “Once in…

Heaven

Choreographer Morgan Thorson had a simple premise when she started working on Heaven, which is making its world premiere at DiverseWorks today. “I was interested in perfection,” she says. “That got me looking into religion, specifically Christianity, and I was disturbed by the contradictions I found there.” Thorson set out…

2009 International Quilt Festival/Houston

Quilts have become fine art; stop by the 2009 International Quilt Festival/Houston and you’ll see what we mean. These aren’t puffed-up blankets. Instead the fabric art, which uses everything from glass beads to thread-painting to digitalized embroidery, looks as if it would be at home in a museum or gallery…

They Live

In director John Carpenter’s They Live, John Nada, a drifter in Los Angeles, is the only person in the world who knows that members of the city’s society scene aren’t really humans but aliens. (We knew L.A. was full of beings from another planet – no human could breathe in…

Immersed in Ink Tattoo & Arts Festival

See bodies adorned in every color at today’s Immersed in Ink Tattoo & Arts Festival. Some of the top tattoo artists in the country, including Dale the Nail and Roman Abrego, will be inking up folks on-site. There’s also human suspension exhibitions (ouch, ouch, ouch!), a car show, tattoo contests…

Matthew Day Jackson: “The Immeasurable Distance”

There’s an idea that culture and innovation advance most during times of duress. (Translation: Pain is inspiring.) That’s the driving force behind Contemporary Arts Museum Houston’s “Matthew Day Jackson: The Immeasurable Distance,” an exhibition of sculptures, constructed paintings, objects and videos that Jackson created during a residency at the List…

1909-2009: The Great Collaborators of the Ballets Russes

When time machines are finally on the market and you feel like having a little fun, head to Paris some time between 1909 and 1929 – the heyday of the Ballets Russes dance company. The core mission of the itinerant company, which boasted such talents as Nijinsky, Pavlova, Stravinsky and…

Gruesome Playground Injuries

The Alley Theatre’s latest coup is the world premiere of Gruesome Playground Injuries by Rajiv Joseph. A provocative dark comedy, Injury follows a couple who meet in the school nurse’s office (she’s throwing up, and he rode his bike off the roof). The encounter sets them on a path marked…

Cinemad Almanac 2009 DVD Release Party

Experimental filmmaker Deborah Stratman (From Hetty to Nancy, Kings of the Sky) once told Mike Plante, editor of Aurora Picture Show’s Cinemad blog, “I love watching films with stories…I just don’t want to make them,” adding, “I loved Herbie the Love Bug when it came out.” You’d never confuse her…

Spotlight on Contemporary Greek Cinema

Works by six of Greece’s most renowned filmmakers are included in the first-ever Spotlight on Contemporary Greek Cinema showcase at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Shown over two weekends, the films cover love, fear, greed and obsession. Today’s screening features the 2007 The Night Fernando Pessoa Met Constantine Cavafy…

Michael Andrews: Historic Texas Courthouses

Michael Andrews, author of Historic Texas Courthouses, hems and haws a little when asked which of the restored architectural gems is his favorite, before admitting, “My top three are the courthouses in Presidio County [in] Marfa, Ellis County [in] Waxahachie, and the Grimes County courthouse in tiny Anderson.” He’ll discuss…

Agatha Christie Takes Manhattan

Houston theater lovers know the name Eddie Cope (the playwright is a local legend), but they might not have heard of his play Agatha Christie Takes Manhattan. Luckily, UpStage Theatre’s Artistic Director of the Evening Series, Arnold Richie, sums it up for us. “It’s a whodunit, of course. Agatha Christie…

Traves Hedemann: “Young at Heart Art”

Artist Travis Hedemann is known for his anime-esque, innocent style, putting his signature big, blue-eyed spin on everything from opera characters to animals, and even inanimate objects such as sushi and handbags. Currently presenting his “Young at Heart Art” exhibit, the Houstonian says, “When I first started, I guess I…

Copyright Infringement

It’s rap meets Wall Street when recording artists and lawyers square off in Copyright Criminals, a PBS documentary by Benjamin Franzen and Kembrew McLeod, first broadcast on its Independent Lens program last January. Rappers and DJs have been “sampling” for decades, taking a brief piece of a song and tweaking,…

Michelle Shocked

Michelle Shocked has explored solo rawness on Texas Campfire Tapes, has bounced big-band style on Captain Swing, and has even had a song used in a Kaiser Permanente ad for osteoporosis. After a legal battle with Mercury Records, which had her signed to a ten-year contract, she wrested control of…

Gary Allan

It’s one thing to write country songs and another thing to live them. So while hardship has helped Gary Allan step his game up another level, the price was staggering. Allan grew up in honky-tonks, accompanying his dad’s band before striking out with a Bakersfield sound and gruff, weathered tenor…

Thursday

In the post-hardcore pantheon, the New Jersey guys of Thursday are millennial gods. Led by the unapologetically erudite frontman Geoff Rickly, in the late ’90s and early ’00s their early loud-soft aesthetic helped define what would later come to be known — often pejoratively — as “screamo.” Now the band…

Har Mar Superstar

At first, you think it’s just shtick. We get it; a fat, balding, completely unsexy white guy crooning lascivious, funky R&B while stripping down to his tighty-whities is funny. That much is undeniable. Then it sinks in — you’re actually really digging it, maybe even kinda turned on. It’s a…

MarchFourth Marching Band

Most people would consider this Portland, Oregon, ensemble a random troupe of eccentric oddballs. After all, who on earth tours in a decommissioned fire truck playing impromptu concerts on streets, subway stations and ferries while dressed in costumes made from bicycle parts or recycled thrift-shop outfits? Not many. But the…

Dive Bars

Somewhere in a godforsaken stretch of near northwest Houston, a very drunk man wearing a Texas Longhorns cap is smoking outside the front door of the strip mall bar on a moist, breezy Saturday afternoon. He sees that I too am rocking the burnt orange, and snarls, “Well, at least…

Bad for the Jews

The Yiddish shtetl shtick that opens Joel and Ethan Coen’s new movie — a Jewish peasant stumbles on an old Hasid who may or may not be a dybbuk — is pretty clumsy, but at least it tips its hat to the great existential comedy that A Serious Man might…

All About Meeeeee!

Laurel Nakadate’s art really irritates me, and I still can’t decide if that is a good thing or a bad thing. You may have heard about her — she’s the young, attractive artist who lets creepy, lonely old guys pick her up and then films her interactions with them, a…

Big House on the Hill

On Fridays at Casa Grande, the wacky Tex-Mex joint on North Main at I-45, most of the lunch specials are seafood dishes. I liked the big, juicy, grilled shrimp on my tablemate’s shrimp-and-fajitas combo. The chunky-looking fajitas on his plate were made with some kind of enzyme-marinated beef, but I…

Capsule Art Reviews: “BIG LECTRIC FAN TO KEEP ME COOL WHILE I SLEEP”, “Katy Heinlein: Project Space, ” “Sasha Pierce: New Paintings” and “John Sparagana: The Crisis Professionals”, “Carlos Runcie-Tanaka: Fragmento”

“BIG LECTRIC FAN TO KEEP ME COOL WHILE I SLEEP” Wayne White’s installation at Rice Gallery is stunning. White, widely known for his incredible sets and puppets for Pee-wee’s Playhouse, is originally from Chattanooga, Tennessee. You can take the artist out of the country, but you can’t take the country…

Valentino

In the space that used to house Bistro Moderne in the Hotel Derek, famed restaurateur Piero Selvaggio has just opened the Houston outpost of Valentino (2525 West Loop South, 713-850-9200). Two weeks ago, he opened Vin Bar, serving a wide assortment of crudo (raw) dishes, adjacent to the fine-dining restaurant…

All Good Again

Founded in the mid-’90s, Goodie Mob is one of Southern hip-hop’s most revered acts. The Atlanta foursome, led by rotund crooner Cee-Lo Green in his pre-Gnarls Barkley days, were so uniquely talented, their oddball behavior was interpreted by many rap pundits as genius. Clearly, Cee-Lo wore that fishnet shirt and…

Let the Mild Rumpus Start!

Directed by Spike Jonze from a 400-word children’s picture book first published in 1963, Where the Wild Things Are may be the toughest adaptation since Tim Burton fashioned Mars Attacks! from a series of bubblegum cards. Tougher, actually: Burton was working with ephemeral, anonymous trash; Jonze is elaborating on a…

Extreme Fusion

We like imagining how this dish developed. Maybe at the end of a shift spent rolling nori around sushi rice all day, the chef at Miyako (6345 Westheimer, 713-781-6300 and other locations) shouted out “No more!” and decided to leave a square of nori flat. Then he baked it in…

Get All Dressed Up

Michael Jackson. Trend spotters say his face will be everywhere you look this coming year, and why not? It certainly has a ghostly aspect, although one wonders how all the would-be Michaels will manage the nose. But if your idea of a good time doesn’t include wearing the face and…

FRONT PORCH PUB’S POISON GIRL

“I’d hate to own a bar,” says Sergeant B. “I’d have to deal with people like me.” He’s talking about agitated drinkers, and in this case, the source of the agitation is a Monday Night Football bingo game at Front Porch Pub (217 Gray, 713-571-9571). Bingo and anger normally go…

The Uninsured and Language History

Dear Mexican, An uninsured wetback just hit my car and totaled his. He had no insurance and no license, but did have a nice cell phone. I asked him if he was okay in my limited Spanish, but he did not ask about me or my children. He was handcuffed…

Death of a Dancer

Death of a Dancer Moral duties: It seems to me the mother of 18-year-old stripper Esther Saenz should concern herself with improving her parenting skills instead of improving her purse [“Club Dead,” by Craig Malisow, October 1]. It doesn’t look like she put in too much of an effort to…

Dream Harder

Houston’s D.R.I. released Crossover in 1987, signaling the alchemical wedding of hardcore punk and heavy metal. Mohawks became dreadlocks, flowing tresses became shiny pates and the fringe world of fast, heavy, angry music gained a foothold in the mainstream by uniting these formerly averse musical fronts. Dozens of mutations and…

Fire Down Below

“One Headlight,” the 1996 hit by Los Angeles alt-rockers the Wallflowers, is still a fun song. Know where you wouldn’t expect to hear it performed live? Firehouse Saloon (5930 Southwest Fwy.), a venue centered around twangy music of the Texas/Oklahoma (“Red Dirt”) variety. “I’m a big fan of that song…

Twice-Told Tales

Break out the black fingernail polish. Just in time for Halloween, Noise has been curling up with New Tales to Tell, a tribute album to goth-pop figureheads Love and Rockets that — believe it or not — issues from right here in Houston. Sort of. A little history first. Love…

Steve Young

Who is Steve Young? Well, beyond being a kid who spent his teen years in Beaumont, he’s a guy who should be in every songwriting Hall of Fame on this planet or any other. Young, who early in his career lived with Van Dyke Parks in Los Angeles, is probably…


Recent

Gift this article