Author: admin

  • 2009 Summer Guide artist #1 — Villanova Junction

    Apr. 27, 2009

    Villanova Junction: \”Panic\” (“Panic”)

    VILLANOVA JUNCTION

    Members: Ryan O’Neill (vocals, guitar), Erin Johnson (organ), Julian Leonard (drums)

    Sounds like: The Doors, Kings of Leon, Murder by Death

    Villanova Junction is a three-piece with some serious sound. O’Neill met Leonard at a party two years ago where they discovered their mutual love for the Misfits. Johnson joined up after he saw them play their first show on a Halloween night: “We started with some covers like The Doors and Murder City Devils and then we ventured off and did our own stuff.” They put out their self-titled album in January and are now writing material for the follow-up. “The tempo is definitely a little different,” says O’Neill, “I think we want to gear towards more energy, connecting more with the crowd and the listeners.” Johnson plays a vintage Hammond organ with all original parts from the late ’60s and he fills out the low end with a modern keyboard. The group wants to tour as soon as they get the “fundage.” “We’re not an ego-based, bastard kind of band,” says O’Neill.

     

  • Q&A: Chatting with environmental warrior Summer Benson

    Apr. 24, 2009

    Summer Benson worked as a registered nurse for 32 years until she decided to walk the green talk. Since watching An Inconvenient Truth three years ago, she has started a home-based wellness coaching business, Good Health Coaching, and rarely uses an automobile and has gotten her electric bill down to $14 a month. Here’s Benson on:

    Why she became an environmental warrior:

    “An Inconvenient Truth opened my eyes. I’ve always worked toward recycling, but I really dug my heels in after I saw that movie. The little polar bear not having an iceberg, so he was downing and stuff. I had nightmares. I’m telling you, I had nightmares about that.

    “I’m a minimalist, so keep the stuff down, and that’s a lot of work. Own as little as you possibly can. Most people you know and I know have just about everything they’re ever going to need. This gift-giving stuff is just kind of garbage, another sweater, another toy for a Christmas or birthday present. Now I give trees. American Forest will plant one sapling for $1. I give 30 for whatever the present is. There’s a lot of room to go. There’s always something more, which is great. It’s a community thing, we can come together, we can learn, we can exchange ideas.”

    What have you done to make your life green?

    “Everybody in their own world, in there own life does whatever he or she can do. To cut down on the car, I ride my bicycle as much as I can. I changed jobs initially so instead of having a 25-minute commute I had a four- to six-minute commute. I’m a registered nurse and nurses get jobs everywhere. Then I hired a career coach, Sharon McCormick in Durham, N.C., and she said, ‘Well Coaches, that’s what you need.’ Well Coaches has set the gold standard for health and wellness coaching. They are patented, and that’s the company I work through. It feeds into the green because I’m staying home.

    “I do most of my shopping at the Goodwill. I buy in bulk as much as I can, but you have to be careful when you go to Sam’s Club, because if you read the oranges and they are coming from California, that’s not green. Green is Florida. I buy locally as much as I can. I work with small businesses as much as I can because that keeps it down. Keep the corporations out of here. Haven’t they destroyed enough already? I don’t use hot water in my house. I don’t use the dishwasher. We live in Florida; I do not use heat. If I get cold I put clothes on. I live in a condominium so I can’t use a clothesline, but I dry my clothes in the closet. And being a minimalist, believe me, there is ample space for them to dry properly. I don’t use air conditioning. Why use air conditioning? I don’t have a fan. I’ve created options in my life. I can go sit in the pool or ride my bike to the YMCA. We are capable of acclimating. Acclimate to your environment.”

    Do you think it’s reasonable for normal people to live like that?

    “I don’t think everybody can do what I did with changing my job and moving in closer. I don’t know if it’s always going to be knee-jerk reactions. We always have to work at this stuff, honestly. We taught children when they were young — reduce, reuse, recycle. You can use both sides of a piece of paper. It’s living in the present. It’s being fully aware of what I am doing now.

    “No, not everybody has the opportunity to cut back like I did. But I’m positive that all of us can make major changes in our lives. We are the spirit of the earth. We are held responsible for taking care of mother earth. We’ve been given so many gift and we take them all for granted. Do I sound like an aging hippie?”

     

  • The Tea Party reveals a clash of ideologies and the underlying unity we all share

    Apr. 16, 2009

     

    Walking through the crowds of the TEA (Taxed Enough Already) party in downtown Sarasota Wednesday made me re-evaluate ideals, partisanship, patriotism and what our country stands for in general. As a laboriously unbiased journalist I always try to see both sides of every issue, and usually do, before making my personal judgment on a matter. As I snap pictures of teens, obviously too young to vote, waving anti-Obama banners and seniors, who probably voted for Eisenhower, holding “stop socialism” signs I think about what we all hold common across generational and party lines.

    One of the biggest drives of libertarians is the view that the 16th Amendment — which states, “The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration” — should be repealed. And this view is shared across party lines.

    The 16th amendment was ratified on Feb. 13, 1913. On Dec. 23 of that same year, Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law, officially creating a quasi-public central banking system comprised of government entities and 12 regional privately owned Federal Reserve Banks. These Federal Reserve Banks now issue Federal Reserve Notes as our official form of currency, which replaced the United States Notes that were issued by the Treasury Department. The banks officially won, and Andrew Jackson officially rolled over in his grave.

    This is our history, and we have to live with the results. We the people allowed the banks to take control of our country, and now they have it. Every American citizen should be furious that our earnings have been spent to support failing banks that greedily bet our money away, but they shouldn’t be surprised. This is an inevitable result of unregulated capitalism and the Golden Rule: He who has the gold, makes the rules. Conservatives rightly complain that we are passing debt onto future generations, but we have all inherited a debt that will never go way — the rule of banks.

    Instead of pointing fingers and accessing blame we need to work together toward common goals. I talked with a man in the tea party crowd named Gaston Larranaga who immigrated to the United States from Uruguay and had recently retired from IBM after 32 years of service. He was holding a sign that said, “Stop the power grab” on one side and “Don’t tread on me” on the other. In his opposite hand he held a pocket copy of the Constitution that he waved at passing cars.

    “I became a proud American by choice in 1973 and I had to read the Constitution very carefully,” says Larranaga. “I became aware of a lot of things. For example, when the power is not defined in the federal government, it resides in the states. When you have a federal government like this one, which is telling the states, ‘We don’t care what you say locally; we’re going to make you spend the money whether you like it or not,’ that’s unconstitutional.”

    Larranaga, who says he travels with the Constitution and reads it “constantly,” believes that the problem with President Obama and congressional democrats is that they do not understand the exceptionality of our country. “We’re the only country in the world where the rights of the people do not come from the government, they come from the creator,” he says. “Whether you’re religious, Jefferson was supposedly not, but he believed in providence right? In European countries, even though they have social democracies, the rights of the people didn’t come from God, they came from the king. The king had the power from God and he lent it to the people — very different concept.”

    Larranaga had me take a picture of him standing next to a woman dressed as the Statue of Liberty while he held up a sign that said “Nut Case” with an arrow pointing toward her. A man with a fake severed head on a spike is packing his stuff into the Statue’s truck.

    “What they’re doing is attempting to say they’re part of this crowd, which is a very respectful crowd,” he says. “What they’re trying to say is, ‘We’re going to go kill people.’ They have a head on a stake. That’s crazy. They’re trying to impugn the entire crowd. I don’t want to kill anybody. I just want the government to do what’s right.”

    What’s right is always up to interpretation. As I talk with Larranaga by the road he holds up the pocket Constitution to a passing car whose passenger flips him off. “Look at that,” he says. “I show them the Constitution and I get the bird.”

    These are trying times we live in and no amount of middle fingers, heads on stakes or protest signs will get us out of them. Our insatiable appetite for money has led our country into an ideological traffic jam — and nobody has the right of way.

     

  • The Greentech Office Park will be Sarasota’s biggest green project yet

    Apr. 2, 2009

    One of Sarasota’s biggest green construction projects yet will be the Greentech Office Park underway at the southeast corner of U.S. 301 and Tallevast Road. The plans for the 27-acre complex include 180,000 square feet of office space, 20,000 square feet of retail space and an 86-room hotel.

    The principle developer, Sperry Van Ness/Blackpoint Realty, first came up with the idea in 2004 and finally got approval to build in 2008. The commercial real estate brokerage company hired an LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) consultant and will have the project certified by the U.S. Green Building Council as meeting the LEED Gold standard.

    The managing director of the company, Anthony Mazzucca (pictured above), coined the term “greentech office park” and wants to create a technologically advanced complex that encourages environmental awareness. “We always had the wetlands preservation in mind,” says Mazzucca. “We could have mitigated some stuff and maybe gotten a better yield out of the project, but we thought it would be interesting to have wetlands on the site.”

    The buildings will be surrounded in a park-like setting that will feature wireless Internet and secure power poles to allow business employees to work outside on their computers. “We’ll have tables and a little conference area outside,” says Mazzucca. “The idea is to get people to become part of the hope that the whole park is an office.”

    The construction of the buildings is only part of what will make the complex green. The company is in the process of attracting businesses that want to jump on the concept. “Right now this is just the base,” he says. “What we have to do is get people signed up and start to go vertical. We have to work with the people that move in so we can provide the right kind of carpeting and paint and air-conditioning systems that bring in fresh air and filters out pollutants, and the right kind of lighting fixtures, and wire it so all their equipment goes off over night.”

    The developers are concerned just as much with the local economy as they are with conservation and efficiency. They have been working with local contractors and trying to use local materials whenever possible. They believe the area between Sarasota and Bradenton is a perfect place to spark business innovation. “We think it’s important that this area becomes a good business corridor,” says Mazzuca, “and it’s important to create areas where businesses will migrate to.”

    Of course they would like to see professionals like doctors, lawyers and accountants sign on, but they are also seeking younger, “smart” industries. “We think that what we’re doing with the level of Internet connectivity should be able to attract bio-sciences and life-sciences people,” says Mazzucca. “And because of Ringling College, we would like to see people who are in digital animation and industrial design. That’s what we’re trying to focus on is to keep those people.”

    Mazzucca believes Sarasota has the potential to lead the way in environmental innovation. “We have some good colleges here. We’ve got to create more businesses that will keep kids here, and create more things for them to do when they’re here. And the buildings we build have to be more interesting, not just architecturally, but they have to have environment around them. We have to make it conducive for people to ride bikes to work and to walk around the facility while they’re here. Get people to get out.”

     

  • Robin Rogers brings the house down at Ace’s this Saturday

    Apr. 1, 2009

    Robin Rogers bring her infectious enthusiasm to Bradenton’s Ace’s this week. She’s been nominated for Best Contemporary Female Blues Artist of the Year in the upcoming 30th Annual Blues Music Awards. She and her band also won the Blues Foundation’s Best Produced CD award in 2005 for their Crazy Cryin’ Blues album. Rogers has opened up for Johnny Winter, Buddy Guy and Robert Cray and is currently on tour promoting her newest effort Treat Me Right.

     

  • Ray Bonneville rocks the Irish Rover Pub this Saturday

    Apr. 1, 2009

    Ray Bonneville has been touring around singing his gritty storytelling and deep grooving blues songs for more than 30 years. His 1999 album Gust of Wind won him a Juno Award (the Canadian Grammy) and his fourth release, Rough Luck, scored a nomination. He has shared the stage with some major blues legends (B.B. King, Muddy Waters, Robert Cray) and got the music industry’s attention in 2007 with his performance at South By Southwest. He’s touring the country now in support of his 2008 record Goin’ By Feel. This show’s being presented at the Irish Rover by local radio station WSLR.