Use quotes to search for a phrase or name: "toy story", or "brooklyn bridge".

Article

Whose city is it, anyway?

Sitting at his modest desk at City Hall last Wednesday, Tracy Pounders couldn't help but smile as he spoke. It wasn't the pictures of his six-year-old daughter and two-month-old son that were making him feel warm all over. It wasn't the compact disc of Vivaldi's Four Seasons that was filling...
Article

BeloWatch

Brain drain Dallas' Only Daily has suffered a trio of major-league defections. The first is the departure of business editor Karen Blumenthal for the Dallas bureau of the Wall Street Journal. Blumenthal, 35, became News business editor about two years ago, after a long stint as a reporter at the...
Article

The meaning of nonsense

Over the past four decades, a million rock and roll bands have made a hundred million rock and roll records. Some go on to sell millions of copies; some, a few thousand; most, maybe a few dozen cassettes. If, tomorrow, most of the would-be Neil Youngs and Kurt Cobains and...
Article

UFOFU and your mother

Joe Butcher, the lead singer and guitar player for UFOFU, leans on the microphone and asks the Club Clearview audience if they would prefer a Gordon Lightfoot or a Buzzcocks cover song. It is close to the end of the night's set, and almost everyone is grinning with something that...
Article

Roadshows

Arresting development Cop Shoot Cop's "Last Legs," off their recently released Release, is probably the best nonhit single of the year. It packs the same wallop as the Beastie Boys' "Sabotage," both songs linked by their similarity to TV cop-show themes of the late '60s and early '70s, but goes...
Article

End of an era

The end of a local band often comes and goes with little notice or mention; as one implodes, another comes along to take its place, filling a void no one knew was empty. But the passing of Killbilly, which will play the final show of its seven-plus-year career this Saturday...
Article

Hot Dish

I'll bet you've heard enough about bagels, already. Coming in on the coattails of the craze for coffee and bread, bagels are especially popular because each one only has about a hundred calories. That's without cream cheese of course, and without cream cheese, a bagel is just another hockey puck...
Article

Enema mine

Except for Nicolas Cage, there's no leading man in movies today who suffers as exquisitely as Matthew Broderick. He's at his best when his characters are at their down-and-out lowest--struggling to hold onto some small shred of dignity while life is gleefully retching on them. He's a versatile actor, but...
Article

Loony tunes

It's a rainy Thursday afternoon at the headquarters of DNA Animation, Dallas' seven-year-old hub of gleeful bad taste and excess, and the company's core group of artists--Keith Alcorn, Paul Claerhout, John Davis, and Debbie Dunning--are taking a break. Huddled around a television set in one corner of the cluttered, computer-laden...
Article

Thanks for the mammaries

At a time in which sex and violence in the movies is blamed for every conceivable social ill, talking to the man who made them both a legitimate entertainment experience feels like an audience with the devil. During a four-decade career, 72-year-old filmmaker Russ Meyer has watched American gender issues...
Article

Joe Bob Briggs

A guy in New Jersey got hauled into court for whacking a rat with a broom handle. The charge: "needlessly killing a rodent." The Goody Two Shoes Lobby: the Newark Humane Society. Welcome to the era of Rat Rights. I would think that, if any city would be happy to...
Article

Events for the week

thursday november 3 Barbie Appraisals: In one of her last essays before she resigned as New York Times columnist to pursue fiction and motherhood, Anna Quindlen admitted she might be an old stick-in-the-mud, but she hated Barbie--or, more accurately, the "feminine" values of appearance, acquisitiveness, and artifice Barbie symbolizes. Although...
Article

America’s deli

Aaah, the melting pot. Cindi's is it: the kind of Jewish deli food especially beloved by New Yorkers, served in white-bread North Dallas by an enterprising Vietnamese woman. How American can you get? The venerable Cindy's, a senior citizen if you're measuring in restaurant years, was given a change of...