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flavorpill NYC | SF | LA | LONDON | CHI January 3 - 9, 2006

 
 Vulcan courtesy of Start Mobile   
Cultural Stimuli in NYC
Issue 291: kaleidoscopic flavor

January might seem cold and grey, but get beneath the surface and there's plenty of color and intrigue just waiting to be discovered. The Dance on Camera Festival brings a month's worth of kinetic, energetic films on dance to the big screen; the goofy NEUROFest marries theatre with neurological conditions; and the New York Times brings an array of creative celebs to town for Arts & Leisure Weekend. On the art-show tip, punk icon Exene Cervenka presents her first-ever New York exhibition, Walid Raad showcases his hallucinatory multimedia landscapes, and Anya Gallaccio makes trees grow in unexpected places. And if you're in the mood to dance while gallery-gazing, Diplo comes to the Guggenheim for First Fridays, bringing some much-needed baile funk from Brazil's steamy hot climes. Celebrate the start of 2006, and spread it...

 

flavorpill NYC is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.






 


Serious holiday stress requires a serious holiday wine. Stock up on bottles from Rioja, Spain's own Napa Valley, famed for its expressive reds and whites that capture a passion for life, culture, and flavor. Sign up at www.VibrantRioja.com and you'll be entered to win a guided wine tasting for 20 at your home.
 Table of Contents TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT
art It's a Beautiful Day; Anya Gallaccio: one art; Exene Cervenka
comedy The Strip Show: An Evening of Cartoonists
design Fashion in Colors
dj Markus Müller; First Fridays feat. Diplo
festival Culturemart; NEUROfest; NYT Arts & Leisure Weekend
film Films of Marguerite Duras; Dance on Camera Festival; Kill the Poor
lectureStriptease: The Untold History
multimedia Walid Raad / The Atlas Group
music Jordan Knight & Jeff Timmons; The Double w/ Celebration; Marc Ribot's Spiritual Unity; Fight the Bull w/ La Otracina; 50 Kaitenz w/ Vaz
photography Jack Pierson
theatre Goner
FEAT music blogging and collector madness Woebot, Gutterbreakz, and Blissblog; cd review Roman, So Ghost?; multimedia BBC Collective


Spotlight


Tart Up Your Phone
We recently teamed up with Start Mobile to curate some brilliant covers. Powered by SF's famed Start Soma Gallery, Start Mobile offers work from hundreds of underground artists as inexpensive downloads for your phone. This week, our featured artist is Vulcan.

Daily Updates




Tuesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


FILM
To Murder the Cinema: The Films of Marguerite Duras

when: Tuesdays 1.3 - 2.28
where: French Institute Alliance Française, Florence Gould Hall (55 E 59th St, 212.355.6160) map
price: $9
links: Event Info

The French Institute Alliance Française celebrates the life of writer/director Marguerite Duras (1914-1996) with this festival honoring her work. Duras' career was defined by controversy over provocative narratives, beginning with her breakout screenplay, Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959). Also included are lesser known films, documentaries, a play, and two meet-the-director evenings. Duras' friend, editor and filmmaker Dominique Auvray, presents her documentary Marguerite par elle-même (2002) and John Waters, a kindred spirit, introduces the final film, La Camion (1977). The later screening is followed by clips from Waters' own oeuvre that pay homage to the delectable and unforgettable Duras. (SAM)



Wednesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


FILM
Dance on Camera Festival 2006

when: Wed 1.4 - Sat 1.7, Tue 1.10, Fri 1.13 & Sun 1.14
where: Walter Reade Theater (70 Lincoln Center Plaza, 212.496.3809) map
price: $10
links: Event Info

Reaching beyond mere performance to showcase a holistic portrayal of dance — from its artistry and history to personal narratives — Dance Film Association's festival makes for an emotionally powerful global onscreen journey. The vigorous octogenarian tap dancers of Been Rich All My Life give way to the courageous amputee of Phoenix Dance; the spotlight also falls on the imaginative Merce Cunningham in Charles Atlas' tender A Lifetime of Dance, and on the most enigmatic of dance icons in A Breath of Pina Bausch. Sure to spark different emotions, a conversation with Striptease: The Untold History of the Girlie Show author Rachel Shteir dares to answer that age-old question: Is striptease a legitimate form of dance? (SP)



THEATRE
Goner

when: Wed 1.4 - Sat 1.28 (Wed-Sat: 8pm)
where: Kraine Theater (85 E 4th St, 212.868.4444) map
price: $15
links: Event Info

The President's brain is quickly turning to pulp after an assassination attempt. Can the staff at Bruno Hauptman General Hospital save him? It seems unlikely that these doctors will rise to the challenge — one thinks Chlamydia is a character in a Greek tragedy, and another is developing "Chemotherapy Barbie" on the side ("Her hair really falls out!") — especially with a couple of FBI agents snooping around and threatening to arrest all medical personnel. Brian Parks' sharp, acidic black comedy may offend the unprepared, but it's a delight for those who dream of an ER-style Simpsons episode with just a touch of The West Wing. (SP)

  What is Bruno Hauptman's claim to infamy? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a performance of Goner.



Thursday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Post-teen Pop
Heart Throbs & Hits feat. Jordan Knight (NKOTB) & Jeff Timmons (98 Degrees)

when: Thur 1.5 (8pm)
where: B.B. King Blues Club & Grill (237 W 42nd St, 212.997.4144) map
price: $25-50
links: Event Info | Jordan Knight | Jeff Timmons

Dust off your NKOTB Trapper Keeper and draw hearts as the New Kids' Jordan Knight teams with Jeff Timmons of 98 Degrees fame. Performing together as Heart Throbs & Hits, the pair sings the highlights from their old band days. Although NKOTB blew up a decade before 98 Degrees, the guys followed similar paths, each going solo after their respective boy band broke up. Join Jordan and Jeff for a blast from the past, when teens screamed for them, cheesy pre-recorded backing tracks were the norm, and Nick Lachey didn't even know Jessica. They bust old dance moves too, so cross your fingers for "Step by Step." (MSB)

Note: $50 VIP tickets include first entry at 6pm and an autographed poster.

  Which saccharine '80s teenie-bopper both co-headlined with NKOTB and dated a member? The sixth and seventh correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.



FESTIVAL: Theatre
NEUROfest

when: Thur 1.5 - Sun 1.29
where: Theater 5 (311 W 43rd St, 5th Fl, 212.352.3101) map
price: $15 / $75 festival pass
links: Event Link

Pick out your favorite neurological condition and then observe it at the first-ever theatre festival dedicated to fascinating, terrifying, and heartbreaking ailments of the mind. The good folks at Untitled Theater Company #61 have put together an eclectic roster of plays that incorporate a fascinating array of theatrical forms. There's everything from puppetry (The Boy Who Wanted to Be a Robot) to an exploration of found texts (Doctors Jane and Alexander) to opera theatre (Tabula Rasa) to a family musical co-written by a 7-year-old with Tourette's Syndrome (Welcome to Tourettaville!). (SP)



FESTIVAL
Culturemart 2006

when: Thur 1.5 - Sun 1.22 (8:30pm)
where: HERE Arts Center (145 6th Ave, 212.647.0202) map
price: $15
links: Event Info

There's something for everyone at this year's Culturemart, which showcases the hyper-creative work of HERE Arts Center's resident artists. Richard Caliban's appropriately high-octane Slovakian cabaret kicks off the 18-day festival, which also includes such curiosities as a multimedia meditation on architectural absence by wrecking-ball survivor/urban planner's daughter Kyle deCamp, and Corey Dargel's theatrical song cycle on the subject of love and voluntary amputation — a must-hear for lovers of sincere irony in the vein of the Magnetic Fields. Basil Twist veteran Oliver Dalzell's puppetry and Alexandra Beller's politically electrifying solo dance performance US are other highlights. (KI)

  What are the two symbols used to denote magnetic fields, and how are they measured (in SI units)? The fourth and fifth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a festival event.



ALSO ON THUR

MUSIC: Free Jazz
Marc Ribot's Spiritual Unity
Thur 1.5 (10pm) The Stone (NW corner of 2nd St & Ave C) map $20

Event Info
 
Marc Ribot heads Spiritual Unity, named after Albert Ayler's free-jazz classic. Ayler's life ended when he drowned mysteriously in 1970. Ribot pays tribute by infusing the saxophonist's trembling songs with his own guitar virtuosity. (JKD)



Friday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


ART: Opening
It's a Beautiful Day

when: Fri 1.6 (6-8pm)
where: ISE Cultural Foundation Gallery (555 Broadway, Basement Fl, 212.226.9382) map
price:
links: Event Info | ISE Cultural Foundation Gallery

In It's a Beautiful Day, Renée Riccardo and Paul Laster (our Artkrush editor) showcase young talents reinventing the everyday through a profound sense of beauty. Kyoto-based painter Saeko Takagi's wispy portraits and landscapes starred at ATM Gallery earlier this year, and Min Kim's sultry collage works headlined P.S.1's Greater New York. Misaki Kawai and Koji Shimizu give bricolage art fresh currency through exuberant color and intricate craft, while Charlene Liu's works on paper blur fantasy and dystopia. Mie Yim creates pastel-colored treats, and Margaret Lee explores love lost. Satoru Eguchi's deconstructed photographs are delicate, surgical forays into the interstices of time and memory. (AM)

Note: It's a Beautiful Day continues through Sat 2.25 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm). A second exhibition curated by Paul Laster and Renée Riccardo, Emotional Landscape, opens at Brooklyn's Rotunda Gallery on Wed 1.18 (6-8pm).



DJ
The Guggenheim and Flavorpill present First Fridays feat. Diplo

when: Fri 1.6 (9pm-1am)
where: Guggenheim Museum (1071 5th Ave, 212.423.3500) map
price: $15
links: Event Info | Diplo

The rotund czars, saucer-eyed saints, and square-jawed apparatchiks of the Guggenheim's RUSSIA! exhibition bear witness one last time to Flavorpill's First Fridays before returning to points east. Giving them a killer — if not obviously apropos — send off, Diplo (aka Wesley Pentz) drops in behind the decks to bring on the sunny, sleazy baile funk. And Houston hip-hop. And two-step garage. And anything else he has kicking around the crates. We're all aware of Pentz's 2005 exploits: producing M.I.A., remixing Beck and Gwen Stefani, and helming the FABRICLIVE.24 mix album. With WFMU mash-up king $mall ¢hange setting the tone tonight, this is compulsory culture. (JS)

Note: Get the down-low on First Fridays past and future with the new First Fridays Blog, full of professional-grade photography documenting you and friends whooping it up in the grand rotunda.



DJ
Markus Müller w/ Someone Else and Dietrich Schoenemann

when: Fri 1.6 (10pm-6am)
where: Exit Club & Lounge (147 Greenpoint Ave, Greenpoint, 718.349.6969) map
price: $20 / $15 advance
links: Event Info | Someone Else | Exit Club & Lounge

While their hometowns aren't exactly neighbors, Cologne's Markus Müller (Traum, Kompakt) and Philadelphia's Someone Else (Foundsound) both produce minimal techno that's been keeping blogs and underground heads in a tizzy. There are subtle differences, though: Müller's recent 12-inch, Chives, is full of bubbly melodies, while Someone Else's work favors the clickier side of the house spectrum, as heard on last year's Goofball EP. With Dietrich Schoenemann, formerly of classic acid-techno outfit Prototype 909, also on the bill, you're sure to be jacking until morning. (TB)



FESTIVAL
New York Times Arts & Leisure Weekend

when: Fri 1.6 - Sun 1.8
where: CUNY Graduate Center (5th Ave at 34th St, 212.209.5442) map
price: $20-50
links: Event Info

Every year, the Times uses its deep pockets and considerable clout to book a dream lineup of writers, directors, and other creative types for a series of talks. Spiels starring A-list celebs such as Robert Redford, Frank Gehry, and Viggo Mortenson are predictably sold out, but many of the more fascinating events still have plenty of seats. These include what promises to be a mind-bending conversation with visionary sci-fi author William Gibson, and an intriguing roundtable discussion on feminism through the generations, featuring the iconic collagist Barbara Kruger, abstract painter Joan Snyder, and current multimedia-art sensation Tamy Ben-Tor. (GD)



ALSO ON FRI

FILM
Kill the Poor
Opens Fri 1.6 IFC Center (323 6th Ave, 212.924.7771) map $10.75

Event Info
 
All jangly nerves and jump cuts, Kill the Poor is a low-budget, Shakespearean-like homage to familial bonds and territory wars set in an Alphabet City block that doggedly resists gentrification. (LR)



LECTURE
Striptease: The Untold History of the Girlie Show
Fri 1.6 (7-9pm) Museum of Sex (233 5th Ave, 212.689.6337x115) map $12

Event Info
 
Writer and academic Rachel Shteir discusses stripping, from its early days to the recent urban revival of burlesque. She might even shed insight on the SuicideGirls Live Burlesque Show. (MSB)



MUSIC: Freak/Free Rock
Fight the Bull w/ La Otracina
Fri 1.6 (8pm) Tommy's Tavern (1041 Manhattan Ave, Greenpoint, 718.383.9699) map $6

Event Info
 
Virginia's Fight the Bull throw everything they learned in Jazz Studies into a blender, producing a torrent of skronk; La Otracina restore the peace with exploratory improv rock — a self-described "trip through watermelon atmospheres." (CLH)



Saturday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MULTIMEDIA: Opening
Walid Raad: The Dead Weight of a Quarrel Hangs: Documents from the Atlas Group Archive

when: Sat 1.7 (5-8pm)
where: The Kitchen (512 W 19th St, 212.255.5793) map
price:
links: Event Info | The Atlas Group

In The Dead Weight of a Quarrel Hangs, Walid Raad, director of an "imaginary foundation" called the Atlas Group, researches and collects photographs, videos, and original documents from 1975-2003. Journalists' photographs of car engines ejected from bombed vehicles are displayed alongside video images of captivity, and ordinary scenes of Arabian horseracing. Together, these images portray a society that, while functional, is ripped through with violence and destruction. Occasionally, the Atlas Group's artful historical method mixes fiction and fact, showing how the act of recording and interpreting history can influence the collective memory of traumatic events. (JK)

Note: This exhibition continues through Sat 3.11 (Tue-Sat: 12-6pm).



MUSIC: Indie Rock
The Double w/ Celebration

when: Sat 1.7 (8:30pm)
where: Bowery Ballroom (6 Delancey St, 212.533.2111) map
price: $12
links: Event Info | The Double | Celebration

Even the loudest songs from the Double's stunning Loose in the Air hang by a thread. The band's querulous vocals are nudged along by ascendant flutes and gentle guitar lines — elements that would get lost in a more amped outfit's Big Muff. Celebration craft gorgeous cacophonies from bits of falling sky. Katrina Ford channels Lora Logic's lung capacity before flinging herself into the audience, whooping and dancing through the crowd while bandmate Sean Antanaitis sits hunched over a huge, sputtering organ, tending every so often to a squealing guitar in his lap. (MKJ)

  After her stint in X-Ray Spex, Logic reunited with bandmate Poly Styrene under what spiritual and musical circumstances? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.



ALSO ON SAT

ART: Opening
Exene Cervenka: America the Beautiful
Sat 1.7 (6-8pm) DCKT Contemporary (552 W 24th St, 2nd Fl, 212.741.9955) map

Event Info
 
In Exene Cervenka's first-ever New York exhibition, the former frontwoman of X showcases her fight-or-die punk spirit through three decades' worth of colorful, scrappy collages, journals, and song lyrics. (GD)

Note: This exhibition continues through Sat 2.11 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm).



MUSIC: Garage Rock
50 Kaitenz w/ Vaz
Sat 1.7 (8pm) The Local, aka Rocky's (351 Kent Ave, Wburg, 718.599.1936) map $8

Event Info
 
Osaka garage rock trio 50 Kaitenz crafted their recent debut with help from Boredoms engineer Koichi Hara, a man known for adding an uncompromisingly hardcore edge. Openers Vaz also celebrate a new album, the dark and spooky The Lie That Matches the Furniture. (CLH)



Sunday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


ART: Opening
Anya Gallaccio: one art

when: Sun 1.8 (4-6pm)
where: SculptureCenter (44-19 Purves St, LIC, 718.361.1750) map
price:
links: Event Info

Looking at the modern era — where social progress finds itself stretched between natural conservation and technological development — Anya Gallaccio integrates organic and industrial materials to create a comprehensive installation. With one art, Gallaccio disassembles and reconstructs a full tree with the artificial supports necessary to encompass SculptureCenter's lofty converted space. one art looks less to Robert Smithson and more to Gallaccio's contemporary, Natalie Jeremijenko, whose tree sculptures at Mass MoCA intervene curiously in the natural process of growth. As its natural materials slowly decay, leaving the supports behind, one art emphasizes the temporal experience of viewing art as well as the notion of commemoration. (JG)

Note: one art continues through Mon 4.3 (Thur-Mon: 11am-6pm).



Monday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


COMEDY
The Strip Show: An Evening of Cartoonists Making Us Laugh at Comic Strips

when: Mon 1.9 (8:30pm)
where: Mo Pitkins (34 Ave A, 212.777.5660) map
price: $6
links: Event Info

Graphic novels brought dignity back to the comic strip, and the new ones are much funnier than Charlie Brown. The Strip Show boasts five of the underground's best cartoonists. Evan Dorkin creates cult classics Dork Comics and Milk & Cheese; Emily Flake draws the cynical Lulu Eightball; Lauren R. Weinstein mocks teeny-boppers in Inside Vineyland; Michael Kupperman's Snake 'n' Bacon's Cartoon Cabaret stars a live reptile and a pork product; and Nicolas Gurewitch's Perry Bible Fellowship combines dreamy drawings with oddball humor. Together tonight, they slap their strips on overhead projectors and gab about their work while you mingle with a nerdy-but-cool crew and check out some new 'toons. (MSB)

  What offbeat characters would you feature in your own comic? Our favorite response of 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this show.



Ongoing / Upcoming TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


PHOTOGRAPHY
Jack Pierson: Early Works and Beyond — Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

when: Now through Sat 1.28 (Tue-Fri: 10am-6pm)
where: Daniel Reich Gallery (537A W 23rd St, 212.924.4949) map
price:
links: Event Info

An intimate survey of Jack Pierson's work, this exhibition presents an elegiac tribute to lost lovers and yesterday's queens of camp. Pierson's poetic sculptural assemblages of signage, letters, and diner menus mingle amongst magazine images of blond boys and Hollywood Walk of Fame stars. A baroquely patterned motel carpet and an American flag composed of room keys memorialize the amorphous identity and sexual freedom of the open highway. Iconic New York ghosts haunt a collaged painting of pages from a Diane Arbus monograph. With an empty silver stage and a soapy nod to Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Pierson's work unfolds like a bittersweet song of experience sung by a diva in drag. (CEK)



DESIGN
Fashion in Colors

when: Now through Sun 3.26
where: Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum (2 E 91st St, 212.849.8400) map
price: $12
links: Event Info

Originally organized by the Kyoto Costume Institute, this collection of 68 garments from world-class designers celebrates three centuries of sartorial innovation. The curators arrange the pieces chromatically, rather than chronologically, de-emphasizing color and allowing viewers to focus on form and detail. This creates new trans-generational dialogues, such as that between an 18th-century French ball gown and a tarty Vivienne Westwood frock (both blue, both mega-sexy). Each room is titled according to prevailing social attitudes about color: yellow represents sun, warmth, and commerce, while red conveys passion and danger. And, lest your sight be over-saturated, necessary palette-cleansers are provided by transition rooms awash with white light. (JK)



Features TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


  MUSIC BLOGGING AND COLLECTOR MADNESS: Woebot, Gutterbreakz, and Blissblog  

The best music blogs are like archaeological excavations, unearthing the half-forgotten records of the past, along with the best of current genres. Woebot, run by the mysterious Matt Woebot, is a crate-digger's paradise. A recent five-part post on his top 100 albums is filled with juicy full-color scans of vinyl album covers that practically pop off the screen, making you wish you'd never jumped on that MP3 train. Gutterbreakz, operated by a guy who calls himself Nick Gutterbreakz, reads like a music magazine dedicated to grime, dubstep, and other fringe genres, complete with voluminous interviews and label profiles. Blissblog, run out of New York by longtime music critic Simon Reynolds, is a regularly updated tumult of brainy pontifications and exultations; a recent post considered the agonies of cleaning out his record collection. (GD)


 


  CD REVIEW: Roman, So Ghost?  

Karaoke Kalk
Released November 2005
$14.50 (Forced Exposure)

Cologne-based crooner Roman's pensive pop is akin to that of fellow puffy-eyed romantic Superpitcher, albeit a few decibels louder and an endorphin or two more upbeat. Rippling and gleaming, contorting and brooding as it runs a gauntlet of lovesick emotions, So Ghost? — Roman's sophomore release on the emotive stronghold Karaoke Kalk — proves a potent offering, equal parts abrasively stiff and euphorically sweet. The shape-shifting "Saving Juno" is an immediate seducer. Permeated by breezy guitar funk and dream-sequence melodies, it features an infectious refrain accompanied by a bevy of bangin', bottom-heavy beats that pop 'n lock the track into a three-minute monster. But what's most striking about So Ghost? is its epic breadth and balancing homemade quality. Employing an onslaught of strings, acoustic guitars, angelic choirs, and gut-born, bedroom-belted vocals, Roman never loses sight of each song's essence: earnest, heartfelt, and undeniably charming music. (JJ)

Note: This review is courtesy of Earplug, a twice-monthly email magazine about electronic music.


 


  MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective  

In wrapping up 2005, the BBC Collective assembled some of its strongest music, film, visual art, and literary content of the year. Highlights include a live session from the Kills, an interview with Matthew Herbert relating to his Plat du Jour project, and a feature on Haruki Murakami, whose Kafka on the Shore made multiple newspaper and literary journal Top Ten lists. It's not all dewy-eyed retrospective, however, as the Collective also lends its insights toward artists to watch in 2006, spotlighting live sessions from Battles, the Young Knives, and Plan B. (CJN)



The Kills: Live Session and Interview (Indie rock)
Matthew Herbert: Plat du Jour Challenge (IDM/found sounds)
Haruki Murakami: Author Interview (Literary)


 


Flavorinfo TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


 
 
Header Design:
Animal CollectiveVulcan courtesy of Start Mobile
 
Editors:
Amon Düül IIGeeta Dayal
Pink FairiesJocelyn K. Glei
Bent WindMaria Hooper
Red CrayolaJake Lancaster
Spaceman 3Doug Levy
Robot vs RabbitSascha Lewis
Orange Alabaster MushroomAndrew Maerkle
Chocolate Watch BandMark Mangan
Planet SuperflyColin J. Nagy
Essra MohawkStephan Paschalides
 
ABOUT US
flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering music, arts, and cultural events in New York City. All listings are pure editorial, never paid advertisements — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us, and spread it...
 
FEEDBACK
Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants.
 
EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.

To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design.
 
MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS
Every week, flavorpill NYC presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications.
 
 
 
Contributors:
Mr. Quimby's BeardMarisa S. Bardach
Shiva's Head BandTodd Burns
Strawberry Alarm ClockJayanthi K. Daniel
Merrell FankhauserCortney L. Harding
Lothar and the Hand PeopleKiwa Iyobe
Mock DuckMaura K. Johnston
Los Dug DugsJames Jung
Jerry Garcia BandJessica Kraft
Pinkie MaclureCatherine E. Krudy
Savage RessurectionS. Aki Moorman
Tony Hill's FictionLisa Rosman
 
Production:
The Insect TrustAnjuli Ayer
Electric PrunesJessica Bauer-Greene
Frumious BandersnatchMorgan Croney
My Indole RingJules Gaffney
Vanilla FudgeSander-Martijn Milks
John's ChildrenDavid Morrow
Tyrannosaurus RexLeah Taylor
Sopwith CamelJudah Wiedre
 
 


 

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