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flavorpill NYC | SF | LA | LONDON | CHI June 13 - 19, 2006

 
 Matei Apostolescu   
Cultural Stimuli in NYC
Issue 314: curious flavor

Whoever coined the "curiosity killed the cat" proverb was clearly not a New Yorker. Daily life alone demands a venturesome spirit here, and this week's trove of cultural events pushes the possibilities for discovery even further. Nine of the city's finest museums open their doors for a highbrow block party during the Museum Mile Fest, dancers pique the interest of businessmen during an elevated performance in the Financial District, and muckraking journalist Greg Palast reads from his political exposé. Digging into more historical territory, Film Forum resurrects the 1929 beauty Pandora's Box and P.S.1 kicks off its evergreen summer series, Warm Up, with a blast from the deep-house past: a Body & Soul reunion. Speaking of reunions, don't forget Sunday is the day to show your appreciation to dear old Dad. Hop a fence, explore a new alley, and spread it...

 

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








 


Return to purity — detox with Evian.
 Table of Contents TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT
art Justin Lowe
dance Douglas Dunn and Elke Rindfleisch
djJuan Atkins; Brazilian Beat Brooklyn; Warm Up feat. Body & Soul
fairRenegade Craft Fair
festivalMuseum Mile Festival
film New York Asian Film Festival; Pandora's Box; Only Human
music Caps & Jones w/ Justin Carter; The Slackers; 2006 Turntablist Sessions; Ralph Stanley; Mr. Lif w/ Cage and El-P; The Juan Maclean; Band of Horses
photography 50 Photographers of Tomorrow
reading Laura Dave, Lydia Davis, and Sigrid Nunez; Jami Attenberg; Greg Palast
spectacle Miss LEZ Pageant feat. Murray Hill
sportsFriday Night Fights
theatre Arabian Night; Spring Awakening
FEAT bargain bard Free Summer Theatre in NYC; cd review Final Fantasy, He Poos Clouds; multimedia BBC Collective




NYC Fronts
Justin Lowe presents a brilliant, confounding series of chimerical urban markers with his exhibition Helter Swelter.

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Tuesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


PHOTOGRAPHY
reGeneration: 50 Photographers of Tomorrow

when: Now through Thur 6.22 (Tue-Sat: 10am-6pm)
where: Aperture Gallery (547 W 27th St, 4th Fl, 212.505.5555) map
price:
links: Event Info

reGeneration charts the direction of contemporary photography through the works of 50 emerging talents, across a range of documentary approaches. Samantha Bass captures bloody butcher houses in vivid detail for her Goats series and Pétur Thomsen explores Icelandic construction sites through wide-angle panoramas in his Imported Landscape series. Other works engage elements of fiction, such as Angela Strassheim's Left Behind series, which betrays her background in forensic photography, now applied to meticulously choreographed, uncanny domestic scenes. Elsewhere, Idris Khan's every...Nicholas Nixon's Brown Sisters uses multiple exposures to create sensual, black-and-white abstractions, while Marcello Mariana's slivered view up an elevator shaft embraces the technological sublime. (GKH)



ALSO ON TUE

FESTIVAL
Museum Mile Festival
Tue 6.13 (6-9pm) 5th Ave btwn 82nd & 105th Sts map

Event Info
 
Starting at the Met, nine Manhattan museums open their doors along 23 blocks of a 5th Avenue decorated by De La Vega's group-created chalk murals. (IB)



Wednesday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: O Brother Bluegrass
River to River presents Ralph Stanley w/ Tres Chicas

when: Wed 6.14 (7pm)
where: Rockefeller Park (Battery Park City, 212.945.0505) map
price:
links: Event Info | Ralph Stanley | Tres Chicas

Raised on the music of the Primitive Baptist Church and the Carter Family, Dr. Ralph Stanley was among the early innovators of bluegrass, inventing his own distinct style of claw-hammer banjo picking. His work on the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack brought his transcendent sound to a wider and younger audience, but his records with late brother Carter and the Clinch Mountain Boys have inspired generations of American roots musicians. At 79, Stanley's mournful tenor is as clear and haunting as ever. (GM)

Note: The rousing, harmonizing country rock trio Tres Chicas open the show.

  O Brother, Where Art Thou? is loosely based on Homer's epic, The Odyssey, but what is the film's title a reference to? Third and fifth correct responses each win a River to River prize pack.



READING
Greg Palast: Armed Madhouse

when: Wed 6.14 (7-9pm)
where: Barnes & Noble Chelsea (675 6th Ave, 212.727.1227) map
price:
links: Event Info | Greg Palast

A citizen-journalist in the classic muckraking mold (complete with old-school hat), Greg Palast does the sort of investigative heavy-lifting that many can't handle. An American writer who does most of his award-winning work in England, he has repeatedly uncovered the secret deals that our leaders strike behind closed doors. His latest book, Armed Madhouse, delves into a political climate that's been irrevocably altered by Bush, covering everything from China's continuing rise to economic superpowerdom to the real story behind Hurricane Katrina. It's clear that Palast, as Noam Chomsky once said, "upsets all the right people." (PS)



READING
Happy Ending Music and Reading Series feat. Laura Dave, Lydia Davis, and Sigrid Nunez

when: Wed 6.14 (8pm)
where: Happy Ending (302 Broome St, 212.334.9676) map
price:
links: Event Info | Laura Dave | Lydia Davis | Sigrid Nunez

Once a LES massage-parlor-with-benefits, Happy Ending is now a lounge hosting, among other things, a biweekly collaboration of live music and readings meant to titillate all five of your filthy senses. Tonight's penultimate installment of the series finds NYC's own Laura Dave, Lydia Davis, and Sigrid Nunez reading their own playful prose, but each writer must take a public risk (at their own poetic discretion) and be judged by the crowd. Singer/songwriter and New Yorker cartoonist Marcellus Hall is challenged to cover a tune that the audience can sing along to. (MM)

Note: For an in-depth review of Nunez's latest novel, check out this month's issue of Boldtype.



Thursday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Old-School Hip-Hop
Tools of War presents 2006 Turntablist Sessions

when: Thur 6.15 (5:30-8:30pm)
where: Rufus King Park (153rd St & 90th Ave, Jamaica, Qns) map
price:
links: Event Info

If you thought the outdoor DJ battles depicted in Martha Cooper's book Hip Hop Files, Jeff Chang's Can't Stop Won't Stop, or Doug Pray's documentary Scratch were a thing of the past, you thought wrong. As part of a series of true-school hip-hop park jams throughout the summer, legendary popper and Rock Steady Crew member Jorge "Fabel" Pabon hosts June's DJ parties at Rufus Park every Thursday. The lineup of DJs reads like a page out of a hip-hop history textbook: tonight features DJ Boo, DJ Tony Tone of the Cold Crush Brothers, Public Enemy's Johnny "Juice" Rosado, the Cut Professor DJ Barry Bee, and DJ Steve Dee of the Get Fresh Crew. (JRC)

Note: Other June performers include the Original Jazzy Jay, Grandwizzard Theodore, Paul Nice, and Grandmaster Caz. The jams move to the South Bronx's Crotona Park in July, and to St. Mary's Park in August.



READING
Jami Attenberg: Instant Love

when: Thur 6.15 (7pm)
where: Borders Columbus Circle (10 Columbus Circle, 212.823.9775) map
price:
links: Event Info | Jami Attenberg

Flavorpill contributor Jami Attenberg reads tonight from her first story collection, Instant Love — though it isn't entirely new, as the eight-year blogging vet has been offering pieces of it as a zine series through her website. But by bringing to mainstream publishing her witty, offbeat tales of young, urban women looking for love — in Campers rather than Manolo Blahniks — Attenberg joins the ranks of blog-stars out to prove that print isn't dead. (CL)



ALSO ON THUR

MUSIC: Electro-Disco
Rocks Off presents the Juan Maclean
Thur 6.15 (7pm) The Temptress (departs from 41st St & West Side Hwy) map $30 / $25 advance

Event Info
 
Tonight, DFA's the Juan Maclean churn out glorious Italo-disco-influenced synthery and robo-vox for seafaring party kids as part of the Rocks Off Concert Cruise Series. (RBD)



Friday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


FILM
Pandora's Box (1929)

when: Fri 6.16 - Thur 6.29 (1, 3:15, 5:30, 7:45 & 10pm)
where: Film Forum (209 W Houston St, 212.727.8110) map
price: $10
links: Event Info

In Greek mythology, Pandora was the first woman, invented by the gods as a punishment to men. In Pandora's Box, Lulu (Louise Brooks) is a young prostitute and showgirl upon whom suitors fling themselves while she blinks deliberately and, yet, somehow guilelessly. Set in Berlin, with all the attendant German Expressionist sharp angles and deep shadows, this is not only one of the last silents but one of the most memorable. Brooks' welling eyes, smooth cap of dark hair, and glowing pale skin are photographed in a sumptuous black and white that will forever put Technicolor to shame. (LR)

Note: Each 7:45pm screening is accompanied by Steve Sterner, playing the score live. The Sat, Sun, and Wed 3:15pm screenings also feature his accompaniment.

  In 50 words or less, describe the most regrettable thing you've done out of pure curiosity. Our favorite response wins a pair of tickets to a Mon 6.19 screening of this film.



FILM
Only Human

when: Opens Fri 6.16
where: AMC Lincoln Square & Quad Cinema (1998 Broadway, 212.336.5020; 34 W 13th St, 212.255.8000) map
price: $10.75
links: Only Human

Because of its high-minded premise — a Spanish Jewish woman introduces her Palestinian fiancé to her family — Only Human may be taken for a serious treatise about Middle East relations. But make no mistake: this film is as goofy as they come, in the finest Almodóvar tradition of nearly shrill parlor-room comedy. Beneath the classically campy setups (toilet jokes, a lethal soup, heart attacks, and concussions), even campier characters (a lecherous grandfather, a religious zealot brother), and bawdy sex scenes galore, lurks another Almodóvar staple: an emotional and political integrity that really is as serious as a heart attack. (LR)



MUSIC: Diverse Digi
FreeNYC presents Avant Garden feat. Caps & Jones w/ Justin Carter

when: Fri 6.16 (10pm-4am)
where: Galapagos Art Space (70 N 6th St, Wburg, 718.782.5188) map
price:
links: Event Info | FreeNYC | Caps & Jones | Justin Carter

Wallet-friendly party people FreeNYC are recruiting the cream of nightlife's crop tonight with Avant Garden. Diversified digi-pop duo Soft & Slick, lap-hopper Mad EP, and Brooklyn's dubstep/bass kingpins Dave Q and Zach Shadetek gather to make glorious noise in three rooms for this eclectic all-nighter. Nublu's Justin Carter drops bassy techno and acid house and Billyburg's mixtape mavericks Caps & Jones mash-up guilty pop pleasures, epic classic rock, and plenty Dirty South for that ass. BrokenLens VJ James LeSage also makes his NYC debut alongside software auteur superDraw. (IB)

Note: Open bar from 10-11pm.



ALSO ON FRI

SPORTS: Muay Thai and Amateur Boxing
Friday Night Fights NYC
Fri 6.16 (7:30pm) Church of St Paul the Apostle (450 Columbus Ave, 212.571.1333) map $25 / $21 advance

Event Info
 
Brad Pitt and Edward Norton have nothing on the men and women warriors competing in amateur boxing and Muay Thai in St Paul the Apostle's arched and vaulted slate-grey basement. (CP)



Saturday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


MUSIC: Ska
The Slackers w/ Les Sans Culottes and Slavic Soul Party

when: Sat 6.17 (10pm)
where: The Hook (18 Commerce St, Red Hook, 718.797.3007) map
price: $12
links: Event Info | The Slackers | Les Sans Culottes | Slavic Soul Party

Maybe because they wore fedoras; maybe because Op Ivy/Rancid member Tim Armstrong signed them to his Hellcat label; maybe because they rejected the Goldfinger method of mid-'90s success: skippy ska verse, distortion-pedal chorus. But the Slackers survived while the Skavoovies, Skarotums, and Skabba the Huts drowned in an unforgiving Third Wave undertow. What's more, they're thriving; this year's Peculiar LP is a buoyant, horn-driven benchmark in their 15-year career. Tonight they 'Hook it with wink-wink Francophile/phones Les Sans Culottes and Balkan-funk Barbés favorites Slavic Soul Party. (JAS)

  Hellcat is an offshoot of which other label? The first three correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.



ALSO ON SAT

FAIR
Renegade Craft Fair
Sat 6.17 & Sun 6.18 (11am-6pm) McCarren Park (Bedford Ave & N 14th St, Wburg, 773.278.5386) map

Event Info
 
Skip the LES vintage shops and SoHo rip-offs; show some DIY consumer (and Brooklyn) love for 200 creative vendors who handcraft kick-ass clothing, jewelry, journals, and art. (MC)



MUSIC: Hip-Hop
Mr. Lif w/ Cage, El-P, Camu Tao, and Yak Ballz
Sat 6.17 (9pm) Bowery Ballroom (6 Delancey St, 212.533.2111) map $17 / $15 advance

Event Info
 
Mr. Lif's new batch of self-aware, politically minded rhymes drops this week in the form of Mo'Mega. Tonight finds Lif in good company with an all-star Def Jux lineup — expect some new joints from top Jukie El-P. (JC)



DJ
Return of the Jaxx feat. Juan Atkins w/ Suburban Knight
Sat 6.17 (10pm-6am) Love (179 MacDougal St, 212.477.5683) map $15 / $10 before 11pm

Event Info
 
Fusing stripped-down Motown melody with Kraftwerkian order, Juan Atkins created Detroit techno in the early 1980s, then took the sound global. Tonight, Motor City cohort James Pennington (aka Suburban Knight) joins the originator behind Love's decks. (JJ)



Sunday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


SPECTACLE: Alpha-Lez
Sixth Annual Miss LEZ Pageant feat. Murray Hill

when: Sun 6.18 (8pm)
where: Knitting Factory (74 Leonard St, 212.219.3132) map
price: $15 / $12 advance
links: Event Info | Murray Hill

Convenient, indeed, how clear everything becomes by turning that S around to a Z. This year's Miss LEZ Pageant, hosted as always by Murray "Mr. Showbiz" Hill, reaches out to the Park Slope, Williamsburg, and Harlem dykes by replacing LES street names with reps from all areas of lez social life. Miss Snapshot, Miss Cattyshack, Miss Go NYC, and Miss LTTR are just some of the competitors vying for a plastic tiara, $100 in singles, and superior cruise visibility. The Lesbian Overtones perform in between the bawdy battles for best swimsuit, gown, and platform. A panel of gay stars such as Michael Musto and Johanna Fatemen judge the winner, and Miss LES 2005 Dynasty Handbag crowns the new Miss LEZ 2006. Godspeed, lesbians. (JG)

  In honor of Mr. Hill, what's your favorite way to eat a cheeseburger? The three most tantalizing responses each win a pair of tickets to this event.



ALSO ON SUN

MUSIC: Indie Rock
Band of Horses
Sun 6.18 (8pm) Warsaw (261 Driggs Ave, Greenpoint, 718.387.0505) map $13

Event info
 
Since other area Band of Horses shows sold out faster than you can say "My Morning Jacket," head to the wilds of Greenpoint for Sub Pop's great reverbed hope. (MB)



DJ
Brazilian Beat Brooklyn's 5-Year Anniversary
Sun 6.18 (10pm) Black Betty (366 Metropolitan Ave, Wburg, 718.599.0243) map $5

Event Info
 
The expert selectors behind Williamsburg's Sunday celebration of tropicália, samba rock, and baile funk have been schooling ears and asses for half a decade — and when a party lasts in this town, you know it's something special. (JL)



Monday TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


DANCE
Douglas Dunn and Elke Rindfleisch: Multiple Undo & Other Distortions

when: Mon 6.19 - Thur 6.29 (Mon-Sat: 12:30pm)
where: Elevated Acre (55 Water St) map
price:
links: Event Info | Douglas Dunn | Elke Rindfleisch

Downtown and Wall Street's cultures are a world apart, but Douglas Dunn and Elke Rindfleisch find common ground as part of LMCC's Sitelines festival. The two dance icons perform their site-specific work at the Financial District's Elevated Acre, a public/private park overlooking the Hudson River where suits lunch and wheelers deal. A surreal oasis on a higher plane, the park is a perfect setting for Dunn's seven dancers to improvise on his preset phrases, coupling off to perform tender, witty pas de deux over the rumblings of the FDR. Rindfleisch is more formal in her approach, but what her work lacks in spontaneity, it makes up for in spasticity. Her athletic dancers flail gracefully about, no doubt to the consternation of day traders and the delight of dance lovers. (JDS)



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


THEATRE
Arabian Night

when: Now through Sat 7.1 (Mon-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 2 & 8pm)
where: East 13th Street Theatre (136 E 13th St, 212.279.4200) map
price: $20-35
links: Event Info

Fresh on the heels of The Woman Before, another deliciously odd and imaginative work appears on the New York stage from Roland Schimmelpfennig, Germany's hottest contemporary playwright. Arabian Night is a tightly structured surrealist fantasy that flies by at a madcap pace as it follows the intertwined stories of five characters in a residential tower on a hot summer night. Elements of Scheherazade's fairy tales blend with an erotic film-noir sensibility and give way to a nightmarish vision, while each character eschews dialogue for detailed monologues that describe what is seen, what is felt, and what is about to occur. (SP)



FILM
New York Asian Film Festival 2006

when: Now through Sat 7.1
where: Anthology Film Archive & the ImaginAsian (32 2nd Ave, 212.505.5181; 239 E 59th St, 212.371.6682) map
price: $9
links: Event Info | Tickets

With all the Malaysian gangsters, vengeful Thai school teachers, dirty Mumbai cops, and Japanese forest sprites running amok in the New York Asian Film Festival, it's easy to overlook quieter gems like the flawed-but-worthwhile Peacock, about a family in post-Cultural Revolution China; Ski Jumping Pairs: Road to Torino, a quirky mockumentary from Japan about an implausible Winter Olympics sport; or A Feather in the Wind, the restrained yet majestic romantic comedy some have proclaimed "the best Korean romance ever made." But who are we kidding? You want zombie mermaids and dancing Bollywood studs — and this year's festival doesn't disappoint. (GM)

  The traditional large-hill ski jumping competition had its Olympic debut in which year? The fourth and fifth correct responses each win a pair of tickets to a festival screening.



THEATRE
Spring Awakening

when: Now through Sun 7.9 (Tue-Fri: 8pm / Sat: 2 & 8pm / Sun: 3pm)
where: Atlantic Theater Company (336 W 20th St, 212.691.5919) map
price: $60
links: Event Info

Pop troubadour Duncan Sheik and dance legend Bill T. Jones provide a fresh new perspective in Spring Awakening, a world premiere musical based on German playwright Frank Wedekind's controversial 19th-century play about young people's sexual awakening amidst an authoritarian adult world. The young cast delivers alt-rock songs about a host of taboo subjects — child molestation, S&M, homosexuality, compulsive masturbation, abortion, rape, and suicide — painting a grim picture of the ubiquitous plight of the modern adolescent. Steven Sater's book and lyrics veer toward the melodramatic and, at times, plain silly, but director Michael Mayer's swift staging and Sheik's catchy tunes make for a rare examination of teenage sexuality. (SP)

Note: Tickets are going fast, and are already sold out through Fri 6.16, so book far in advance. There is no performance on Tue 7.4.

  In 50 words or less, tell us about a personal epiphany or awakening you've recently experienced. Our two favorite responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.



ART
Justin Lowe: Helter Swelter

when: Now through Fri 7.28 (Tue-Sat: 11am-6pm)
where: Oliver Kamm 5BE (621 W 27th St, 212.255.0979) map
price:
links: Event Info

First appearances can be deceiving at psychedelia-revivalist Justin Lowe's intoxicating three-part installation involving a strange trip through quintessential city sights. The gallery entrance leads into a convincing bodega, complete with a rainbow of Gatorade, morning newspapers, and a reception desk behind a Plexiglas window. Referencing the urban vernacular for drug-dealing fronts, the back wall of chips, condoms, and sketchy herbal stimulants rotates to reveal a secret passageway. Continuing past a blissed-out pair of mother and pup coyotes occupying the driver's seat of a Kool Man ice-cream truck, viewers pop onto a crazy quilt of rolled t-shirt tufts, offering a comfy site to soak in the truck's collaborative soundtrack and reorient to reality. (CEK)

Note: After Tue 7.4, gallery hours are Mon-Fri: 11am-6pm.



ALSO ONGOING/UPCOMING

DJ: Upcoming
Warm Up feat. Body & Soul
Sat 7.1 (3-9pm) P.S.1 (22-25 Jackson Ave, LIC, 718.784.2084) map $10

Event Info
 
A decade ago, DJ collective Danny Krivit, François K, and Joe Claussell formed NYC's Sunday-social Body & Soul party, casting a lifeline to discerning deep-house dancers. The tag-teamin' trio returns to kick off P.S.1's famed summer series. (JJ)



Features TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


  BARGAIN BARD: Free Summer Theatre in NYC  

Summer and Shakespeare go way back. The season provided the Bard with his sweetest sonnet — "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" — and Shakespeare provides summer with some of the city's best free outdoor theatre. The Public Theater opens Shakespeare in the Park with Macbeth, the Boomerang Theatre mounts a park-hopping production of King Lear, the New York Classical Theatre presents All's Well That Ends Well, and Moose Hall Theatre Group presents Much Ado About Nothing in Inwood Park. In August, classical gives way to contemporary as Meryl Streep stars in the Public Theater presentation of Brecht's Mother Courage, the tale of a Cindy Sheehan-like soldier's mother. Though "summer's lease hath," as Shakespeare writes, "all too short a date," all the world's a stage, or at least much of New York. (JDS)



 


  CD REVIEW: Final Fantasy, He Poos Clouds  

Tomlab
Released June 2006
$14.99 (Insound)

A bizarre, beautiful work of visionary excess, Final Fantasy's He Poos Clouds demands repeated listens, if only to quell your "what the hell was that?" reflex. Arrangement-wise, Poos is a work of classical composition, pitting the deft violin counterpoint and Donovan-esque vocal quaver of Owen Pallett — Arcade Fire's stringsman — against tympani, harpsichords, and primal screams. And yet, in time the mess crystallizes into pop songs — gorgeous, sweeping things with slow-reveal melodies and wry, sharply imagistic storytelling. The album is ostensibly an "attempt to modernize each of the eight D&D schools of magic" (the Montrealer's a proud nerd, god love 'im) but you'd never know it. The title track plays like a demented musical-theatre showcase, and "This Lamb Sells Condos" relays the heart-wrenching tale of a real-estate mogul with a failing marriage and massive, uncooperative genitals. So showy and campy, He Poos Clouds is almost too much to take. Almost. (TG)


 


  MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective  

Nevermind the "online" qualifier; the BBC Collective is among the most consistently engaging cultural outlets around, period. Providing a platform for discerning readers to exchange views on new music, film, and culture, the site also creates some of the best weekly content we've seen in our frequent web and newsstand trawlings. This week, check out an interview with two of electronic music's most influential conspirators, Karl Hyde and Rick Smith of Underworld, who discuss their groundbreaking Riverrun Project. Also busting open conventions is artist Marcel Dzama, who's interviewed and featured in an interactive gallery of works he recently displayed at Birmingham's Ikon Gallery. Finally, tune into the Collective's pièce de résistance, its staff-compiled playlist, featuring new music from Simian, Tuung, and Vetiver. (CJN)



Underworld: Interview and Riverrun Tracks (Electronic)
Marcel Dzama: Interview and Gallery (Visual art)
Various Artists: Collective Playlist (Eclectic)


 


Flavorinfo TUE   WED   THUR   FRI   SAT   SUN   MON   ONG   FEAT


 
 
Header Design:
AbrahamMatei Apostolescu
 
Editors:
Murray HillJocelyn K. Glei
OzzyJake Lancaster
ZeusDoug Levy
Big PoppaSascha Lewis
Danny TannerAndrew Maerkle
Archie BunkerMark Mangan
Big Daddy KaneKristin Miller
Howard SternColin J. Nagy
YodaStephan Paschalides
Prince Albert IILisa Rosman
George JeffersonJon A. Schultz
HomerJoshua D. Stein
John PhillipsLeah Taylor
 
ABOUT US
Flavorpill NYC is a free weekly email magazine covering cultural happenings across art, music, film, theatre, dance, literature, and DJ events. All content is produced by a local team of writers in NYC. We don't include sold out events, and all listings are pure editorial — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us.
 
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.
 
 
 
 
Contributors:
King FerdinandNathan Bock
NoahMindy Bond
AnakinIrene Bradish
King LearMelody Caraballo
Kool HercJustin R. Charles
Papa SmurfRachel B. Doyle
James Earl JonesJules Gaffney
Beard PapaTodd Goldstein
Tony DanzaGin K. Hsu
Milton BerleJames Jung
Mark TwainCatherine E. Krudy
Father TimeChris Lamb
John VoightChris MacLeod
Lord WormGerry Mak
Johnny CashE. McKay McFadden
Dave CoulierChristin Prince
 
Production:
Thomas JeffersonAnjuli Ayer
Al BundyChelsea Bauch
Attila the HunJessica Bauer-Greene
Daddy LonglegsMorgan Croney
Neil YoungMyla Dalbesio
Bill CosbyJosh Deeden
Kris KristoffersonDavid Goodine
Larry FlintJasmine Loignon
Mr. TSander-Martijn Milks
Tom CruiseDavid Morrow
Jodie FosterJudah Wiedre
 
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