Thursday, August 4, 2016

Today's Top 5: Thursday

Posted By on Thu, Aug 4, 2016 at 2:01 PM

Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Aug. 4, 2016 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.

Steve Byrne at The Comedy Zone
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• The Peach Kings w/ Mobley at The Evening Muse

• GONZO: A Brutal Chrysalis' at Duke Energy Theater

Alive After Five w/ Slippery When Wet at Rooftop 210

The Naked Magic Show at McGlohon Theater

Lunch Break (8/3/16): Charlotte man arrested, charged with recruiting for ISIL

Posted By on Thu, Aug 4, 2016 at 11:52 AM


A Charlotte man appeared in court after being arrested this morning for allegedly conspiring to provide material support to the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL). 

Erick Jamal Hendricks, 35, tried to recruit people to train together and conduct terrorist attacks in the United States on behalf of ISIL, according to a criminal complaint unsealed today in U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Ohio.

The complaint describes how a man arrested in June 2015 in Ohio for allegedly attempting to purchase an AK-47 assault rifle and ammunition from an undercover law enforcement officer led authorities to Hendricks.

That man, whose name was withheld, had been recruited over social media by Hendricks, whose goal, according to the complaint, was "to create a sleeper cell to be trained and housed at a secure compound that would conduct attacks in the United States."

He mentioned that potential targets included military members whose information had been released by ISIL and the woman who organized the "Draw Prophet Mohammad contest" in Garland, Texas. Hendricks was in contact with two men who opened fire on participants of that "contest" in Texas in May 2015. 

This case was investigated by the FBI’s offices in Cleveland, Ohio; Columbia, South Carolina; Baltimore; and Charlotte, with assistance from the Justice Department’s National Security Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Offices in the Northern District of Ohio, District of Maryland, District of South Carolina and the Western District of North Carolina. 

If convicted, Hendricks faces a statutory maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. 

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A flash flood watch is in effect for Mecklenburg County until 8 a.m. tomorrow, according to WBTV. The watch also covers much of the surrounding area, including Gaston, Union, Caldwell, Catawba and Iredell counties. While rain around 1 to 3 inches is expected in most parts, as much as 5 inches could fall in others. (WBTV Web Staff) 

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Nearly 30 former Carowinds employees who are in the country on work exchange visas will now be sent home after being fired from the amusement park for being caught drinking while underage. The employees were not working when the incident happened, but were drinking in a parking lot in the early morning hours on Tuesday. Carowinds has not commented on the incident but the exchange workers say 27 of them were fired, meaning they'll be expected to leave the country immediately. (Paul Boyd, WSOC) 

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Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Today's Top 5: Wednesday

Posted By on Wed, Aug 3, 2016 at 2:07 PM

Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Aug. 3, 2016 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.

• Left & Right w/ Daddy Issues, Rapper Shane, Elevator Jay at Snug Harbor
Daddy Issues (Photo by EmilyQuirk)
  • Daddy Issues (Photo by EmilyQuirk)

Beyond Rubiks Cube exhibit at Discovery Place 

Drinking Liberally at Murphy's Kitchen & Tap

Party in the Park w/ Fantastic Shakers at Romare Bearden Park

Trivia at Ed's Tavern

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Today's Top 5: Tuesday

Posted By on Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 6:01 PM

Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Aug. 2, 2016 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.

• Slipknot w/ Marilyn Manson, Of Mice & Men at PNC Music Pavilion
Slipknot (M. Shawn Crahan)
  • Slipknot (M. Shawn Crahan)

Beer Ed at Growlers Pourhouse

• S.O.M.E. - A Storytelling Open Mic Experiment at Petra's

The House that Modernism Built at Bechtler Museum of Modern Art

Bingo at Killington's

Guerrilla street-art project in Elizabeth meant to slow down shortcut drivers

Posted By on Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 5:12 PM


A group of neighbors in Elizabeth came together on Sunday to create a guerrilla street art installation that not only looks awesome but that they hope will make them safer while walking and cycling on the roads. 

Neighbors that live near the intersection of Sunnyside and Oaklawn avenues spent a total of around 13 hours over the weekend creating a sun painting at the intersection roundabout. The painting is an attempt to slow down cars that speed through trying to cut between Hawthorne and Central avenues. 

Local artist Felicia Sutton, a former resident of the neighborhood, designed the sun and helped sketch the design with chalk on Saturday night, which took three hours in itself. The next morning, Sutton and the surrounding neighbors literally hit the street at 7:30 a.m. and began painting. Sunday's work took about 10 hours total, with one break, and the painting was finished at around 5:30 p.m. 

"I personally was super excited about the project because I feel like art — especially public art — at its best is something that can unite a community and that everyone can be a part of and everyone can experience," Sutton said. "Being able to do a project where everybody pitched in and everybody worked on it — we all got together and everyone was working together and the kids came out and painted — it was a really great community activity and brought everyone in the neighborhood closer too. So it was not only a way to make everyone safer but a way to unite the neighborhood." 

Although the amateur street artists didn't exactly get permission from the city, Sutton believes the sun will stay where it is, especially considering one surprise guest who showed up in support on Sunday afternoon after hearing about the work they were doing: Mayor Jennifer Roberts. 

Sutton said she was happy to see Roberts and be able to discuss Charlotte's art scene with her. 

"I wasn’t expecting her. One of the people in the neighborhood had told her about it. I’m still not sure why she showed up but it was cool that she was there," Sutton said. "It was a nice little surprise. We talked for a little bit about public art and how beautifying spaces that are rundown or public spaces like the one we were at can be something that’s really powerful." 

CL contributor Grant Baldwin was on hand for some of the day's festivities and shot the following slide show (below). Sutton can be seen in many of the photos in a gray tank top and blue hat. 

Correction: The original post said this project was done in the Plaza Midwood neighborhood. It is actually in Elizabeth.

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Pretty disturbing chaos in new Modern Primitives video

Posted By on Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 2:30 PM

The Modern Primitives have been stirring up a buzz in the local music scene for years. The band's music is unpretentious - no frills indie rock and roll. In the band's new video for “Lay With The Dead,” they're on the receiving end of some pretty disturbing chaos.
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In the video, members of the three-piece band - Travis Philips (guitar, vocals), Phillip Gripper (drums), Tim Nhu (bass) - meet three femme fatales (Kacie Smagacz, Nicole Story, Danielle Eldarini) dressed in white, who chase them with machetes and take pleasure in slashing them to bits. Gruesome, huh?

Gripper wrote and directed the video, which he said was shot in one day. “[We spent] probably three hours at the warehouse and one at my house for the instrument clips,” said Gripper.
The video, filmed and edited by Tim Hendrick with additional filming by Dustin “Dingus” Staley, was recorded by Jeffrey Saer.

Watch the video below and check them out when they play Snug Harbor tonight.

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Monday, August 1, 2016

Theater review: COTU's O Brother

Posted By on Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 2:01 PM

In Greek legend, Odysseus was a man of many ways who sacked the sacred citadels of Troy, traveled widely, struggled valiantly, and suffered greatly. But even if this Homeric catalogue of achievements pales in comparison to the praise lavished upon presidential candidates at our quadrennial conventions, there’s something about the guy that continues to spark admiration – despite the fact that he was once captured and imprisoned.

Latterday tributes from Lord Tennyson and James Joyce to Ulysses (O’s Roman name) gradually humanized the Ithacan warlord and brought him down to life-size. Ethan and Joel Coen decided that wasn’t quite enough indignity to heap upon the mythic hero. The Coen Brothers’ O Brother, Where Art Thou not only presented Ulysses Everett McGill as an escaped jailbird, they made him a Mississippi hayseed. If any role George Clooney plays can be considered a hayseed.

On a ridiculously limited budget, Citizens of the Universe bring Odysseus down the social ladder a few more rungs with O Brother, for the costumes and backdrops by Mandy Kendall aren’t Hollywood. On the other hand, the newly unveiled performance space at NoDa Brewing Company – on North Tryon Street – can’t be accused of being Mississippi.

Trailblazing yet another new venue, COTU embraces an outdoor ambiance that is more picnic theatre than dinner theatre. Beer flows from the interior of the spacious new NoDa tavern, and grub is rustled up from a food truck you can’t miss on your way in from the parking lot. There’s a bluegrass trio at the side of the modest playing area: the Hashbrown Belly Boys, who start up before the odyssey begins. Very relaxed and homespun.

Energy amps up as soon as director Courtney Varnum, perky and pigtailed, steps forward to introduce the show. O Brother is only loosely based on Homer’s epic – and loose only faintly describes its trashy, Southern-fried, slapstick style. These are not realms usually explored by James Cartee and his COTU, but Varnum has been able to round up more than a couple of the usual suspects from past COTU navigations.

Tom Ollis is the one Citizen you would expect to fit in well in this new rusticated universe, playing “Pappy” O’Daniel, the gregariously corrupt Mississippi governor seeking re-election while hosting a Grand Ole Opry-style radio show on the side. Sort of a cross between Tennessee Williams’ Big Daddy, Huey Long, and Yosemite Sam the way Ollis plays him – mythologically, he’s Menelaus in the scheme of things.

Most surprising is Shane Brayton as our hero Ulysses, after playing opposite Ollis as an arrogant Richard the lion-hearted in The Lion in Winter. Down in the Delta, Brayton taps into hillbilly pluck, energy, optimism, and rascality in a way that I’d likely find irresistible if part of the audience weren’t partying and oblivious. Of course, persisting in the face of such loud inattention adds to the pluck factor, but I found the entire cast up to that challenge.

We need to listen all the more attentively because some of the actors’ names are flip-flopped with the names of the folk they play in the playbill. The most obvious of these is “Sheriff Cooley as Stephen West-Rogers.” While he isn’t quite as megalomaniacal as he was in Fight Club or as violently vehement as he was in Trainspotting, West-Rogers is more than sufficiently implacable and clueless as the Sheriff.

Make no mistake, all of these principals are surrounded by sidekicks or underlings that make them look like sages. “Pappy” has Michael Haynes as Junior O’Daniel and Jeremy Bryant as Pap’s political opponent, Homer Stokes, who turns out to have clout in the KKK. Sheriff Cooley has Justin Mulcahy as his standard-issue deputy, and Ulysses is saddled with Michael Anderson as Delmar O’Donnell and Josh Elicker as Pete Hogwallop – Varnum and Charlie Napier extend the deep-down hayseediness of the Hogwallop family.

Not counting the vocal trio of Ulysses’ daughters that doubles as the Sirens, three of the actors zip through multiple roles. Napier stands out as the aforementioned Wash Hogwallop, as a Blind Seer modeled on Teiresias, and as a marauding gangster with a chip on his shoulder, George Nelson, because he’s not the more infamous Babyface. All the great menaces of The Odyssey don’t appear in this hashbrown mashup, but we do get Scotland Gallo as “Big Dan” Teague, certainly Polyphemus with his eyepatch, and Kendall as Penny, Ulysses’ wife.

All of Penelope’s famed suitors coalesce into one Vernon T. Waldrip (Napier again) and, with this Ulysses, Kendall’s infidelity doesn’t play as sluttiness so much as cold pragmatism. A ne’er-do-well jailbird – as opposed to an MIA hero – should cause a sensible wife to make new plans, even in the backwoods. Calypso’s shtick in the journey gets merged into the three singing Sirens – Becca Whitesmith, MoMo Hughes, and Laura M Lee.

As you’ve no doubt divined, Odysseus’ sea voyage and his epic struggle to return home after the Trojan War have been downsized to a comical chase triggered by Ulysses’ jailbreak. Toss in the bluegrass music and it shouldn’t be surprising if O Brother sometimes reminds you of Smokey and the Bandit – without the same Hollywood charisma from the lead rascal. Igniting the chase, Ulysses cons Delmar and Pete into joining him in the escape by enlisting them in a quest for a treasure that he has hidden at the bottom of a valley soon to be flooded to create a dam. Echoes of Deliverance, another bluegrass bromance.

Only here, the music is more deeply woven into the storyline. For along the way, the three escaped white men hook up with Tommy Johnson, a black musician who claims to have gotten his phenomenal skills in a deal with the devil, a la Robert Johnson. On one of their stops before they break up, the quartet cuts a record as the Soggy Bottom Boys. It’s at these key musical moments – and subsequently at his KKK lynching – that we encounter yet one more familiar COTU personality, James Lee Walker II, best remembered for his one-man presentation of Karl Marx.

Walker is a bit humbler this time around. Everybody is. Sifting through the distractions, I’d say that Koly McBride’s O Brother tribute/arrangement of the Coen Brothers’ film is among the very best adaptations COTU has ever done. If the ratio of audience to partyers can be boosted significantly this weekend, the experience will be even better.

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Today's Top 5: Monday

Posted By on Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 12:49 PM

Here are the five best events going down in Charlotte and the surrounding area today, Aug. 1, 2016 as selected by the folks at Creative Loafing.

Cindy Kaza at The Comedy Zone
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The Monday Night Allstars at Double Door Inn

Yoga on the Roof at Rooftop 210

Trivia at Sir Edmond Halley's

Karaoke at Vida Vida

Lunch Break (8/1/16): Play detective for CMPD today

Posted By on Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 12:03 PM


Police ask that anyone with info about a hit-and-run that occurred on Saturday morning contact Detective M.A. Sammis at 704-336-8862 or Crime Stoppers at 704-334-1600.
  • Police ask that anyone with info about a hit-and-run that occurred on Saturday morning contact Detective M.A. Sammis at 704-336-8862 or Crime Stoppers at 704-334-1600.

CMPD is asking for help finding the driver of the vehicle that struck and killed a pedestrian in east Charlotte early Saturday morning. Khalid Perry, 21, was hit by a silver car at around 2:15 a.m. on Saturday at the intersection of Albemarle and Lawyers roads. Police released a photo of the car, stating that it's expected to have noticeable damage to the right side of the windshield and possibly to the hood and roof. 

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CMPD also needs help finding a man who robbed a convenience store on the same morning as the above-mentioned, unrelated incident. Police say the suspect (pictured left) assaulted an employee in the Kangaroo Express on North Tryon Street at around 12:45 a.m. on Saturday morning. He also implied that he had a weapon before taking money from the victim's hand. The suspect fled the scene in an older model white Mercury with a blue top and a basket hitch. 

The old Charlotte Observer building was torn down today. It's not much of a news story but everyone likes to see people knocking shit down, right? It's not quite the cool implosions you've seen on TV, but here's a video from Observer reporter Rick Rothacker anyway: 


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