Issue Archive for the Week of
Aug 24 -
30,
2000
Vol. 9, No. 49
Pullout
Seattle's Adolescent Arts
By Jamie Hook
Seattle Film Has an Identity Crisis
By Jamie Hook
Steve Creson and Jon Behrens
Seattle Needs Some Theater Therapy
By Bret Fetzer
Smaller Institutions Come of Age
By Traci Vogel
Or I'll Send You to Your Room
By Emily Hall
Looking Back at Grunge
By Kathleen Wilson
By Kathleen Wilson and Peter Lucas
News
Seattle's art scene: Cranky old man or blooming adolescent? The Stranger's annual guide to film, books, art, music, and theater for the upcoming season.
Los Angeles Ain't No Protestor's Paradise
By Grant Cogswell
Labor Movement Wrestles with Problems Organizing New Immigrants
By Phil Campbell
City Council Down with the All-Ages Dance Ordinance
By Allie Holly-Gottlieb
Downtown Businesses Hire Their Own Police
By Pat Kearney
Rainier Valley Demands Sidewalks
By Allie Holly-Gottlieb and Josh Feit
The Crime of the Century
By Charles Mudede
Music
Made in Mexico Owner James Morelos Is One Tasty Dish
By Jeff DeRoche
Urban Development and the Impending Demise of the 700 Club
By Nathan Thornburgh
Film
Richard Gere as Antidote for Upper-Class Birthrate Decline
By C. Everett Treacle
What We Lost When We Lost Kurosawa
By Barley Blair
The Convoluted, Lousy Appeal of François Ozon
By Charles Mudede
Wits Behind The Onion Make a Feature Film of the Comedy Sort
By Tamara Paris
Aimée and Jaguar Is a Must-See for History Buffs and Lesbians Alike
By Stacey Levine
Cover Art
Columns
The Week in Review
By David Schmader
Sleazy Meetings
By Dan Savage
Why the Caged Hump Sings
By Wm. Steven Humphrey
From the Mouths of Codgers
By Adrian Ryan
Apologies of a Drugged Asshole
By Kathleen Wilson
Visual Art
John Waters on the Changing Film Industry, Cecil B. Demented, and Punk Manicures
By Bruce Reid
Childhood Art for More Than Children
By Emily Hall
Books
Who Needs It?
By Steve Perry
Theater
Magical Fun Overcomes Jaded Critic's Urban Prejudice
By Tamara Paris
Stale Secrets, Dusty Chairs, and a Hot Shower
Restaurants
The Slow-Moving Revolution
By Charles Rosenberg