• Dan Webb, a finalist for this year's Stranger Genius Award in art, set off the alarm system of a local museum—we won't say which one, and he has no idea how this was possible—just by using his cell phone in the lobby. "Here's what happens: Three old ladies"—the only people around—"lift their heads and see that nothing's going on, and then they get back to what they were doing. But they're mad at you," he says. He adds, "If you're gonna rob anywhere, this is the place."

• The forlorn-looking but affordable King Cat Theater on Sixth Avenue will be knocked down to make way for Amazon's world headquarters, and this week saw an outpouring of memories of the place on Slog, The Stranger's blog. "Nirvana played there. Pearl Jam played there. And you know—Nelson," wrote composer/artist Korby Sears. It was built as a cinema in the 1970s, and playwright Paul Mullin saw Casablanca for the first time on the big screen there. Among the acts remembered: Nick Cave, Sigur Rós, Bettie Serveert, Liz Phair, Joe Jackson, Warren Zevon, Hunchback!: The Musical, and "my high school band... Mister Frithers."

• At an onstage interview, a member of the audience asked Neal Stephenson last week if there was a part of The Stranger he enjoyed. Stephenson replied that he always started reading it "from the back."

• Gary Hill's kookily named solo exhibition at the Henry Art Gallery, glossodelic attractors, has been updated with new works. One involves the artist taking a lot of LSD and being coached by his wife. "He's very vulnerable in it," an observer remarked. "I worried a little." Take care, Gary.

• Dumb Eyes, the art-and-design team led by Christian Petersen and Michael Ellsworth and responsible for monthly psych-video explosion Penetration and the magazine I Want You, has broken up—amicably—after seven years. "I will (henceforth) be doing everything under the name I WANT YOU," Petersen says, including audiovisuals at BAMignite: Funk Out! at Bellevue Arts Museum on Friday, August 17. He's also filled the hallways in the new Lawrence Lofts at 19th and Madison with video by 10 artists. (To see it, talk somebody into letting you inside.) Meanwhile, Ellsworth and Corey Gutch are creating a company called Civilization: "Civilization focuses on fashion, culture, the environment, and economy of gesture," their statement reads. "An example of a project that is currently being built by Civilization is the community-powered Relocate Kivalina website which will help move a Inupiat whaling village north of the arctic circle." Mazel tov, all.

• Greenwood stalwart gallery Bherd Studios is leaving the quirky-awesome subterranean warren at Greenwood Collective for a more accessible location at 312 North Eighth Street nearby. "It is heartbreaking that we're moving out... because we literally built the walls of our gallery ourselves," says owner Michele Osgood. "What we need to keep growing, though, is a space that we have control over the entryway, so that visitors could reliably find us." Stay tuned for new Bherd ventures "like artist meet-ups and multimedia exhibits." recommended