TechSync
In this week's issue:
* Tech:Cleveland Case CIO Lev Gonick
* Cool Cleveland People DanceWorks' David Shimotakahara
* Cool Cleveland Interview Singer-songwriter Goat
* Cool Cleveland Reads Creative Essence: Cleveland’s Sense of Place by Nina Gibans
* Cool Cleveland Sounds White Lies from Chittlin’
* Cool Cleveland Preview "Cool Meets Innovation" @ Cleveland Institute of Art
* RoldoLINK & Cool Cleveland Comment on the arts levy
* Cool Cleveland Poem Listen by Kelly Ferjutz
* Cool Cleveland Kids podcast click here, CC podcast click here, CC Blog click here
Technology is Cleveland's future, and it's high time we realized it. A serendipitous array of tech events this week was kicked into high gear when RedRoomRevolution.com's Cathy Panzica invited Silicon Valley VC guru Guy Kawasaki to keynote what has become nicknamed TechSync. Listen to our podcast with Guy, catch him live, watch our video with Case CIO Lev Gonick, and come back for events all week celebrating Cleveland's new economic direction. It's September, and the Fall cultural season is in full swing. Read about Cleveland's Creative Essence, then get in sync with Cleveland's own creative, and tech, essence. –Thomas Mulready
Cool Cleveland Interview
Lev Gonick
Case CIO
Movies Behind the Scenes
WATCH THE MOVIE Case VP Information Technology Lev Gonick
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Five Secrets of Revolutionary Thinking Experience the Apple Evangelist, Guy Kawasaki, a Silicon Valley titan, Apple fellow, and columnist for Forbes.com on Wed 9/6 at 6:30PM on the stage of the State Theater, Playhouse Square. Kawasaki believes in revolutionary thinking for Cleveland, and beyond, and will address his change-the-world style during his thought-provoking and controversial keynote speech Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Is Greater Cleveland Ready? This event will kick-off TechSync, a week of technology excellence in Cleveland. Kawasaki is brought to you by the Beta Strategy Group, www.BetaGroup.us, a spin-off of Panzica Investments designed to grow ideas into outcomes. Even better, come to the Technology Showcase at 5PM. Space is limited! Register today for Kawasaki (only $40!) at www.RedRoomRevolution.com. TechSync is an orchestration of community efforts demonstrating technology synergies Wed 9/6 - Fri 9/15. Buy tix at the door. Cash/check only. Listen to Kawasaki live today Wed 9/6 at 9AM on WCPN 90.3FM. The Beta Strategy Group is a founding sponsor of Cool Cleveland Tech.
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Tech:Cleveland
TechNews
TechEvents
Cool Cleveland Tech Spotlight
TechSync
A Cleveland tech revolution 9/6-15
The revolution is here The question is this: Is Cleveland Ready? TechSync is a first-ever city-wide orchestration of community efforts demonstrating technology synergies. TechSync hosts include: The Red Room Revolution, TeamNEO, The City of Cleveland, Case Western Reserve University and Playhouse Square Foundation. Each organization is hosting an event centered around technology in Greater Cleveland. http://www.RedRoomRevolution.com
Apple evangelist, Forbes columnist & Silicon Valley VC lays it on the line, whether we want to hear it or not. Date: Wed 9/6 Time: 6:30PM (Technology showcase opens at 5PM) Venue: On Stage at the State Theatre, Playhouse Square Agenda and registration: here
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Major Goose Bumps Check out some of the best Cleveland has to offer with the second annual appearance of Verb Ballets' Nature Moves, on the stage of the Natural History Museum’s Murch Auditorium on Fri 9/15 and Sat 9/16 at 8PM. Verb ups the ante and tops itself yet again by bringing us a new standard for contemporary dance with a company that always delivers. The company's world music, choreographed by artistic director Hernando Cortez, will present five dynamic dances. Back by Popular Demand! Chichester Psalms and Shadows of Nesmin. Tickets are $25 for the performance only (reserved seating) or $40 on Saturday with a reception afterward that includes Verb’s dancers and staff, open bar, hors d’oeuvres and DJ. Go to www.cmnh.org for more info or call 216-231-4600.
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Cool Cleveland NewsLINKS
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Is It a Funky Nation? "Lil' Brian" and the "Zydeco Travelers" have gained a reputation as the most innovative and musically accomplished young zydeco bands, proving it is a cutting-edge sound as vital to a new generation of fans as it has been for longtime buffs. Significantly, Stanley, "Buckwheat" Dural --of the genre's top band, "Buckwheat Zydeco" -- is their mentor and even produced their new cd, Funky Nation. "We believe in Lil' Brian and the Zydeco Travelers,” says Dural, "and we think Funky Nation will make a believer of people all over America. There’s no limit to Lil' Brian's future. He can take zydeco to another level." Come hear for yourself on Fri 9/8 at Fat Fish Blue, downtown on the corner of Prospect and Ontario. Five dollars at the door. For more info contact 216.875.6000 or www.FatFishBlue.com.
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Cool Cleveland NewsLINKS
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The Top Six Reasons We Need You We want to hear your opinions! Take an active part in discussions about your Northeast Ohio community and its future by attending the final Voices & Choices Regional Town Meeting at the University of Akron on Sat 9/16. Your opinions are welcome and will certainly be influential in decision making in six top categories facing your future: 1). school funding, 2). job creation, 3). racial equity, 4). workforce training, 5). government cooperation, and 6). sprawl in your community. Register now to help set the agenda for Northeast Ohio's future! Space is limited! Make reservations now by registering at www.voiceschoices.org or call 800-929-2319.
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Cool Cleveland This Week
9.06-9.13
Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com
WED
THU
Stupendous Event Lister of the Month Big ups to The Pop Shop Gallery in Lakewood. Their listings are interesting and cool and always provide an appropriate link and the venue address. Need to rev up your event listings? Click here and scroll down to Hints. Submit your brand new butt-kickin' event listing to Events@CoolCleveland.com.
Our clients love us, yours will too Promote your products and services (or your client’s) with the edgy, weekly e-newsletter that delights the senses, ruffles the feathers and gets down with Cleveland’s cool like no other: "There wouldn’t be enough money to put into other forms of advertising that could have created the buzz that Cool Cleveland gave our MOMIX performance in January! You knocked our socks off! Thanks for making our performance a success. It was more than we ever expected and meant the world to us."-- Pam Young, Dance Cleveland. To request info on sponsorship and advertising, drop a note to: TL@CoolCleveland.com.
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WCLVnotes This week WCLV 104.9 FM is presenting a series of concerts from the world-famous BBC Proms. Tonight through Fri 9/8 at 8PM, we’re airing nightly concerts with the Philharmonia, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia Orchestras. Then on Sat 9/9 at 2:30PM, WCLV will go to London’s Royal Albert Hall for a live three-hour broadcast of the exciting (and sometimes raucous) Last Night of the Proms. The BBC Proms is the world's largest and best-known classical music festival, and invitations to perform at it are a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Each season, only one American orchestra is tapped to make the trip to London's Royal Albert Hall. Last year it was The Cleveland Orchestra. However, this year, three American orchestras were invited. And you can still catch the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia appearances. Above all, though, don’t miss the Last Night of the Proms when the huge audience and BBC Symphony and Chorus perform “Hail Britannia.” The hair will stand up on your neck. And you may begin to think the American Revolution was a mistake. Complete details on all of WCLV programming can be found at www.WCLV.com.
SAT
Put Some Clothes On! You don’t have to stand on your doorstep in your pajamas or haul recycling to the curb when receiving Cool Cleveland’s weekly news. Not only are we fashionably and environmentally conscious, but you can pass a free “green” copy onto friends or family members today.
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Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com
Cool Cleveland People
David Shimotakahara
GroundWorks Dance Theatre
WATCH THE MOVIE GroundWorks artistic director David Shimotakahara
Emissions from the Blogosphere
Short summaries of NEO blog posts
Bill Callahan makes the case for the Greater Cleveland Partnership to support a unionized WalMart. Brian remembers peace activist Ione Biggs with a poem by Daniel Thompson. Norm Roulet questions the Plain Dealer's position on killing street culture. Poet Don Iannone anticipates the change of season. Hannah raves about Tremont's Ty Fun. Check the Cool Cleveland weblog here, then add your own comments, questions and attitude. Letters@CoolCleveland.com.
Cool Cleveland Interview
Singer-songwriter Goat (a.k.a. Andy Rosen)
Cool Cleveland Reads
Creative Essence: Cleveland’s Sense of Place
Nina Freedlander Gibans
Kent State University Press
But it’s far more than just a list. In fact, it is no stretch to say that Creative Essence is the quintessential resource for thoughtful understanding of our region’s history, art, and inevitably its art history. With a charming and accessible writing style and amazing illustrations, the book focuses on everything from painting and photography, to architecture and a future filled with multimedia and other mediums.
Creative Essence really gets at the crux of regional culture through exploring contributions in Cleveland, made by Clevelanders, and the impact those offerings have made to the visual arts and architecture across the board. As one consumes the book’s scope of factual information and engaging visuals, the understanding of how talent has thrived here unfolds right before the eyes.
The book is the result of the Cleveland Artists Foundation's Dialogue Series—a 22-hour-long collection of forums held in cultural institutions and broadcast on National Public Radio. Those discussions included knowledge sharing of how regionalism influenced artistic productivity.
She also includes a bonus, 46-minute DVD, selected for the 2003 Cleveland International Film Festival, which makes for an incredible companion and supports the eye-popping revelations within the book. To that end, the author leaves no stone unturned, covering all the notables—Schrekengost, Mieczkowski, Burchfield—while talking through inspirations, partnerships and support that our region has offered to allow local talent to flourish.
And as if that wasn’t enough, consider that one of the late Masumi Hayashi’s photo collage pieces, 1994’s Public Square, graces the cover. Published before recent tragic events took the artist's life, the book’s cover adds a poignant connection to what stands ostensibly as the must-have Northeast Ohio art reference.
For more information on Creative Essence: Cleveland’s Sense of Place, visit Kent State University Press online at http://www.kentstateuniversitypress.com and Nina Freedlander Gibans’ own website at http://www.ninagibans.com.
From Cool Cleveland Managing Editor Peter Chakerian peterATcoolcleveland.com
Cool Cleveland Sounds
White Lies
Chittlin’
self published
expect from a young singer-songwriter. Born into a prodigiously gifted musical family, (her brother, David Mayfield, a mandolin virtuoso, fronts his own bluegrass band, and both siblings play with their Kent-based parents in the old-timey One Way Rider), Chittlin’ has far more than good genes going for her.
On White Lies, her second self-released record, she sings about topics all adolescents might relate to, but with a mature perspective and lyrical skills better than many writers twice her age. Minimally accompanied, generally by little more than acoustic guitar and occasional touches of banjo and lap steel, Chittlin’s oddly world-weary voice takes center stage, making it virtually impossible to ignore her words.
On the title track, and later on “Empty Room, she deals with self-esteem issues. “It’s when your waistline has a price/ and no pills will suffice/ and you’ve gotta find a better way/ to get back to who you were/ before the world made you a word that you/ dare not say,” she declares with justifiable angst.
In “For Today” she tackles the thorny issue of finding herself independently of some mediocre boyfriend, whom she’s nevertheless not quite ready to leave: I could care less about you/ And I love the sound of you walking away/ And I can see clearer/ and I’m getting closer to finding out just who I am without you in the way.
For all the formative concerns addressed in the lyrics, though, it is a musically sophisticated record, defying easy categorization. Amidst all the country-folk trappings, Chittlin’ writes what, with different instrumentation, might be considered indie rock songs -- witness the strident “Better Off,” and “I Miss You,” which, graced with a flowing cello line, comes across as sort of an unplugged Smiths number.
In the end, though, what remains most arresting about White Lies is the wise-beyond-her-years timbre of Chittlin’s deadpan voice. She even manages to perfectly foil Akron blues favorite Patrick Sweany’s laconic drawl on a spirited cover of Hank Williams’ “Rockin’ Chair Money.” If this is what Chittlin’ is capable of when most kids are more concerned with getting a car and passing proficiency tests, she is well on her way to becoming a musical force to be reckoned with.
Chittlin' performs two intimate, back-to-back shows in Kent this week: Sunday, September 10 at 6PM at the Zephyr and Monday, September 11 at 10 PM at Europe Gyro. Visit Chittlin' online at her official website http://www.chittlin.com and her MySpace page at http://www.myspace.com/chittlin.
From Cool Cleveland contributor Leslie Basalla lbasalla77ATmsn.com
Wanna get reviewed? Send your band's CD (less than 1 year old) to: Cool Cleveland, 14837 Detroit Avenue, #105, Lakewood, OH 44107
Hey Writers! Wanna write about Cleveland music? We've got a slew of recently-released CDs and DVDs by Cleveland-area musicians that could use your critical commentary for Cool Cleveland Sounds. If you're interested, send us a note at Letters@CoolCleveland.com.
Cool Cleveland Preview
CIA's "Cool Meets Innovation"
CIA’s faculty has tremendous capacity, intuition and insight. They have influenced over 1800 artists and designers working regionally and they contribute $1.3 billion annually to the arts industry. With their latest effort, "Cool Meets Innovation," the faculty themselves are the stars. Connecting the dots between innovation and contemporary culture in this show, some 50 faculty members are featuring work from all 16 CIA majors. Works include sculpture, industrial design, fine art, animation and photography.
Digital artist Kasumi Minkin, assistant professor of Technology and Integrated Media Environment (T.I.M.E.) produced a feature-length installation called Rule the Soul. The fusion of images and political satire (pictured) provided her the opportunity to present work to Japan’s Sapporo International Short Film Festival this month. Adjunct faculty member and Plain Dealer contributor Dan Tranberg's own digital photography pieces are also a part of "Cool Meets Innovation," providing a focus on patterns and textures through software manipulation.
But that doesn't even begin to scratch the surface of "Cool Meets Innovation," put together under the direction of CIA Director of Galleries and Exhibitions (and noted art theorist) Bruce Checefsky. This, well, cool faculty exhibition opens this Friday, September 8 with a public reception from 6-8PM in the school’s Reinberger Galleries at 11141 East Boulevard.
For more information, visit the CIA website at http://www.cia.edu.
From Cool Cleveland Managing Editor Peter Chakerian peterATcoolcleveland.com
Cool Cleveland Comment
Support the Arts & Culture Levy
by Eric Fingerhut
Our Arts & Culture sector helped make this region great, and continues to keep our economy strong. It generates over more than $1 billion in annual economic activity and creates thousands of good, family-supporting jobs for our residents. The billion dollar economic activity comes in all shapes and sizes including tourism, major plays and concerts, neighborhood festivals, street and music fairs, and individual artists. These are the activities and people who make our city so vibrant. They are also the reason Northeast Ohio receives tens of thousands of visitors and tourists every year who bring money into our region...
Read the Cool Cleveland Comment from Eric Fingerhut here
RoldoLINK
No! To Cigarette Tax For Arts
By Roldo Bartimole
To help artists and arts organizations why didn’t the always-eager tax devotees at Cuyahoga County Commission find a tax we might all cheer? Maybe even cast a “Yes” vote.
For example, a tax on lawyers, especially the big legal firms. You know, the ones that sit on the major non-profits, including arts organizations.
On the other hand, maybe a special surtax on incomes of $100,000 or more, which righteously would include many top arts executives and the foundation leaders and politicians who back the cigarette tax for the arts. Wouldn’t that be nice!
Another tax on cigarettes, however, seems to be picking on the same people repeatedly and unnecessarily. The Three Stooge Commissioners and the proponents took the easy way out.
The cost to consumers will be $20 million a year at 30 cents a pack for 10 years.
Amazingly, that is a heavier tax than the cigarette tax levied for Gateway. The arts smoking tax would raise $200 million in 10 years.
During the 15 years of cigarette taxes for Gateway, smokers paid $80,358,035 in extra taxes. (More actually, because they paid the regular sales tax atop the sin tax.) Since August of 2005, smokers have paid an additional $3,654,122 to support Browns Stadium....
Read RoldoLINK here
Instant Karma
Quick reviews of recent events
Going out this weekend? Take along your PDA and your digital camera. Scratch out a few notes to send us with a picture of it for our Instant Karma real-world reviews of what's really happening. We'd love to hear from you. Send your stuff to Events@CoolCleveland.com
Let Freedom Ring @ Ensemble Theatre 9/2 American musical theater has long fostered songs of protest and/or rebellion. Such productions are especially popular during times of national stress. Consequently, not only is the timing of Let Freedom Ring right on, but so is the message. All too often, we tend to think we’re alone in our opinions, and it is comforting to know we’re not always a nation of strangers. Ensemble Theatre opens its 27th season with a spiffy production of this new version of Bill Rudman’s Brother Can You Spare a Dime? from some years ago. With a bit of tweaking by local playwright Eric Coble and sparkling choreography from David Shimotakahara and Pandora Robertson, the five-member cast, wonderfully accompanied by pianist/music director Nancy Maier, give new life to 80 years of message-type music...
Read the review by Kelly Ferjutz here
Yr Turn
Cool Cleveland readers write
We encourage our readers to speak out by sending us letters and commentary. Send your letters to Letters@CoolCleveland.com. You must include your full name (required) and you may include your e-mail address (optional). You may also create a new Hotmail, Yahoo or Gmail e-mail address and submit it with your letter. Letters submitted to Cool Cleveland, or edited portions, may be published in an upcoming issue of Cool Cleveland at our discretion.
Send your letters to: Letters@CoolCleveland.com
On Lakewood's attractive AT&T boxes (See Unsightly Lightspeed boxes in Lakewood here) Completely, horribly awful. Just moved to Lakewood, and extremely disappointed in City Council on this one. I think every Lakewood City Council member who voted "yes" for these boxes should take one for the team, and offer to have one on their own treelawn. Yeah, council!
from Cool Cleveland reader Walter Wright wrightwwAThotmail.com
On the arts levy (See http://www.CoolCleveland.com/ArtsLevy) We need to support the Cuyahoga Arts and Culture Issue! Supporting the Cuyahoga Arts and Culture issue this November is an essential component to the progressive upward mobility, resurgence and life-blood of our community. The benefits to our economy, educational enrichment value, international recognition and the pillar of excellency the Arts and Culture community represents to our area are just a few reasons to " VOTE YES on November 7th". A county this size with the stellar, vibrant and world-class arts and culture community it possesses, should embrace the opportunity through public funding, to assure we will continue to lead in this area. Now is the time to chart new opportunities from Handel to Hip-Hop for future generations and further our claim of being the 'best location in the nation'. Let's seize the moment to assure Cuyahoga Arts and Culture continues to be one of the finest assets and priceless gems of expression this community can ill-afford to let slip away.
from Cool Cleveland reader Bob Ivory bniceivoryATgmail.com
Dear ODOT (See ODOT responds, sorta here) TO:Craig Hebebrand, Project Director, Ohio Department of Transportation, Gordon Proctor, Director ODOT, Governor Taft. Hi Craig et al: Please close those two exits off of I-90 immediately for a period of two weeks. Simply put up the concrete median barriers across those exits for that period of time and see what happens. Weekends must be included as well. I'm not kidding here. Make sure the Indians and/or Browns are in town. You can put it back after the experiment. Enough of the theoretical musings of traffic engineers and politicians: do it and get some real world experience!
from Cool Cleveland reader Bob Chalfant batting.chiefATgmail.com
This morning, for the first time, I used the West 14th Street ramp at the eastbound I-71/I-90 merge. That's the spot where they've constructed a traffic circle as access down to Steelyard Commons. I've driven through the traffic circles on the East side enough to be familiar with their design. But this lunacy on West 14th Street bears no resemblance to its counterparts across town. To have done away with the traffic lights is insane enough, but to put the circle right at the top of the ramp, where exiting drivers can't see the lay of the land until they're smack in the middle of it, is absolutely inexcusable. How many drivers topping the ramp, not knowing what's ahead, are going to be broadsided by traffic whizzing by from the left? To say that the circle's design is counter-intuitive is a huge understatement; "makes no sense whatsoever" is a better description. Add confusing signage, and ODOT and company have concocted a winning recipe for frequent accidents. It looks as if the drunken monkeys have been let loose to play with the city's traffic design plans again. And these are the same people who insist that they know best about the Innerbelt bridge and exit design? We should be very afraid. And we should insist that they NOT be allowed to continue to completely disregard the public's concerns, as they've been doing for years.
from Cool Cleveland reader Denise Donaldson zoonorthATnetzero.com
Send your letters to: Letters@CoolCleveland.com
Top 5
Most clicked
Here are the Top 5 from last week's issue, with one more chance for you to click.
1) Unsightly Lightspeed boxes in Lakewood Lakewood Observer editor Jim O'Bryan has identified the first of dozens of huge AT&T cable/Internet boxes.
www.lakewoodobserver.com.
2) Signs of Life on Planet Cleveland The Emprorer's New Clothes by David Budin.
www.CoolCleveland.com.
3) More Get Wild photos Another batch of party photos. These from Doug Morris.
www.CoolCleveland.com.
4) Access:Cleveland Blues barn impresario Michael Yates.
http://www.MikesBarn.com.
5) ODOT responds, sorta Ohio Department of Transportation Project Director Craig Hebebrand responds point-by-point with his justification of ODOT's plan to reduce to two the number of Innerbelt ramps addressing the massive traffic concerns raised by CSU Prof. Tom Bier's op-ed.
www.CoolCleveland.com.
In Labor It ain't easy giving birth to this newsletter each week. Thanks to Peter Chakerian, Roxanne Ravenel, TL Champion, George Nemeth, Kelly Ferjutz, Roldo Bartimole, Leslie Basalla and everyone who partners with us. Want to volunteer and contribute your writing to Cool Cleveland? Send your reviews, articles, or story ideas to: Events@CoolCleveland.com
Download the Cool Cleveland podcast each week at http://www.CoolCleveland.com. Click on the Cool Cleveland Blog here. Read the Cool Cleveland column each month in Cleveland Magazine here. Listen to Cool Cleveland on WCLV-FM 104.9 twice each Friday during drive time. Send your cool events to: Events@CoolCleveland.com, and your letters to: Letters@CoolCleveland.com. For your copy of the free weekly Cool Cleveland e-zine, go to http://www.CoolCleveland.com
Cool Cleveland Poem
by Kelly Ferjutz
Listen
In a time long past, everything was slower and more beautiful.
Even boats on a lake. They were made of wood--real wood,
strips honed carefully to match each other, then lovingly sanded
and varnished, and sanded again and varnished again.
Over and over and over.
Finally, when you could see your face in the warm walnut finish,
bright shiny chrome pieces would be attached here and there
to help protect the mirrored surfaces
that reflected the blue sky and white clouds and green leaves and trees.
But what was inside was beautiful, too. The engines that pushed these
craft were special, and to this day, they still sound just like they
know that's still true.
The kings of the lakes, these big, beautiful creations of steel and
aluminum
and other exotic metals that formed crankshafts and pistons and rings
and valves,
which when put together with love produced one of the most glorious sounds
in all of nature. If you're partial to bass voices of any kind, your
ears perk up
whenever you hear that sound. Burble, gurgle, rumpety, and even an
occasional roar
when asked to show off. Ahhh. Those wonderful, big, old eight-cylinder
masterpieces.
Listen to the night. When you hear that deep slowly-vibrating sound,
you'll know
another king has come out of hiding to claim his throne,
aided by the nighttime stillness of the lake, sending the echoes and
reverberations
to all the subjects who listen for the return of the monarch.
by Kelly Ferjutz
08.24.06
Let's get in sync,
--Thomas Mulready
Letters@CoolCleveland.com
all contents ©2006 MulreadyGROUP all rights reserved
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