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January 21, 2014 Newswires
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2013 DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS

Anonymous
By Anonymous
Proquest LLC

WE REGRET THESE ERRORS

In the January 16, 2013 issue of The Stranger, we criticized "the FAA's pointless and humiliating security theater." We meant to criticize TSA's pointless and humiliating security theater. We regret the error.

In the March 6 issue of The Stranger, we ran a Stranger Suggest for the film West of Memphis, which hadn't even opened yet. We regret the error.

In our recent winter edition of A&P, the art and performance quarterly produced by The Stranger, we erroneously omitted the entire entry for ACT Theatre from our ostensibly comprehensive performance calendar. We are still not sure how this happened, although we unanimously blame the newest member of our editorial department, Krishanu Ray.

Krishanu Ray, The Stranger's recently hired calendar editor, would like to take a moment to name-check some of ACT's upcoming program, which is delightful and hardly worthy of omission from any arts publication. It includes 14/48: The World's Quickest Theater Festival, in which theater-makers write, rehearse, and perform 14 new short plays in 48 hours (January 10 through 18); Red Tiger Tales, featuring the UMO Ensemble performing Buddhist and Sufifolktales with puppetry and masks (January 31 through February 1); Nirvanov, a mashup between Chekov's Ivanov and the life of Kurt Cobain, presented by Balagan Theater (February 27 through March 16); and Little Shop of Horrors, a coproduction with the 5th Avenue Theatre and, incidentally, Krishanu Ray's favorite musical of all time (March 8 through June 15). If you'd like to see ACT's full schedule, go to acttheatre. org. If you'd like to give Krishanu Ray shit, e-mail him at kray@thestranger. com.

On a related point, Krishanu Ray, calendar editor at The Stranger, regrets that despite his position and its responsibilities, he has never had a terribly good grasp of time, scheduling, cardinal directions, balance, or space-time orientation in any of its many manifestations.

In the July 17 issue of The Stranger, we referred to the band Vitamin Baby Slaughter as Baby Vitamin Slaughter. We regret the error.

In the October 2 issue of The Stranger, we misspelled staffphotographer Kelly O's name in a photo credit. Kind of hard to imagine how to fuck up spelling "Kelly O," but we did.

In an October 18 Slog post linking to a description of prehistoric creatures with small braincases, big teeth, and long faces, Dominic Holden, news editor at The Stranger, misspelled a former senator's name by writing "Early Humans Looked a Lot Like Slade Gordon." The correct spelling is Gorton, like the fish sticks. Mr. Holden regrets the error. He also regrets Slade Gorton.

Anna Minard, a Stranger staffwriter who currently covers city hall, deeply regrets that she has, on at least two occasions, mentioned city council members' names in bed-not in a dirty way, but still, while she was trying to fall asleep-which is just about the saddest and creepiest thing she can think of.

Stranger food critic Bethany Jean Clement deeply regrets the closure of Capitol Hill dive bar/neo-old-English masterpiece the Canterbury. She grew up nine blocks from it, and she has been drawn to its castle-like exterior ever since she can remember, and as a child she was told it was for grown-ups only, which only made her want to go there more, and when she finally could go, it was that rare thing that exceeds hopes in such a dramatic way that the pleasure never goes away, like an old friend you can visit any time who, like you, has a thing for Chaucer but never talks about it. The suit of armor inside, which used to hold a sign that said "Seat thyself!" The beams! The fireplace! The kingly wooden chairs! The shuffleboard! The cheap liquor! The bad-but-good foodservice chicken strips! (Did you know that world-famous chef Jerry Traunfeld, formerly of the Herbfarm and now of Poppy, had his first cooking job at the Canterbury? It's true. Also, the Canterbury is supposedly haunted, which is absolutely believable.) Ms. Clement understands that the bar will reopen, and the new owners say it's not really going to change, but it will doubtless be cleaner, and it will never be the same.

The management of the Goodrich Capital 8 movie theater in Jefferson City, Missouri, regrets inviting actors with dark clothes, body armor, and guns to show up to an Iron Man movie as a publicity stunt, just 10 months after a man with dark clothes, body armor, and guns shot 70 people at a Batman movie in Aurora, Colorado, killing 12.

Christopher Frizzelle, editor in chief of The Stranger, regrets publishing a poll on Slog on October 17 about whether staffer Brendan Kiley should be killed and eaten. All the management books unambiguously say you shouldn't leave the murdering of an employee up to a public vote.

In the March 20 issue of The Stranger, books editor Paul Constant accidentally referred to poet Heather Christle as Heather Christie. We regret the error, although, in Mr. Constant's defense, "Christle" is a crazy last name.

Kelly O, staffphotographer at The Stranger, regrets that she doesn't own a car, because one of her favorite things to do is drive aimlessly around Seattle on Sunday evenings listening to Larry Mizell Jr.'s weekly Street Sounds show on KEXP.

Cienna Madrid, staffwriter at The Stranger, regrets not being able to identify where the Philippines is on a map, but she says give it 10 years and it won't be on any maps.

The world-famous Dan Savage, editorial director of The Stranger, promised Christopher Frizzelle, the relatively unknown editor in chief of The Stranger, that he would write a 2,500-word feature about air travel-something Mr. Savage knows a great deal about (there's a melting ice cap in the arctic named after Mr. Savage to call attention to his carbon footprint)-during a 15-hour flight to Seattle from Sydney, Australia. Mr. Savage did not write that feature. Instead, Mr. Savage ate a pot cookie and watched The Sting, All About Eve, and The Great Gatsby on the in-flight entertainment system, ate a large meal, and promptly fell asleep in his first-class flatbed seat. Mr. Savage does not regret this. Would you? Would anyone?

Emily Nokes, music editor at The Stranger, regrets eating one of Dan Savage's pot cookies and ending up at QFC for two hours. Have you ever really looked at the candle section there? Or the art supplies?

In an August 26 Stranger Suggests item for Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine, Stranger film editor David Schmader mentioned supporting actor Andrew Dice Clay, "who might very well find himself nominated for an Oscar." In fact, Clay's performance is impressive mostly because it's coming from Andrew Dice Clay, a terrible comedian who manages a good film performance, but there's no way Oscar's getting involved in any of this. We regret the error.

Theater editor Brendan Kiley regrets inheriting genes from his mother's side of the family that cause the skin on his fingers to split, especially during colder months, making it painful to do the dishes. Mr. Kiley further suggests that anyone suffering from the same condition try O'Keeffe's Working Hands cream, which can be found in small green tins at most hardware stores. It works even better than Bag Balm and is much less greasy, so you don't have to sit around with your hands in the air for a half an hour, waiting for them to dry.

In a May 24 Slog post, Stranger news writer Goldy celebrated the fact that nobody died when an Interstate 5 highway bridge "plummeted 120 feet" into the Skagit River below. The bridge plummeted only 40 feet. Goldy regrets the error. Though he mostly regrets that Slog commenters dickishly accused him of "sensationalizing" the bridge collapse instead of, you know, just getting a number wrong.

On a related note, the I-5 Skagit River Bridge regrets that everybody remembers it for one little 40-foot collapse rather than its years of faithful service.

In the April 3 installment of Loose Lips, The Stranger's arts gossip column, Jen Graves, who has formal training as a classical music critic, confused a Wagner tuba with a tuba tuba. A Wagner tuba is more like a French horn. We regret the error.

In a July 17 article concerning our endorsements for the August 6 primary election, Stranger news editor Dominic Holden wrote that Goodspaceguy Nelson, a perennial candidate for King County executive, wants to colonize the moon and is "delightfully batshit." Goodspaceguy Nelson did not take issue with "batshit," though he did implore us to stop referring to him as Goodspaceguy Nelson and only and always refer to him as simply Goodspaceguy. Goodspaceguy further elaborated that he does not want to colonize the moon and thinks that colonizing the moon is a stupid idea. "I am an advocate of colonizing orbital space, which would be much more healthy than colonizing the moon," he clarified, adding that "in orbital space, we can rotate the space colony to create one gravity, which humans need for health, but on the moon, the gravity level is one-sixth of the earth's gravity, which is very unhealthy for humans." Got it?

Stranger music writer Dave Segal regrets trying to hold a DJ night devoted to African music on Easter Sunday. He and two other DJs attempted this quixotic mission at Electric Tea Garden (RIP) and attracted exactly zero (0) people. Jesus, what a cold town this can be.

Stranger staffwriter Anna Minard sorely regrets that a pipe in the ceiling of her apartment building recently burst, pouring water through the walls and turning ceiling light fixtures into giant faucets, which quickly filled the apartment with multiple inches of cold water on a very cold day, destroying countless possessions and leaving her and her roommates slightly traumatized and basically homeless for the holidays.

Stranger staffwriter Anna Minard further regrets not having renter's insurance. Whoops.

Most importantly, Stranger staffwriter Anna Minard regrets that there is no possible way to adequately thank the Seattle Fire Department for arriving as quickly as they did, making the ceiling stop raining, making the awful alarms stop, making sure everyone was okay, then patiently and kindly squeegeeing and vacuuming up as much water as they could from the floors before going to their next emergency. Ms. Minard and her roommates never knew they could love complete strangers so much or feel that depth of gratitude so instantly. Really: Thank you, guys.

In his review of the Jason Statham movie Homefront, Paul Constant referred to Gary Fleder as a "first-time director." This is ridiculous: Fleder has directed many forgettable films. We regret the error.

Charles Mudede, a realist at The Stranger, regrets that the powerful jets of the Blue Angels did not this year make nonsense of the sky above our dearly treasured liberal illusions.

Bethany Jean Clement, The Stranger's food critic, regrets that while the first 2,047 words of her 2,126-word article on soup in the November 27 issue were typo-free, the 2,048th word was misspelled "boyrfiend." She further regrets that the typo turned what was meant to be a moment of tender recollection into something that seems to be about a fresh and especially awful kind of monster (a "boyrfiend"-no one wants one of those). The typo was introduced by someone else at the layout stage, and yet Ms. Clement still had a chance to catch it before it went to the printer, if only Ms. Clement had not failed to see it. Adding insult to injury, every time Ms. Clement types "boyrfiend," MicrosoftWord auto-corrects it, as if to point out yet again what a stupid typo it is.

Stranger theater editor Brendan Kiley regrets that another year has slipped past without him writing a lengthy, sure-to-be-controversial apologia for the oeuvre of Jimmy Buffett.

On a related point, the entire rest of the editorial staffof The Stranger does not regret that Mr. Kiley has yet to write his lengthy, sure-to-be-controversial apologia for the oeuvre of Jimmy Buffett, because shut up already.

In the August 7 issue of The Stranger, we mixed up the band Blooper's records Long Distance and Go Away. We regret the error.

Seattle Times editorial board member Bruce Ramsey regrets that after writing he "burst out laughing" at Chelsea Manning for having undergone a gender transition, worn makeup, and donned a wig, Ramsey had to post a "clarification" responding to accusations he was "a bigoted person." "I was not making fun of transgendered people as such," Ramsey said, even though writing that you "burst out laughing" at someone's sex change is the definition of making fun of a transgender person.

In the August 28 issue of The Stranger, Emily Nokes, music editor at The Stranger, regrets "misspelling" song "Yung Lean" as "Young Lean" in a piece on Kendrick Lamar that required her to interview teens at the Southcenter Mall. Ms. Nokes also regrets the amount of money she spent that day on gummy-bear bracelets, glow-in-the-dark leggings, and food-court chow mein.

During a live broadcast on a nationally televised news program in Australia, Dan Savage, author of American Savage, which was published by Dutton in 2013, mentioned that he gives great blowjobs. Mr. Savage was sitting on a stage in front 3,000 people in the Sydney Opera House when he mentioned this, and millions more were watching at home. In defense of the remark-which is not presented here in its original context-it was amusing and it has the benefit of being the truth. Mr. Savage does not regret it.

Cienna Madrid, a Stranger staffwriter, regrets that she used the word "pedantic" wrong in a review of Katy Perry's new album, Prism. Turns out Ms. Madrid doesn't know what the word "pedantic" means. If she did, Ms. Madrid would know Perry's lyrics are anything but pedantic.

Kale chips regret that they are not more delicious.

Theater editor Brendan Kiley normally considers himself a responsible borrower, but regrets that a handsome copy of An Annotated Christmas Carol, loaned to him by actor Ian Bell (who regularly appears in ACT Theatre's A Christmas Carol) in the winter of 2011, is still sitting on the bookshelf near the front door of Mr. Kiley's apartment. He only notices the book at impractical times (welcoming a guest, for example) and never when he could actually take steps to return it to its owner.

Food that is actually delicious regrets the overuse of the word "delicious." There are other adjectives out there. Also, time regrets the cutesy and ironically ungrammatical use of "times" (happy times, sexy times, sad times, ad nauseam), nouns regret their abandonment in favor of describing everything as "a thing," and conjunctions resent "because" for its recent promotion to the status of preposition (because internet).

David Schmader, associate editor of The Stranger, regrets every time he rejected the phrase "the N-word" as too babyish and coddling and spelled out the actual word. Even in "the proper context," even in a quote, the full word releases a stink that overwhelms all other aspects of communication, making the imperfect "N-word" forever preferable.

Jen Graves, The Stranger's art critic, regrets that people who love art and live outside Seattle still probably don't know the names of any Seattle artists who aren't millionaires or Holocaust revisionists.

In a February Slog post, Dominic Holden, news editor at The Stranger, argued that cyclists who also drive cars should have to pay their fair share of "gay taxes." Mr. Holden meant "gas taxes," of course, because if gay taxes were a thing, Mr. Holden would be broke.

Stranger associate editor Charles Mudede regrets watching 10 minutes of a 20-minute episode of Duck Dynasty. Mr. Mudede would do anything to have that experience erased from his memory.

Staffwriter Cienna Madrid regrets that more people haven't read cartoonist Peter Bagge's illustrated biography of pioneer birth-control advocate Margaret Sanger, Woman Rebel, because it is beautiful and fascinating and funny.

Bethany Jean Clement, The Stranger's food critic, regrets that in her October 2 piece "Coffee and Mars Hill: The Story Behind Storyville," she gave the name of the previous occupant of the Storyville Coffee space as "Shea Chez." She knows perfectly well that it is/was Chez Shea; she had a cold and was on a bunch of cracklike Sudafed at the time, but that's no excuse. What Ms. Clement regrets way, way more is that people who didn't read her story might go spend money at Storyville Coffee, and even think it's kind of a nice place, when the owners of Storyville are heavily involved with neo-evangelical, homophobic, misogynist Mars Hill Church.

Dan Savage, author of Savage Love, a widely syndicated sex-advice column, got a letter in March from an 18-year-old college student who indicated that his parents "grew up" reading Mr. Savage's column. The letter writer stated that he "felt weird" about asking "his parents' advice columnist" for oral sex tips. The young man's real name and the name of his college were both included in the e-mail. Mr. Savage had the young man killed. Mr. Savage does not regret this homicide.

Emily Nokes, music editor at The Stranger, regrets to inform musicians and bands that if they really want to GET THEIR SHOW WRITTEN ABOUT, DAMNIT, then it's always a good idea to have literally any other way to access their music online than a MySpace account. No one in the world has enough time to wait for that shit to open.

Krishanu Ray, The Stranger's calendar editor, regrets that it took him so long to learn to use the Oxford comma. Perhaps Mr. Ray thought that a newspaper would be interested in conserving space and was confused, baffled, and perplexed to find articles so liberally seasoned with dots and dashes.

It should be noted, in a related matter, that Krishanu Ray, calendar editor at The Stranger, has consistently scored below the acceptable range in the "Punctuation and Capitalization" portions of most standardized tests.

krishanu ray calendar editor at the stranger regrets that punctuation and capitalization are used at all and considers them a quaint relic of the past which shall soon be wholly discarded and forgotten .

In the August 21 issue of The Stranger, we called Ugly Duckling Presse Ugly Ducking Presse. We regret the error.

Staffphotographer Kelly O regrets that more people don't show up to be photographed at the Stranger offices like Alex of the band Country Lips did-wearing assless chaps and thong underwear designed to look like a horse's head.

The Stranger regrets the following illstyled band names, regardless of their musical merit: fun., Sun O))), Ke$ha, Will.i.am, of Montreal, clipping., tUnEyArDs,!!!, .., Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Chvrches, Panic! at the Disco, ? and the Mysterians, à;GRUMH, A$AP Rocky, the (International) Noise Conspiracy, the Go! Team, Portugal. the Man, and AC [lightning bolt] DC.

David Schmader, associate editor of The Stranger, regrets that there is not yet a sex tape, or at least a hilarious porn parody, featuring those two smartmouthed guys sitting together in a car in Sonic commercials.

In his review of Rain Shadow Meats Squared, Stranger staffer Paul Constant wrote: "Diners idly chew ham sandwiches even as they watch men with impressive forearms cut into slabs of pork with big butcher knives." Rain Shadow Meats employs both male and female butchers, and this was a chauvinistic case of gender assumption on Mr. Constant's part. You'd think Mr. Constant would be sensitive to gender assumption considering Charles Mudede tells him all the time that he's not a man.

Stranger editor in chief Christopher Frizzelle deeply regrets, more than you will ever know, his erstwhile habit of cleaning wax out of his ears with the long skinny point of the removable cap of a Bic pen (you know, the part that functions as a clip for holding a pen to the edge of a pocket). Mr. Frizzelle used to idly clean his ears with production department pens while signing offon pages as they went to the printer, much to the vexation of managing editor Bethany Jean Clement, who practices perfect hygiene. As Mr. Frizzelle and Ms. Clement were preparing last year's Regrets Issue for the printer, Mr. Frizzelle began to complain of a vague ache in his ear. By New Year's Eve, the pain was such that it felt like an airplane was slam ming into that side of Mr. Frizzelle's head every five minutes or so, the hurt radiating sideways across his cranium. In the ensuing year, Mr. Frizzelle has visited no fewer than three ear doctors, each more baffled than the last by the mixed infection just beyond Mr. Frizzelle's perforated eardrum. After five months of treatments solved the bacterial and fungal issues, Mr. Frizzelle underwent skin-graftsurgery on his eardrum, a procedure that required (owing to the hole's placement) removing and then reattaching Mr. Frizzelle's ear. For reasons perplexing to the medical community, the graftdid not fully take, leaving Mr. Frizzelle a pinhole through which he now hears a constant noise he can only describe as a "glistening" sound, even though writers and doctors alike have pointed out he's using the word incorrectly.

Seattle City Council member Tom Rasmussen regrets that platform shoes were a fad that faded in the 1970s.

Former Seattle Pacific University president Philip W. Eaton should regret an op-ed he wrote this fall for the Seattle Times about "gum spots" turning downtown into a crime-ridden dystopia. With regard to that editorial, Dominic Holden, news editor of The Stranger, called Mr. Eaton an "uninformed blowhard," which an anonymous blog commenter regretted. That anonymous commenter went on to insult Mr. Holden, saying, "You, with your high-school diploma, is calling someone who probably has an IQ much, much higher than you, an 'uniformed blowhard'?" Mr. Holden, in turn, regretted that he doesn't even have a high-school diploma to be so proud of.

In the August 28 issue of The Stranger, we regrettably listed the film Cutie and the Boxer as playing at the Varsity Theatre on one page and at the Seven Gables Theatre on the next. Shockingly, this one wasn't Krishanu Ray's fault, though we blame him anyway.

In a Stranger Suggests blurb from June 21 about the saxophonist Colin Stetson, music staffer Dave Segal implied that the saxophone is a brass instrument; it is in fact a woodwind. Mr. Segal regrets blowing it.

Theater editor Brendan Kiley regrets that it took him more than a month to sit down and transcribe his October 26 interview with Javier Sicilia, the Mexican writer and activist who, after his son was killed by narcos in 2011, galvanized the country with mass marches to Mexico City to protest the drug war, government corruption, money laundering, and the black-market gun trade. Mr. Kiley also regrets that he chickened out of asking Sicilia and his fellow activist Teresa Carmona (whose son was also murdered by narcos) a difficult question about why people often wait until a personal tragedy to take action against some perceived injustice. Asking the question would've suggested that the grieving parents were somehow at fault, which would've been monstrous-but Mr. Kiley is curious about people's thresholds for action, and who better to talk about that than those two? Still, even thinking about asking the question made Mr. Kiley feel like a sociopath.

In the March 27 issue of The Stranger, we said the (great) restaurant Gastropod is located in Georgetown. In fact, it is in Sodo. We regret the error.

In an article in The Stranger's marijuana guide-of course it was in the marijuana guide-Dominic Holden, news editor of The Stranger, referred to "layers" in court. Mr. Holden meant, of course, "lawyers." We regret that proofreading and marijuana don't mix.

Stranger associate editor Charles Mudede totally regrets exposing the limits of his knowledge of jazz history by stating in the June 19 issue that the famous jazz tune "But Beautiful" was composed/ written by Gregory Porter. It wasn't. It was composed by Jimmy Van Heusen and written by Johnny Burke. Both Heusen and Burke died a long time ago. Porter is still alive and not at all old. We regret Charles Mudede.

In the November 27 issue of The Stranger, we regrettably ran show listings for Sunday, November 31, a date that didn't exist. This resulted in us being off-kilter for the next two days of shows as well.

Cienna Madrid, staffwriter at The Stranger, regrets that her column pitches "Cienna's Fucking the Mayor!" and "Burning Bridges with Cienna Madrid/Building Bridges with Anna Minard" were never used.

Emily Nokes, music editor at The Stranger, regrets that freelancer Cate McGehee's last name was misspelled "McGhee" in bold type in Ms. McGehee's very first (and very wonderful) feature in print.

In the November 6 issue of The Stranger, we called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court the Federal International Surveillance Court. Just, like, making shit up there. We regret the error.

Contrary to what you may have read in The Stranger's food issue, Cheftown, on August 7, there never was a time when Ileen's Sports Bar (now Julia's) was the only place on Capitol Hill serving hard liquor. Jen Graves, who has been a professional journalist for nearly two decades, regrets taking the word of bartender/artist Joe Shlichta on this matter in an interview. Ileen's Sports Bar was, rather, "the only place to go that had hard liquor at midnight when you were a twentysomething straight white male looking for a pretty lady," Shlichta later clarified. Never believe a bartender/artist late at night.

Krishanu Ray, calendar editor at The Stranger, regrets that there are so many people making art around town. Mr. Ray urges Seattle to consider the ergonomic simplicity of a city with only 10 artists, each of whom is legally restricted to one or (maybe) two projects a year.

Longtime Stranger critic and reporter Brendan Kiley regrets that he did not follow up more rigorously with the mystery man who, at the beginning of football season, called to say he ran a secret speakeasy-type club for Seahawks players who don't want the hassle of clubbing in public. "They become targets," the man said, for guys who want to seem tough by picking fights with Seahawks and their friends. The better the Seahawks are doing, the mystery man added, the more trouble they attract. The mystery man invited Mr. Kiley to visit the club one night, but Mr. Kiley punted the invitation to another game day, and soon the Seahawks were having an astronomically good season and the mystery man stopped returning calls. Mr. Kiley is still kicking himself for missing a golden opportunity to get to know pro football players outside their canned TV personalities ("We just want to go out there and play good football," etc.), especially during an unexpectedly successful season.

The Stranger regrets that ontogeny does not recapitulate phylogeny.

In the 2013 SIFF Guide, we reported that Annemarie Jacir's When I Saw You was the first feature film directed by a Palestinian woman, when in fact it was Jacir's own Salt of this Sea from 2008. Duh.

Copyright:  (c) 2014 The Stranger
Wordcount:  4483

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