Arts & Life

MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – Join artist Christalene Loren and learn advanced techniques in paper maché this Saturday, Aug. 18, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Middletown Art Center.
The class will focus on mask making.
Participants are invited to engage with masks for Día de Muertos, Halloween or as totems, spirit guides or inner hero.
Learn this affordable and doable technique of sculpting as part of the Restore project for just $5.
Adults and teens 12 up of all artistic backgrounds are welcome to join. All materials are supplied but this is also a good opportunity to reuse your paper grocery bags.
“Now more than ever after the recent fires, we encourage all Lake County residents to engage in art making of all kinds, to express themselves and release stress and trauma,” said artist and Director Lisa Kaplan. “Being creative is healing, enriching and fun!”
The Restore project was made possible with support from the California Arts Council, a state agency, with additional support from local organizations, businesses, and individuals. Learn more about Restore scheduling and preregister for all classes at www.middletownartcenter.org/restore.
The next Restore class will be Sculpting with Felt with Alana Clearlake on Sept. 8.
September through May will feature Restore classes most Saturdays (or Sunday from time to time.
The project will culminate with the reopening of the EcoArts Sculpture Walk at Trailside Park, and a new Rabbit Hill Art Trail.
Restore offers opportunities for both personal and collaborative artworks.
Be a part of the growing arts and culture scene in South Lake County by becoming a MAC member, by participating in Restore, or by coming to any of the many arts and cultural events or classes at MAC.
Visit www.middletownartcenter.org or like Middletown Art Center on Facebook @ARTMiddletown to stay up to date with what’s happening at MAC.
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- Written by: Middletown Art Center
My mother's best friend, Ruth Stickfort Kregel, was "Aunt Sticky" to my sister and me, and today I feel like telling you a little about this woman we loved.
This poem is from my new book, “Kindest Regards,” published by Copper Canyon Press.
Post Office
The wall of identical boxes into which
our Aunt Sticky sorted the daily mail
was at the far end of her dining room,
and from the private side looked like
a fancy wallpaper upon which peonies
pushed through a white wooden trellis,
or sometimes like crates of chickens
stacked all the way to the ceiling.
I'd learned by then – I was a little boy –
that a thing can look like one thing
on one day and another on another,
depending on how you might be feeling.
There were times when we were there,
having our coffee and sweet rolls,
when some woman on the lobby side
would with a click unlock her box
and leaning down, peer inside to see
if she had mail, and see us at the table,
Mother and Father, my sister and I
and our postmistress aunt, and call out,
"Yoohoo, Sticky! I see you have company!"
and waggle her fingers, waving hello.
American Life in Poetry does not accept unsolicited manuscripts. It is made possible by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2018 by Ted Kooser, "Post Office," from Kindest Regards, (Copper Canyon Press, 2018). Poem reprinted by permission of Ted Kooser and the publisher. Introduction copyright ©2018 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.
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- Written by: Ted Kooser

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The 1948 adventure drama, “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” starring Humphrey Bogart, screens at the Soper Reese Theatre on Tuesday, Aug. 28, at 1 and 6 p.m.
Entry to the film is by donation.
John Huston directs this superior morality play shot entirely on location in Mexico.
It’s one of the best movie treatments of the corrosiveness of greed, with Bogart in perfect pitch playing a decent guy whose character slowly crumbles before the god of gold.
Huston won Oscars for both Director and Screenplay while his father, Walter Huston, won a Best Supporting Actor award for the same film.
The movie is sponsored by Frank and Michaelee Murphy. Not rated. Run time is two hours and six minutes.
The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, 707-263-0577, www.soperreesetheatre.com.
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- Written by: Soper Reese Theatre
They say that timing is everything and that could not be more true than in today’s world of social media and a 24-hour news cycle.
For the CBS television network, that means the dark cloud hovering over CBS chairman and CEO Leslie Moonves comes at an interesting time.
What will be the fallout of serious public allegations of sexual misconduct, yet again against another high-profile entertainment figure, is yet to be known. But the shadow of controversy hangs in the air.
To the credit of CBS, the network moved ahead with an executive session with Kelly Kahl, president of CBS Entertainment, during the summer press tour which offered the nation’s TV critics a chance to ask pointed questions.
I’d say the press queries came off rather tame, as compared to the cage match often seen between CNN’s Jim Acosta and White House press secretary Sarah Sanders during a usual press briefing.
When asked if Moonves would apologize to the women in the New Yorker article, Kahl’s response hit the fallback position of saying “I can’t speak to that. As we’ve said, there’s an investigation underway. There’s nothing I can add to that.”
Whether Moonves is running the ship next month or next year, CBS will defer to the legalities of ongoing probes and move ahead on promoting its Fall schedule, which is balanced between comedies and drama.
The edge may go to the network’s love of police procedurals and the impressive fact that it lured prolific producer Dick Wolf (“Law & Order” franchise) away from NBC for the new series “FBI,” focused on New York agents in the field.
That Wolf landed his new show on the Eye network after deep ties to a rival network prompted many questions, and the producer deftly punted to saying his honest answer was that there “was no more beachfront real estate at NBC.”
What’s more interesting about the “FBI” is that Wolf revealed that he idolized his uncle who was a FBI agent in the ‘50s and ‘60s, finding him to be a great role model along with other agents he had met during that time.
Aside from Sela Ward, who appears not to be in the first episode, the cast of the “FBI” fits a diversity model of different ethnic backgrounds that reflects the metropolis where it is based.
The cast may not be household names. The leading role is with Missy Peregrym, as Special Agent Maggie Bell, who may be best-known for her role as Officer Andy McNally in the ABC series “Rookie Blue.”
The special FBI agent at the nerve center of the office during tense situations is the familiar face of Jeremy Sisto as Agent Jubal Valentine. He acts as the master motivator as everyone works under intense pressure.
A more laid-back approach to a crime drama is the remake of “Magnum P.I.” where Thomas Magnum, a former Navy SEAL who becomes a private investigator, is still a diehard Detroit Tigers fan living at a luxurious Hawaiian estate.
Jay Hernandez, the new Magnum may not look like Tom Selleck, but he operates in similar fashion in dealing with the estate’s majordomo Higgins, who now happens to be a female disavowed MI6 agent (Perdita Weeks) keeping Magnum in line with the help of her two Dobermans.
The last of the new dramas takes a new tack on a religious theme. Tapping into social media, “God Friended Me” turns the life of an outspoken atheist upside down when he receives a friend request from God.
Miles (Brandon Micheal Hall), at odds with his preacher father (Joe Morton) about the rejection of faith, hosts a podcast where he’s free to speak his mind, but changes happen after being poked by the mysterious request to get involved outside his comfort zone.
Signs point him in the direction of helping Cara (Violett Beane), an online journalist suffering from writer’s block. Together, they find themselves investigating God’s friend suggestions and inadvertently helping others in need.
The new dramas are balanced by a similar number of comedies, though one of them is another reboot of a vintage series. Unlike new major characters on “Magnum P.I.,” the revival of “Murphy Brown” brings back many of the original stars.
Once again, Candice Bergen is in the titular role of a newscaster in a fictional show that, in the words of producer Diane English, has “always been a political show with something to say,” now focusing on a platform through the prism of the press.
Faith Ford returns as lifestyle reporter Corky Sherwood, Joe Regalbuto remains investigate journalist Frank Fontana, and Grant Shaud is the former wunderkind news producer Miles Silverberg.
The other two comedies appear to be rather generic. “The Neighborhood” stars Cedric the Entertainer not exactly putting out the welcome wagon when a friendly Midwest family moves next door.
Meanwhile, “Happy Together,” as the title implies might be a stretch for a happily married couple (Damon Wayans, Jr. and Amber Stevens West) when the husband’s music superstar client (Felix Mallard) seeks refuge from paparazzi by moving into their home.
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
For the CBS television network, that means the dark cloud hovering over CBS chairman and CEO Leslie Moonves comes at an interesting time.
What will be the fallout of serious public allegations of sexual misconduct, yet again against another high-profile entertainment figure, is yet to be known. But the shadow of controversy hangs in the air.
To the credit of CBS, the network moved ahead with an executive session with Kelly Kahl, president of CBS Entertainment, during the summer press tour which offered the nation’s TV critics a chance to ask pointed questions.
I’d say the press queries came off rather tame, as compared to the cage match often seen between CNN’s Jim Acosta and White House press secretary Sarah Sanders during a usual press briefing.
When asked if Moonves would apologize to the women in the New Yorker article, Kahl’s response hit the fallback position of saying “I can’t speak to that. As we’ve said, there’s an investigation underway. There’s nothing I can add to that.”
Whether Moonves is running the ship next month or next year, CBS will defer to the legalities of ongoing probes and move ahead on promoting its Fall schedule, which is balanced between comedies and drama.
The edge may go to the network’s love of police procedurals and the impressive fact that it lured prolific producer Dick Wolf (“Law & Order” franchise) away from NBC for the new series “FBI,” focused on New York agents in the field.
That Wolf landed his new show on the Eye network after deep ties to a rival network prompted many questions, and the producer deftly punted to saying his honest answer was that there “was no more beachfront real estate at NBC.”
What’s more interesting about the “FBI” is that Wolf revealed that he idolized his uncle who was a FBI agent in the ‘50s and ‘60s, finding him to be a great role model along with other agents he had met during that time.
Aside from Sela Ward, who appears not to be in the first episode, the cast of the “FBI” fits a diversity model of different ethnic backgrounds that reflects the metropolis where it is based.
The cast may not be household names. The leading role is with Missy Peregrym, as Special Agent Maggie Bell, who may be best-known for her role as Officer Andy McNally in the ABC series “Rookie Blue.”
The special FBI agent at the nerve center of the office during tense situations is the familiar face of Jeremy Sisto as Agent Jubal Valentine. He acts as the master motivator as everyone works under intense pressure.
A more laid-back approach to a crime drama is the remake of “Magnum P.I.” where Thomas Magnum, a former Navy SEAL who becomes a private investigator, is still a diehard Detroit Tigers fan living at a luxurious Hawaiian estate.
Jay Hernandez, the new Magnum may not look like Tom Selleck, but he operates in similar fashion in dealing with the estate’s majordomo Higgins, who now happens to be a female disavowed MI6 agent (Perdita Weeks) keeping Magnum in line with the help of her two Dobermans.
The last of the new dramas takes a new tack on a religious theme. Tapping into social media, “God Friended Me” turns the life of an outspoken atheist upside down when he receives a friend request from God.
Miles (Brandon Micheal Hall), at odds with his preacher father (Joe Morton) about the rejection of faith, hosts a podcast where he’s free to speak his mind, but changes happen after being poked by the mysterious request to get involved outside his comfort zone.
Signs point him in the direction of helping Cara (Violett Beane), an online journalist suffering from writer’s block. Together, they find themselves investigating God’s friend suggestions and inadvertently helping others in need.
The new dramas are balanced by a similar number of comedies, though one of them is another reboot of a vintage series. Unlike new major characters on “Magnum P.I.,” the revival of “Murphy Brown” brings back many of the original stars.
Once again, Candice Bergen is in the titular role of a newscaster in a fictional show that, in the words of producer Diane English, has “always been a political show with something to say,” now focusing on a platform through the prism of the press.
Faith Ford returns as lifestyle reporter Corky Sherwood, Joe Regalbuto remains investigate journalist Frank Fontana, and Grant Shaud is the former wunderkind news producer Miles Silverberg.
The other two comedies appear to be rather generic. “The Neighborhood” stars Cedric the Entertainer not exactly putting out the welcome wagon when a friendly Midwest family moves next door.
Meanwhile, “Happy Together,” as the title implies might be a stretch for a happily married couple (Damon Wayans, Jr. and Amber Stevens West) when the husband’s music superstar client (Felix Mallard) seeks refuge from paparazzi by moving into their home.
Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.
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- Written by: Tim Riley
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