SIDEWALKING: Frack Attack

Convention Center, 1:20 PM by Jacques-Jean Tiziou RELATED: GASLANDIA: Q&A w/ Fracked Author Seamus McGraw PREVIOUSLY: THE FRACKING SONG: My Water’s On Fire Tonight PREVIOUSLY: GASLAND: Who Died & Made Grover Norquist Elvis? PREVIOUSLY: FIRE & RAIN: New Peer-Reviewed Study Definitively Links Fracking To Flammable Drinking Water

SOUR CRUDE: Why The Sunoco Refinery Is Doomed

REUTERS: Sunoco’s decision to put its East Coast Philadelphia and Marcus Hook refineries up for sale has probably condemned both to closure. In a world where seaborne light sweet oils are much more expensive than landlocked U.S. crude and heavier and sourer imports, Philadelphia and Marcus Hook are the two worst refineries to own in the United States. Both will struggle to find buyers, unless someone can be found willing to invest large sums of money to upgrade their desulphurisation and coking capacity, enabling them to improve margins by processing cheaper heavier and sourer crudes. With so much pressure on […]

GASLANDIA: Q&A w/ Fracked Author Seamus McGraw

BY ALEX POTTER Seamus McGraw recently published The End of Country, a heart-breaking expose of the unexpected/unintended consequences of hydraulic fracturing, or, “fracking,” on the lives of the people in the hinterlands of Pennsylvania who have lived off the land for generations. As the book points out, it is both a curse and a blessing that they live on top of the Marcellus Shale, the world’s second largest subterranean deposit of natural gas. Four years ago, McGraw knew nothing about natural gas or the controversial techniques for extracting it from the ground. Amidst financial turmoil, McGraw and his family agreed […]

EARLY WORD: Sweet Oblivion

When it comes to road work, Perpetual Groove (or PGroove, as they’re known by their adoring fans) is an unstoppable machine on a seemingly endless tour. Although they’re routinely classified as a jam band, PGroove’s sound can’t be contained within the boundaries of a single genre, and often combines elements of rock, electronic, ambient, psychedelia, and jazz all within the confines of a single song. Adam Perry’s stinging bass grooves and Albert Suttle’s heavy beats provide the foundation for undulating layers of keyboard and pulsating guitar crescendos that have been known to drive audiences into jam-induced convulsions. However, they have […]

FRINGE REVIEW: Pig Iron’s Twelfth Night

BY BRANDON LAFVING I came expecting theater. If that is a crime, let me be guilty. Pig Iron is, in fact, a Theater Company, and, as the name suggests, they produce what people in the know refer to as plays. So when I walked into the Suzanne Roberts Theater* on opening night I expected to see a modern version of Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, or What You Will and what I got was a head-spinning nexus of performing arts genres that brought together dance, theater, and opera onto a single stage. Not that I’m complaining. Most directors do not even consider […]

EARLY WORD: The Toynbee Tile Mystery

International House Philadelphia proudly presents the Philadelphia premiere of this local production! A surprise hit at the Sundance Film Festival, Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles garnered West Philadelphian Jon Foy an award for Best Documentary Director at Sundance 2011. Resurrect Dead is an artfully crafted documentary that follows Foy, local musician and artist Justin Duerr, and Steve Weinik and Colin Smith as they try to solve the mystery of the Toynbee Tiles. Appearing on city streets over the past three decades, the Toynbee Tiles consist of hundreds of cryptic messages about resurrecting the dead. The search takes […]

NPR FOR THE DEAF: We Hear It Even When You Can’t

FRESH AIR Thousands of government organizations and private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence. Last December, The Washington Post reported that this “top-secret world … has become so large, so unwieldy and so secretive that no one knows how much money it costs, how many people it employs, how many programs exist within it or exactly how many agencies do the same work.” On today’s Fresh Air, Washington Post national security reporter Dana Priest, the co-author of both the Post’s investigative series and the book Top Secret America: The Rise of the New American Security […]

WHISTLEBLOWER: The Lunatics Are In The Hall

  MIKE LOFGREN*: Thus far, I have concentrated on Republican tactics, rather than Republican beliefs, but the tactics themselves are important indicators of an absolutist, authoritarian mindset that is increasingly hostile to the democratic values of reason, compromise and conciliation. Rather, this mindset seeks polarizing division (Karl Rove has been very explicit that this is his principal campaign strategy), conflict and the crushing of opposition. As for what they really believe, the Republican Party of 2011 believes in three principal tenets I have laid out below. The rest of their platform one may safely dismiss as window dressing: 1. The […]

FRINGE REVIEW: Lady M

[Photo by Mark Valenzuela] BY BRANDON LAFVING FRINGE CORRESPONDENT Fringe shows are, by design, experimental and/or playful, they occupy a space where anything can, and usually does, happen — well, the good ones do, anyway. With this in mind, I walked into the Arts Bank Theater Friday night with the same caution I would exert if I was attending Shamu’s matinee performance at Sea World. Which is to say that under no circumstances would I willingly sit in the ‘splash’ section. Then I saw the stage: A majestic bed and a throne entangled in a dark and twisted web of […]

Q&A With Scott McCaughey Of The Baseball Project

BY JONATHAN VALANIA The knock on rock music since, well, time immemorial is that there’s nothing new under The Big Rock Sun, that it’s all been done before and everything after is just a distant echo of the big bang that ended on or about 1969. The Baseball Project puts the lie to all that. I submit to you that they are doing something that’s never before: An indie rock supergroup that writes catchy songs about the lore and the legends of America’s pastime. If there is an ur-text for the Baseball Project, it’s “Take Me Out To The Ball […]

NPR FOR THE DEAF: Georgia On My Mind

[Painting by JEFF DOTTAVIO] NPR SONG OF THE DAY:  It’s a little baffling that when Ray Charles originally released Live in Concert in early 1965, its brisk 38-minute duration meant shutting out “Georgia on My Mind.” It was his first concert record since turning Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell’s classic into a No. 1 hit, but what was already well on its way to becoming Charles’ signature song was nowhere to be found until recently, when a expanded reissue restored it to the album’s running order. Counterintuitive though it may be, the song’s absence might be explained by the breathtaking […]