You wouldn’t know it to look at her piercings and aqua locks, coiffed by electric shock, but Draven didn’t see a mohawk until she was 15.

Growing up in wealthy, conservative North Delta, she was surrounded by normalcy. At school she killed time by doing her friends’ makeup in the cafeteria — her talent was plain. Soon enough, the not-for-profit Burlesque collective Screaming Chicken Theatrical Society discovered her makeup skills. But when they eventually put her on stage to dance solo, she didn’t fit in. She was too scary.

“I’ve been obsessed with horror movies and blood and intestines since I was a very small child,” says Draven, who remembers refusing to turn off the television when her mother caught her absorbed in a slasher flick. “Parents take note: I went to church and wasn’t allowed to watch horror movies as a child.”

Read the full interview with Betty Draven/Bloody Betty in Sad Mag #11: The Glamour Issue, launching November 17th at W2.

Photo by Shane Oosterhoff

From the creators of the Steven Seagallery, Bill You Murray me? and the Zig-a-Zigallery comes the pimpest mutha-effin art show to hit Vancouver: Drop it Like it’s Hot, an S-N-Double O-P Lion art show.

While you’re sipping your gin n’ juice, get down to the sensual seduction of our chronic-lovin’ Doggfather. Weave us some corn rows marinated with ganja and Dr. Dre. We want the Doggfather lining the walls of The Fall in his iconic plaid while bouncing in his ’64 Impala on canvas. No talent necessary, fo shizzle, just represent the iconic king of Doggystyle in whatever medium you preferizzle. Dress up and get down to DJ’s Jonathan Igharas (Bike Trike) and Wyndom Earle!

Opening November 9th 2012
7:00PM – 2:00AM
By Donation
RSVP on Facebook

Sponsored by CiTR and the Arts Report

Vancouver International Writers Fest is in its last days of its 25th Anniversary season, but don’t fret, there’s still a plethora of events remaining.

Taking place on Granville Island, the focus of the festival, besides writers, of course, is to celebrate story. With just over 115 authors in attendance, the six days of the festival are jam packed with 77 events to satisfy everyone with a love for words.

If you don’t think writing is your thing, think again. This festival is not just authors reading books: it includes authors, poets, spoken word performers, graphic novelists and more showcasing the diversity of words and writing. Along with a variety of word-oriented events, there are also musical collaborations and theatre pieces on Granville Island to please every attendee.

An integral part of the Vancouver literary scene, Writers Fest also holds it’s own on the international stage seen through the big names this year, including Margaret Atwood (who was at the very first Writers Fest 25 years ago), David Suzuki and Linden MacIntrye.

The festival has proven to be popular among Vancouverites with many events already sold out. Take the time this weekend to see what the buzz is about and catch some of this weekend’s highlights:

Saturday:

Chan Koonchung in Conversation with Charles Foran , 10:30AM, Improv Centre – check out this discussion of Chan Koonchung’s book described as “radical satire” dealing with the Tiananmen Square protests.

Electric Company: Initiation Trilogy (6) , 3pm, Anderson Street Space – get your theatre fix with this piece leading you through three short pieces inspired by poetry.

Sunday:

Journey with No Maps with Sandra Djwa, 10:30AM, Studio 1398 – learn about great Canadian Poet, P.K. Page through Djwa’s stories.

The State and Fate of This Small Blue Planet with Tim Flannery and David Suzuki , 7pm, Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage – closing off the festival, don’t miss this discussion focused on hope the our environmental future.

Wondering what to do after the festival is over and your passion for words has grown three times the size? To keep a presence in Vancouver, the Writers Fest holds other events throughout the year including incite, an exploration of books and ideas in partnership with the Vancouver Public Library, starting again mid-January, special events featuring writers and the Spreading the Word education programs at various schools through the Lower Mainland and smaller communities.

Vancouver Writers Fest
Granville Island

Oct 16 – 21, 2012
Ticket prices vary (details)

For full festival details, check out the Vancouver Writers Fest online.


Jenny Ritter is the goat herding, choir conducting, former member of Vancouver Island’s beloved, now defunct, folk band The Gruff. Now she’s struck out on her own on the mainland and is releasing her first solo album.

For a bright spot in the cold and rainy winter months. Jenny Ritter brings Bright Mainland to the world tonight (October 13) at Saint James Hall. Sad Mag talked to her about leaving her previous band behind, busking for the internet age (i.e. crowd funding) and starting Vancouver’s best choir – and now their potential rival group.

Sad Mag: How long have you been working on this album?

Jenny Ritter: The process started last October. I started a crowd-funding campaign and I raised about half of the funds I needed for the album. I wouldn’t be releasing the album without that money, so it was pretty amazing. We started recording in March of this year. We went over Mayne Island and did a recording-slash-retreat. My producer (who played most of the instruments on the album), my drummer (who I brought from Saskatoon) and I just hid out in this house in the country. The only hitch was that I lost my voice as soon as I got there, so what was supposed to take ten days in total ended up taking another month. We recorded everything but the vocals and then I came back a month later and finished it in May. I’ve been sitting on it for a couple of months and I’m just releasing it now.

SM: What did you think about crowd funding as a way to finance an album?

JR: It was a great experience because it made visible the support network I have. It was interesting to see people I know and that I don’t know come together to help the project. I don’t want to call it donating because everyone who contributed gets some kind of reward for it. There were a couple of dissenters and I got some negative feedback from people who thought that crowd funding was akin to begging. But people will think what they think. I guess they’ve never tried to do a project they couldn’t afford to do on their own.

SM: How does your solo work compare to the experience of working in a band?

JR: It’s really different. I’m basically a dictator now. It’s a lot more work than being in a band where to some extent we split up the work, but now it’s just me calling the shots. It’s been difficult, and sometimes I wish I had back up, but I also find it kind of liberating to make the decisions myself and execute them as I see fit. I like having control over it. I’ve been joking a lot about being a control freak and I guess I’m starting to realize it’s not really a joke.

SM: How would you describe the sound of this album?

JR: I would describe it as indie folk. I would describe myself as a folk musician. I’m obsessed with folk music – new and old – so I think I have that in me. The songs that I write are not folk songs in a traditional sense, but they’re influenced heavily by it. So while I feel like a folk musician, I’m presenting the music in a rock band format with a drummer and an electric bass player and pedal steel and whatever electric instrument I can get my hands on. Just because you’re a folk musician doesn’t mean you don’t want to rock.

SM: What can people look forward to seeing at your album release?

JR: A lot of happy people. We’re going to play through the album beginning to end. I have a number of guests including members of my choir, the Kingsgate Chorus, who recorded on the album. I have some new songs too. All sorts of things will be unveiled. The general message of the album is hope and positivity, and I think when we perform that kind of feeling goes out to the audience. This will be my biggest show in a long time – biggest in terms of audience, and the size of the band, and excitement. And whenever the Kingsgate Chorus gets together there’s a lot of giggling, so I think they’ll be a lot of that too.

SM: How did the choir get started?

JR: I started the Kingsgate Chorus when my band broke up. There’s a specific feeling you get when singing with other people that I was longing for. I missed that harmony that you feel when…well, when you’re harmonizing with people. So I got a handful of friends that were really supportive and then within a few months it became about thirty people. I’ve now even started a second choir called the Mount Pleasant Regional Institute of Sound – the name still makes me laugh every time I say it because it’s so unnecessarily official sounding.

When I started the first group, I found that a lot of the feelings I had about life getting better were connected to the choir, so they ended up singing on some tracks on the record. And if you have a choir you might as well use them!

Jenny Ritter plays her album release concert October 13th with Tim Tweedale on steel guitar, Jay Hosking on bass, Kevin Romain drums and members of the Kingsgate Chorus.

Tickets are $20 at the door and $16 for members.

Dir Mirjam von Arx

For the Wilson family, every little girl gets to be a princess for a day. But it comes at horrifying cost. The patriarch of the family, Randy Wilson, founded the American custom of purity balls: ceremonies where daughters dress up in gowns and promise their fathers that they will remain virgins until marriage. The film focuses on Randy and his oldest unmarried daughter Jordan (22 years old).

The film is predictably disturbing, not because the family has hidden secrets or are hypocritical monsters, but because they really do embody their own twisted Christian ideals. The mood in the Wilson home is suffocating. Von Arx described the feeling of filming the Wilsons as “claustrophobic” and it is comes across in the movie. Their entire existence is wrapped up in gender norms that are so restrictive being a woman is a full time job for the Wilson ladies. Jordan waits to meet her husband while she teaches other young ladies to embody grace and manners at workshops she organizes. And every goddamn (sorry, I mean gosh darn) thing the family does is marked by some strange ceremony they invented for the occasion, always preceded by exhausting beauty prep.

Von Arx sometimes seems to reach a little when stating the political importance of the Wilsons, but their story is no doubt important when you consider how many people in America are either just like the Wilsons or aspire to be. Perhaps most shocking of all is how sympathetically the family is represented in the movie. They are constantly reaffirming how much they love each other and they are principled, even if their principles are grotesque to most liberal-minded audiences. The audience was obviously at once horrified and drawn in by the Wilsons. Despite a pointed and often mocking Q&A discussion of the documentary, when Von Arx announced that after the film wrapped Jordan did indeed marry the man of her dreams, the crowd cheered.

If you missed Virgin Tales at VIFF, a shorter cut will air on CBC television on October 20 on the Passionate Eye.

The writer Malcolm Gladwell tells us that to achieve mastery, we need to put in 10 000 hours of dedicated work toward a craft or specialty.The concept is a new spin on an old idea: practice makes perfect. Richard Williams puts in more than his 10 000 hours, but the film Persistence of Vision begs the question of whether or not it was all worth it.

Williams, the Oscar-winning animation director of Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, spent thirty years obsessing over a film that he never finished. He alienated family, friends and animators pursuing a project that a studio eventually swept away from under him when he was unable to bring his vision together on deadline.

As it is becoming increasingly popular to ascribe to the Gladwell-ian manner of thinking, it is surprising to find a documentary that serves as a cautionary tale against creative obsession. Making its world premiere at VIFF, this film has all the makings of an engrossing documentary but falls a little flat in production. Still, Williams’ story tells us something about what it takes to be a genius and why it might not be all it is cracked up to be.

Thirty years allows enough time for things to go wrong in myriad ways: an investor embezzles funds; a master animator dies; Disney steals characters and images. There is something to be said for letting your work go and Williams’ problem is probably more ego than persistence. He constantly wants to tweak elements that are already finished, yet he fails to finish basic parts of the project like story boarding.

Schreck does not quite do Williams’ story justice; the documentary is hastily done, and since Williams refused to cooperate there is only archival footage of him in the film. There is a certain lack of insight into what drove his genius. However, the animation is beautiful and it was interesting to see not only Williams, but a team of animators so driven, only to see it all fade away. It is well worth checking out the documentary and definitely worth looking at the various recuts from the unfinished project The Cobbler and the Thief.

 

Persistence of Vision
Dir. Kevin Shreck
10:45AM, October 12
Pacific Cinematheque (1181 Howe)
Details

Sober October… not really. More like October everyone gets a cold and settles into the sheets with their love that being a human, book or tv show. Now that the fall shivers are out of the way and I’ve purchased a great pair of red stripe wool socks from Québec, I’m ready for hibernation. I’ve selected five videos that give a feel of shedding off late summer nights and bringing in the ease of a cozy fall.

Sayso – Evy Jane

Her performance with producer Jeremiah Klein back in April is what got me hooked. Not knowing they were from Vancouver I was super thrilled to see them perform again during the festival circuit at Olio and Music Waste. This duo really puts on the feelers and down tempo waist shaking movements around the house.

 

Time to Kill – Youth & Gold (Arts and Crafts)

I cannot deny my love for Louise Burns and a solid electronic beat. This song is really great at getting one in the mood for something either dangerous or loving. Black & white and contemplative the director brings a sense of danger and innocence to the shots. It is after all our time to feel. Youth & Gold will be touring across Canada with Diamond Rings this Fall and I bet it will be worth seeing.

 

Horizon – Humans (Hybridity Music)

Infectious sounds and always a fun show to boot, Humans brings electronic music to Vancouver in an accessible way. This video is polished yet creepy and has a narrative that you can expand on in your mind. Like what happens when grandma gets back home?

Plague – Crystal Castles

Micheal Jackson’s Thriller used to scare the shit out of me in grade 3. If I were a kid now, this would freak me out! Despite freaky and creepy there is some great body movement and choreography in the music video. These kids are playing the Commodore October 26th 2012. Happy Halloween.

Guided Highways – Spell

This is yet another project from the prolific and wonderful Prophecy Sun. The slow floating sounds and sparse lyrics bring space and atmosphere to the room as if you were under water. The song allows for thoughts to fall like leaves or a chance to reminisce about long highway drives in Northern Ontario. The video has very little development however it pairs well with the song.

The rise of fast fashion is unfortunate for many reasons: the proliferation of disposable clothing; the unethical sweatshop labour required to keep up with it; the additional motivations for teenagers to spend their weekends loitering in a mall trend-hunting; haul videos. But the issue in the spotlight this week has been the tendency of retailers to colonize culturally meaningful designs and traditions for the sake of selling crap to trend-hungry, culturally-naïve consumers.

Paul Frank, memorable for their cartoon monkey imagery, recently provoked an outrage when they hosted a party described thusly: “Paul Frank celebrated Fashion’s Night Out with a neon-Native American powwow theme. Glow-in-the-dark war-painted employees in feather headbands and bow and arrows invited guests to be photographed on a mini-runway holding prop tomahawks.”

The party encouraged partygoers to chug cocktails such as the “Neon Teepee” and “Dream Catcher” while simultaneously claiming that they “[celebrate] diversity and [are inspired] by many rich cultures.” As Jessica Metcalfe of the Native American fashion blog Beyond Buckskin put it in a letter to Paul Frank Industries, “It is ridiculous to see this level of racism still occurring in 2012.”

Paul Frank invite

Except it’s not ridiculous, unfortunately. It’s neither rare nor unbelievable. Paul Frank was just the most recent audacious example of companies thoughtlessly considering dressing up like a “Native” to be a breezy pop-culture reference, dumping of a continent’s worth of distinct indigenous cultures into a feckless blender and mixing the resulting puree with diet Red Bull & vodka.

Previous offenders include Urban Outfitters, who were sued earlier this year by the Navajo Nation for committing cavalier copyright infringement on their eponymous copyright to sell products like the “Navajo Panty” and “Navajo Flask.”

The practice is so common that Jezebel made a whole slideshow entitled “The Most WTF Navajo-Inspired Clothing and Accessories.” And let’s not forget the seasonal popularity of the Sexy Indian Girl, or the capitalization of Spirithoods© on the animalistic “savage Indian” stereotype.

Indignant party-goers and anonymous internet commenters everywhere argue that there’s nothing racist about smearing “war paint” on one’s face, posing with a plastic tomahawk, or mounting a supposedly Peruvian stuffed animal on one’s head before diving headlong into the void. The claims that such acts are “celebrating” Native culture are undermined by the fact that all of one’s insights into the homogeneous “Native culture” they’re celebrating are derived from corporate party props.

Even worse, this party draws on the worst of prevailing Indian stereotypes: that Native people are savage, mystical, drunken anachronisms, practically mythical creatures; certainly not real people with meaningful histories and contemporary cultures. It’s depressing to realise that the partygoers who thought it was fun to dress up “like an Indian” probably thought it was no different than dressing up like a unicorn or a Harry Potter character.

Paul Frank PowwowThe only unique twist on the Paul Frank story is the aftermath, in which the company president, Elie Dekel, reached out to to Jessica Metcalfe and Adrienne K, the bloggers behind Beyond Buckskin and Native Appropriations respectively, to discuss how the company could rectify their actions and develop corporate standards of practice to ensure that a similar event wouldn’t happen again.

Concrete commitments include Dekel and both bloggers speaking at a panel for the International Licensing Merchandisers Association (LIMA) conference about the use of Native imagery in fashion, and collaborating with a Native artist to create designs that would see profits donated to a Native cause.

This is the real jaw-dropping turn of events: not the careless racism, but the thoughtful apology. It not only sets a bar for other companies that want to continue using Native imagery, but it demonstrates that it’s at least hypothetically possible for collaboration to happen between mainstream designers and Native artists.

Too often mainstream culture falls on the “frozen Indian” stereotypes, assuming that only through appropriation, re-envisioning, and marketing by non-Native individuals can indigenous designs break out of their irrelevant, prehistoric moulds and become appealing or interesting to the masses. Paul Frank apologizing, reaching out, and welcoming collaboration changes the conversation to include Native voices and perspectives, rather than simply plagiarizing them for the sake of convenience.

This isn’t to say that disposable fashion is defensible as long as they have an indigenous designer on board. But seeing this response at the level of Paul Frank has the potential to set a precedent for fellow fashion leviathans who can and have simply steamrollered over complaints and carried on, relatively unmarred by scandal.

Paul Frank could have issued a culpability-shrugging statement (a la Urban Outfitters: “Like many other fashion brands, we interpret trends and will continue to do so for years to come”) and carried on, and the sad truth is most shoppers would be undeterred from scooping up their products. What matters even more than their apology and subsequent actions is the fact that they could have chosen not to take them at all, but did.

Originally posted at Art Threat.

The 18th annual literary festival will take place from Friday, September 28, to Sunday, September 30, 2012. Enjoy a weekend jam-packed with author readings, exhibits, performances, and all-round literary mayhem.

Events will be taking place around the city, from Banyen Books in Kits to the Carnegie Centre on Main & Hastings, with the majority of events happening around the Central Library (Homer & Georgia).

Sad Mag will be part of Magazine Mews with other great BC magazines, such as Poetry is Dead, Ricepaper and Geist. Plus, Sad Mag’s own Katie Stewart will be giving a talk on Sunday, September 30th, at 2PM on our Sea Legs Pinhole Photography workshop! We’ll have copies of Issues 9 & 10 to share and would be thrilled to talk to aspiring writers, editors, artists and magazine enthusiasts alike. Hope to see you there!

Visit the official Word on the Street website!