Shebeen Club: Gonzo Vancouver

The Shebeen Club: Gonzo Vancouver!

When: 7-9pm, Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

Where: the Shebeen, 7 Gaoler’s Mews, behind the Irish Heather, 217 Carrall Street, Vancouver BC

How Much: $15 includes dinner: limited to 40

What: mingling, door prizes, eating, drinking, fornicating!

Who: Heather Watson (Civixen), Gonzo Journalist and founding columnist at Terminal City

“We had two bags of grass, seventy-five pellets of mescaline, five sheets of high-powered blotter acid, a salt shaker half full of cocaine, and a whole galaxy of multi-coloured uppers, downers, screamers, laughers and also a quart of tequila, a quart of rum, a case of Budweiser, a pint of raw ether and two dozen amyls.”
Hunter S. Thompson

Well, we probably won’t have that, but we will have a great introduction to indigenous Vancouver Gonzo journalism with the hyperkinetic and internationally infamous Heather Watson, alias Civixen (http://www.civixen.com/ and http://cvxn.tumblr.com). Coming at you straight down the Mojo Wire at 95 miles per hour, it’ll be an evening of raw, uncut literary power. Bare-knuckling her way up the ladder from the wide open frontier of the Wild West to the mean streets of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Heather has seen it all, done most of it, and has a damn hell solid alibi for everything else.

Bio: Heather Watson created the satirical op/ed column “Civixen,” which became a source of enjoyment and irritation for political bright lights and dim bulbs alike (including the current mayor) in the four years it ran in two local alternative newspapers. Besides a brief tenure as editor-in-chief of the 30,000-circulation Gonzo-inspired Terminal City (now sadly defunct), Heather Watson also presented a popular seminar on Gonzo Journalism at the request of the Western arm of the Canadian University Press in 2006. She is a published poet, a produced playwright and her essay “Vancouver Today” is featured in the Time Out Guide to Vancouver. In addition to a few years at Vancouver’s éminence grise of independent bookstores, Duthie Books, some of her more surreal side jobs have included voice-over and motion capture for a video game and six years spent hand modeling toys from Star Wars figures to Barbies in dozens of TV commercials.

Meet and Mingle 7-7:30
Listen and Learn 7:30-8
Drown Sorrows and Vow to Buck the System 8-9 or, really, the rest of your life.

Shebeen Club Meeting: Amy Tan’s Birthday Party February 19th

Amy TanShhhh, it’s a surprise!

What: The Shebeen Club Presents: Amy Tan’s Birthday Party

When: 7:30pm-9:00pm, Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Where: Upstairs at The Shebeen, behind The Irish Heather, 217 Carrall Street in Gastown

Why: to celebrate Amy Tan’s Birthday, duh!

Who: Contact lorraine.murphy AT gmail.com for more information

How(much)? $15 includes presentation, dinner of bangers and mash or vegetarian pasta, one celebratory beverage, and mingling.

Resurrecting the Old Skool Shebeen Club tradition of celebrating authors who are not actually present, we move up from our former practice of toasting dead celebrities and begin to celebrate the living! Amy Tan is deservedly one of the best-beloved authors on the contemporary fiction scene. February 19th is her birthday, so we have arranged a short presentation on her life and works and her (I’m sorry) don’t-quit-your-day-job rock band, the Rock Bottom Remainders. If anyone has a CD, you’re welcome to bring it!

7-7:30: meet and mingle
7:30-8: listen and learn
8-whenever: The Joy Luck Club Literary Lottery: good luck!

cross-posted to the Shebeen Club

Quote o’ the Day: The Man

Never Forget, Never Surrender

This is the smartest thing I’ve heard in ages. From tonight’s meeting of The Shebeen Club.

Me: “And I’m all, like, fuck The Man!

Ian: “You know, sometimes The Man just needs a little foreplay.”

Shebeen Club Radio!

cross-posted to The Shebeen Club

Cry of the Phoenix, yo

Whoa, check it out: yet another medium (oh, look it up if you’re so pedantic!) falls to the raincoaster Operation Global Media Domination behemoth. We be all up in yo airwaves now! Preeeee-senting the inaugural broadcast of Shebeen Club Radio, recorded live (and subsequently edited to death) November 20th, 2007. This is a recording of our book launch for Shebeen Club regular Colleen O’Connor‘s book Cry of the Phoenix. Pour yourself something companionable and heckle along! It’ll be almost like being there, just without the trays of appetizers or the screams from Blood Alley!

Podcast recorded and edited by Dale McGladdery

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Boot to the Head

OK Boot CorralSo, I’ve told you about the time my mother tried to sell me to a Saudi prince. And I’ve told you about the time I ended up shopping with a CIA agent and buying a vampire carved from human bone from the oldest nun in the Spice Islands. And I’ve told you about the time I had coffee with a serial killer. And dinner with the guy who was stalking me. And the red truck at sunset on the dock at Not-Ucluelet.

Yeah, that’s pretty much all of my A-list material. Since I gave the room-and-boarder collie back to her owner, things have been much quieter around home, as I don’t get out so much. Not much happens in my apartment, alas.

Ah.
I didn’t tell you about the car chase. Car chase #1: there have been a number of them in the ‘hood recently.

Car Chase #1 started somewhere out east of here, towards the suburban wilds (tames) of Burnaby. A car, probably stolen, definitely caught the attention of certain officers of the VPD, probably for activities of a nefarious nature if not for simply the state of having been stolen. The details are lost to history. And said nefariating sedan (it’s always an oversized Yank sedan, in these car chases. Nobody ever leads the cops on a high-speed chase in a Pacer or a VW van or a puce Vespa) led the cops upon your basic high speed chase through the Downtown EastSide, whipping through the dark star of Railtown and up to the Main Street Viaduct, down at the foot of Vancouver, indeed, the boot heel, Stanley Park being the seasonally-appropriate squared pirate toe, and beyond, up Alexander at, have I mentioned, high speeds, speeds which made negotiating the, it must be admitted, rather broad, bendy, unchallenging corner at Maple Tree Square an apparent impossibility.
Never steal more car than you can handle.

Hydroplaning on the picturesquely rain-slick cobblestones, said sedan skidded straight into Ye Olde Westerne Boote Shoppe, the OK Boot Corral, narrowly missing the larger than life-size statue of Gassy Jack, presiding spirit of the place who, it appears, is the patron saint (if not the god) of avoiding being hit by a careening Caddy. Being of width as well as length and speed, the Cadillac took out the entire narrow storefront when it nosedived into the shop with admirable precision, crushing wooden cowboy and all (we are quite egalitarian up in Canuckistan, y’all, and our storefronts feature at least as many wooden Cowboys as Indians) and completely sparing Six Acres restaurant and drinketeria next door, sheltered as it was behind the beneficent ass of the aforementioned Gassy Jack.

All I cared about was, it missed the Irish Heather. My local is safe!

Seeing no immediate method of egress which didn’t include walking right past the cops who’d pulled up immediately behind him, and apparently not feeling quite up for that, the Caddypilot considered his options, which included taking the back door into the barred and gated Gaoler’s Mews (not frivolously named; they used to hold the public hangings here, and the bars are still on the window of the Irish Heather from back when it was the jail; as one of the bartenders said, “I always knew I’d end up in jail, but at least you can get beer in this one”) and decided that indiscretion was the better part of valour.

He hid under the counter.

All of which is to say: slightly damaged Western boots are probably on sale in Gastown this week.