National Features

Broward-Palm Beach New Times

Genetically Modified Bugs Glow Red and Self-Destruct, but Can They Keep Away Disease?

It's a pristine spring morning on the remote tip of Big Pine Key, 30 miles north of Key West. The lone paved road is surrounded by dense brush and wetlands that give way to the Gulf of Mexico. On this particular Tuesday, though, the usually silent landscape is dominated by the pulsing whoosh of a brown and tan helicopter that just touched down. Half a dozen workers in neon safety vests, surgical masks, and sunglasses emerge from the roadside and hustle toward the aircraft. Under the whirling two-blade rotor, they form an assembly line and dump bags of a yellowish substance called larvicide ... full story >>

Dallas Observer

How Jimmy's Conquered Dallas

If you order a hoagie in Philly, there's a good chance it will come on a Sarcone's roll. Sure, other bakeries supply bread for some shops around town, but Sarcone's has built a legacy out of its sesame-seed-studded bread and that chewy texture that's a workout for your jaw.

Order a hot dog in Chicago and soon you'll be staring down the end of a Vienna Beef frankfurter. Do other companies supply the vendors that provide the city with its daily allowance of tubed meat? Of course. But the blue and red logo of Vienna Beef is synonymous with Chicago dogs.

This is how it goes: Eve... full story >>

Westword

Marijuana is real medicine for a long list of ills

Marijuana keeps Craig Rodgers alive.

With his muscular physique and energetic, fast-talking personality, the 36-year-old Las Vegas resident seems the epitome of health — except for the banana-size scar on the left side of his head.

Rodgers was on a good career track as a trade-show organizer until 2006, when he was diagnosed with brain cancer. Now he's a passionate advocate of medical marijuana, lives on government disability, and earns a few extra bucks making candles that look like brains.

He was one of several patients who attended a conference in Tucson las... full story >>

Houston Press

Pradaxa Patients Can't Stop the Bleeding

Less than 24 hours after Loraine Franklin fell on the kitchen floor of her Georgetown home, she was dead.

It was December 29, 2011, and Franklin's daughters say today that, had Franklin, 80, not been prescribed a blood thinner called Pradaxa, she'd have lived to see the new year and subsequently celebrate her 60th wedding anniversary.

Instead, they say, the fall caused a blow to her head, which caused an intracranial hemorrhage, which doctors at the hospital could not stop. All the doctors could do, the daughters say, is make Franklin as comfortable as possible as her ... full story >>

Miami New Times

Miami-Dade Police Lured Robbers to the Redland, Then Shot Them

Roger Gonzalez Jr. guides the car full of thieves through the Redland, past the groves of mango trees glowing blood red against the evening sky, toward a beige building with a large yard and a black Mercedes-Benz parked in front. He slows down. His father, Roger Sr., calmly checks the ammunition in his handgun. So do the three other passengers. They've all done this before.

Rosendo Betancourt — a skinny, high-strung ex-con only ten months out of prison — points to the house. There are 20 pounds of yerba (marijuana) inside, he says in Spanish. Then, for the sake of the lo... full story >>

Phoenix New Times

Marijuana Is Real Medicine for a Long List of Ills

Marijuana keeps Craig Rodgers alive.

With his muscular physique and energetic, fast-talking personality, the 36-year-old Las Vegas resident seems the epitome of health — except for the banana-size scar on the left side of his head.

Rodgers was on a good career track as a trade-show organizer until 2006, when he was diagnosed with brain cancer. Now he's a passionate advocate of medical marijuana, lives on government disability, and earns a few extra bucks making candles that look like brains.

He was one of several patients who attended a conference in Tucson las... full story >>

SF Weekly

The Adventures of a Videogame Rebel: Tim Schafer at Double Fine


Illustration by Andrew J. Nilsen with photo by Joseph Schell.

Perhaps choicest of the trophies on display inside the SOMA office of videogame designer Tim Schafer is the row of landmark heavy-metal albums, from Sabbath Bloody Sabbath to Painkiller, each bearing the black-scrawled autograph of a megastar who contributed songs to Brütal Legend, Schafer's videogame ode to metal.

"It's funny. Rob Halford signed records for us until his hand got tired, and then he quit," Schafer recalls. "But Ozzy Osbourne signed and signed for hours, talking with everyone, telling ... full story >>

Riverfront Times

Oh, My Landlord! The Luminary Center of the Arts is not a religious organization. But it's housed by one. Mystery solved.

For the past few years, the vast second floor above the former Globe Variety Store at Cherokee Street and Ohio Avenue has been a hive of activity — a jungle of color and clutter and cheap beer, an artists' loft, a music venue/rehearsal space, a shelter for itinerant misfits in need of a place to crash for the night. Ergo the nickname its tenants bestowed upon their ragtag studio space:

Pig Slop.

As of August 1, though, Zak Marmalefsky, Chloe Bethany, Jonathan Muehlke and their fellow Pig Sloppers must vacate the 22,500-square-foot building to make way for a more ambiti... full story >>

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From the Print Edition

Democratic War for L.A.'s Richest Democratic War for L.A.'s Richest
By Patrick Range McDonald

A t the top of the Santa Monica Mountains range in Beverly Hills, standing in the middle of the "urban forest" campus of the environmental group TreePeople, California Assemblywoman Betsy… More >>

Comment: People Like Us Comment: People Like Us
By L.A. Weekly readers

Last week was our annual People issue! And so, last week, we heard from a bunch of fanboys and -girls who were thrilled with the personalities we'd profiled and with… More >>

Daniel Becerril's Victims Use Yelp to Fight Alleged Murderer and Con Man Daniel Becerril's Victims Use Yelp to Fight Alleged Murderer and Con Man
By Tessa Stuart

Debbie Search, a quality technician in Torrance, first suspected something when her financial adviser seemed to fall off the grid. She had a mysterious issue with her taxes and kept… More >>

Proposition 29 Cigarette Tax Proposition 29 Cigarette Tax
By Hillel Aron

This millennium has not been kind to cigarette smokers. Each year more locales prevent them from lighting up: restaurants, bars, beaches, parks. Since 1999, 47 states have raised taxes on… More >>

Comment: Murder Most Foul Comment: Murder Most Foul
By L.A. Weekly readers

Last week's feature, "Murder on Montana Avenue" by Tessa Stuart, explored the death of LAUSD art teacher Sasha Merman. Among other facts uncovered by Stuart: Merman met his alleged killer,… More >>

<i>L.A. Weekly</i>'s People 2012 Issue L.A. Weekly's People 2012 Issue
By Sarah Fenske

Check out our People 2012 issue here. Every city has its interesting people: the artists, the inventors, the dreamers, the visionaries. You can find actresses in Omaha and activists in Albuquerque. But… More >>

Could Fracking in Los Angeles Cause an Earthquake?
By Tessa Stuart

Conversations about fracking, the controversial technique for natural gas extraction (alternately known as "that thing that turns your tap water flammable") are typically confined to Pennsylvania, where the critically acclaimed… More >>

Murder on Montana Ave. Murder on Montana Ave.
By Tessa Stuart

The living room of Sofia Merman's West Hollywood apartment is filled with photos of her only son. Sasha in cap and gown, Sasha sitting for his Navy portrait, Sasha and… More >>

Comment: Darling Dita
By L.A. Weekly readers

Who can resist a siren in a red dress? Not many of you, apparently: Last week's Dita Von Teese cover flew off the newsstands ("The Most Famous Stripper in America,"… More >>

L.A. Overspends by $27,378 an Hour L.A. Overspends by $27,378 an Hour
By Hillel Aron

You'd be surprised at what goes on just below the surface of Los Angeles City Hall, which is mired in years of fiscal cutbacks that at various times have decimated… More >>

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