Categories
Opinion The Editor's Desk

This week, 8/28

Charlottesville is an expensive place to live, and with a new crop of students settling in at UVA, we figured it was a good time to pull together some of our favorite deals around town. See our completely idiosyncratic list, from coffee to donuts, and add your own go-tos online.

Also this week, we take on new businesses (Waterbird Spirits) and old debates (dueling petitions to close the mall crossing at Fourth Street to vehicles, or keep it open.)

The Downtown Mall, designed by noted landscape architect Lawrence Halprin, opened in 1976. It’s one of the longest pedestrian malls in the United States, and one of the few from that era that survived into the present day. It’s in all of our interests to keep the mall thriving. Yet, though the Fourth Street crossing opened relatively recently, in 2006, the suggestion that it should be once more closed to traffic was met with such a vociferously negative response, from downtown business owners and others, that the original petition was withdrawn before it could even be brought to City Council for debate.

In other mall-related news, local filmmaker Lorenzo Dickerson premieres his documentary 3rd Street: Best Seats in the House on Thursday, August 27. The film reflects on the experience of going to the Paramount back when African American residents had to use a side entrance, and were relegated to the balcony. Judging from the previews, the doc is both an exercise in nostalgia (older folks recall date nights and special movies) and anti-nostalgia (a reminder that many of our most treasured public spaces were segregated only a generation ago).

Which is all to say that the Downtown Mall, like the city itself, is constantly evolving. Our work is to make sure it reflects the community we want to be. —Laura Longhine

Categories
News

‘I did a lot of damage:’ Fourth parking garage attacker sentenced to two years in prison

Just a little over two years after white supremacists marched through the streets of Charlottesville, the final criminal court case opened as a result of the events that unfolded August 11-12, 2017, came to an end Tuesday evening.

Tyler Davis, 51, was sentenced to two years and one month in prison for his role in the assault of DeAndre Harris in the Market Street Parking Garage, despite pleas from his lawyers for Charlottesville Circuit Court Judge Richard Moore to consider alternative punishments, citing his attempts to reconcile and his family’s dependence on him.

“My main goal is not what’s best for Mr. Davis,” Moore said when he delivered his verdict. “It’s not what’s best for his family. It’s about what’s right…If you consider all the impacts on families, no one would be punished.”

Davis entered an Alford plea February 8, admitting that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him of malicious wounding after he struck Harris on the head with a tire thumper while other Unite the Right protestors kicked and beat him on the ground. Born and raised in Lynchburg, Virginia, Davis, who had been living in Florida at the time of the rally, says he has since denounced white supremacy and dissolved his former allegiance to the League of the South.

“By lashing out at my perceived enemies, I was, without realizing it, lashing out at myself—I hated everyone,” Davis said during his lengthy remarks to the court. “I did a lot of damage, so this is an ongoing process that I will be working on for a long time, probably forever.”

The court determined that the blow Davis delivered was the most damaging to Harris, requiring eight staples in his head to mend. He was, however, given the lightest punishment of the four co-defendants because, Moore said, he only hit Harris once and wasn’t involved in the “group beating” that unfolded after Davis struck first.

Daniel Borden, who struck Harris three times with a large stick, was sentenced to three years and 10 months in January. Jacob Goodwin and Alex Ramos will serve prison sentences of eight and six years, respectively, in August 2018. Goodwin knocked Harris to the ground and Ramos sprinted into the garage to join him in hitting the African American man while he was down. Both Goodwin and Ramos have appealed their cases and are awaiting hearings in September.

Davis’ full sentence is for 10 years with seven years and two months suspended, and nine months credited to his time served for the three months he spent in jail and year that he submitted to electronic home monitoring. Davis was the only defendant in this case who was allowed out on bond; he was permitted to live at home with EHM in order to help take care of his now-19-year-old Autistic son.

Matthew Engle, Davis’ attorney, declined to comment after the verdict.

Joe Platania and Nina-Alice Antony from the commonwealth’s attorney’s office didn’t recommend a specific sentence, but both acknowledged that Davis deserved a lighter sentence than his co-defendants and recognized that he took ownership for his role in the attack.

Although the Charlottesville Police Department is still working to identify two other assailants from the attack, Platania and Antony hope the conclusion of these open criminal cases allows Charlottesville to gain a sense of finality and closure now that the trials are behind it.

“As prosecutors that did six of these cases…we tried to be careful not to make it about message,” Platania says. “We tried to look at the conduct of each individual and focus on each individual case and not prosecute ideology but prosecute conduct. Having said that, we are hopeful that those six prosecutions speak loud and clear about how this community and our office feels about individuals that come here from out of the area to perpetrate hateful acts of violence on others.”

Categories
Living

The price is right: C-VILLE’s guide to the best deals in town

Charlottesville’s a pricey town, but there are still lots of ways to enjoy yourself on the cheap. So whether you want to eat out or rock out, here are a few of our favorites.

It takes two

Two bucks don’t get you very far these days, but some local breweries and bars don’t believe in such nonsense. South Street will hook you up with any 12-ounce pour under 8 percent alcohol from 11am-9pm on Tuesdays. On Thursdays from 7-9pm, Random Row’s got select pints available. And over on the Corner, the Biltmore has been hosting $2-rail “survivor hours” from 8-9pm on Thursdays ever since “Survivor” was the most popular show on TV.

Join the club

You’ll have to drink 100 beers (take as long as you want) to join the Notch Club at Jack Brown’s, but once you do, you can get 20 percent off food and drinks every Tuesday.

Sweeeeeeet

Here’s one we love a hole bunch: Every day, Sugar Shack, the donut chain founded in Richmond by self-proclaimed “donut nostalgia nerd” Ian Kelley, offers a free house donut from its location on West Main Street. But there’s a catch: You have to complete an often-quirky daily challenge to get this particularly sweet deal. Walk in wearing two different shoes. Draw a unicorn. Bring in a Goosebumps book, an arcade token, a disposable camera, or your drumsticks (whether they’re talking percussion mallets or meaty poultry, we’re not sure). Follow @cvilledonuts on Twitter or Sugar Shack Donuts Charlottesville on Facebook for the sweet deets.

Go big

The Paramount occasionally opens its doors for free live sporting events on the big screen, including UVA men’s basketball games. Keep a close eye on the theater’s online events calendar throughout the season.

Fill ‘er up

Top off your growler at Random Row for half price on Mondays.

One shell of a deal

Get a lobster dinner for around $20 at The Pub by Wegmans on Thursdays.

Sound of free music

Charlottesville is bursting with music these days, and it doesn’t always have to bust your wallet. Fridays After Five has been around long enough—this is its 31st season—to be an institution, and even if the summer is winding down, there’s still a chance to catch Skip Castro September 5, which will be a Thursday After Five. Fall is a good time to Freefall with WTJU and IX Art Park’s Saturday music and art series through October 5. And at Carter Mountain’s Thursday Evening Sunset Series, the free concerts come with a view.

Tank you, thank you

Getting your fill at Brown’s convenience store and gas station on Avon Street means a tank of gas plus your choice of a crispy, fried chicken snack. Grab a wing, drumstick, thigh, or breast for free when you put 10-plus gallons of fuel in your ride.

Play nice

We here at C-VILLE believe in supporting the arts in many ways, including financially…but we know that’s not always possible when you have other necessities (like rent, groceries, or an electric bill) to cover. Enter Live Arts’ pay-what-you-can Wednesdays. During any production run, show up to the Live Arts box office in advance of a hump day performance, and ask if any PWYC tickets are available.

*Don’t be a cheapskate. If you can spend twenty bucks on a play, then do it.

Fewer fees

Save on fees by buying your tix in person at the Jefferson, Southern, and Pavilion box offices (where you’ll still pay a flat 50-cent fee), and the Paramount box office, where there’s no fee at all.

Free nature

We’re lucky enough to have the wonders of Shenandoah National Park in our backyard, and on selected holidays during the year, you can even get in for free (the next one is National Public Lands Day, on September 28). See nps.gov for the complete list.

$5 movies

Alamo Drafthouse frequently offers $5 screenings, and while you won’t catch the latest, most popular releases for a paper Lincoln, you could see something old and nostalgic (like Godzilla-adjacent Mothra), or, if you’re reel open, something from the Video Vortex series, featuring “ultra-obscure, ultra-bizarre movies from the fringes of the universe. And beyond.”

A la c-art

The first Friday of every month, local galleries open their doors for evening receptions, often offering free drinks and snacks alongside quality, thought-provoking art from local, national, and international artists, Need we say more? Keep your eyes peeled for C-VILLE’s handy First Fridays guide, out the first Wednesday of every month, to help you choose which shows to see.

Wine-ing out

We’re not sure which is the better deal at Tilman’s on the Downtown Mall: Half off bottles of wine on the bar menu from 3-9pm on Tuesdays, or no corkage fee (a $10 savings) on retail-priced bottles from 3-10pm Thursdays. The former will get you an old-world wine—a viognier from France or a barbera from Italy, for instance—from $15 to $23, and the latter means you’ll pay shelf price and get to sit and sip in the calm little space at the back of the shop.

Half-price wine specials are also on the chalkboard every Wednesday at Fry’s Spring Station on JPA, and Zinburger at Barracks Road, for early birds only (3-6pm).

Free skate

At Carver Rec on Friday evenings and Sunday afternoons, the roller skating and skate rentals are free (and so are the irresistible dance hits).

Cuppa for nada…

At its three Charlottesville locations (and also in Crozet and Richmond, if you’re traveling), Grit Coffee will pour you a hot or iced regular coffee—meaning, no fancy latte stuff—when you buy a pound of beans. Let us help you with the math: The bag will cost $13 to $17, and the drink you’ll receive gratis would go for $2 to $4. Cha-ching! Meanwhile, another prominent local coffee roaster said it offers the same deal—but requested that we not publish anything about it. Freebies on the DL only, we guess!

…or for a buck!

Also at Grit, enjoy a “coffee happy hour” from 3-4pm every weekday, with $1 off all coffee drinks. That means you can get a small drip coffee for just a dollar! That’ll perk you up.

Flexible spending

Now, this is how you stretch a dollar. Pay-what-you-can yoga at IX Art Park has a suggested price of $5 to $15 for an hour of expert instruction, now through October 31. Just show up at the patio adjacent to the Dream Big mural at 6pm. Your instructor’s name is Shankari. She is a true yogi, with her own signature style of Hatha yoga and Vinyasa Flow, which she calls “Soul Flow.” An hour on the mat under her direction, starting at five bucks? Worth it. Visit the IX Art Park events page on Facebook for more info.

Cheap seats

Students can catch many shows at the Paramount for half-off with their university ID, anytime within 45 minutes of showtime.

Crozet okay!

Live in Crozet? You can ride into town for free, now through October 1, on the new Crozet Connect commuter bus, operated by Jaunt. (In October, the very reasonable fare of $2 each way goes into effect, though UVA ID holders will always ride free.) Meant to be a commuter service for workers and students, the bus has three stops in Charlottesville (the Downtown Mall, UVA Grounds, and UVA Medical Center), with multiple pickup points in east and west Crozet. See findyourconnection.org for schedules and info.

As the story goes…

The Saturday children’s storytimes at New Dominion Bookshop and 2nd Act Books, on the Downtown Mall, are free. But the chance to browse the shelves while someone else entertains your kiddos?  Priceless.

Room service

Got kids at UVA? The Hotel Tonight app—the cooler version of booking on, say, Hotels.com—has expanded its offerings in town, from solid Fairfield and Holiday Inns to luxe choices such as the Boar’s Head Resort and the Omni at the west end of the Downtown Mall. A quick check at press time showed nightly room rates in September of $99 at the Graduate, $82 at the UVA Inn at Darden, and $176 at the Boar’s Head—savings of $20 to $50 a night. Rates in Charlottesville fluctuate wildly, depending on what’s happening on Grounds, but the app will always put a dent in the cost of your stay.

By the pitcher

The Lazy Parrot, by the Pantops Food Lion, might not be your first thought for craft beer. But they’ve got 40 beers on tap, and for the $10 pitchers on Saturdays you can choose from any one of them, including some top-notch indie brews.

Park it

Parking is the most often-cited reason for people not coming downtown. But here’s the deal: The first hour is free at both the Water and Market street parking garages. And if your lunch date goes 15 minutes over, it’ll cost you a buck. Beats circling around looking for a street space if you’re running late. If you want to go see a movie, Violet Crown validates for four hours at either garage.

More than books

There’s no better deal than our public libraries, and it’s not just the free books and DVDs.

Charlottesville’s downtown branch carries “health kits” and “maker kits” that come with both equipment and instructions that you can take home for three weeks at a time. “Getting started with yoga,” for example, includes a yoga mat, block, strap, DVD, and instructional materials. Maker kits include knitting, embroidery, calligraphy, and more. Parents can check out toys, free passes to the Virginia Discovery Museum, or a parking pass good for any Virginia state park, along with a backpack filled with pocket naturalist guides.

Staff at every branch can proctor exams or notarize documents for free, and can provide one-on-one tech training, says reference librarian Abbie Cox. At the downtown branch you can also digitize your photos, negatives, slides, and audio or VHS tapes, all for free by appointment.

From the library’s website, you can download e-books and audiobooks onto your phone, and access databases for language learning, investment news, auto repair, and much more.

Finally, don’t forget all the free classes and events at every branch—including books clubs for all ages, crafting groups, movie nights, story times, and special events, from a discussion on remembering past lives at the Crozet branch to a poetry open mic at Gordon Avenue. Pick up a program guide at any branch or go to jmrl.org.

Cheap meats

The butcher’s counter at Reid Super-Save Market, on Preston Avenue, is a stealth favorite for hard-to-find cuts of meat that won’t break the bank. Although most prices vary from week to week, Reid has offered a deal for 80/20 hamburger meat for just $2.99 a pound for the last two years—which management says has been the biggest draw for their meat counter.

As a locally owned grocery store in a city full of national chains, Reid offers a mom-and-pop atmosphere where employees know many of their customers, and often offer advice on how to prepare their products. The butchers will custom cut any order and prepare specialty items, like pig’s feet and turkey gizzards, that can’t be found at many other stores.

Weekly deals last from Wednesdays to Tuesdays and can be found on its website at reidsupersavemarket.com.

Kids eat free!

Lots of spots around town offer free meals for the little ones, including Moe’s BBQ (Sunday or Monday evenings, depending on location) and Boylan Heights (Wednesdays from 4-8pm).

Looky here 

Most art museums cost a pretty penny to get into, but here in Charlottesville, they’re free to peruse. And we have some real gems, full of thoughtfully-curated shows.

The Fralin Museum of Art at UVA, over on Rugby Road, is the university’s teaching museum, but it’s not just for students. The museum changes up its exhibitions every few months, and in the past year alone it’s had shows focused on Native American women artists, images of the interior, Asian art from private collections, and so much more (one current show, “Otherwise,” visualizes LGBTQ+ themes in honor of the 1969 Stonewall uprising). Check out the free family programs, tours, and gallery talks, too.

And then there’s the Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, located on Pantops, the only exclusively Aboriginal art museum outside of Australia. Think about what that means: On the six other continents on Earth, there is only one such museum, and it’s here. (Are your eyes popping yet?)

The Kluge-Ruhe rotates exhibitions every few months, constantly showing the breadth and the depth, as well as the global importance, of the work Aboriginal artists produce. What’s more, these artists often travel halfway around the world for residencies at the museum, giving us all a rare opportunity to interact with people who live, well, literally half a world away.

We’d be loath to leave out the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center gallery here—curated by Andrea Douglas, who holds a doctorate in art history and is a former Fralin curator, it’s a museum-quality exhibition space focused on the African American experience.

Categories
Arts

Album reviews: Heron & Crane, Vivian Girls, G Flip, Ikebe Shakedown, and Sleater-Kinney

Heron & Crane

Firesides (Hibernator Gigs)

Denizens of Charlottesville’s indie scene know Dave Gibson from power-pop exponents Borrowed Beams of Light and Weird Mob, plus synth soundscapers Personal Bandana. Here, Gibson and Columbus, Ohio, buddy Travis Kokas split the difference, with sweet results. The mostly instrumental Firesides is a fetching mélange of melody and texture, nature and geometry, as delicate guitar figures intertwine with murmuring keyboards while drum tracks rustle underneath (becoming the motorik backbone of the Byrds-meet-Delia Derbyshire “Stars Over Nara”). Firesides
is hypnotic yet sociable, and well worth hanging with. [8.8]

https://heronandcranemusic.bandcamp.com

Vivian Girls

Memory (Polyvinyl)

Following their 2008 debut, the Vivian Girls’ aesthetic—surfy post-punk with girl group cuteness and gothic brooding—seemed to crop up everywhere, and while the band’s spinoffs (La Sera, Best Coast, Babies) carried the ball in different directions, the Vivian Girls’ DNA was always detectable. On Memory they revisit their classic style with a squall of sound that’s aggressive and protective at the same time, obscuring intimate lyrics behind feedback. And although “Waiting in the Car” closes the album in a poppier mode, the Girls’ moodier side prevails on Memory. It isn’t an apotheosis of all that put the Vivian Girls on the map, but it’s nice to have ‘em back. [7.0]

https://viviangirlsnyc.bandcamp.com/album/memory

G Flip

About Us (Future Classic)

With her giant glasses, baggy tees, and stringy hair, Melbourne’s G Flip does Taylor Swift’s nerd character better by a mile. But it’s still a character—Flip’s a pop diva who specializes in The Big Ballad, especially of the “I’m soooo screwed up but will inevitably triumph” species. Flip’s got a potent voice, mixing Lorde and Camila Cabello, and she can turn a phrase. But the songs are Hallmark-card lame, all bombast and wide gestures, and not even the sprightly, funky beat on single “About You” can hide the plodding and plotting on top. [6.1]

Ikebe Shakedown

Kings Left Behind (Colemine)

Members of New York septet Ikebe Shakedown have played with Sharon Jones & the
Dap-Kings, so you kinda know what to expect, and you get it right from the top. “Not Another Drop” opens with solid funk from the trap kit and congas
before a pair of guitars enter,
one ringing out tremoloed chords, and one chunking away, while a snaky bass line insinuates itself. And then, the horns…they enter, playing an unremarkable melody in unison, and over the course of the album they never stop; they just rest, fitfully. However each song starts, you know the horns are crouching, waiting to unleash their staccato barks to squelch whatever psychedelic guitar solo or evocative harpsichord might be fighting for daylight. The only relief comes on the brief closer “Not Another Drop (Reprise),” featuring a tasty slide guitar that makes you wonder what else you missed. [5.9]

https://ikebeshakedown-clmn.bandcamp.com/album/kings-left-behind

Sleater-Kinney

The Center Won’t Hold (Mom + Pop)

The third Sleater-Kinney album since their post-Woods hiatus (and apparently their final outing with drummer Janet Weiss), The Center Won’t Hold begins with some lumbering, retro-industrial percussion, and the classic S-K punk throttle that emerges feels like it’s fighting out of tar pits. Sadly, this is a portent. There are hooks on The Center Won’t Hold, but in pumping up the band’s razor-sharp grooves, producer St. Vincent dulls them. The lower-key “Restless” is an exception, and the band’s always-bracing vocals come close to saving the day elsewhere. But the only joy I find is the breezy, danceable “LOVE,”—a little rock ‘n’ roll fun, and a tantalizing taste of where this album could have gone. [6.1]

https://sleaterkinney.bandcamp.com/album/the-center-wont-hold

Categories
Living

Testing the waters: Wilson Craig bets on canned cocktails as the next big thing

Under normal circumstances, having your jaw broken and reset in order to correct an underbite—and then being laid-up in recovery for two months—would be a bummer. But Wilson Craig was happy for the time on the couch. It gave him an opportunity to think. He took his meals through a straw, and wasn’t able to talk, so he spent a lot of time in his own head.

This was about a year ago, and he was living in Manhattan, where he worked in real-estate finance. In this regard, he was following in his father’s rather large footsteps. Hunter E. Craig is one of the biggest landowners and developers in town, a co-founder of Virginia National Bank, and a member of the board at UVA’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy.

But the younger Craig didn’t necessarily want to pick up the paternal mantle. Not long before the operation, he told his dad that he had an idea to create a canned-cocktail brand. He wanted to return from New York, settle down in Charlottesville, and launch the business in the city he knows and loves. His father liked the idea. He liked it so much that he helped his son get started. And now, after a whirlwind startup, Waterbird Spirits is cranking out tens of thousands of 12-ounce canned vodka-and-sodas and Moscow Mules from a sharp-looking shop on the corner of Water and West Second streets. If all goes as planned, four-packs of Waterbird cocktails priced at $13.99 will appear in local supermarkets by the end of September, and the space on Water Street will open for tours in 2020. (Waterbird does not have a license to offer tastings on-site.)

On a blistering-hot day in August, Craig tilts back in a chair in the Waterbird office and crosses his long legs. A woman knocks on the door. Craig uncrosses his legs, bolts upright, and hurries over to greet her.

“Hi,” says the woman.

“Hello,” Craig says, or rather, almost shouts.

“When are you guys opening?” she asks.

“Not for awhile, but we’re in production now,” Craig says.

“Great!” says the woman.

“Thanks so much for your interest,” Craig says. “Really—thank you!”

This is not an act. Craig relishes telling people about Waterbird. “We get a lot of that,” he says, bounding back to his chair. “I love it. People are curious, and we want them to see what’s going on here.”

He also wants you to know that the building, once The Clock Shop of Virginia, actually started as a Sears auto service center. “Sears used to be one of the biggest companies in the United States,” Craig says. “But what happens to a company when they don’t pay attention to their customers? They end up in Chapter 7 bankruptcy.”

His point: Waterbird will succeed by focusing relentlessly on what consumers want. In his opinion—shaped by months of conversations with his father and local winemakers, distillers, and brewers, including his official consultant, Hunter Smith of Champion Brewing Company, and some work with focus groups and taste-testers—consumers want high-quality canned cocktails. “We’re going to use potato vodka because it’s so much better than corn vodka” Craig says. “And we’re going to use cane sugar, because it’s infinitely better than high-fructose corn syrup.”

With many alternative canned beverages entering the market, including the aforementioned hard seltzer and non-alcoholic euphorics, some using CBD, Craig might have reason to temper his enthusiasm for his own product. But, um—not a chance.

“When I was living in New York, all my friends were drinking Bud Light, but not for the taste or any other redeeming factor—it was just convenient,” he says. “Convenience is king. So I thought, why isn’t there a better alternative for portable cocktails?”

As for marketing and branding, Craig sees Charlottesville, Virginia—which is clearly stamped on Waterbird’s label—as an asset.

“Charlottesville has received a lot of bad publicity,” he says. “But I just want to embrace the good. We want to be a product that people see and feel happy and proud that it’s made in Charlottesville. Excited, happy, upbeat, positive—that’s what this brand is.”

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Lynn Trefzger

Talking hands: Self-taught ventriloquist and comedian Lynn Trefzger brings more than four decades of experience to a routine that’s polished but unpredictable. Her cast of characters includes a recently potty-trained toddler excited to share, a confrontational drunk camel, and an old man who keeps things fresh in the bedroom with Saran Wrap. Trefzger’s performances, which rely on audience participation and improvisation, have been seen on television networks like ABC, Comedy Central, and VH-1.

Friday, August 30. $12-15, 7:30pm. V. Earl Dickinson Theater at PVCC, 501 College Dr. 977-3900.

Categories
News

In brief: Cop’s case reopened, Meadow Creek pollution, Belmont Bridge plans and more

Bridging the Belmont gap

Replacing the 1962-built Belmont Bridge was first recommended in 2003. Many plans have come and gone, as has at least one design company. In 2012, some, like former city councilor Bob Fenwick, said the bridge’s deterioration was the result of city neglect and could be repaired. At the time, the bridge replacement project cost was about $14 million.

That cost is now $24.7 million, and on August 20 the Board of Architectural Review approved a certificate of appropriateness for the new span. The design, with its 10-foot sidewalks and 7-foot bike lanes, favors pedestrians and 

bicyclists, with two lanes devoted to motorists.

City officials hope that construction will begin by 2020.

Putting the “i” in infidelity

Millennials and Gen Xers are more likely to engage in “internet infidelity” than earlier generations, according to “iFidelity: The State of Our Unions 2019,” a report from the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia and the School of Family Life at Brigham Young University.

UVA sociology prof Brad Wilcox has studied marriage and fidelity for the past 10 years. For this study, he partnered with BYU’s Jeffrey Dew, a family studies professor. They found:

  • Online sex talk: 18 percent of millennial participants did it with someone besides their partner, compared to 16 percent of
    Gen Xers, 6 percent of baby boomers, and 3 percent of the greatest generation.
  • That’s cheating: 70 percent or more of Americans rate secret emotional affairs or sexting with a non-partner as “unfaithful.”
  • Crossing the generations: The number of people who cheat in real life is consistent across age groups at 15 percent, although Wilcox points out that millennials and Gen Xers haven’t had as much time to have affairs and may exceed that number by the time they’re older.
  • Married and cohabitating adults who don’t fool around online are more likely to be happy and committed in their relationships.

    Quote of the week

    We needed to make it go away.—Delegate Chris Head, R-Botetourt, on the GOP strategy to adjourn the special session called by Governor Ralph Northam to address gun safety after the Virginia Beach massacre, according to the Roanoke Times


    In brief

    Cop’s case not closed yet

    Andrew Holmes, the Albemarle County Police officer who was accused in 2016 of racial profiling, is no longer off the hook after a federal appeals court ruled a previous decision to throw the case out must be revisited. No date has been set for the next hearing.

    Chasing gold

    Former UVA men’s basketball star Joe Harris was named to the U.S. men’s national team for the FIBA World Cup, which will be held in China beginning September 1. The roster is chock-full of NBA stars like Kemba Walker and Donovan Mitchell, but several spots opened up after many of the bigger-name players backed out to focus on preparing for the 2019-20 season.

    Murky waters

    Construction workers at the demolition site for U-Hall poured stormwater into a drain that ran into Meadow Creek, polluting the water and killing hundreds of fish. Although the city’s drinking water was unaffected, the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality said the rainwater had mixed with concrete dust prior to being dumped down the drain.

    Last pet standing

    Izzy the cat, who’s been missing since the August 18 Pet Paradise fire, was found Tuesday morning, and, according to WINA, appears to be okay. Izzy was among three pets who escaped during the fire. Shadow, another cat, was safely located, but a dog named Bailey was discovered dead about a mile and a half away from the building.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Dropping Julia

Ruling the roof: Dropping Julia is the culmination of guitarist Emily Kresky’s journey as a musician, which she began in New Jersey at age 19. After developing her chops on the road, Kresky landed in Charlottesville where she formed the four-piece pop rock band. Rootsy Americana graced by jazz and folk is channeled through “Jersey sass and Virginia charm” on the group’s debut album, Wake Up.

Wednesday, August 28. $8-10, 5:30pm. Rooftop Jukebox at Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 806-7062.

Categories
Arts

Mating ritual: Ready or Not plays well in the horror-comedy game

The class rage-fueled horror comedy Ready or Not is for anyone who’s been robbed of the life they deserve, in order to further someone else’s wealth, status, or tradition. It’s a bloody, hilarious, and satisfyingly mean parable that’s not only mad about income inequality. It’s mad about the rich themselves. How they gained their wealth, and the predatory practices that keep them in power. Granted, most upper-crust families don’t play twisted, murderous variations on parlor games to keep commoners from joining their ranks, but when a real-world version of The Purge seems likelier every day, Ready or Not’s metaphor is timely.

When former foster child Grace (Samara Weaving) marries into the Le Domas family, everything seems to fall into place. Not only does she love her husband Alex (Mark O’Brien) dearly, but finally having a close-knit family is a dream come true. Mostly everyone is welcoming, particularly Alex’s parents Becky and Tony (Andie MacDowell and Henry Czerny) and brother Daniel (Adam Brody), and even the most troublesome relative seems like nothing more than a quirky outlier.

Things change at midnight following the wedding, when the initiation ritual begins. According to tradition, new members of the family must pick a card from a mysterious box, and on that card is the game they play to be accepted. Grace, of course, chooses the one card she wished she hadn’t: Hide and Seek, where the hider must stay alive until dawn while being hunted with muskets, hatchets, knives, and crossbows.

Ready or Not

R, 96 minutes

Pulling off a conceit this big takes some nerve and a lot of skill, which Weaving and directors Matt Bettinelli- Olpin and Tyler Gillett do astonishingly well. After Alex reveals the true nature and history of the game, Grace’s evolution from shock to surprise to fury is magnificently carried by Weaving. She realizes that her life is in danger, but the knowledge that it is over something so stupid turns her situation from frightening to absurd. “The rich really are different,” she later remarks.

The truth of the game—and what the Le Domas family believes will happen if it doesn’t play—are better left unspoiled. Some believe the old story, and those who don’t, go along for the sake of tradition or preservation of status. Even the sympathetic members place their social and economic interest ahead of human decency or logic.

In addition to the class catharsis, Ready or Not is wickedly funny and will keep you guessing until the very end. Weaving’s star continues to rise, and it’s difficult to imagine this movie working without her, but every performance is pitch perfect, no matter the size of the role. The entire film takes place on the Le Domas family estate, as the directors demonstrate how to effectively maximize impact with limited resources. Ready or Not does a lot with little, where movies with twice the budget and dozens of locations often do little with a lot.


Local theater listings

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema 375 Merchant Walk Sq., 326-5056.

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213.

Violet Crown Cinema 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000.

Categories
2019 Best of C-VILLE Editor’s Pick

Wine royalty: Remembering David King, who lived up to his family name

By Joe Bargmann