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Style, Local Events, From the SP Staff

Indie Craft Experience is this Saturday!

This weekend is ICE 8, the best holiday shopping in Atlanta!

This year, ICE has over 100 vendors from all over the country selling amazing handcrafted items.
Check out the vendor list here. (And notice that Gangbusters is on it. That's me, your darling SP web designer!)
 
Zano will be DJing.
Some Art Fabric will have fun craft projects for you to do.
Indie Craft Experience T-shirt making is back by popular demand.
Dulce Vegan will be there with delightful vegan baked goods and Grand-o-la will have fancy granola.
 
Buy Handmade This Holiday Season -- there is no need to brave the mall when you can get all your holiday shopping done at ICE. And you can feel good about yourself for making a donation to Hagar House and Handmade Nation (we make a charitable donation to both of these organizations from the door fee) and for directly supporting the person who made the gifts you are giving.
 
See you Saturday! 

Saturday, November 15
11-6 p.m.
Ambient + Photo Studio
Please note that the building doesn't actually say "Indie Craft Experience," so it may help to look at this photograph so you'll know what you're looking for when you get there.
585 Wells St. SW
Atlanta, GA 30312
$5 admission
(Full article and comments)

by Kristina Ackerman | Friday, November 14, 2008 at 11:29 AM in Style, Local Events, From the SP Staff | Comments (0) | Link

The Web, From the SP Staff

Google Video Chat...works

Now that Gmail Video Chat is open, anyone with a Gmail account can engage in high-quality one-on-one webcam chat with family and friends anywhere in the world, free of charge.

Sorry about that, Skype.

(Full article and comments)

by Kristina Ackerman | Friday, November 14, 2008 at 9:38 AM in The Web, From the SP Staff | Comments (0) | Link

Life, Local Events

Yes to equality, no on prop 8

I’m a lesbian planning on marrying my partner in the spring of next year. When we wed, we (under current laws) will not be able to obtain a marriage certificate, nor will we qualify for the hundreds of tax benefits granted to straight married couples in this country. If one of us ends up in the ICU section of the hospital where only immediate family is allowed, we might be denied access to be there for our loved one. If a tragedy should occur and major medical decisions must be made for one of us, our marriage will not automatically grant us the right to have our pleas to keep the other one on life support recognized, should our families disagree. We will have to jump through ridiculous hoops to change my last name to hers, and when we have children, our family will have to be closely examined to determine if my wife can adopt the children I bore. Gay adoption isn't even allowed in Cobb County, where we were living, hence our recent move to Fulton.

This is the state of Georgia, where gays and lesbians are treated like second-class citizens and denied the basic right of marriage to the ones we love. It’s been my hope that we will evolve to be like California and grant gays and lesbians the rights to marry.

But with the recent overturning of Proposition 8, the proposed amendment to the California State Constitution that would eliminate same-sex couples’ right to marry, everything seems in jeopardy. On a historic day when America got its first black president and the civil rights movement for African-Americans advanced beyond many people’s wildest dreams, the basic rights for the GLBT community was snatched away from us. It sickens me, and I’m beyond sad.

The decisions made in California directly impact us in Georgia and everywhere else. Atlantans are gathering this weekend to support gay equality with organized events, and I encourage everyone who believes in civil rights to attend.

The lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community will be joined by friends, families and allies to support gay marriage equality at two events scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 15, 2008. At 1:30 p.m, a protest will take place at the Georgia State Capitol. A candlelight vigil will follow at 5PM at the corner of 10th St. and Piedmont Ave.

The protest and vigil will be part of the nation-wide efforts coordinated by grassroots-organization Join the Impact. The events will show solidarity in support of LGBTQ equality and in opposition to Proposition 8.

For the LGBTQ community and its supporters, last week’s historic election was undercut by the disheartening reality that 52 percent of Californians voted to take away civil rights for same-sex couples. Currently in the United States, same-sex couples in long-term, committed relationships are denied over 1,000 benefits and protections granted to their married counterparts. For example, they are denied the right to visit a hospitalized partner, the right to Social Security survivor benefits, and the right to unpaid leave from work to take care of an ill spouse.

Vigil organizer Scott Touchstone stated, “It is fundamentally unfair and unconstitutional to deny to some citizens the rights and protections given to others.”

Organizers want both the protest and the vigil to be peaceful shows of support for California’s LGBTQ community and a step in the right direction for ensuring that all Americans are treated fairly.

Join the Impact invites all Atlantans who believe in justice for the LGBTQ community to bring a sign (less than 2”x2”) to the protest at the State Capitol at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, November 15 and a candle to the vigil at the corner of 10th St. and Piedmont Ave.

For more, visit www.jointheimpact.wetpaint.com/page/Georgia.

(Full article and comments)

by Kirsten Ott | Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 1:26 PM in Life, Local Events | Comments (3) | Link

Sports, Arts and Entertainment

Enjoy the Ride

 

The Hawks lost the game last night, but they've clinched something far more valuable: respect.

(Full article and comments)

by Kevin Moreau | Thursday, November 13, 2008 at 9:46 AM in Sports, Arts and Entertainment | Comments (0) | Link

Opinion

N.Y. Times’ prejudice against Southerners blinds it to facts

The New York Times has set about painting all those Southerners who voted for John McCain as racists. The Atlanta area is at the very epicenter of the conservative-liberal seismic shift. Yet the Times didn’t think the Atlanta area important enough to explore for its story. (Full article and comments)

by Stephanie Ramage | Tuesday, November 11, 2008 at 11:46 AM in Opinion | Comments (3) | Link

Arts and Entertainment, From the SP Staff

Celebrity birthdays of the week

Former boy band-er Nick Lachey is 35 on Nov. 9, and happy he no longer has to answer his ex-wife’s difficult questions—chicken or tuna?

 

Nearly washed-up actor Leonardo DiCaprio hits the big 3-4 on Nov. 11. His birthday wish? To reclaim his “king of the world” crown.

 

Calista Flockhart (pictured) is 44 on Nov. 11. Who knew Indiana Jones' hardest challenge would be to get this girl to eat?

 

Demi Moore, role model to cougars everywhere, is 46 on Nov. 11, which she’ll no doubt spend with her much-younger hubby, 30-year-old boy toy Ashton NoTalent.

 

We suggest Nancy Kerrigan take cover when Tonya Harding makes a birthday wish. She’s 38 on Nov. 12.

 

Retired MLB slugger Sammy Sosa marks the big 4-0 on Nov. 12. Gift ideas? We hear he’s partial to corked bats and steroid prescriptions.

 

The soon-to-be-unemployed Condoleezza Rice is 54 on Nov. 14, the same day Prince Charles turns 60. Come to think of it, have you ever seen them in the same place at the same time?

 

 Photo: Evan Agostini/Getty Images

(Full article and comments)

by Mister Friendly | Friday, November 07, 2008 at 5:42 PM in Arts and Entertainment, From the SP Staff | Comments (0) | Link

News and Politics

Half million votes still not counted in Georgia

"There may be nearly a half million outstanding ballots in Georgia alone, and thousands more in other states — including the one with the largest turnout, California — that are still being counted." (Full article and comments)

by Stephanie Ramage | Wednesday, November 05, 2008 at 5:13 PM in News and Politics | Comments (0) | Link

Arts and Entertainment

President Obama's first act

Now that Barack Obama has made history, the president-elect can look forward to a long line of important issues vying for his attention once he takes the oath of office in January. But I'm hoping he'll elect to yield his considerable influence to affect some change before Inauguration Day in two key areas.

First and foremost, of course, I hope he'll reach out to those voters who did not vote for him, either out of genuine political differences, racial prejudice or brainwashing from the likes of Hannity, Limbaugh, etc. In the less than 12 hours since Sen. Obama gave his first speech as president-elect, I've received a number of distraught e-mails that are frankly disturbing in their level of vitriol. I'll be addressing that issue more directly in my Stop the Presses column in this weekend's issue of The Sunday Paper.

But almost as important, I call upon President-Elect Obama to pull some strings over at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and get "Doonesbury" back in the paper immediately. As you may have heard, cartoonist Garry Trudeau submitted a batch of comic strips in which Obama is named president. (Syndicated daily strips are usually turned in a few weeks in advance.) The AJC opted to pull the strip, placing it on hiatus this week, and resume running it Nov. 10.

Let's give Atlanta's monopoly daily the benefit of the doubt that this move wasn't politically motivated; the AJC endorsed Obama, after all. Even so, it's a baffling move, if not an unexpected one. After all, the AJC already segregates "Doonesbury" (along with the poorly drawn and execrable conservative strip "Prickly City") to another part of the Living section, away from the Comics page, fearing that its readers aren't sophisticated enough to process comic strips that espouse political opinions next to crap like "On A Claire Day." (No matter that "Get Fuzzy," for one, also addresses political matters via Bucky the Cat's right-wing rants. Heck, even "Brewster Rockit" had its title character run for president of the galaxy--why not segregate that one, as well? And "Mutts" pursues a clearly leftist pro-animal agenda. Maybe we should separate the Comics section into "right" and "left"-leaning strips. And don't even get me started on having to find the Business section just to read "Dilbert.")

Since those AJC customers who want to read "Doonesbury" are already forced to take the extra step of seeking it out, one can safely assume that most folks who do read it are sympathetic to its leanings. And posters to "The Vent" notwithstanding, I think even those innocent naifs who stumble upon the strip by mistake are probably smart enough to recognize that it is a work of fiction.

Now that the results are in, and Obama has indeed won (to absolutely no one's surprise), the AJC should run the three strips readers have missed so far. It shouldn't have insulted its readers' intelligence in the first place. (Full article and comments)

by Kevin Moreau | Wednesday, November 05, 2008 at 9:54 AM in Arts and Entertainment | Comments (0) | Link

News and Politics, Opinion

Black Panthers intimidate voters in Philly

Video shows two alleged members of the "new" Black Panthers wielding a night stick to scare away anyone who looked like they weren't voting for Obama at a polling station in Philly. I say "alleged" because although they are black and they are wearing militant garb, we don't know if they are actually members of the Panthers or just wannabes. Not that it matters much when it comes to wielding a deadly weapon at a polling station. Does Philly not have any cops?  Here's the video made by a University of Pennsylvania student as posted on politico.com:
(Full article and comments)

by Stephanie Ramage | Tuesday, November 04, 2008 at 2:23 PM in News and Politics, Opinion | Comments (1) | Link

Opinion

The silent majority's vote

If Obama wins, it won’t be by the landslide that so many have predicted. The thing that will be most astonishing to many of those on the left is the very thing that history should have prepared them for: the loud election-day voice of the silent majority. (Full article and comments)

by Stephanie Ramage | Tuesday, November 04, 2008 at 12:04 PM in Opinion | Comments (0) | Link

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