Letters 1

Hey George, Why Don’t You Just Arm-Wrestle Bruce Matheson and Be Done with It I have been visiting Crandon Park for 35 years and have some comments on its proposed future, as described in Oscar Musibay’s article “His Own Private Paradise” (April 4). It was a bonehead decision to install…

Letters

Crandon Park: Commissioners Feared Lost in Mangroves! We were very pleased with Oscar Musibay’s frank and honest description of the state of affairs at Crandon Park (“His Own Private Paradise,” April 4). It was interesting to note the level of dissension within the county about Bruce Matheson’s plans for the…

Reverb

Been wondering why the University of Miami’s WVUM-FM (90.5) sounds an awful lot like commercial FM stations WSHE (103.1)and WZTA (94.9)? Then gather around for a brief, explanatory history lesson. It may seem hard to believe now, but there was once a time when college radio was the place to…

Letters

Coming Up Next, 1000 Little Eco-Artists Regarding Kirk Semple’s article “A Whiter Shade of Green” (March 28): I am unapologetically responding to the statements made and sentiments held by Mary Barley and her people regarding the Hispanic community’s so-called lack of support for the arts and social causes. Artist Enrique…

Reverb

Growing up in Havana in the late Sixties and early Seventies, pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba made little distinction between the percolating jazz of his countrymen and that of their creative counterparts working in the U.S. “[Cuban and American musicians] are the main sources of inspiration in my work,” Rubalcaba explains by…

Letters

The Smallest Slice of the Jailhouse Pie After reading Jim DeFede’s story “Jailhouse Rumble” (March 21), I have to wonder about the remaining fifteen percent of the corrections officers who are not black or Hispanic. How do they fit into the department and who represents them? Edward S. Sheppard Miami…

Reverb

The music industry as a whole isn’t exactly known for taking care of the workers who create its main commodity. Yet Florida Music Association (FMA) executive director Helaine Blum insists that the Tampa-based nonprofit organization exists to help musicians develop the skills needed to journey unscathed through the financial minefields…

Reverb

As soon as I started working at New Times last November, before I had even memorized my new phone number, the demo tapes started pouring in. I must have received at least five my first week here — little C-60 missives from this band or that singer/songwriter, usually accompanied by…

Letters

Austin: A Goethe Wanna-be After reading Tom Austin’s final “Swelter” column (March 7), I was reminded of the absolute relief I felt when I sold the Island Club and closed the doors for the last time. I had a wonderful and loyal staff, a good clientele, and a host of…

Letters

Austin: Swooning over Swelter I’ve never set foot in a South Beach nightclub. I haven’t even a passing acquaintance with the frivolity, venality, and fabulosity rampant in the world Tom Austin has covered in “Swelter” as a reporter for New Times. I have, however, been a devoted reader, plowing to…

Reverb

“After the accident, like the next day, we made a conscious decision that if there was any kind of passion in our music, any kind of legacy we wanted to create, we had to keep doing this.” For Squirrels guitarist Travis Tooke is ruminating on the aftermath of the September…

Reverb

There’s some new blood over at WSHE-FM (103.5), but don’t worry: “South Florida’s rock alternative” will most likely continue to serve up Deep Blue Something’s unctuous hit “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” as well as what the station calls “Excellent Eighties” tracks from New Order, U2, R.E.M., and other modern-rock radio regulars…

Swelter

This is the last “Swelter,” the end of the road. It’s time to say goodbye to all that, keep things short, sweet, and even more about me than usual. I’ve had a long enough run, God knows, given that the first column appeared on August 21, 1991, which translates to…

Swelter

There are certain perks to living in Miami, but at times it’s rather like being a typecast actor, vainly struggling to escape some early career embarrassments and forge a new image of professional seriousness. Of all the baggage associated with the city, none is more crippling than the idea that…

Reverb

Don’t bother asking Michael O’Brien why his band the Eat has become an underground legend in punk circles. With equal amounts of humility and bewilderment, he’ll tell you he has no idea. “We’re all totally clueless,” admits O’Brien, the 39-year-old guitarist and vocalist for the Miami quartet, whose 1979 single…

Letters

When Lobbyists Rule the World I was intrigued by Jim DeFede’s analysis of the Miami Herald’s American Airlines upgrades-to-commissioners expose (“Smeared for Takeoff,” February 22). As I read the Herald’s front-page article, I was amazed that our principal daily newspaper would publish such a trivialized deja vu and that the…

Reverb

What happens when the denizens of Miami’s punk-rock underground enter the historic halls of Tobacco Road? Well, a lot of yelling and screaming, for starters. None of it, however, came from the club’s second-floor stage. Star Crunch Records, an independent label based in Miami, was invited to hold a February…

Letters

Haiti — Kurzban’s Cash Cow Regarding Elise Ackerman’s article “Perilous Journey” (February 8), attorney Ira Kurzban’s efforts on behalf of Haitians are hardly altruistic. He has been retained as Haiti’s general counsel [in the United States]. According to the Miami Herald, Kurzban “paid his own firm $298,798 for services in…

The following correction appeared in “Letters,” Feb. 22:

Jim Mullin’s column last week incorrectly reported that the Miami Herald had not published the names of members of an ad hoc sports arena committee headed by Knight-Ridder chairman Tony Ridder. In fact, a partial list of names was published February 7 in a late edition of the paper, which…

Nobody Touches Tony

Tony Ridder’s performance last week before the Dade County Commission was truly inspirational. The Knight-Ridder boss was there in his new role as leader of a group of private citizens whose desperate mission is to appease zillionaire sports moguls Micky Arison and Wayne Huizenga and find a way to build…

Reverb

Like many frustrated surfers on the commercial radio airwaves, Michelle Naples finds cultural comfort in the eclectic programming of WLRN-FM (91.3), Miami’s public radio station. And like a lot of listeners with bigger hearts than bank accounts, Naples wanted to help the station, which is feeling the crunch of recent…

Swelter

Of all the luminaries who have passed through Miami, Kenneth Anger — avant-garde cinema pioneer and author of the Tinseltown trash classics Hollywood Babylon and Hollywood Babylon II — may be the most remarkable. Anger has been flown in as a featured attraction of the Miami Film Festival and the…