Sources tell the Los Angeles Times that federal investigators may be pursuing a legal solution that would actually re-open alternative newsweeklies in Los Angeles and Cleveland, the two cities where Village Voice Media and New Times agreed to close papers and eliminate competition. The federal anti-trust investigation is "unusually fast-paced," The Times' Tim Rutten reports. "Clearly, they've decided to move before the bodies get too cold," an anti-trust attorney tells Rutten.
Shawna Stone doesn't try to hide her transsexuality, and she says a Colorado Springs police detective wanted to try something different with her in exchange for having an old assault charge dropped. John Dicker of the Colorado Springs Independent breaks the wall of silence the police threw up around the case and asks questions about whether the public trust has been betrayed.
RedEye and Red Streak both "suck to similar degrees, and both emulate the clichés of youth-oriented marketing: brevity, snark, 'edginess' ... and color," Whet Moser of The Chicago Maroon writes. But their other, more important, failures include not being a substitute for the "brevity and depth" of the Internet or either a viable substitute for or a precursor to reading the regular daily, the University of Chicago columnist writes.
Todd Haynes, director of "Far From Heaven," is a different filmmaker, who's opted to live in a Portland, Ore., Craftsman bungalow amid three lots' worth of verdant vegetation. He's a genuine critics' favorite, a poster boy for independent film. But what really sets Haynes apart from other moviemakers is "a devotion to the cinematic theme of homosexuality that goes beyond merely having fey characters," Byron Beck writes in Willamette Week. "He's made only a handful of films--all critical, if not all commercial, successes. And each of them, in its own way, looks at life through a lavender lens. "
Yusuf Bey and his "family" are a group of entrepreneurs and reformed ex-cons who operate a patchwork of businesses and non-profits throughout the city of Oakland. They're also that city's most prominent Black Muslims, treated with noted deference by the East Bay's political and media elite--in part because they claim to be positive role models for African-American youth. East Bay Express staff writer Chris Thompson rips off that mask in part one of his special report "Blood & Money," showing that Bey and some of his followers have left a trail of violence, brutality and fraud that stretches back nearly a decade.
According to Harris Meyer, Jim DeFede is learning what it means to make the "transition from kicking powerful butts in the pages of the freewheeling (Miami) New Times to doing the same at the more sedate (Miami) Herald." Meyer reports that DeFede, speaking at a local SPJ meeting, said that when he wrote a tough column criticizing two local businessmen, the Herald was "flooded with angry responses" and "the paper essentially repudiated his column in an editorial the next day lavishing praise" on the targets of DeFede's ire. On the other hand, DeFede said, Miami-Dade Mayor Alex Penelas now returns his calls.
Alan Baer's "love for the obscure and the nontraditional led him to the alternative news weekly," Omaha Reader writes of its eccentric owner, who died of cancer Nov. 5. The paper remembers Baer as "the philanthropist and the gentle man with a quirky sense of humor, who never lost faith in those around him and in the city he loved."
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