
[Editor's Note: This review is by CL Holiday Auction winner Upohar Haroon. Haroon won the chance to tap her inner Ebert when her husband, Matthew Peterson, placed a successful bid for the Be a movie reviewer item in the 2010 CL Holiday Auction for the benefit of The Childrens Home.]
Who controls our fate? Can we make our own destiny or are we just puppets of some higher power? How far would you go to create your own destiny? These are some of the questions raised by the new sci-fi romance The Adjustment Bureau.
The movie starts out like a political thriller, with a young candidate, David Norris (Matt Damon), favored to win a NY Senate seat but losing out in the end. Right before David delivers his concession speech to supporters, he meets a ballerina named Elise (Emily Blunt). Though they feel an instant mutual attraction, they quickly part ways. All the while, men in dark suits and hats are following Davids every move.
When we contacted Interview Your Favorite Band CL Holiday Auction winner Derek Weiner to find out the bands he was most interested in talking to, he responded with a shortlist of picks. Admittedly, I may be dreaming a little too big, he wrote, but I figured why not give you the wish list and let you be the judge of that? At the top was platinum-selling alt rock/power pop foursome Jimmy Eat World.
Luckly, after contacting the Jimmy Eat World folks and pitching the story idea an advance of the Tampa show featuring a Q&A by a fan whod won the chance to talk to his favorite band via our charity auction they were totally down. And not only did Weiner get to talk to bassist Rick Burch, but the musician gave Weiner ample time to get in all his questions and offered a well-thought-out answer to each. Check out the complete she-bang below...
Derrick Weiner: Hi Rick, How are you doing?
Rick Burch: Im good. How are you doing?
Im good, thank you.
Congratulations on being the lucky winner.
Ive been a fan of you guys for a while, so Im excited to ask you all a few questions, and I really appreciate you for doing this for myself and Creative Loafing.
Yeah, cool.
Okay, great! I guess start by asking you whats going on with the tour right now?
The tour has been really good. The shows are going really well. A lot of people coming out, having a good time. I dont know if you know this, but Courtney Marie Andrews she sang on Invented shes joining us on stage as well. So, you know, we have a great person up there which is really cool. So, its going really good.
Will she be in Tampa with you guys?
Yeah, shell be in Tampa.
Great! Can you tell me about your newest album? What were your inspirations and what were you looking to accomplish with it?
When we started working on Invented whenever we sit down and start working on new stuff we try not to limit ourselves and not dictate how its going to be. We just let it happen, you know, let it develop on its own. We dont try and direct it too much other than trying to maintain our sound, but we also want to grow and try new things. So we keep those things in mind as were progressing through the creative process. And I think we did a good job. I think the finished product stays within those parameters, for sure. Were really proud of it.
You know, Ive unfortunately never had the patience to be able to make myself learn any instruments, but Im a huge music fan and Ive been kind of curious about just the general process that goes into writing music. Do you guys find that it is easier to write music when youre on tour? Off? In the studio? Out of the studio? How does that normally breakdown?
Its kind of unpredictable when inspiration is going to hit. Ideas are constantly happening but you dont necessarily have the ability to always flesh them out into finished songs or whatever. So you try and take notes and document it, so when you actually do have the time to sit down in the studio and actually work with those ideas, theyre there. They arent forgotten. And thats kind of what happens. Well get a bunch of ideas together, and sometimes they originated on the road or randomly whenever. Well go through them all and pick things that ring with us: things that we like or that we want to expand on. And we work from there putting a song together.
A few weeks before I was due to take the winner of the indie music store shopping spree out for some record riffling (the package included two records each from three indie record stores along with some expert shopping advice and picks by yours truly), 30-year-old mainstay Vinyl Fever announced it was closing its doors for good.
Vinyl Fever was a participant in the spree and owner Lee Wolfson was still more than willing to offer the winning bidder store credit. But in the end, rather than stress the finances of an already-closing business (and so the winner wasnt limited to choosing from a dwindling stock of LPs), we offered to pick up the tab on an extra record at each of the two still-open and thriving stores, Mojo Books & Music in North Tampa and Daddy Kool in downtown St. Petersburg. The winner gladly accepted.
The spree was purchased by Jessica Hellman as a birthday/Christmas present for her vinyl/music loving boyfriend, Jonathan Peskin, though the day we went shopping, it was actually her birthday (and she snagged a few goodies for herself just to make it fair).
I didnt quite know what to expect when I agreed to interview Tampa plastic surgeon Dr. Charles McLaughlin. I knew that his family friend Gina Flynn-Carmack had been enthusiastic enough about him to place the winning bid for Buy the news in the Creative Loafing Holiday Auction, ensuring that CL would do a profile of the good doctor.
But plastic surgery? What did I know of the profession beyond Nip/Tuck and Cher? What would we talk about?
Well, as it turns out, lots. Because Dr. McLaughlin, aka Charlie, is a raconteur of the first order. From his memories of why he got into medicine, to his love of horses (which he breeds on a 40-acre farm in Wesley Chapel), to the art and antiques he collects, the 63-year-old North Carolina native has a story for everything.
On their way to helping us raise $19,000 for The Children's Home in the 2010 Online Holiday Auction, several lucky readers snagged a spot for themselves (or their friends and families) on the pages of Creative Loafing. In the print edition of CL that hit the streets Jan. 19, they got to see the results in content marked, aptly enough, SOLD! And in every instance, the winning bidders gave all or part of their bounty away.
Creative Loafings 2nd Annual Online Holiday Auction, which ran from Nov. 18 to Dec. 16, brought together hundreds of businesses and thousands of readers for one important cause: raising funds for The Childrens Home. We were hoping to top last years total $12,077 and we did. By a lot. (Scroll down to the end of the post for a video thank-you to area businesses from Children's Home residents, plus video from a gathering at CL on the final day of the auction, when the then-unofficial tally was announced.)
In the spirit of end-of-the-year Top 10 lists, here are 10 reasons this years auction was better than ever:
This is it your last chance to bid in the Creative Loafing Holiday Auction for The Children's Home. The final 20 items close today from noon-6 p.m., and they're among the biggest prizes of all: a vacation anywhere in the world; a private chef's dinner at Best of the Bay-winning restaurant The Refinery; Lady Gaga tickets; a private tour of the Tampa Museum of Art's upcoming Degas show; gourmet feasts at Datz and Taqueria Monterrey; package deals in SoHo and Dunedin; cocktail class at Fly; and poker lessons from a champion. Plus, this is the day to bid on CL's own big-ticket items: an event in CL Space; drinks with the political editor and a political mystery guest; an indie record-store shopping spree with the music editor; a CL profile of your band (and a chance to interview your favorite band); a story in the news section; and the cover of the paper's Jan. 20, 2011 issue.
We're close to breaking last year's $12,000-plus fundraising total for The Children's Home, but we can't do it without you. And, like every nonprofit organization these days, the Home is facing a tough fundraising climate and the prospect of making cuts in its vital programs for abused and neglected children if its budget goals aren't met.
Click on the following link to find out when your favorite items are up for bid, or go straight to cltampa.com/auction. The CL Holiday Auction is going down to the wire good luck!
This is absolutely a CAN'T MISS auction item for music fans who love New World Brewery, Ybor City's popular bar and concert venue. The fine folks at New World (in conjunction with promoters New Granada Presents, THX Mgmt and Brokenmold Entertainment) will grant the winner (and a companion) a spot on the guest list for every event held at the bar in 2011. We're talking more than 100 concerts and special events. Truckstop Coffee (pictured right, photo by Nicole Kibert) and Joan of Arc in January!! The Sunshine Factory in February!! More TBA!!
Note: This item is non-transferable, meaning only the winner will be placed on the guest list. However, the winner's choice of companion can change from to show to show.
Estimated Value: Priceless. Current bid: $225
This auction item closes Wed., Dec. 15 (today) at 6 p.m. Place your bid here.
It's the next-to-last day in the Creative Loafing Holiday Auction for the benefit of The Children's Home, and it's a big one. Almost 20 items close today starting at 12 noon and continuing until 7 p.m., ranging from amazing gift certificate packages to concert and theater-ticket offers you won't see anywhere but here. This is the day to bid if someone on your gift list is a music-lover or a film aficionado, a coffee connoisseur or a gourmet foodie; you can even win an appearance on local TV.
Make your bids at cltampa.com/auction. And keep coming back, because the final batch of items closes tomorrow — including such hotly contested items as Lady Gaga tickets, a vacation anywhere in the world, and the cover of CL.
The CL Holiday Auction marches on. Just three more days of bidding to go, and today's almost over! That's important news especially if you're a beer or wine aficionado, because
Plus, you've got two getaways to bid on at local resorts, concert tickets, original band posters and more. Remember, it's all for the benefit of The Children's Home. Go to cltampa.com/auction for more info.Closing today, Tues. Dec. 14, at 2 p.m.
Item #020: Escape weekend for two at Caliente Resort
Item #028: Two all-access passes to WildSplash
Item #034: Brokenmold Entertainment poster package
Item #064: Learn about wine at The Wine Exchange
Item #065: A wine-tasting party at home
Item #066: Brew your own beer at Cigar City Brewing and follow up at home
Item #067: Taste the best of Cigar City
Item #068: Private Belgian beer tasting for 8 at The Independent
Item #069: Beer tasting for 8 at Stone Soup Cafe
Closing today Tues. Dec. 14 at 5 p.m.
Item #021: A Winter weekend at the Postcard Inn on the Beach