Sandra is depressed and has a nervous breakdown, entering the hospital and taking time off from her job at a solar panel factory. While away, her boss sees that the factory can be run by 15 people instead of 16. When Sandra comes back to work, she finds that her employer has made her co-workers […]
Jared Rasic
Film critic and author of food, arts and culture stories for the Source Weekly since 2010.
Ralphie May talks about the man behind the comedy routine
I chatted with stand-up comic Ralphie Mayโformer runner-up on “Last Comic Standing”โin advance of his show in Bend. Here is the complete transcript of that conversation. May performs tonight at the Tower Theatre. Source Weekly: You’re 17 and you win a contest to open for Sam Kinison- super exciting or pants-shitting nervousness? Ralphie May: Uh, […]
Second-to-Last Comic Standing
Ralphie May walks between the raindrops. Some critics think he’s racist, sexist and likes using the word “retard” a little too much. But the man who came just short of winning the first season of “Last Comic Standing” lives a blessed life with a beautiful wife, two gorgeous kids and his own damned bus to […]
Short, But Stern
The short film category at the Oscars is a fascinating cinematic examination. In some sense, they are the pure films, not worried about commercial success, and in other ways, they are the minor leagues, a place to see the up-and-coming talent. But they also are a fascinating insight into the mind of the Academy’s collective […]
Not Happy, But High Quality
There is not as much of a thematic through-line with the documentary selections as the live action narratives, except a subtle one: Regular people dealing with trauma, death and depression and keeping hope alive. While that sounds like a brutal bit of programming (and at times it is), there is always light and beauty; there […]
Film Events 1/28-2/4
The Wrecking Crew This documentary follows the career of a group of mostly anonymous studio musicians that played in recording sessions in Los Angeles during the 1960s for some of the biggest artists of all time. They did film scores, TV and radio jingles, and theme songs, while recording for a diverse lineup including Sonny […]
Southern Gothic
Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie is not easy theater. The play forces its audience members to step into a family life so intimate and revealing that it can shed light on our own situations we might not be comfortable examining. It is easy to draw comparisons to one’s own familial relationships and either find ourselves […]
Film Events 1/21-1/29
It’s Just Sage Brush: The Life History of the Great Sage Grouse The High Desert Museum is hosting a presentation by Garth Fuller of the Nature Conservancy about a new, collaborative effort to restore sage grouse habitat. Following Fuller’s presentation there will be a screening of a documentary film by Steve Chindgren entitled The film […]
The Dolce & Gabbana-logues
Love, Loss and What I Wore is a gutsy proposition of a play. It focuses exclusively on stories of women, some hilarious, some bittersweet and heartbreaking, all told through the outfits and accessories they wore at the time. It is simply staged, with images of some of the dresses projected around the cast of five […]
Film Events 1/15-1/21
The Metropolitan Opera: The Merry Widow Lehár’s operetta has been incredibly successful since its 1905 premiere in Vienna, Austria. The story follows a rich widow and the men in her life that attempt to control her so they can keep her money local. That sounds right up Bend’s alley! The operetta has proved so popular […]

