Posted inOutside

BCS Lovers!: Why do these people enjoy ruining college football?

BCS is ruining college football

Somewhere on Sunday, likely in a dimly lit cavernous room inside a decrepit castle atop a craggy mountaintop surrounded at all times by a lightning storm, sat the group of men, likely smoking cigars and likely wearing the finest of suits, who make up the collective brain of the Bowl Championship Series. The committee had just unveiled to the world that LSU and Alabama would be playing for the national championship and had also just laid out the slate of other BCS games.
“Excellent job, men,” said one of the mysterious BCS men through a mouth full of caviar, which he quickly washed down with champagne that had been filtered through the horn of a unicorn.

Posted inNews

The Comeback Colonel: Once a homeless veteran, a local man is drawing his way back into society

Local veteran working his way back into society.

They called him the Colonel and while I figured he probably never attained that rank during his time in the Army, he seemed to command the respect of everyone on that exceptionally cold spring morning earlier this year. I remember that, and how he appeared out of nowhere, it seemed, as volunteers from the Central Oregon Veterans Outreach (COVO) arrived in a makeshift Bend homeless camp, as they do every week, with food, camping gear, fresh water, toiletries and other supplies.
He cheerfully greeted the three volunteers, whom he clearly had come to know quite well during the few months since he'd been living in the camp. Soon he got to talking about life as a homeless veteran in Central Oregon. The cheerfulness immediately disappeared when he told me about a friend of his who'd recently died in the camp. Emotion was coming over him as he mumbled, “They're dooming us to failure out here.”

Posted inCulture

Fancy Trash: The Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show turns waste into stylish threads

Benefit for REALMS features intriguing attire.

A month or so ago, a woman came into our office asking if she could have some old copies of the Source. We get this request quite frequently from loyal readers who've been out of town and perhaps want to catch up on the issues they missed. But she wanted more than just a few copies.
“Are you moving?” one of our staffers asked, guessing the second most typical reason someone would be looking for old copies of our paper en masse.
“No, I'm making a dress out of newspaper. It's going to be awesome,” she said as she left the building.
We were confused, but only until a few days later when we received word about the second-annual Rubbish Renewed Eco Fashion Show, a benefit for the Rimrock Expeditionary Alternative Learning Middle School (REALMS), taking place on Thursday, December 8 at the Century Center. This show, which got off to a successful start last year, encourages the community to create fashionable outfits from used items. Newspaper certainly qualifies as a used item, and falls perfectly into the theme of Rubbish Renewed. Suddenly, her statement made a lot more sense.

Posted inOutside

It’s Back: The NBA lockout is over and that’s good…and bad

The pros and cons of a depleted NBA season.

I'll admit it. I've been borderline apocalyptical in my predictions about the 2011-2012 NBA season in that I have told many, many people that there probably won't be an NBA season this winter. I also wildly declared that professional basketball as we know it would cease to exist as a result of the lockout.
OK, I look a little bit like Harold Camping right now. If you don't remember who Harold Camping is, he's that old asshole who told a bunch of other old assholes to give him all their money because the world was going to end earlier this year. I, too, am kind of an a-hole, I suppose, because there will indeed be an NBA season this winter and it doesn't look like the demise of professional American basketball is coming to an end anytime soon.
I still don't know which side won this dispute or if it even matters, but I'm now faced with preparing my psyche for an NBA season slated to begin on Christmas Day. That's right, as if owners and players weren't displaying enough hubris in their “negotiations,” they went ahead and superseded the birthday of Jesus Christ for their big tipoff day.

Posted inCulture

Funniest Woman in Three Counties: Chelsea Woodmansee wins Central Oregon's Last Comic Standing

Chelsea Woodmansee wins Central Oregon’s Last Comic Standing.

When Chelsea Woodmansee's name was announced as the winner of Central Oregon's Last Comic Standing on Friday night, she may have been one of the most surprised people in the building. That didn't stop her, however, from bounding onto the Old Stone Church stage to join runner up Samantha Albert and third-place finisher Stan Whitton in a celebratory hug.
Having never performed stand-up comedy before entering the contest (which she did at the last moment), the 28-year-old office administrator managed to out joke more than 20 other comics, including her own brother, over the course of the month-plus-long contest. And as a reward, she took home more than $2,200 in cash, as well as offers to take the stage with local improve groups and appear at comedy showcases.

Posted inMusic

It's Funk, Man: Orgone just wants to see you dance

Orgone wants you to dance.

The members of Orgone are in Las Vegas, which seems like it would be the perfect spot for an eight-piece, dancefloor-conquering funk and soul collective to play four consecutive nights of shows. Well, yeah, that hasn't exactly been the case.
Sure, this Los Angeles-bred band likes to party, or at least provide the soundtrack for parties, but Vegas isn't really their speed, guitarist and co-founder Sergio Rios tells me late on a Friday afternoon. Soon, they'd be heading down for their third night playing in a casino lounge, where he says the stage is tucked behind the bar and the management insists that even the band must obey a dress code that forbids the wearing of hats. The shows have been OK – not exactly as raucous as their typical performances – but Orgone is mostly enjoying the downtime in their high-rise hotel.

Posted inOutside

Wide Wrong: In defense of the American-style football kicker

Examining the high stress job on an American Football kicker.

The kick was wide left. It was one of those kicks that was doomed from the second it left the ground and it also happened to be one of those kicks that ends a team's hopes for a national championship.
But before Oregon kicker Alejandro Maldonado even took the field to try to send his team into overtime on Saturday night, the Duck gear-clad woman on the bar stool next to me said, “Our kicker is awful.” Then she said it again, and then one more time as Oregon marched down the field. It turns out this was foreshadowing the final seconds of the game when it all came down to the kicker, as it so often does.
And this isn't fair. Not in the slightest, because a kicker isn't really part of the team. Yeah, they're on the roster and they get a uniform (usually taking whatever number happens to be left over) and a helmet with inadequate facial protection, but if you were to grab a defensive end at random and ask if he knew his kicker's name, there's a good chance he'd just mumble something vaguely eastern European and walk away. Hell, kickers don't even participate in the team practice. While the squad is perfecting its offense, the kicker is typically at the other end of the field, perhaps with the punter if he's lucky, just kicking the damn ball around. They just don't fit in and even announcers don't give a damn about them most of the time, failing to even narrate the goings on of extra points – which are an expected certainty yet are actually incredibly difficult to execute.

Posted inMusic

From the Ground Up: Harley Bourbon's fast track DIY path to making great acoustic rock music

Harley Bourbon making great music from the ground up.

Sitting outside of a downtown Bend coffee shop, the four members of Harley Bourbon are talking about the name of their band, which also happens to be the name of one of their favorite drinks. The band, you see, is a raucous indie-folk-meets-punk-rock quartet and the drink is a seemingly weird mix of orange juice and Jim Beam that these four young local musicians insist is delicious.
Orange juice and Jim Beam? Really? Let's get back to that band name.
“Motorcycles and bourbon. What's more American than those two things? Remember when you were a kid and you wanted to be a cowboy? This is my way of doing that, I guess,” says guitarist and songwriter John Forrest, getting a laugh from longtime friend and fellow guitarist Collin Rhoton, with whom he's been collaborating since they were bored 14 year olds growing up in the coastal town of Ocean Shores, Washington.
Now, at age 22, Forrest has no aspirations of becoming a cowboy, but has quickly made Harley Bourbon into one of the more engaging young live acts on the Central Oregon music scene. And all of this has happened quite quickly. While at first it was just Forrest and Rhoton, Boxcar String Band bassist Casey Cathcart soon joined the band, cementing the strong friendship between the two bands. With the sound growing, Forrest and Rhoton figured they should add some percussion, and they didn't have to look far to find it. Both Forrest and Rhoton are cooks at Flatbread Community Oven and when they heard that one of the servers, Maxine Roach, played the drums, they soon had a rootsy, but raging, acoustic rock band.

Posted inMusic

Anastacia: Where the Road Meets the Sky

Anastacia builds on its gypsy folk sounds from Grains of Sand.

If you were at the Church of Neil on Saturday night, you saw the musical range of local singer-songwriter Anastacia, who donned a floppy Neil Young-esque hat and ripped through some amazing covers, including a roaring version of “Old Man.”
That was impressive, but it's not exactly what you'll hear on her new EP, Where the Road Meets the Sky, a six-song collection that showcases her silky voice and poppy songwriting chops.

Posted inOutside

The Week That Was: And how sports became part of the real world

The scandal that shocked the sports world.

There's one tenet of sports fandom I hold most dear and it's also the reason I spend so much of my time talking about this subject: these games have almost zero effect on real life.
Yes, you're going to enter a mild depression when your football team of choice fumbles on the goal line or when that last-second three pointer rims out, but unless you're moronically betting large sums of money on these games, none of this affects you, the fan. And that, I've always thought, is also one of the greatest things about allowing oneself to love a sports team: none of it is real. It's just part of the sports world. Not the real world, and that's why it's always so easy for me to nonsensically vomit out jokes about sports in this column – none of it is real, so of course it's funny.

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