 |
|
 |
| |
|
|
 |
Jerome Lagarrigue |
Cultural Stimuli in CHI Issue 91: paterfamilias flavor
Papa. Papi. Pops. Besides teaching you how to ride a bike and tie a sheep shank knot, dear old Dad's also the guy that taught you everything about fine art: all songs should have two guitar solos and every movie should end with a car chase. Though you're running your own life now (and Pop won't quit telling you when you screw it up), the city is still packed with events of which Pa would approve. It may not be what he's used to, but Dad can dig the crazy rock of Liars and respect artist Conor McGrady's hard-knock life. A staunch outdoorsman, he would insist that you get off your ass and bike to work, and quit listening to that cigarette-swiping no-goodnik Nikki Corvette. Pop always enjoys a good laugh, even if comedian Neil Hamburger puts the joke on him, but spendthrift furniture is no laughing matter. Don't get smart with Dad this Father's Day week — just take your lumps and spread it...
|
|
flavorpill CHI is an email magazine covering a hand-picked selection of music, art, and cultural events — delivered each Tuesday afternoon.


|
|
|
|
 |
|
Return to purity — detox with Evian. |
|
|
|
|

Gonna Make Ya Sweat
Last year's record crowds sent the weekly SummerDance DJ series in search of a new home, so this year the world-class DJ program goes nomadic with a new location every Monday and Wednesday night.
|
|
|
 |
| MUSIC: Indie Rock |
Young People w/ Pit er Pat and Lark
|
|
Whimsical local trio Pit er Pat have a nimble (and guitar-free!) art-pop sound that recalls a dissonant player piano roll or an off-kilter children's lullaby. Singer/electric pianist Fay Davis-Jeffers' fantastical musings on the Pied Piper, insects, and "animal conferences" are intoned with a lilting, sprightly, and occasionally breaking voice that is both charming and endearing. Her buoyant, jaunty piano melodies ride over lumbering bass and unusually cadenced, complex drumming. Bicoastal coed duo Young People headline with sparse, noisy post-folk, while Theo Katsaounis (of the Traitors, Locks, and A Tundra) opens under his Lark moniker. (SN)
|
|
| ALSO ON TUE |
|
ART: Performance
12 x 12: D. Denenge Akpem Tue 6.13 (6pm) Museum of Contemporary Art (220 E Chicago Ave, 312.280.2660) map $10 admission
Event Info |
|
D. Denenge Akpem's Dutch-American mother and Tiv-Nigerian father formed her name from two Tiv words meaning "wait and see." For tonight's final performance, the artist climbs inside a fiber-optic jellyfish and reworks the Rapunzel myth with Afrocentric sci-fi style. (AM)
Note: D. Denenge Akpem leads a tour of her exhibition tonight at 6:30pm. Akpem's ongoing exhibition runs through Sun 7.2 (schedule).
|
|
|
MUSIC: Drone Pop
Pink Mountaintops w/ the Black Angels and Catfish Haven Tue 6.13 (9:30pm) The Empty Bottle (1035 N Western Ave, 773.276.3600) map $10
Event Info |
|
This dense and drone-heavy double bill gets speaker cones a-smokin' by pitting Vancouver scenester Stephen McBean's political-minded project Pink Mountaintops against the Velvet Underground fetishists in Austin's Black Angels. (PS)
|
|
|
|
 |
| MUSIC: Post-Punk |
Bottomless Pit w/ Eux Autres
|
|
Silkworm stalwarts Tim Midgett and Andy Cohen started Bottomless Pit in 2005, not long after their drummer, Michael Dahlquist, was killed in a tragic car accident in July of that year. Now joined by ex-Seam drummer Chris Manfrin and .22's Brian Orchard, the quartet plays soulful, poignant post-punk that handles misfortune in a decidedly uplifting way. Bottomless Pit harbor the hardness of the classic Silkworm sound, inserting emotional intensity and whip-crack dynamics. Portland's faux-French brother-sister pop duo Eux Autres opens. (SG)
In the classic children's story Alice in Wonderland, who was Alice sitting with before she chased the white rabbit down an (almost) bottomless hole? The first and third correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| MUSIC: Whisper Pop |
Doveman w/ David Thomas Broughton and Roommate
|
|
The only advantage of taking a date to see David Thomas Broughton is that you seem less crazy by comparison. With lines like "I wouldn't take her to an execution/I wouldn't take her to a live sex show... because I love her so," this new-Americana maniac's music is as creepy as it is compelling. Clonking slowly through withdrawn acoustic ballads, the low-voiced singer evokes the kind of dark, perverse atmospheres usually left to backwater porn theaters in small, abandoned towns. Headliners Doveman try to lighten the mood with slightly less downtrodden tales of loss and regret. Good luck guys. (AP)
What is the origin of Doveman's band name? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
|
 |
| MUSIC: Mr. MopeyMope |
David Bazan
| when: |
Thur 6.15 (9pm) |
| where: |
Schubas (3159 N Southport Ave, 773.525.2508) map |
| price: |
$12 |
| links: |
Event Info | David Bazan |
|
|
David Bazan is so soft-spoken and gracious onstage — all scruffy beard and twitchy, sleepy gaze — you'd never guess the man has a capacity for such lyrical cruelty and dark, sociopathic themes. As lead singer/songwriter for the dearly departed Pedro the Lion (whose Control and Winners Never Quit are masterpieces of exhilaratingly doleful indie rock), Bazan chronicled infidelity, murder, and crises of faith with an unflinching, novelistic attention to detail. The Eeyore-esque singer now tours as a solo artist, playing new songs alongside heartbreaking cuts from his PtL albums and his underrated synth-and-drums project, Headphones. Thankfully, being talented, prolific, and appreciated hasn't done much to lighten the guy's mood. (TG)
During the early '90s (before Pedro the Lion), what was the name of David Bazan's conscience-stricken rock band? The second correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| MUSIC: Lo-Fi |
90 Day Men w/ Home and Supreme Court
| when: |
Thur 6.15 (9:30pm) |
| where: |
The Empty Bottle (1035 N Western Ave, 773.276.3600) map |
| price: |
$10 |
| links: |
Event Info | 90 Day Men | Home |
|
|
Lo-fi pop experimentalists Home have finally released their first album in seven years, a naughty, tongue-firmly-in-cheek ode to all things coital: Sexteen. A 19-song opus featuring descriptions of lewd and gleefully lascivious behavior over catchy, Devo-esque keyboard melodies and snappy little bass lines, the album recalls the adolescent yearnings and pop perfection of Magnetic Fields' 69 Love Songs, affirming Home's ascent to indie-icon status. Chicago's lusty prog-enthusiasts 90 Day Men headline their first hometown show in over a year, and DJ Supreme Court spins between sets. (SN)
Which classic '80s alt-rock band is lyrically referenced throughout the 90 Day Men album A National Car Crash? The fourth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
|
 |
| CITY GEM |
Bike to Work Day Rally
| when: |
Fri 6.16 (7:30-9am) |
| where: |
Daley Plaza (Dearborn & Washington Sts, 312.744.3315) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Though you'd be hard pressed to find Da Mayor rolling up his pant legs, strapping on a safety helmet, and pedaling through rush-hour traffic to City Hall, he has made it a point to encourage everyone else to adopt a two-wheeled commute. As part of the Bike Chicago event series, the city is holding a downtown rally for all cycle-inclined Chicagoans, passing out t-shirts, raffle prizes, and free breakfasts. While this Sturgis-for-the-morning bike set may not reach Critical Mass proportions, it'll surely gather a sizable crowd at Daley Plaza in support of people-powered transport. (PS)
|
|
| ART |
Conor McGrady
| when: |
Fri 6.16 - Sat 8.19 (Fri: 10am-6pm / Sat: 11am-6pm) |
| where: |
Thomas Robertello Gallery (939 W Randolph St, 312.421.1587) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info | Conor McGrady |
|
|
Northern Ireland native Conor McGrady paints some tough characters. His work is populated with thieves, police, soldiers, prisoners, and institutional architecture, and is heavily informed by his experience living in the military-controlled atmosphere of the Troubles. McGrady not only highlights the oppressive atmosphere but illustrates its futility. In the New Recruit series, he emphasizes the smallish, vulnerable forms of young men wearing huge hats and broad-shouldered uniforms, and in the Car Thief series, McGrady's stark, confrontational style somehow emphasizes the humanity of his paintings' mug-shot subjects. (AM)
|
|
| MUSIC: Indie Pop |
The Spinto Band w/ Dr. Dog and the Lovely Feathers
|
|
Canadian kiddos the Lovely Feathers grab you by the collar and shove their candy-coated creativity down your throat. Quirky almost to the point of fatal self-deconstruction, the band's debut Hind Hind Legs gets by on a Unicorns-esque sense of musical playtime, compacting hooks into unexpected shapes and singing plaintively about the death of a Pope. Dr. Dog are (slightly) more mature, reconstituting Beatles and Neil Young riffs in splashes of hippy-dippy sing-along. Headliners the Spinto Band are the most restrained indie-poppers of the lot. This is not to say that they don't fly off the handle once in a while — but when they do lose control, it's in that tastefully self-aware, adulty kind of way. (TG)
What major department store recently used one of the Spinto Band's songs in a commercial? The fourth correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| MUSIC: Automotive Punk |
Nikki Corvette w/ Nagg and the Busy Signals
|
|
When Nikki Corvette released her bouncy pop-punk debut back in 1981, it evaporated like so many other new-wave also-rans. Flash forward to 2000, when Bomp! re-released Corvette's album, highlighting its clear influence on the Donnas — and sudden relevance. Corvette projects a love of Phil Spector melodies and Chuck Berry guitar licks that casts her as the girl who sneaks cigarettes with the bad boys but still makes it home before curfew. Corvette's recent Back to Detroit continues the rock themes — boys, rock 'n roll, gettin' in trouble — but with a heaping spoonful of sugar. Openers Nagg feature AC/DShe's Bonny Scott on vocals. (QH)
Bad girls: trash or treasure? In 50 words or less, explain why you love/hate a classic bad girl (Joan Jett, Shannon Dougherty, et. al). Our two favorite responses each win a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| ALSO ON FRI |
|
DJ
Demon Days feat. Carl Craig w/ Gamall, and Jerome D Fri 6.16 (10pm) SmartBar (3730 N Clark St, 773.549.0203) map $12 / $10 before midnight
Event Info |
|
Named to reflect the crazy times in which we're living, this traveling clubland circus features the music of Detroit techno legend Carl Craig and NY jock Gamall alongside art by Amsterdam-based designer Parra. (PS)
|
|
|
|
 |
| LECTURE |
Sustainable Furniture
| when: |
Sat 6.17 (10am-12pm) |
| where: |
Chicago Center for Green Technology (445 N Sacramento Blvd, 312.746.9642) map |
| price: |
with registration |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Interior design dilemma solved: ditch the staid Swedish plywood and add an earth-friendly touch to your flat. At the Sustainable Furniture seminar, presented by Chicago's Green Tech U., Emily Pilloton, a member of the Chicago Furniture Designers Association, demonstrates ways to "reincarnate" your old couches and chairs (talk about serious feng shui benefits). Instead of merely restoring, refinishing, or replacing old furniture, Pilloton focuses on creative methods of repurposing aged items to give your dwelling a new look without breaking the bank or stuffing landfills with unnecessary waste. (PS)
|
|
| COMEDY |
Neil Hamburger
|
|
That time you slipped and fell on ice last winter. The not-actually-pregnant woman you discussed due dates with. The overwhelming paralysis of junior prom. None of these events quite compares to the awkwardness generated when Neil Hamburger works a room. Hamburger's crowds pass through all stages of shock, fear, denial, and outrage as the comedian powers through one distasteful, poorly timed joke after another. Hamburger's helpless facade and earnest smile push crowds to new heights of heckling and taunting — until he suddenly drags them back to his side with an alarmingly on-point gag. As the night progresses, it's nearly impossible to tell who the joke is really on. (JL)
What failed record label did Gregg Turkington (the comedian who "plays" Hamburger) co-own? The first two correct responses each win a pair of tickets to this event.
|
|
| MUSIC: Electro-Rock |
Magas w/ Glass Candy and Chromatics
| when: |
Sat 6.17 (10pm) |
| where: |
The Empty Bottle (1035 N Western Ave, 773.276.3600) map |
| price: |
$10 / $8 advance |
| links: |
Event Info | Magas | Chromatics |
|
|
This bill calls out to all the hearts of glass out there. Chromatics inhabit the same bracingly austere synth-pop ice palace that the Knife built so lovingly on their latest album. For Chromatics' latest 12-inch, Nite, the band neatly bridges the danceable and the melodramatic, adorning mutant disco with mournful vocals and arpeggios that practically drip mascara. Glass Candy are likewise fond of that arch new-wave electro-pop sound that's been revived to death lately, but like their Troubleman Unlimited labelmates, they avoid the trap of overly faithful homage. While they drop indifferently pouty Blondie-esque vocals, they lay them over ingrown yet catchy synth hooks and a bossy 808. Magas headline. (TW)
What is the name of the record shop James Marlon Magas (of Magas) runs? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| ALSO ON SAT |
|
ARCHITECTURE
Douglas Garofalo Sat 6.17 - Sun 10.8 (schedule) The Art Institute of Chicago (111 S Michigan Ave, 312.443.3600) map $12
Event Info |
|
Prolific, progressive architect Douglas Garofalo shows drawing, models, plans, and digital media for various projects, from ultramodern residences (the Nothstine house in Wisconsin) to multifunctional spaces (the new Hyde Park Art Center). (AM)
|
|
|
|
 |
| CITY GEM |
Millennium Park Workouts feat. the Joffrey Ballet
|
|
If you spend your days parked in front of a computer, your body is slowly curling its way into a Mr. Burns hunch. And unless your partner's last name is Smithers, no one is going to find that very attractive. Before strapping on an orthopedic brace, check out the free summertime workouts in Millennium Park. Exercise experts from the Lake Shore Athletic Club lead a yoga class, followed by Pilates — both world-class methods for tightening posture and stretching those hamstrings and lats after hours of self-Googling. Once you're thoroughly loosened, put those muscles to work with a special dance session conducted by the Joffrey Ballet. Eeeexcellent. (QH)
|
|
| MUSIC: Noise |
Liars w/ the Apes
| when: |
Sun 6.18 (9:30pm) |
| where: |
Logan Square Auditorium (2539 N Kedzie Ave, 773.252.6179) map |
| price: |
$12 |
| links: |
Event Info | Liars | The Apes |
|
|
The past few years have proven a pivotal turning point for Liars, and it seems the experimental rock band's relocation to Berlin was just the artistic catalyst it needed to evolve. This year's Drum's Not Dead is a complex amalgam of heavy drumbeats, radiating guitars, swirling bass lines, and dronish vocals, ebbing and flowing with an anxious intensity. Though the trance-inducing voyage is vividly industrial, it's also emotionally driven, at times ringing like the ritual music of some urban, postmodern tribe. The Apes open. (DM)
What is the most elaborate lie you've ever told? Our favorite response in 50 words or less wins a pair of tickets to this show.
|
|
| MUSIC: Avant-Jazz |
Isotope 217
| when: |
Sun 6.18 (10pm) |
| where: |
The Empty Bottle (1035 N Western Ave, 773.276.3600) map |
| price: |
$12 / $10 advance |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
An unstable improvisational compound comprising key members of Tortoise and alumni of Chicago's eclectic free-jazz scene, Isotope 217 have proven without a doubt that they're more than a mere side project. Formed during the city's post-rock heyday in the mid-'90s, the group brings together some of the local scene's more iconic instrumental voices — Jeff Parker's prickly guitar and Rob Mazurek's braying trumpet, among others — and melds experimental electronic grooves and percussion with funky fusion jazz. Their two sets split the difference between a solid back catalogue and improvisational jam sessions. (PS)
What makes an element an isotope? The third correct response wins a pair of tickets to this event.
|
|
|
 |
| DJ |
SummerDance Nomadic DJ Series feat. Greenskeepers w/ Phantom 45 and Danny the Wildchild
|
|
SummerDance has swiftly become one of the most talked about and attended community events in Chicago, and rightfully so. Each year, the momentum grows through the addition of DJs and high-class sponsors. This year the series goes Nomadic, with the 10-week showcase making appearances on Mondays and Wednesdays in different locales throughout the city (don't show up at the Spirit of Music Garden as usual — the Petrillo Bandshell is the order of the night). Tonight features home-grown favorites Greenskeepers, Phantom 45, and Danny the Wildchild, spinning good ol' Chicago house music — our greatest export. (VG)
|
|
| READING |
Music with Meaning 7
| when: |
Mon 6.19 (7pm) |
| where: |
Quimby's (1854 W North Ave, 773.342.0910) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
The Music with Meaning series is 30 days of unfettered music-and-culture musings and intrepid blurtings from Chicago's finest writers, bloggers, and performers. Today's gonzo journalism consists of a cornucopia of uncensored media — blogs, one-man shows, columns, websites, zines, small presses — and Music with Meaning has 'em all. Tonight's reading features Jim DeRogatis, Sun-Times pop-music critic and author of Let It Blurt: The Life and Times of Lester Bangs, America's Greatest Rock Critic; blogster/zinester Jessica Hopper; Brian Costello, host of the Brian Costello Show and author of the fictional hipster chronicle The Enchanters vs. Sprawlburg Springs; Pitchfork Media news editor Amy Phillips; and well-known Chicago blogger J.R. Nelson. (MS)
|
|
|
 |
| ART |
Shannon Stratton and Lisa Boumstein-Smalley: Forecast
| when: |
Now through Fri 6.30 (Wed-Sat: 1-6pm) |
| where: |
Gallery 40000 (1001 N Winchester Ave, 773.342.4930) map |
| price: |
 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
Forecast bodes well for Gallery 40000 — it's the last exhibition in the Augusta Ave storefront before the gallery makes the leap to 119 N Peoria in the West Loop Gallery District proper, and it's a doozy. Artists Shannon Stratton and Lisa Boumstein-Smalley play on concepts of weather, using dissimilar media but analogous approaches to incorporate accumulation, change, and stasis. Stratton's works are multimedia collages made with crafty materials such as fabric, tape, and foil (her Cyclone is a whirlwind of spiraled lace and thread), while Boumstein-Smalley uses graphite to amass clouds on paper and employs map pins to "draw" on a wall. (AM)
|
|
| FILM |
African Diaspora Film Festival
| when: |
Fri 6.16 - Thur 6.22 (schedule) |
| where: |
Facets Cinémathèque (1517 W Fullerton Ave, 773.281.4114) map |
| price: |
$9 |
| links: |
Event Info |
|
|
The African Diaspora Film Festival features cinematic works of emerging and established filmmakers of color. Founded in 1993 by the husband and wife team of Reinaldo Barroso-Spech and Diarah N'Daw-Spech, the ADFF focuses on the rich talent, intellectual diversity, and unique stories generated by the African Diaspora — the movement of African peoples throughout the world. Notable films include Catch a Fire, a biopic on Deacon Paul Bogle (sometimes referred to as "a 19th-century Malcolm X"), and the slavery narrative Manderlay, directed by Lars von Trier (Dogville, Dancer in the Dark) and starring Danny Glover. (VG)
|
|
| FILM |
I Am A Sex Addict
|
|
It may sound like a Wilt Chamberlin or Charlie Sheen biopic, but I Am a Sex Addict is in fact a riveting piece of autobiographical filmmaking by Caveh Zahedi. Moments before he gets married for the third time, Zahedi launches into a diatribe in front of his bride about his obsession with prostitutes, recalling a lifetime spent exploring the farthest reaches of the sexual spectrum. Brutally honest, Sex Addict manages to be both a comedy (hard to avoid it with that title, really) and a serious chronicle of the problems and pain that result from Zahedi's addictive behavior. (PS)
|
|
|
 |
| |
PEEL SLOWLY: 18th Onion City Experimental Film & Video Festival |
 |
|
For the last 17 years, the Onion City Experimental Film & Video Festival (Thur 6.15 - Sun 6.18, schedule) has showcased new and innovative experimental visual delights from across the globe. This year's exceedingly eclectic festival boasts 70 films, including 20 US and world premieres. Opening night includes underground animator Lawrence Jordan's Poet's Dream; Soul Dancing by Japan's "trance film" master, Kiyoshi Kurosawa; Bob Dylan's screen tests for Andy Warhol; and Abbas Kiarostami's remarkable, poetic essay on what he loves about Iranian and world culture. Consisting of nine loosely themed programs such as "Outer and Inner Spaces," "Blinded by Science," and "Literati," the festival offers a plethora of voices, stunning visuals, brilliant animation, and simply adventurous filmmaking. (PG)
|
|
| |
|
| |
CD REVIEW: Final Fantasy, He Poos Clouds |
 |
|
Tomlab
Released June 2006
$14.99 (Insound)
|
A bizarre, beautiful work of visionary excess, Final Fantasy's He Poos
Clouds demands repeated listens, if only to quell your "what the hell
was that?" reflex. Arrangement-wise, Poos is a work of classical
composition, pitting the deft violin counterpoint and Donovan-esque vocal
quaver of Owen Pallett — Arcade Fire's stringsman — against
tympani, harpsichords, and primal screams. And yet, in time the mess
crystallizes into pop songs — gorgeous, sweeping things with
slow-reveal melodies and wry, sharply imagistic storytelling. The album is
ostensibly an "attempt to modernize each of the eight D&D schools of magic"
(the Montrealer's a proud nerd, god love 'im) but you'd never know it. The
title track plays like a demented musical-theatre showcase, and "This Lamb
Sells Condos" relays the heart-wrenching tale of a real-estate mogul with a
failing marriage and massive, uncooperative genitals. So showy and campy,
He Poos Clouds is almost too much to take. Almost. (TG)
|
|
| |
|
| |
MULTIMEDIA: BBC Collective |
 |
|
Nevermind the "online" qualifier; the BBC Collective is among the most consistently engaging cultural outlets around, period. Providing a platform for discerning readers to exchange views on new music, film, and culture, the site also creates some of the best weekly content we've seen in our frequent web and newsstand trawlings. This week, check out an interview with two of electronic music's most influential conspirators, Karl Hyde and Rick Smith of Underworld, who discuss their groundbreaking Riverrun Project. Also busting open conventions is artist Marcel Dzama, who's interviewed and featured in an interactive gallery of works he recently displayed at Birmingham's Ikon Gallery. Finally, tune into the Collective's pièce de résistance, its staff-compiled playlist, featuring new music from Simian, Tuung, and Vetiver. (CJN)
|
 |
Underworld: Interview and Riverrun Tracks (Electronic)
|
 |
Marcel Dzama: Interview and Gallery (Visual art)
|
 |
Various Artists: Collective Playlist (Eclectic)
|
|
| |
|
|
 |
| |
| |
| Header Design: |
| Thurston Moore | Jerome Lagarrigue |
| |
| Editors: |
| Big Poppa | Kimberlyn David | | King Ferdinand | Chris Gage | | King Missile | Jocelyn K. Glei | | Noah | Todd Goldstein | | Father Abraham | Quanah Humphreys | | Simba | Doug Levy | | Anakin Skywalker | Sascha Lewis | | James Earl Jones | Mark Mangan | | Harry Dean Stanton | Audrey Mast | | Beard Papa | Colin J. Nagy | | Mufasa | Patrick Sisson |
| |
| ABOUT US |
| Flavorpill CHI is a free weekly email magazine covering cultural happenings, across art, music, film, theatre, dance, literature, and DJ events. All content is produced by a local team of writers in Chicago. We don't include sold-out events, and all listings are pure editorial — no money is accepted from venues, artists, or promoters. Read more about us. |
| |
| FEEDBACK |
| Please let us know what's on your mind, any and all feedback — comments, questions, ideas, or rants. |
| |
| EVENT & DESIGN SUBMISSIONS |
To let us know about an upcoming event that you think belongs here, please email us at events at least two weeks prior to the date.
To find out more about submitting cover art to run at the top of Flavorpill publications, go to flavorpill.net/design. |
| |
| |
|
|
| | |
| Contributors: |
| Tony Danza | Victor Ganic | | Tim Stephans | Stevie Greco | | Jesus Christ | Patricia Gray | | Johnny Cash | John Lombardo | | Jon Voight | Suzanne Niemoth | | Larry Flint | Andrew Phillips | | Al Pacino | Marla Seidell | | G.G. Allin | Toby Warner |
| |
Production: |
| Rob Pollard | Anjuli Ayer | | Uncle Jesse | Chelsea Bauch | | King Roland | Jessica Bauer-Greene | | RuPaul | Morgan Croney | | Ira Kaplan | Myla Dalbesio | | Al Bundy | Josh Deeden | | Sam Beam | David Goodine | | Ghengis Khan | Jasmine Loignon | | Daddy longlegs | Sander-Martijn Milks | | Neil Young | David Morrow | | Danny Tanner | Leah Taylor | | Bill Cosby | Judah Wiedre |
| |
| MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS |
| Every week, Flavorpill CHI presents one exclusive media partner. Click for more information about advertising opportunities on all Flavorpill publications. |
| |
|
|
|
|
| |
MORE FILTERED CULTURE |
Hi-fidelity updates
A twice-monthly email magazine high- lighting the latest in electronic music — including news, reviews, and original features
 |
Books worth reading
A monthly review focusing on smart, readable works of fiction and nonfiction, from current titles to past gems
 |
Global fashion trends
A twice-monthly, insider view on fashion trends breaking in Paris, London, New York, and around the world
 |
International art
A twice-monthly email magazine covering art, design, and architecture with profiles, news, and reviews of inter- national shows
 |
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
|