By Will Falk
driven north across
the Canadian border
Viet Nam is long lost
I make war on myself
and I’m getting beat
late July and I’ve
been running so long
my clothes are soaked with summer
I am sick of my own smell [Read more…]
by Will Falk
By Will Falk
driven north across
the Canadian border
Viet Nam is long lost
I make war on myself
and I’m getting beat
late July and I’ve
been running so long
my clothes are soaked with summer
I am sick of my own smell [Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
Brick by brick workers
Assembled lawns light showers
Rubbing away lines
[Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
Eventually
Nobody heard the freeway
Running (Humming) (Drumming) Through backyards [Read more…]
Compiled by Brent E. Beltrán
This week’s edition of Looking Back at the Week features articles by San Diego Free Press and OB Rag regulars and at-large contributors on Comic-Con, a proud day for activism, stinky SDPD, the Mayor’s climate indifference, GOP wanting to impeach, minimum wage, Obama and Cap America, Neighborhood House, for-profit colleges, who runs San Diego, bare facts, native solidarity, El Machete, OB planning and lots more. [Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
When asked
where you are from
say Montreal Mexico Brazil
Don’t tell the truth
unless you have the balls to take the lies your country has slapped across their faces …
[Read more…]
SDFP Writer Inundated with Comic-Con Related Emails
By Brent E. Beltrán
Last year I covered Comic-Con for San Diego Free Press. I wrote five articles in a series I called Adventures in Comic-Conlandia: A Nerds-eye View. You can read them here: Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV & Part 5. This was my first attempt at writing about something I had loved since I started attending back in 1986. Though grueling I thoroughly enjoyed the experience and will cover the event again this week. I plan on being not so ambitious this year.
Sometimes Comic-Con sneaks up on you. You don’t know it is here until trolley station signs are written in Klingon or you’re standing in line for a happy hour beverage next to a Stormtrooper.
For me that wasn’t the case this year. You see, I’ve been inundated with press releases for the past month and it’s picked up even more within the last week. I’ve been sent hundreds of emails from the various media, toy and comic book companies that want to get the word out about their latest film, action figure or storyline. [Read more…]
by Ernie McCray
(Inspired by the Corner of Rhythm and Rhyme)
By Ernie McCray
I just spent a week doing a show at the San Diego International Fringe Festival called “On the Corner of Rhythm and Rhyme” with some of the most fabulous tap dancers anyone could ever find. This spoken word/dance piece was dedicated to the creation of a reality that
“appears to the mind to be of a gentler
more caring and loving kind…”
It was written in honor of children no matter where they reside on the planet. It entertains the idea of creating a world for them that is
“without arms,
worthy of their beauty
and their charm.”
The poem speaks to a society dancing On the Corner of Rhythm and Rhyme
“to the beat of a song,
a love song.” [Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
When flashing lights
pound on soundly sleeping doors
ordering evacuations five minutes
to gather a few items
from a lifetime of belongings … [Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
Beneath heaven’s open eye
a mother cradles her dying son
Ashes of sun snow
rain on exposed statue
eroding definition
identity … [Read more…]
(Where Students Burned 20,000 Books Banned by the Nazis)
Hands frozen together
at midnight in Bebelplatz, Berlin
Ink shadows
spilling
stones worn
Without warning
a window opens
sun is punctuating blind pages
cloud covers
Faces
thumbing through melting sheets of glass
seeing the empty shelves of ourselves [Read more…]
By Ishmael von Heidrick-Barnes
Waterfall of rocks
Slipping into moss rippling
Through sun-clouding koi [Read more…]
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