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Archives for October 2010

Chef Ming Tsai Back in Dayton

October 31, 2010 By Lisa Grigsby Leave a Comment

Ming Tsai grew up in Dayton, cooking with his parents and grandparents in the family restaurant, Mandarin Kitchen.  Then he went off to Yale, studied to become a mechanical engineer.  But after a trip to Paris, he realized that food was going to be his career.  He enrolled at the Cordon Bleu and worked to integrate his passion for French Cuisine with his Chinese cooking roots.  Now years later he’s established himself as a master of East meets West dishes, as featured on his own Food Network show.  He’s gone on to become a successful author as well, and his fourth book is the motivation for this trip to Dayton.  His first cookbook , Blue Ginger, is names after his Weley, MA restaurant, opened in 1998 with his wife Polly.  Since then, Simply Ming, and Ming’s Master Recipes were released.

Tsai recently guest starred on an episode of Top Chef , opened Blue Ginger Noodle Bar, a mini-restaurant, inside Blue Ginger and  is currently competing for the “Next Iron Chef” on the Food Network Channel.  Ming will be in town on Thurs, Nov 4th at ThinkTV for a book signing and meet & greet for his latest book: SIMPLY MING ONE-POT MEALS. Tickets  are $32 per person or per couple and include wine, beverages, light hors d’oeuvres and a signed copy of the new cookbook. RSVP deadline is Tuesday, Nov. 2. To purchase tickets or for more information about the Think TV event, contact Bill Miller.

He will then head to Book & Company at The Greene for a 7pm signing.  Line numbers for that signing will be handed out starting at 6pm to patrons purchasing his new book.  For more info on this event, contact Sharon Kelly Roth at (937) 429-6302.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Blue Ginger, Dayton Dining, Iron Chef, Ming Tsai

Buying and selling a house of the living dead

October 30, 2010 By Teri Lussier 3 Comments

Frank Coleman wrote an interesting post about some of Dayton’s more famous haunted spaces. As the resident Realtor at DaytonMostMetro.com, I thought I’d take this Halloween Sunday to talk about how haunted or otherwise stigmatized properties might affect property values. But first, a disclaimer: I am not an attorney. I do not play one on TV. This is not intended as legal advice. If you are purchasing or selling a property that has any stigma attached, or have any questions about legal implications of stigmatized property, please consult an attorney for legal advice. I now return you to your regularly scheduled post.

Let’s say you just moved into town, bought a house at a fair market value- that is, it’s not a foreclosure or otherwise discounted price- you paid a fair price for a property you love. You’ve moved in, you are settling in, and one day a neighbor tentatively knocks on your day to say hello and introduce themselves. The conversation naturally turns to your new home and your neighbor shakes their head sadly and says, “It’s so horrible what happened here.” You say…”Huh?” The neighbor explains, “Yeah! Six months ago there was a murder/suicide in the master bedroom. Didn’t you know?”

So you don’t believe in ghosts, poltergeists, spirits, etc, and that’s fine. But. Same thing: You just moved into town, bought a house, blahblahblah, one day your new neighbor excitedly pipes up, “What’s it like to live in a haunted house!?!?” Say what? Congratulations. You are the proud owner of a stigmatized property. Would you want to know before you bought the home? Do you have a right to know? Is the seller legally or ethically obligated to disclose any death that occurred in this home? And what is the statute of limitations for such disclosure?

I was helping a family transfer from California to Wright-Patterson Air Force base. The husband was here, the wife and kids were still in California. One Saturday morning as we were driving to see a home, the husband got a call from his wife, “I have a weird feeling about this home,” she said. “Find out if there’s been a death there.” I had to clarify her concerns. “Any death or a violent death?” I think we can assume that most historic homes have had a death occur in them. People used to die at home, the body would have been prepared in the home, the wake was held in the parlor. To most people, that’s a completely different issue from a violent death.

Violent deaths might attach an emotional or psychological stigma to a property and might impact the perceived value of a property. Again, if this is a concern to you, express this to your Realtor, ask the sellers to disclose any known deaths, and research the property history using internet searches, county auditor websites, and other means, including talking to the neighbors.

When you list a property for sale in the Dayton Area Board of Realtors MLS system, you fill out a Property Disclosure form that discloses material defects of which the sellers are aware. Plumbing issues, roof leaks, foundation problems, etc. There isn’t a “check one, Yes or No” for ghosts or strange unexplained occurrances- these are not material defects, so what would you do if you are selling a home that has what your family jokingly refers to as a ghost, living in it? What about a violent death?

The laws vary from state to state, and from case to case– and again, this is not intended as legal advice, I am not a lawyer- but laws are beginning to lean on seller’s responsibility to disclose. In other words, who knew of the facts, and who has the money? Speak with a lawyer about your responsibility to disclose anything that might affect the value of your property, but as a general rule of thumb, if you know something about the property that might affect a buyer’s decision to purchase, err on the side of disclosure. And Happy Dios de los Muertos, Dayton!

Photo credit: Emma, used with permission.

Filed Under: Real Estate

The Dayton Tap Project

October 29, 2010 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

Performing artists from Dayton and beyond will head up a tap dance performance and workshop on Saturday, Nov. 20, at Stivers School for the Arts, 1313 E. Fifth St. The event will begin with workshops starting at 9 a.m. and culminate in a 7:30 p.m. performance. Guests can attend all or part of the event.

The Dayton Tap Project will be presented by two local organizations: Sole Purpose — a nonprofit tap company founded by Dayton’s own Kandee Thacker-Mann, who’s performed in Savion Glover’s Footnotes, won Showtime at the Apollo and volunteers to teach tap at Ruskin Elementary — and The Tap Factor — a new local professional company founded by Chris Erk that offers dance lessons and community outreach. The Dayton Tap Project will provide instruction to Dayton’s public school students and community members.   The project is made possible with a grant provided by Montgomery County Arts and Culture District and cooperation with East End Community Service.

“The Dayton Tap Project is an effort to present tap dance to the community and help preserve its place as an American art form,” Erk said.

The fee for the workshops is as follows: one class is $25, two classes $40 and three classes is $50. The cost is $10 per class for Dayton Public Schools students. General admission for the evening performance is $10. For tickets, call the Dayton Playhouse 937-424-8477 or go to www.daytonplayhouse.com.

“Before the show there will be master classes held at Stivers School for the Arts,” said Thacker-Mann. “Our guest performers will teach classes to students with The Dayton Tap Project, as well as others from the Dayton area and beyond.”

Performances and workshops will be given by professional dancers, including:

  • Alexandra Bradley, from Flint, Mich., has performed internationally at the Cannes Film Festival and 2002 Winter Olympics, as well as in Improvography at the Joyce Theater in New York City.
  • Quynn Johnson has performed in Jamaica and Lima, Peru. He’s an original member of the Flintstone Hoofers, has performed with American Tap at the Lincoln Center in New York City and was recognized as Maryland’s No. 1 choreographer for students younger than 12.  (see video below)
  • Frances Bradley has performed in the Tap Masters Honorarium in Oklahoma City, Savion Glover’s Footnotes in Detroit, the 2000 National Tap Dance Day Tap Extravaganza in New York City, and Bubblin’ Brown Sugar in Atlanta.

Also included in the performances for the show will be an array of student performers from the East Dayton Community Center, Wright State University, Sinclair Community College, the University of Dayton and Stivers, as well as from other local public schools and colleges. Poetic and video installations also will be on display. Music will be provided by Premium Blend and others.

“This is going to be an exciting day of classes and a delightful evening of tap dancing,” Erk said. “Dayton, being a city that appreciates tap dance, will warmly welcome our new local performers and guests to town and appreciate the breadth in which so many members of our community can participate. This is just the beginning of more to come as tap dancing stays alive and thrives in Dayton.”

Quynn Johnson from studio3wd.net on Vimeo.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: Alexandra Bradley, Chris Erk, Dayton Tap Project, Frances Bradley, Kandee Thacker-Mann, Quynn Johnson, Sole Purpose, Stivers School for the Arts, The Tap Factor

National Novel Writing Month

October 29, 2010 By Dayton Most Metro 4 Comments

(the following was submitted by Nicole Amsler)

November is the month best known for television sweeps, too much turkey and frost on the ground. But for a handful of Dayton writers, it is also NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month.)

National Novel Writing Month began in 1999 with only 21 participants. Now, in its 11th year, a few hundred thousand writers from all over the world endeavor to write a 50,000 word novel from scratch. Writers can register for free at www.nanowrimo.org and can begin writing on November 1st. The website offers forums, advice, word wars and community connections.

“Just knowing that there are thousands of others embarking on the same amazingly crazy challenge helps me to write,” said Dara Sorensen, one of the three Dayton Muncipal Liasons (or MLs). “Many times, writing is a solitary profession. So to see so many others participating and encouraging one another makes reaching 50K in a month seem a little smaller somehow.”

The Dayton area NaNo group, affectionately named DANG, meets all over the city most nights in November. Flocking to coffee shops, book shops and libraries, the DANG group is a mismatched group of young and old(er), students and professionals, experienced writers and newbies. The genres are broad as well—ranging from fanfic to fantasy, historical romance to literary fiction.

Winning NaNo is accomplished by uploading the completed manuscript online for a quick word count before November 30th. You win a printable award, winner icons for your website and of course, bragging rights.

But the biggest win varies for different people. Some pursue publication, others don’t write another word again until next November.

“The big win for me personally is that I found my critique group through NaNo. I’ve been part the group ever since 2007 and my writing has improved so much, thanks to them.  Without NaNo, I’m sure I never would’ve been part of such a great group,” said Sorenson.

November is already a busy month. But by drinking copious amounts of coffee, ignoring your carpal tunnel syndrome and neglecting your laundry, it can be done.

Tips to Win NaNoWriMo

  • Try to accomplish the daily word count goal of 1,667. It is much harder to make up one or more missing days.
  • Don’t worry about making the story perfect as you are writing it. Turn off your internal editor. NaNoWriMo is about producing a first draft—not a polished manuscript.
  • Attend one of the many write-ins in the area. Other NaNo participants are encouraging and friendly. But don’t expect too much conversation. Write-ins tend to have concentrated times of silent writing followed by several minutes of conversation.
  • Participate in a friendly “word war” by challenging another writer to see who will get the most amount of words in an allotted time.
  • Don’t give up. Even if it becomes impossible to win NaNo this year, you will have more words in your word in progress than you did at the beginning of the month.

NaNoWriMo Write-In Calendar

The full NaNoWriMo calendar can be viewed on the Dayton forum on www.nanowrimo.org. You must register join the forum but registration is free.

Oct. 30th
Pre-Kick Off Party, Kettering-Moraine Library (3946 Far Hills Ave, Kettering, OH 45429), Noon-3 PM

November 1st:
Northern Kickoff, Piqua Public Library (116 W High St. Piqua, OH 45356), 5:30-8:30 PM
Dayton area: Dorothy Lane Market, Upstairs Room (740 N Main St, Springboro, OH 45066), 6-9 PM

Nov. 2nd:
Write In @ Panera Bread, Fairfield Mall (2751 Fairfield Commons Dayton, OH 45431), 6-9 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Miller Lane (6550 Miller Lane Dayton, OH 45409), 6-9 PM

Nov. 3rd:
Write-In @ Books & Company, The Greene (4453 Walnut Street Beavercreek, OH 45440), 6-9 PM

Nov. 4th:
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 6:30-9:30 PM

Nov. 6th:
Write In @ Washington-Centerville Public Library (111 W Spring Valley Rd, Centerville, OH 45458) 12:30-4:30
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 1:00-5:00 PM

Nov. 8th:
Event @ Dayton Public Library, Main Branch (215 E. Third St. Dayton, OH, 45402), 5-8 PM
Write-In @ Piqua Public Library (116 W High St. Piqua, OH 45356), 5:30-8:30 PM

Nov. 9th:
Write In @ Panera Bread, Fairfield Mall (2751 Fairfield Commons Dayton, OH 45431), 6-9 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Miller Lane (6550 Miller Lane Dayton, OH 45409), 6-9 PM
Write in @Dorothy Lane Market, Upstairs Room, (740 N Main St, Springboro, OH 45066) 7-9 PM

Nov. 10th:
Write-In @ Barnes & Noble, Dayton Mall (2619 Miamisburg-Centerville Rd Dayton, OH 45459)

Nov. 11th:
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 1:00-5:00 PM

Nov. 13th:
Write in @ Fairborn Public Library (1 East Main Street, Fairborn, OH 45324) 1-5 PM

Nov. 15th:
Write-In @ Piqua Public Library (116 W High St. Piqua, OH 45356), 6:00-8:30 PM

Nov. 16th:
Write In @ Panera Bread, Fairfield Mall (2751 Fairfield Commons Dayton, OH 45431), 6-9 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Miller Lane (6550 Miller Lane Dayton, OH 45409), 6-9 PM
Write in @Dorothy Lane Market, Upstairs Room, (740 N Main St, Springboro, OH 45066) 6-9 PM

Nov. 17th:
Write-In @ Barnes & Noble, Dayton Mall (2619 Miamisburg-Centerville Rd Dayton, OH 45459)

Nov. 18th:
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 1:00-5:00 PM

Nov. 19th:
Write in @ The Loft, Fairborn (1 South Central (West) Fairborn, Ohio 45324 ) 7-11 PM

Nov. 20th:
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 1:00-5:00 PM

Nov. 22nd:
Write-In @ Piqua Public Library (116 W High St. Piqua, OH 45356), 5:30-8:30 PM
Write in @Dorothy Lane Market, Upstairs Room, (740 N Main St, Springboro, OH 45066) 6-9 PM

Nov. 23rd:
Write In @ Panera Bread, Fairfield Mall (2751 Fairfield Commons Dayton, OH 45431), 6-9 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Miller Lane (6550 Miller Lane Dayton, OH 45409), 6-9 PM

Nov. 27th:
Write in @ The Loft, Fairborn (1 South Central (West) Fairborn, Ohio 45324 ) 6-10 PM

Nov. 29th:
Write-In @ Piqua Public Library (116 W High St. Piqua, OH 45356), 5:30-8:30 PM
Write in @Dorothy Lane Market, Upstairs Room, (740 N Main St, Springboro, OH 45066) 6-9 PM

Nov. 30th:
Write-In @ Night Sky, Troy (18 N Market St Troy, OH 45373), 5:00-9:00 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Fairfield Mall (2751 Fairfield Commons Dayton, OH 45431), 6-9 PM
Write In @ Panera Bread, Miller Lane (6550 Miller Lane Dayton, OH 45409), 6-9 PM

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: National Novel Writing Month

Commemorate the Dayton Peace Accords

October 29, 2010 By Megan Cooper Leave a Comment

From OhioHistoryCentral.org: The agreement reached at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio in November 1995, and formally signed in Paris on December 14, 1995. These accords put an end to the three and a half year long war in Bosnia, one of the armed conflicts in the former Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia.

You’ve heard of the Dayton Peace Accords.  You know it’s a big deal.  But you may not know exactly who, why, and how it all came together right here in Dayton, Ohio to end the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina.  November 5th thru 7th, you can join in the commemoration of the fifteenth anniversary and experience fuller understanding of this important turning point through great events featuring distinguished guests.

More information is available here: http://www.daytonliterarypeaceprize.org/accords_update.htm

The commemoration includes a banquet at the Hope Hotel on Friday, Nov. 5 and a public forum in Kennedy Union on Saturday, Nov. 6.  These events will be held in conjunction with the awarding of the Dayton Literary Peace Prize on Sunday, Nov. 7.  These events are being supported by The City of Dayton, Montgomery County, Dayton International Airport, University of Dayton, Wright State University, Sinclair Community College, Central State University, Dayton Literary Peace Prize Committee, and Dayton Sister Cities Committee.

The banquet and forum will feature many distinguished guests, including the Minister of Foreign Affairs for BiH (H. E. Sven Alkalaj), the Mayor of Sarajevo (Dr. Alija Behmen), and the Executive Director of Migration and Refugee Services for the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (Amb. Johnny Young).

Please consider attending one or more of these events, and help spread the word about them.  The hosts are particularly interested in having students and community members attend the forum.

Details on the November 5 BANQUET: There will be a banquet on the evening of November 5th for Dayton residents and others to remember the negotiations and the many people we came into contact with during those days and in the last fifteen years. The banquet will be held at the Hope Hotel at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the same place where the Accords were negotiated and initialed in 1995.  Tickets for the banquet ($45) may be purchased on-line at:  http://daytonpeaceaccordsat15.eventbrite.com/.

Details on the November 6 FORUM:

Now, fifteen years later, they are holding a forum (free to attend) on November 6, 2010, at the University of Dayton, with three goals in mind.

  1. To discuss the current situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina and take a look at what US policy towards BiH should be now and in the immediate future.
  2. To discuss how our experience in Bosnia and Herzegovina has and will change US policy approaches in resolving other conflicts.
  3. To hear from those who left Bosnia and Herzegovina, and who now live in Dayton, about their positive and negative experiences here in the US.

The forum at UD on Nov. 6 is free-of-charge, but they request an on-line registration.  People who want to attend the forum can register at http://daytonpeaceaccordsat15.eventbrite.com/.  A buffet lunch will be offered free-of-charge.

Details on the November 7 Authors Event: If you missed getting your tickets to the big reception for the Literary Peace Prize winners (or couldn’t afford them), you can still hear the winners  speak on Sunday, November 7th at 11:30 AM at Books and Co. at the Greene.  Attached are details directly from the Books and Co. event calendar.

geraldinebrooks2.jpgmarlonjames2.jpgdaveeggers2.jpg

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7; 11:30 AM @ The Greene

Conversation and Brunch with the Winners of the 2010 Dayton Literary Peace Prize. Come for a luscious brunch prepared by Brio Tuscan Grille and enjoy conversation with our visiting authors: DAVE EGGERS, author of Zeitoun, Nonfiction Award winner, MARLON JAMES, author of The Book of Night Women, Fiction Award winner, and GERALDINE BROOKS, Lifetime Achievement Award winner, and author of March (Pulitzer Prize winner), Year of Wonders, and People of the Book. Marsha Bonhart from WDTN-TV2 will emcee the program.

There is a $10 donation for the brunch, which is a fundraiser for The Dayton Literary Peace Prize Foundation. You can pay at the event, but please RSVP to [email protected] by November 2, so Brio can prepare accordingly. Those who want to hear the authors but not partake of the brunch are certainly welcome to attend at 12:15 pm, with no charge.

************

So there are quite a few ways to commemorate the 15th Anniversary of the Dayton Peace Accords.  The event coordinators share their mission that, “after these events are complete, we hope to be able to say that we have advanced the understanding of BiH by US citizens and perhaps that we have helped shine a light on some ways to improve peoples’ lives in Bosnia and Herzegovina.”

For additional information, please call Kate Evans in the Dayton City Commission office at:  333-3659.

Filed Under: Getting Involved Tagged With: Dayton Peace Accords, Literary Peace Prize

A Shade of Red unveils Blush

October 29, 2010 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

When I met Sean and Georgia of A Shade of Red a few months ago, they were preparing to perform in the semi-finals of the Dayton Band Playoffs and mentioned that they had an album in the works.  That album was Blush, and A Shade of Red will be celebrating its release Friday night at Canal Street Tavern with Orange Willard who will be releasing an EP of their own that night.

Blush highlights the strength of Georgia Goad’s vocals and matches them perfectly with Sean Pennington’s mellow yet still driving drumbeats. The band recorded Blush in their basement studio and says, “With no sound engineers or producers it was a lot of guess work in the studio on the recording technique, so we played around with a lot of ideas on how to get the sounds we wanted. Then we give the tracks to Jarren Nicoletti, who would mix it down and balance it all out. He put a lot of hours in to this for beer and pizza.”

You get a copy of Blush at this evening’s show or visit A Shade of Red’s website to hear a preview and buy the disc online.

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: A Shade of Red, Canal Street Tavern, CD release party, Dayton Music

Trying to ride a century (and coming up 14 miles short)

October 28, 2010 By Dayton937 3 Comments

Looking south down the trail in Taylorsville Metropark, around 70ish miles

No need for suspense: I tried, and failed, to ride my first century earlier this month. “Century” — that’s cyclist’s parlance for riding 100 miles. I learned that this summer. But at 86 miles, I laid on a bench in Wegerzyn Gardens and called my wife for a ride home.

I know. I’m not happy about it either. But that’s the way it ended. And the ride was beautiful.

I started north from my home near Carillon Park to downtown. It was cold, in the 40s, but the forecast said it would climb to 80 degrees. That meant layers. I set off with some snacks and Gatorade in my panniers, as well as some lighter shirts to change into once it got warm.

Mistake #1: Failed to lubricate my moving parts before I left. Duh.

My tires were pumped, but I hadn’t had a chance to lubricate my wheels and gears. Honestly, I’d been pretty busy for several days and had decided at the last minute to try the century. The warm season was waning, it was the first weekend in October, and I thought if I didn’t do it that day, I’d have to wait until next year.

I also never seriously considered the possibility I wouldn’t make it. After all, earlier this year, I’d ridden 88 miles from home to Sawyer Point in Cincinnati back in June and felt good when I arrived.

Mistake #2: Had no idea I was getting sick.

Truth be told, I wasn’t feeling great that morning. Sluggish. Lacking energy. I thought I was just tired from my busy days, that if I started riding I’d get my energy. What I didn’t understand was that I was actually getting sick, that I’d have a fever and all sorts of digestive problems for the next few days.

My planned route was pretty simple:

  • North from my house downtown on the Great Miami River Recreation Trail.
  • Pick up the Stillwater Recreation Trail at Triangle Park and ride it to Taylorsville Metropark.
  • From Taylorsville Metropark, keep going north — through Tipp City, Troy, Piqua and finally Sidney. It would take me off and on new (to me) northern sections of the Great Miami River Recreation Trail.
  • In Sidney, where I’d hit 50 miles, I’d turn around and ride downstream home.

The farthest north I’d been before was the “Welcome to Tadmor” sign north of Taylorsville Dam, so riding further to Kyle Park in Tipp City was new territory. I had to cut over on a road for about 2.5 miles because the trail doesn’t connect, though on the east side of the road it looked like someone might be doing some work to build one. Fingers crossed that’s so. If you’re looking for directions, the trail ends at Old Springfield Road. Take that right then a very quick left onto Old Canal Road, which takes you into Kyle Park.

Kyle Park is big and open. The morning I was there, the soccer fields were full of kids playing games, their parents in lawn chairs cheering on the sidelines. Very idyllic if you go for that sort of thing. (I do.)

The trail wrapped around the fields and continued north. One treat was watching a biplane take off from a small airport.

The trail north from Kyle’s Park brought me into Troy, where what looked like a high school cross-country team jogged along the river past what I assumed was Troy’s town hall.

North of Troy, I had to hop on more roads before picking up another section of trail. A friend had scribbled directions for me, and they were flawless.

Here’s what I did: The bike trail made a dead end at a cemetery. I turned left (north) onto Troy-Sidney Road (County Highway 14) and rode on that road up to a five-way stop. Yes, five-way. There, I turned left onto Piqua-Troy Road (County Highway 15). After 2.5 miles, I crossed over I-75 and turned left onto Peterson.

Before I continue, let me pause to say what a pleasure these roads were. Gentle rolling hills. Beautiful farms. Ridiculously courteous drivers. One must’ve ridden behind me half a mile because the twists, turns and hills made it hard to see ahead and pass safely without risking having to cut into me.

Back to the directions, and here’s where they get weird. My direction-giving friend had told me that on Peterson, just before you go over a bridge, there’s a gravel trail to your right. Get off your bike and walk it into the woods, she said. You’ll be sure you’re going the wrong way, but the trail picks back up about 50 yards inside the woods.

I bet this is where she lures all her victims, I thought.

But she was exactly right. And this stretch of trail was just gorgeous. Absolutely beautiful. It was early October, and the trees were in full glory. Everything was lush and crisp, and I spent miles listening to nothing more than the crunch of leaves under my tires.

Then I arrived in Piqua. If you have a boy under the age of 15 or so, you might hear “Piqua” and think “underwear.” Maybe you don’t know why. Piqua, you see, is the setting for the hilarious Captain Underpants children’s books. I have no idea whether the city is proud of that, but I was tickled to finally see the place. As I rode along the river, I even stopped under Piqua’s water tower to take a picture for my 10-year-old, a big Capt. UP fan.

Little did I know, Piqua would be my undoing.

Mistake #3: Didn’t know my whole route.

So, I mentioned this friend who gave directions. The farthest north she’d gone? Piqua. As I rode, I somehow got it into my head that I could stay on the trail all of the way to Sidney. My directions ran out. There must be only trail ahead.

A fact about Piqua’s bike trails: If you ride them right, they make a giant loop.

A fact about me: I have no sense of cardinal directions. Some people know when they’re going north or east or south. I just know if I’m going forward or backward, left or right.

The Piqua loop, a combination of the blue and green lines

I rode forward in Piqua, ever forward, until at one point I saw a flag and a Cracker Barrel sign ahead on a hill. Geez, I thought, that looks just like ones I passed a little bit ago. Then I rounded the bend and saw the Piqua water tower again, the one I’d stopped to photograph.

I did what I’ll call the Piqua loop. Somehow I’d made a huge circle. And since I didn’t know where I’d gone wrong, I wasn’t sure how to get off it. I did know there was a small park and some benches ahead. I rode up and pulled over. My odometer read 49 miles, and, it should be said, I felt very drained. I changed into a lighter shirt and watched a river laze by as I ate an apple and considered my options.

Since the point was a century, not Sidney, I decided to turn around to try to figure out how to get off the loop. That turned out not to be hard. As I rode south along the river (the loop around Piqua, it should be said, was lovely, especially a stretch along what looked to be a canal), I found my mistake and rode back over an old train bridge I’d taken on the way in.

Then I went south back the way I came with a math problem to solve. I knew that since I’d turned around rather than retaken the loop, I wouldn’t double my miles on the way back. My problem was that I didn’t know how far off I’d be. My plan was to ride all the way to Triangle Park and, rather than continue downtown, take a right and add a few miles by riding to Wegerzyn before going home.

I had another problem: I was feeling very, very drained at this point. That’s two “verys.” For me, that’s a lot.

Mistake #4: Brought too much Gatorade, too little water.

At 10 p.m. or so the night before, I had run out to the grocery store to get a few things to hold me over during the ride. Looking over drinks, I decided to get some Gatorade. Gatorade, I reasoned, was water plus. Plus flavor. Plus nutrients. Plus electrolytes.

Admission: I have no idea what electrolytes are. I think elves might make them.

What I do know is that the more Gatorade I drank, the more I craved water. And I couldn’t find any along the route. I kept drinking Gatorade and counting the miles, feeling completely parched. I struggled to go 10 miles between breaks.

I finally found some water in a shelter in Kyle Park in Tipp City, but it tasted really disgusting. Maybe my taste buds were just off at this point, but I couldn’t make myself drink it. I sat in the shelter and did more math in my head. If memory serves, I was around the 70-mile mark. I felt like I might come up as many as 13 miles short if I kept riding home. Diverting my route to Wegerzyn might add three or four at most. I started contemplating other ways to divert my route. Nothing bearable came to mind.

I hopped back on and continued riding, and somewhere between Kyle Park and Taylorsville Metropark, I started for the first time to contemplate seriously the possibility that I might not make it. That I might quit. It was depressing.

I won’t drag it out. I decided that I’d ride to Wegerzyn and see where I was at. My body felt terrible, and I was miserable. I wasn’t having any fun.

On the other hand, I kept telling myself, if you can ride 80-something miles, you can tough through to 100. You’re close. Don’t quit. If you don’t finish now, you won’t have another chance until spring. You’ll think about it all winter.

By the time I rode into Wegerzyn, I’d been riding a little more than six hours. My odometer read only 86 miles. I would have to ride past home to West Carrollton then back to make it. I know it doesn’t sound like much, but I knew that meant it was over. I wasn’t riding that far past home only to turn around and ride upstream into the wind.

I parked my bike and laid down on a bench for a few minutes. A group of laughing and screaming kids kept running by as I gathered the energy to pull my phone from my pocket and call my wife and ask for a ride home. Then I waited.

It just wasn’t my day.

Extra: Here’s a gallery of photos from the ride.

Filed Under: Cycling Tagged With: bicycling, century ride, cycling, five rivers metroparks, Great Miami River Recreation Trail, Still Water Recreation Trail, Wegerzyn Gardens

Join The Fight Against World Hunger

October 28, 2010 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

How many times have you come home, ravenously hungry, opened the refrigerator door, did a quick once over, saw only a fridge full of food that need to be cooked and declared to yourself, “There is nothing to eat!” Now, imagine that scene again, but this time there is little to no food to be eaten and with hunched shoulders, you sighed, “There is nothing to eat.”

Millions go hungry every day - Photo by Lyric Fields

In a world where there are more than 1,000 billionaires with a net worth of $3.6 trillion, up from $2.4 trillion in 2009, (Forbes, 2010), there is an estimated total of 925 million people undernourished according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization. There are number of factors that contribute to food scarcity globally, poverty being the leading cause.

In the Miami Valley many families come home to empty refrigerators every day. Unable to feed their children, they turn to local food pantries and social service agencies for support. Sometimes a teen or youth is left to fend for themselves. When that happens, they go to Daybreak, Dayton’s only homeless shelter for youth.

This week the Dayton Urban League Young Professionals (DULYP) in partnership with the Dayton Urban League Guild, the National Urban League (www.nul.org), and National Urban League partner, YUM! Brands is hosting a National Day of Empowerment to collect various non-perishable items for the youth served at Daybreak. At this event, the DULYP will report on its weeklong efforts to address world hunger by supporting this very worthy local agency. Donations of non-perishable food items (i.e. soup, Ramen noodles, tuna and Poptarts) along with gift cards to WalMart and Krogers will be accepted at this event.

Event: Fight to End Hunger (National Day of Empowerment)

Date: Saturday, October 30

Time: 9:00 am – 11:00 am

Location: Dayton Urban League, 907 W. Fifth Street

For more information email Serida Lowery at [email protected] or call 672-0402.

Filed Under: Charity Events, Volunteer Opportunities Tagged With: daybreak, Foodbank, homelessness, hunger, runaway, youth

CAIRO TIME, A Coen Bros ReMake, and Lots More!

October 28, 2010 By Jonathan McNeal Leave a Comment

Hello Everyone.

We’re moving things along at THE NEON.  If you still need to see NEVER LET ME GO or IT’S KIND OF A FUNNY STORY, you only have Thursday (10/28) to catch them with us (www.neonmovies.com).  On Friday, we start two new films – A WOMAN, A GUN AND A NOODLE SHOP – based BLOOD SIMPLE – a Coen Brothers film (which will only play for one week) and CAIRO TIME – starring one of my all-time favorites – Patricia Clarkson (which may only play for one week).

Synopsis for CAIRO TIME: “A married magazine editor falls for one of her husband’s old acquaintances while vacationing in Cairo in this romantic drama from writer/director Ruba Nadda. Juliette (Patricia Clarkson) is a magazine editor who is happily married to Mark (Tom McCamus), a Canadian diplomat. Their kids are all grown up, and they’ve planned a three-week vacation in Cairo together when Mark gets delayed in the Palestinian territories and Juliette is left to navigate the Egyptian capitol alone. In order to ensure his wife’s safety until he arrives, Mark asks his former security officer and longtime friend Tareq (Alexander Siddig) to be her guide though the city. He never imagined that they would fall in love, but the more time Tareq and Juliette spend together the more difficult is becomes for them to deny their intense attraction to one another.”  (Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide)

Synopsis for A WOMAN, A GUN AND A NOODLE SHOP: “Wang is a miserable yet cunning noodle shop owner in a desert town in China. Feeling neglected, Wang’s wife secretly goes out with Li, one of his employees. A timid man, Li reluctantly keeps the gun the landlady bought for ‘killing her husband later’. However, not a single move they make escapes the boss’s notice, and he decides to bribe patrol officer Zhang to kill the illicit couple. It looks like a perfect plan: the affair will come to a cruel but satisfying end… or so he thinks, but the equally wicked Zhang has an agenda of his own that will lead to even more violence.” (Sony Pictures Classics)
This film is based on BLOOD SIMPLE – a film by The Coen Brothers.  It was directed by Yimou Zhang – director of RAISE THE RED LANTERN, HERO and HOUSE OF FLYING DAGGERS.

The Living City Film Fest continues next week with a rare 35mm print of a Peter Bogdanovich classic starring Jeff Bridges and Cybill Shepherd!  Here are the remaing films in the Jeff Bridges retrospective:
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW (sponsored by Chisano Marketing) – Nov. 1 at 7PM
THUNDERBOLT AND LIGHTFOOT (sponsored by Jeff Martin Florist) – Nov. 8 at 7PM
RANCHO DELUXE (sponsored by CityWide Development) – Nov. 15 at 7PM
Single tickets will be $8 each available before each show.

“REVELATION, the award-winning short film by writer/director Will Graver, will have its local premiere Saturday, Oct. 30, at 3:30. The majority of the film was shot on the campus of Wright State University last year and features local talent.  In the zombie-filled world of the film, two young people seek shelter on a large college campus where they find a mysterious man living alone in the campus tunnels. Everyone must decide who can be trusted as they struggle to survive the zombie threat.
‘This is a zombie movie with a message,’ said Graver. ‘It’s a social commentary focusing on the importance of human interaction in times of need.’
REVELATION has been an official selection at various film festivals, including Scotland’s Deep Fried Film Festival. It won the award for ‘Best Zombie Film’ at the 2010 Fright Night Film Festival in Louisville, KY.
The premiere will begin at 3:30 p.m. with several locally produced short films. The 28-minute Revelation will be followed by a 15-minute documentary about its production and a Q&A session. The event should last about an hour and a half. Tickets are $5 and can be purchased at The Neon box office.”  (taken from WSU media release)  To watch the trailer for REVELATION, visit http://revelationzombie.com/ .

“In conjunction with a concert taking place at Gilly’s featuring Dave Greer’s Classic Jazz Stompers (the concert takes place on November 12), Cityfolk presents Brigitte Berman’s 1981 documentary on jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke – BIX.  Bix was a gifted composer, magnificent cornetist and doomed alcoholic (he died at 28) who battled those demons at a very inopportune time, the prohibition era of bootleg ‘hooch.’  He looms, with Louis Armstrong as one of the two most influential jazz soloists of the 1920s.  The movie captures interviews with boyhood friends from his hometown of Davenport, Iowa, and key musical collaborators such as Hoagy Carmichael.” (taken from Cityfolk press notes)  This film will screen on Wednesday, November 3 at 7PM.  Admission will be free!

On Thursday, November 18 at 8PM, New York director Gary Beeber (a Dayton native) will bring his movie DIRTY MARTINI AND THE NEW BURLESQUE to town – “a feature-length, independent documentary that explores the outrageous world of the performers who created the ‘new burlesque’ scene in New York City. Get to know Miss Dirty Martini and her friends Julie Atlas Muz, World-Famous *BOB*, Bambi the Mermaid, Tigger!, Scotty the Blue Bunny, and many other cult stars. The movie’s seductiveness comes from its sexy acts as well as its dark exploration of the performers’ struggle to pay their bills, quest for stable love relationships and inability to envision the future after burlesque. The relationship between sex work, burlesque and feminism are discussed. As a classically trained dancer, Dirty Martini has struggled since childhood to overcome criticism of her size. Like Bette Midler, she began her career as part of the downtown drag scene where she
was accepted for her talent. She went on to develop her act in the East Village drag clubs where the gay community appreciated her glamour and kitsch.
Dirty Martini redefines female beauty and allows other women, of all shapes and sizes, to feel uninhibited in expressing their raw sexuality.” (taken from press notes)  In addition to the documentary, Beeber is also rounding up regional Burlesque stars to put on a show for attendees.  More details will be available in the coming days, but for now you can check out a teaser trailer by clicking HERE.  Advanced tickets for this event will cost $15 – and will be available this weekend at THE NEON’s box office.  Tickets on the day of the show will be $20.

For the past several weeks, many of you have been asking about WAITING FOR SUPERMAN.  Please help us spread the word that this important film will begin its run on November 5th.

We hope to see you very soon.

Take care,
Jonathan

SHOWTIMES for October 29 – November 4:

YOU WILL MEET A TALL DARK STRANGER (R) 98 Minutes
Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 12:50, 5:10, 7:20
Monday – Thursday: 5:10, 7:20

A WOMAN, A GUN AND A NOODLE SHOP (R) 95 Minutes
Friday – Thursday: 3:00, 9:30

CAIRO TIME (PG) 90 Minutes
Friday: 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40
Saturday: 1:00, 5:30, 7:30, 9:40
Sunday: 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40
Monday: 3:10, 5:20, 9:40
Tuesday: 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40
Wednesday: 3:10, 5:20
Thursday: 3:10, 5:20, 7:30, 9:40

REVELATION (NR)
Saturday: 3:30

THE LAST PICTURE SHOW (R)  Minutes
Monday: 7:00

BIX (NR) 116 Minutes
Wednesday: 7:00PM

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: A Woman A Gun and A Noodle Shop, Cairo Time, Coen Brothers, Dayton Ohio, Dirty Martini and the new Burlesque, jeff bridges, Patricia Clarkson, The Last Picture Show, The Neon

“Of Soft And Golden Hue”

October 28, 2010 By J.T. Ryder 3 Comments

The Stoddard Avenue Pumpkin Glow

“When black cats prowl and pumpkins gleam,
May luck be yours on Halloween.”

Judith Chaffin

Reflecting on a pumpkin patch, it reminds me of the way a community should truly be. Occupying your own mounded hill, you are nurtured from the same sustenance offered to your neighbor. When you bask in the warmth of a sunlit day, your neighbors feel the sun’s impartial rays as well. When hard times befall you, the community must endure the inclement storms. Eventually, your vines and roots tangle and twist together, becoming a communal plot of land. Could it be that a simple jack-o’-lantern could bring a community of people together as well?

Many years ago, Judy Chaffin envision ghoulishly glowing pumpkin lighting the perfect darkness of the McKinley Park located on Forest Ave. by the Dayton Art Institute. Her vision remained a wil-o’the-wisp…until she moved nearby onto Stoddard Ave.

“When I moved onto Stoddard Ave., I thought, ‘Boy, if we put some over on the hill, how neat would that look?’” Judy reminisce. “I then asked my brother and his wife if they would help me and I went out and bought thirty-six pumpkins and, back then, I thought that was huge! So, we put them over there and people stopped by and seemed to really like them and that was really nice.”

The hill behind the Greek Orthodox Church seemed perfect, providing the pumpkins with a raised dais so that the casual passersby would fall under it’s eerie orange stare while the stone edifice of the Church itself endowed the tableaux with the ideal backdrop. The idea seemed to grow all on it’s own, sending tendrils and roots through the fertile furrows of the imagination. Judy recounted how the pumpkin patch grew with each subsequent year that passed.

“Then the next year, we decided to go for a little more. We tried to increase it by twenty-five or so…we did seventy-five, then one hundred, then one hundred and twenty-five…it just kept going up and up and up.” With a wave, Judy said, “At some point, it just jumped up to three hundred, and once that number goes up, you really can’t go back down. Last year it jumped to like four hundred and this year we have like five hundred pumpkins.”

In the beginning, Judy would trek up towards Springfield each night after work to cull through a local pumpkin farm, loading up her little Honda Civic with all that it would carry. After a few years, her brother helped her by loading up his van with the orange gourd-like squash. Eventually, she was referred to another Springfield area farmer who not only negotiated a fair price for the prestigious pumpkins, but more importantly…he delivered.

Neighbors and friends have joined into the mix, offering their services from gutting and cleaning to carving, placing and lighting the finished pumpkins. It became a neighborhood affair.

“Well, I think that a lot of them like to bring people into the neighborhood for something positive. You know how it is. If you say, ‘Oh, I live over by the Dayton Art Institute’ people are aghast. It’s not like that. It’s a great neighborhood.” Judy opined, “I think that is why the neighbors enjoy it because we have people from all over…we have people from Sidney and Troy and other cities that come down. It’s just nice. I have friends from Cincinnati who come up to see it.”

With every manner of carving displayed, the Pumpkin Glow has definitely grown, taking in the hearts and imaginations of people from far away cities who have hear about the extraordinary exhibit by word of mouth. The sheer logistics is staggering when one realizes how few people are involved in the actual process of cleaning and carving the pumpkins. Before I left, Judy outlined the schedule for this year’s Pumpkin Glow for me.

“We’re going to try and put them up early this year at about eleven o’clock in the morning and then at about four-thirty or five o’clock, we’ll begin lighting them and they’ll stay lit well past midnight. Then they will be up Saturday night and Sunday night and then Monday, we take them off the hill.” Judy ended by alluding to one of the many factors that make this such a special occasion. “Some people want us to keep them lit until Monday. I think that two nights is enough…it’s fleeting, and that’s what makes it so special.”

The Stoddard Avenue Pumpkin Glow can be seen on Saturday and Sunday, October 30th and 31st. It is a display that is well worth seeing, not only for it’s sheer eerie beauty, but also for the sense of community that it invokes on this All Hallows Eve.

“Only the knife knows what goes on in the heart of a pumpkin.”
~Simone Schwarz-Bart

...let the carnage begin!

[album: http://www.daytonmostmetro.com/wp-content/plugins/dm-albums/dm-albums.php?currdir=/wp-content/uploads/dm-albums/Stoddard Ave. Pumpkin Glow/]

Filed Under: The Featured Articles Tagged With: All Hallow's Eve, carving, halloween, jack-o'-lantern, Judith Chaffin, pumpkin, Stoddard Avenue Pumpkin Glow

Zombie Film Shot At Wright State To Debut At The Neon

October 27, 2010 By Dayton Most Metro Leave a Comment

Press release:

Will Graver (director, producer, writer and editor) will be having the local premiere of his award winning short “Revelation” at The Neon on Halloween weekend. This Ohio production was shot at Wright State University in August 2009, and features numerous talent from the Dayton area.

The premiere will take place at The Neon on Saturday, October 30th at 3:30PM. The afternoon will begin with the screening of several locally produced short films, followed by the 28-minute Revelation, a 15-minute Making Of documentary and ending with a short Q&A session. Admission is $5 per person and tickets will be available at The Neon’s box office. The screening should last around an hour and a half.

Revelation was shot at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio in August 2009. It went on to receive five official selections in various film festivals across the world (including a screening in Scotland at the Deep Fried Film Festival) and one win where the project took home “Best Zombie Film” at the 2010 Fright Night Film Festival. The cast and crew featured numerous local talent and the production was even covered by the Dayton Daily News.

“This is a zombie movie with a message,” said Graver. “It’s a social commentary focusing on the importance of human interaction in times of need.” Seeking shelter for the night, two survivors stumble upon a man living alone in the tunnels of a large college campus. Over the period of two days they attempt to figure out if the man is a saint or a threat.

See the official trailer here:

Filed Under: On Screen Dayton Tagged With: film dayton, revelations, The Neon, will graver, wsu film

Where Am I? October 27, 2010

October 27, 2010 By Teri Lussier 2 Comments

Hint: en pointe

Last week I was visiting Foy’s Halloween Store in downtown Fairborn. I know long term residents of Dayton who are still unaware that there is such a thing as downtown Fairborn, let alone a very very cool five & ten there (if you don’t know what a five and ten is, think if the Oriental Trading Company and the Dollar Store had a baby, it would be a five and ten cent store). Anyway, in October, Foy’s Variety Store, Foy’s Halloween Store, and Foy’s various costume stores take over downtown Fairborn, creating some big, bad, goulish fun for the whole family. The Oregon District may have the most raucous Halloween party but if you are looking for something more family friendly, head out to Fairborn on Friday, October 29 for the Spooktacular Parade, starting at 7:30.

Filed Under: Where Am I?

Reaching For The Brass Pole

October 27, 2010 By J.T. Ryder 24 Comments

Pole Vixens Xtreme Takes Exercise To New Heights

Light streams in from the massive, industrial windows, highlighting the pastel purple and pinks of the décor, glinting off of the poles that shoot down from the ceiling, like metallic stalactites that securely anchored themselves into the floor. The light also plays off the forms of several women, glinting off of their perspiring bodies as they enthusiastically work out to a high energy deep bass groove. Laughter and congratulatory catcalls can be heard over the music as Geneva Duncan’s voice is heard over the cacophony, instructing her class in a cajoling tone, demonstrating to all what the next moves will be and what she hopes to achieve with them. In between classes, I was able to talk to Geneva Duncan, owner and instructor for Pole Vixens Xtreme. The first thing I wanted to know was how she hoped to overcome the common perceptions that immediately leap to people’s minds when their hear the words, “pole dancing.” To my surprise, instead of completely distancing herself from the more tawdry aspects associated with strip clubs, Geneva has chosen to embrace some of those features and mold them into her own vision, thereby taking away any of the negative connotations that some may have.

Geneva Duncan and Crystal Sullivan ~Photo by Brooke Medlin

“My goal is to actually incorporate some of the stripper moves and make it more elegant. With that in mind, we have created a whole workout regime while keeping the sensuality of the movements.” Geneva went on to outline her reasoning for incorporating the pole into her exercise routine. “Every woman, I don’t care who you are, has a yearning to be a sensual creature. We, as women, always criticize ourselves and we are not 100% confident or comfortable with our looks. Out goal is to get you out of that mode and to try something different and something out of the ordinary.”

Geneva went on to address the perceptions of pole dancing by stating;

“A lot of men get the idea twisted. I can’t say all men, but a lot of men. When you say ‘pole dancing’ they automatically think strippers, go-go dancing and women hustling for money.” To counteract that, Geneva explains that, “What we’re trying to do is to change the mind frame of people who think like that, so you can feel comfortable sending your wife to a class because it can only enhance your intimacy. It can also enhance her figure and enhance her confidence level and it can bring back a spark to your relationship.”

I asked Geborah, Pole Vixen’s Zumba instructor, the same question about overcoming people’s perception of the poles.

“Well, the only way that people can get over the controversial idea of pole fitness is to come through here and see what we are doing. I think it is definitely important for people to get their knowledge firsthand as far as what pole fitness is all about.” Geborah add rather succinctly that, “We do not strip in here…absolutely not. We are very classy and tasteful women who love to work out and feel sexy while we are doing it.”

Mardi McNeil ~Photo by Frank Coleman

As the group got ready for Geborah’s Zumba class, I spoke with Mardi McNeil, Pole Vixen’s business manager about how they were marketing the programs, who was their target demographics and what were some of the classes that are available and what kind of classes may be available in the future.

“Right now, most of our marketing is online, through Facebook and our website as well as by word of mouth. We have posted some flyers and signs, like for this event and we just shot a commercial today. Our target audience is every woman of every size, every fitness level and from ages eighteen to ninety-nine.” As for the classes available, Mardi said, “Well, right now we have the Polercise  classes, which is basically the pole fitness which incorporates the use of the pole predominantly. We also have Zumba classes with Geborah as well as target classes, like the Absolutely Abs class and the Booty-Max class, that target a specific area that someone might want to work on. We’ve got some other things in the works, like getting some punching bags in for kickboxing and we are looking at potentially adding yoga and massage therapy classes.”

I watched as Lady Geborah led the ladies through a distinctive Zumba routine, interspersed with standard stretching exercises, repetitive movement exercises and gently laced with Latin and jazz dance movements. The women were enjoying themselves so much, it didn’t seem like a workout at all…except for the perspiration and the satisfied exhaustion afterwards. Was Zumba a definitive workout?

Geborah ~Photo by Brooke Medlin

“Oh yes, definitely! The Zumba class format combines both slow and fast rhythms that tone and sculpt the body. You can get a full body workout when you’re doing Zumba. You can burn from 250 up to 1,000 calories based on how hard you want to work out in a Zumba class. It will help you tone your muscles as well as help you lose inches. Zumba is the new way to work out.” Geborah said, emphatically.

It seemed as if I was witnessing a choreograph dance routine rather than a regular workout. It looked effortless and sensual, unlike other Zumba classes that looked very rigid and brittle. It just didn’t appear to be what one would envision when one would picture a regular gym workout.

“No, it doesn’t and that is one of the reasons that I love it because, being that I love dance and fitness and dance is the easiest way for me to exercise.” Geborah said, with a laugh. “I love to share the opportunity for other people to dance as well as work out and also to learn different techniques while they’re dancing and get a good workout. You gain so much when you get involved in Zumba fitness.”

I asked Geborah about her conspicuous incorporation of dance rhythms and movements into her program and the sensual eroticism that it conveys.

“It does. I mean, as a lady, you love to move and shake your hips. It’s a natural thing for a woman to move her body gracefully and to move her hips. There is a sensual nature to it.” As for the dance movements, Geborah said, “With Zumba, you can do Latin dance moves, ranging from Salsa to the rumba. You can do hip-hop dance moves,  but I like to incorporate jazz as well as some more modern movements as well. I’m all about movement.”

Geneva Duncan and Crystal Sullivan ~Photo by Brooke Medlin

During a break, I was able to speak to one of students, Crystal Sullivan, to ask her why she had picked Pole Vixens Xtreme.

“I picked Pole Vixens Xtreme, first of all, because of the safe environment: I feel comfortable there. It’s just a very warm and welcoming atmosphere because I am kind of self conscious about my body…” After a pause, Crystal continued by saying, “I have issues with how big I have gotten, but here, I feel comfortable. Here, I’m not embarrassed. I feel open and free to actually work out so that it will really benefit my body versus going to a gym and not giving it 100% because I’m kind of worrying about what the person next to me is thinking. I guess, just overall, I love the comfort level here at Pole Vixens.”

I wondered if there was a ‘feel good’ aspect to the classes, over and above the general yearning to stay fit.

“Oh absolutely! Working out here doesn’t become tedious because there is always laughter, the friendship, the camaraderie…it’s just like hanging out with your girlfriends.” Crustal added that, “We mentally encourage one another, we emotionally encourage one another and we support each other no matter what size, shape, complexion or age.”

After the classes were over, Geneva and I got to sit down for a moment. The first thing I needed was for her to define some of the things about her unique approach to exercise, such as what to call it.

“Polercise. That is a signature type of exercise routine that was created by my mother, Miss Sue, and that is a signature type of class that also goes along with our other signature classes.” Geneva explained further that, “Polercise is like full fledged cardio, with a warm up and a cool down at the end, but the main thing about Polercise is that we are doing a full cardio workout incorporating the poles. It’s a lot of swings on the pole and stances utilizing the pole. We’ve got 1,200 square feet to workout in, so we’re definitely going to get that cardio pumping.”

Geneva Duncan and Denise Brookshire ~Photo by Brooke Medlin

From what I had seen, it also looked as if utilizing the poles also created a demanding muscular workout as well, using kinetic energy as well as adaptations of some familiar isometric exercises.

“Oh yes, we are definitely training your muscles, and here’s the thing: Every class is different! It’s muscle confusion to the max. We confuse the muscles by having you do things one way and then switch it up or energize it another way.” I had to have Geneva explain to me what ‘muscle confusion’ was. “Muscle confusion, to those that don’t know the term, are when your muscles are getting worked one way one day, and then the next day, it’s totally different. If you do the same routines and work the same muscles, you end up on a plateau and your body ends up conditioned to it and the exercise stops being relevant. So, we need to confuse your muscles where they are getting stretched in every way possible.”

Although there are several layers to this, albeit the obvious one being the fitness aspect and the running undercurrent of sensuality that the classes imbue, there is one thing that seems to sum up the differences between Pole Vixens and other larger box-type gyms: a unified camaraderie. Crystal seemed to encapsulate that best when she said;

“We are literally all in this together. It’s not a workout because you’re hanging out with your friends. That’s exactly what it feels like.”

To check out all Pole Vixens Xtreme has to offer, go online to their website.

Check out Pole Vixens Commercial Here!

Filed Under: Active Living, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Crystal Sullivan, Denise Brookshire, excercise, fitness, Geborah, Geneva Duncan, hip-hop dance, kickboxing, Mardi McNeil, pole dancing, pole fitness, Pole Vixens Xtreme, polercise, yoga, zumba

Whatever Happened to My Transylvania Twist? Halloween Concert Roundup

October 27, 2010 By Juliet Fromholt Leave a Comment

Just because you’re wearing a costume doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t enjoy some great music.  Here are some of the best Halloween concerts happening around town this week:

  • Start your celebrations on Wednesday night with Don’t Be Afraid, It’s Only Us, an original Halloween concert party presented by DJ Mister Kidd at Canal Street Tavern.  Ten bands will perform and there will be a DJ between sets. Details and lineup are here.
  • We gave you a preview of Saturday’s Monster Hop during this week’s Music Video Monday.  You can check out more details about this Canal Street Tavern show featuring the Luxury Pushers and Legbone here.
  • On Saturday night, Brixx Ice Company will be hosting a free Halloween Bash featuring music from C. Wright’s Parlour Tricks and the Playboys.  103.9FM the X will also be on the scene doing a live remote.  Click here for details.
  • J’Alan’s is also hosting a Halloween party/concert featuring the Dark Backward, Once-ler and Blaxeed. Full details here.
  • Hauntfest on Fifth is the Oregon District’s big party and will feature live music and more.  More on that here.
  • If you’re looking for something that’s a bit more family friendly, head over to the Schuster Center for the Dayton Philharmonic’s annual Philharmonster show on Saturday afternoon.
  • On Halloween night, head over to Therapy Cafe for their Rocky Horror Picture Show 35th Anniversary Halloween Party.  They’ll have DJs spinning retro and industrial tunes all night long.  Details are here.

What musical Halloween celebrations are you looking forward to?

Filed Under: Dayton Music Tagged With: Dayton Music, halloween

Oregon District Hauntfest 2010 – Oregon District’s Biggest Party of the Year!

October 27, 2010 By Dayton Most Metro 2 Comments

2007 Hauntfest (photo credit: Kevin Bonnett)

Those who have been to the annual Oregon District Hauntfest can tell you that it is THE party of the year in the OD.   Starting at 7pm and going through until 1am, Fifth Street is closed to traffic as it is transformed into a Bourbon Street-type atmosphere with the craziest, most elaborate and sexiest costumes you’ll see anywhere in the region.  This year there will be two live bands, belly dancers and fire jugglers on the main stage at Fifth & Pine, semi-professional wrestling at Fifth & Jackson, and a costume contest at 9:45pm with cash prizes for best single and group costumes.

This is the one night of the year that you can drink on the street in the OD, with four different beer stations along Fifth Street that offer draft and bottled beer.  If you’re more of a wine drinker then just head to the Fifth Street Wine & Deli patio, and don’t forget the Monster Smoke Bomb stations!  If you get hungry, don’t worry – lots of food vendors will be on hand, not to mention the many restaurants that will be open.

Organizers recommend that people park in the Transportation Center parking garage, which is just on the other side of Patterson (behind the Neon Movies).   Tickets are $5 before 10pm and $10 after 10pm, and we’re told that most if not all the bars won’t be charging a cover charge before 10pm.  Proceeds will benefit:  Oregon District Business Association, Kettering Children’s Choir, Dayton Ski Club, Oregon Historic District Society, Garden Station and more non-profit groups.

We will have our photogs there as well, so check back here after the event to see pictures of you acting a fool so you can change your Facebook profile picture (warning – not recommended for those currently looking for a job – ha!)

So get down to the OD this Saturday night and get your scare on!

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Costumes, Halloween Party, Hauntfest 2010, Oregon District, Party

Jane’s Best Bets (10/27 – 10/31)

October 27, 2010 By Dayton937 14 Comments

Photo Credit: Alli Shillito

FREE TICKET PROMOTION BELOW…

This past weekend, hopefully you were able to catch some theater, see some fun Halloween costumes down at Boo in the ‘Burg, or watch the Browns’ victory over the Saints!  In my first, and might I note, top city, I was fortunate to see the amazing improv comedy group Second City at Victoria Theatre.  Big surprise that I would like comedy!  Well, enough about me…it’s time to get ready for another busy week Dayton, full of Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber (I still don’t know who that it is), and vampire wannabes!

On Wednesday, participate in the District Dine Around and Haunted Walking Tour, which will be a progressive dinner at some haunted spots in the Oregon District.  At Brixx Ice Company, join others who are interested in sustainability, the environment, and green living for an event called October Green Drinks.  There are also a few theater options on Wednesday, including The 39 Steps at the Loft Theatre and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels at La Comedia.

On Thursday, if you work downtown and don’t have a hot lunch date, check out the Noonday Organ Recitals – Jerry Taylor at Westminster Presbyterian Church.  Thinking about starting your own business?  You’ll want to attend Generation Dayton’s Event, ‘When Reality Bites’ at The Entrepreneurs Center.  In the evening, get more than just a taste of wine at the Unique Varietals Wine Tasting at A Taste of Wine in Miamisburg.  Or, check out Casanova and Eve of Frankenstein at Victoria Theatre to get into the Halloween spirit!

On Friday, all you downtown workers will want to head to Court House Square during your lunch hour for the TEAM VOID Halloween Party On Court House Square, which will involve some rockin’ live music and Go-Go-dancing!  Not sure where you’ll be “go”ing, but by the sound of it, it looks like you’ll be going there twice.  If you are not completely freaked out by horror films like me and actually enjoy chainsaws and massacres, go to Englewood Cinema for Horrorama 2010.  Any Seinfeld fans out there?  If so, you’ll want to join the “Soup Nazi” in sampling some “souper” soups from a dozen local fine restaurants at the Soup Off to benefit A Doctor’s Heart Inc.  Also on Friday, you will have the chance to see many people in costume, but not just because of Halloween, as again this week, there are numerous theater type options.  These include The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs at Town Hall Theatre, Casanova and Eve of Frankenstein at Victoria Theatre, Porgy and Bess at the Schuster Center, The 39 Steps at the Loft Theatre, and The Sugar Witch at the Dayton Theatre Guild.  If theater doesn’t strike your fancy, consider attending the Matching Fund for Catholic Education featuring The Farewell Fisher Band, made up of some very talented guys from my high school, or the Make A Difference Tour 2010 at the Nutter Center.

"I'm so not diggin' this."

On Saturday, if you’re a man, bring your best friend to the Bark For Life of Centerville event at Oak Grove Community Park to help raise money for the American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life.  Don’t worry…if you’re not a man, it’s Halloween-time so you can just dress up as one.  If you’re looking to continue the day with your pooch, definitely check out the Howl-o-Ween Dog Pawty at Scout Burnell Garbecht Dog Park in Xenia for an afternoon filled with fun activities!  Don’t forget to put your dog in costume if he/she will tolerate it!  For all you folks who want to return to the days of grade school P.E. class, register a team for The 2nd Annual Frickin Dodgeball Tournament at the Nutter Center.  If you have kids that are between the ages of 3 and 12, take them to the Schuster Center for the ‘PhilharMonster Halloween Concert’.  In addition to music, there will be costume contests, face painting, and an “instrument petting zoo.”  On Saturday, there will still be a plethora of theater opportunities (I hope I used that word correctly!), including Casanova and Eve of Frankenstein at Victoria Theatre, The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs at the Town Hall Theatre, The Sugar Witch at the Dayton Theatre Guild, The 39 Steps at the Loft Theatre, and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels at La Comedia.

A Couple of Pumpkins

There are also many more Halloween-related activities on Saturday, so if you don’t get out to experience at least one of them, boo to you!  That is, unless you have a darn good excuse!  If you are looking for a wild and crazy evening with some great people watching and ultra-creative costumes, Hauntfest on Fifth is the place to be.  I feel everyone should experience it at least once (if not more than that!), so if you have never been, here is your chance!  If you’re feeling guilty about eating all those Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, put on your disguise and participate in the Run For Your Life 5k Run at Community Golf Center in Kettering.  For those of you that prefer a more classy evening, Carvers will be hosting their First Annual Costume Party.  (I wonder if they got their name from carving pumpkins.)  There will also be a Fall Harvest: Family Halloween Fun event sponsored by the City of Dayton’s Department of Recreation and Youth Services, featuring many fun and safe activities for the kids.  Plus, it’s FREE!   And if you’re in Waynesville and don’t feel like making the trip to Dayton, check out the Halloween Masquerade Ball at The Wombat Art Works.

On Halloween (Sunday), after sleeping in, consider making it a relaxing day by checking out one of the many shows you didn’t have the opportunity to attend:   The 39 Steps at The Loft Theatre, Casanova and Eve of Frankenstein at Victoria Theatre, Porgy and Bess at the Schuster Center, The Sugar Witch at the Dayton Theatre Guild, The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs at Town Hall Theatre, or Dirty Rotten Scoundrels at La Comedia.

WHO WANTS FREE TICKETS TO SEE SPRING AWAKENING AT THE VICTORIA THEATRE?

We’re giving away a pair of free tickets to see Spring Awakening – the Tony Award-winning musical playing at the Victoria Theatre next Tuesday & Wednesday (11/2-11/3)!  If you want to go see this excellent production, just give me a shout-out below in the comments and we’ll draw a winner this Sunday.  This is a great opportunity to check out Dayton’s theater scene if you’ve never done so – it really is amazing!

And now it’s time for the Dumb Joke of the Week. Drum roll please…

Why couldn’t Dracula’s wife get to sleep?
Because of his coffin.

These are just a few best bets from the DMM Calendar.  There are plenty more events listed there, so if you haven’t, I encourage you to check it out today!  Also, if you have an event to share or promote, please submit it– it’s great marketing and better yet, it’s FREE!   And finally, if you have a dumb joke to share, I’m all ears!

Have a spook-tacular week Dayton!

Filed Under: DMM's Best Bets Tagged With: Bark for Life of Centerville, Brixx, Casanova and Eve of Frankestein, Farewell Fisher, Frickin Dodgeball Tournament, generation dayton, Haunted Walking Tour, Hauntfest on Fifth, Horrorama 2010, Howl-o-Ween Dog Pawty, La Comedia, Loft Theatre, Make A Difference Tour 2010, Oregon District Halloween, PhilharMonster Halloween Concert, Porgy and Bess, Run For Your Life 5k Run, Schuster Performing Arts Center, Soup Off, Taste of Wine, Team Void, The 39 Steps, The Sugar Witch, The true Story of the 3 Little Pigs, Town Hall Theatre, Victoria Theatre

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