What mainstream publishers don't want you to know about door-to-door magazine sales.
When these huntresses on are on the prowl, the prey very much wants to be caught.
How rumored McCain veep choice Charlie Crist wants to bail out Big Sugar.
Are Asian women getting their jawbones cut to look whiter?
Sure, Shock Nagasaki and the other punk bands on the bill (Austin's Sweet Skull and Dallas' Dog Company) aren't from our city's mid-'80s punk period (really, are any left?), but Gilder's plea still seems like quite an overreaction. Methinks the target niche isn't going to pull big bucks into the DW on Saturday, and as even Gilder put it, "We don't own the '86 punk rock scene." Let the punks have their one night of fun--or, hell, try to steal it away with a more local punk lineup at BoS that night, including Punk Rock Dinosaurs and Frankie Campagna. Either way, old-school punks are in for a good Saturday night; from the look of the MySpace page, a few are flying in from across the country for the class reunion. Don't forget your skateboards, kids.
And on August 4, avid Deep Ellum music fan John Lambert died at 53 of pulmonary artery sarcoma, a rare type of cancer. You may remember the Lambert and his long beard from countless Dallas concerts, particularly at the Gypsy Tea Room and Trees, recording bootlegs of groups such as Queens of the Stone Age, Mike Watt, Acid Mother's Temple and every rock band in between. "You know, for probably the last 18 to 20 years, he's been down in Deep Ellum," brother Jim Lambert says, who also says John requested no funeral service. "He was very good friends with Eddie from the Supersuckers...there's been a lot of bands that have been through that John opened his house to and let people stay at. He was just that kind of guy."