Ocean Notion: Chef Alan Bedient of Coast Kitchen

Born and raised in Cazadero, chef Alan Bedient first ignited his love for cooking during his high school years through El Molino’s culinary program. 

While pursuing further education at Santa Rosa Junior College, he honed his craft at Raymond’s Bakery for seven years, developing expertise in artisan breads and pastries, and helped establish the bakery’s presence at farmers’ markets and local restaurants.

Collaborating with chef Helena Gustavsson ultimately resulted in co-creating kitchens by his early 20s, including Station 1870 in Santa Rosa and Whitetail Wine Bar in Guerneville. 

After refining his techniques at Rivers End in Jenner, Bedient joined Timber Cove Resort as a line cook in 2017, working up to his current position as executive chef of Coast Kitchen (one must not skip the smoked trout chowder), where he channels his profound ties to the Sonoma Coast into seasonal, locally-inspired creations. 

Amber Turpin: How did you get into this work?

Alan Bedient: Growing up in a small town, there were limited possibilities for places to work. However, I was fortunate to begin working at Raymond’s Bakery. I started making pizzas and bread when I was 15 years old, and the passion grew from there. I quickly learned more about the culinary world by taking classes and finding new opportunities such as catering, wine bars and other various dining experiences. The thought that I could go anywhere in the world to learn new techniques and ingredients I had never imagined kept the drive going.

Did you ever have an ‘aha’ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

It was Great White from Lost Coast Brewing Company. I had never tried a beer that I thought actually tasted good, and Great White was that beer. Crisp and light with a hint of cracker and bread notes—it was a winner. From there, I began to try other craft brews. Now, if I see a new creation from any of our local breweries, I have to give it a try.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

When I’m enjoying downtime at home or after a long shift, a beer is my preferred beverage: stouts, pilsners, saisons or IPAs. Sonoma County offers a great beer variety, always keeping the palate intrigued.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I may stick in the far western Sonoma County and go to the Blue Heron Tavern in Duncans Mills. If I am looking for a good cocktail, I may go to Stark’s Steak & Seafood in Santa Rosa or Dukes in Healdsburg.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

I would be drinking coconut water. Potassium, electrolytes and a light but delicious flavor.

Timber Cove Resort, 21780 North Coast Hwy 1, Timber Cove, 707.847.3231. timbercoveresort.com.

Free Will Astrology: Aug. 27 – Sept. 2

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In some Buddhist mandalas, the outer circle depicts a wall of fire. It marks the boundary between the chaotic external world and the sacred space within. For seekers and devotees, it’s a symbol of the transformation they must undergo to commune with deeper truths. I think you’re ready to create or bolster your own flame wall, Aries. What is non-negotiable for your peace, your creativity, your worth? Who or what belongs in your inner circle? And what must stay outside? Be clear about the boundaries you need to be your authentic self.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Centuries ago, builders in Venice, Italy, drove countless wooden pilings deep into the waterlogged mud of the lagoon to create a stable base for future structures. These timber foundations were essential because the soil was too weak to support stone buildings directly. Eventually, the wood absorbed minerals from the surrounding muddy water and became exceptionally hard and durable: capable of supporting heavy buildings. Taurus, you may soon glimpse how something you’ve built your life upon—a value, a relationship or a daily ritual—is more enduring than you imagined. Its power is in its rootedness, its long conversation with the invisible. My advice: Trust what once seemed soft but has become solid. Thank life for blessing you with its secret alchemy.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In Inuit myth, Sedna is the goddess who lives at the bottom of the sea and oversees all marine life. If humans harm nature or neglect spiritual truths, Sedna may stop allowing them to catch sea creatures for food, leading to starvation. Then shamans from the world above must swim down to sing her songs and comb her long black hair. If they win her favor, she restores balance. I propose that you take direction from this myth, Gemini. Some neglected beauty and wisdom in your emotional depths is asking for your attention. What part of you needs reverence, tenderness and ceremonial care? 

CANCER (June 21-July 22): In ancient Rome, the lararium was a home altar. It wasn’t used for momentous appeals to the heavyweight deities like Jupiter, Venus, Apollo, Juno and Mars. Instead, it was there that people performed daily rituals, seeking prosperity, protection and health from their ancestors and minor household gods. I think now is a fine time to create your own version of a lararium, Cancerian. How could you fortify your home base to make it more nurturing and uplifting? What rituals and playful ceremonies might you do to generate everyday blessings?

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In Persian miniature painting, entire epics are compressed into exquisite images the size of a hand. Each creation contains worlds within worlds, myths tucked into detail. I suggest you draw inspiration from this approach, Leo. Rather than imagining your life as a grand performance, play with the theme of sacred compression. Be alert for seemingly transitory moments that carry enormous weight. Proceed on the assumption that a brief phrase or lucky accident may spark sweet changes. What might it look like to condense your full glory into small gifts that people can readily use?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In Andean cosmology, the condor and the hummingbird are both sacred messengers. One soars majestically at high altitudes, a symbolic bridge between the earth and heaven. The other moves with supple efficiency and detailed precision, an icon of resilience and high energy. Let’s make these birds your spirit creatures for the coming months. Your challenging but feasible assignment is to both see the big picture and attend skillfully to the intimate details.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the ancient Greek myth of Psyche, one of her trials is to gather golden wool from violent rams. She succeeds by waiting until the torrid heat of midday passes, and the rams are resting in the cool shade. She safely collects the wool from bushes and branches without confronting the rams directly. Let this be a lesson, Libra. To succeed at your challenges, rely on strategy rather than confrontation. It’s true that what you want may feel blocked by difficult energies, like chaotic schedules, reactive people or tangled decisions. But don’t act impulsively. Wait. Listen. Watch. Openings will happen when the noise settles and others tire themselves out. You don’t need to overpower. You just need to time your grace. Golden wool is waiting, but it can’t be taken by force.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In 1911, two teams tried to become the first humans to reach the South Pole. Roald Amundsen’s group succeeded, but Robert Falcon Scott’s did not. Why? Amundsen had studied with Indigenous people who were familiar with frigid environments. He adopted their clothing choices (fur and layering), their travel techniques (dogsledding) and their measured, deliberate pacing, including lots of rest. Scott exhausted himself and his people with inconsistent bursts of intense effort and stubbornly inept British strategies. Take your cues from Amundsen, dear Scorpio. Get advice from real experts. Pace yourself; don’t sprint. Be consistent rather than melodramatic. Opt for discipline instead of heroics.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A lighthouse isn’t concerned with whether ships are watching it from a distance. It simply shines forth its strong beams, no questions asked. It rotates, pulses and moves through its cycles because that’s its natural task. Its purpose is steady illumination, not recognition. In the coming weeks, Sagittarius, I ask you and encourage you to be like a lighthouse. Be loyal to your own gleam. Do what you do best because it pleases you. The ones who need your signal will find you. You don’t have to chase them across the waves.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Sarah E. Goode became the fourth African American woman to be granted a U.S. patent, in 1885. Her invention was ingenious: a folding cabinet bed that could be transformed into a roll-top desk. It appealed to people who lived in small apartments and needed to save space. I believe you’re primed and ready for a similar advance in practical resourcefulness, Capricorn. You may be able to combine two seemingly unrelated needs into one brilliant solution— turning space, time or resources into something more graceful and useful. Let your mind play with hybrid inventions and unlikely pairings.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): I expect you will be knowledgeable and smart during the coming weeks, Aquarius. But I hope you will also be wise and savvy. I hope you will wrestle vigorously with the truth so you can express it in practical and timely ways. You must be ingenious as you figure out the precise ways to translate your intelligence into specifically right actions. So for example: You may feel compelled to be authentic in a situation where you have been reticent, or to share a vision that has been growing quietly. Don’t stay silent, but also: Don’t blurt. Articulate your reality checks with elegance and discernment. The right message delivered at the wrong moment could make a mess, whereas that same message will be a blessing if offered at the exact turning point.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Liubai is a Chinese term that means “to leave blank.” In traditional ink painting, it referred to the portions of the canvas the artist chose not to fill in. Those unpainted areas were not considered empty. They carried emotional weight, inviting the eye to rest and the mind to wander. I believe your near future could benefit from this idea, Pisces. Don’t feel you have to spell everything out or tie up each thread. It may be important not to explain and reveal some things. What’s left unsaid, incomplete or open-ended may bring you more gifts than constant effort. Let a little stillness accompany whatever you’re creating.

Subud Marin Member and ‘Helper,’ Meldan Heaslip

Strikingly, Subud is an international spiritual movement without leaders. It has no rules and just one spiritual practice. Absent any authority, Subud’s “members” have no single, authoritative conception of god among them. Some members choose to “submit themselves to the will of almighty god” (who one just knows is a man), while others choose to surrender to the goddess, or the trinity, mixed pantheons, the earth, the universe, a value, an idea or the void. 

But strikingly, Subud’s members choose to do so together, in mixed communitarian worship. Which sounds strangely utopian. Absent any official doctrine, it is a challenge to describe their worship—which happens behind closed doors. It has a promisingly esoteric name, the “Latihan Kejiwaan,” but that is only a common Indonesian phrase meaning, “spiritual exercise.”

When asked, each Subud member had a profoundly different description of their worship, freely improvising purely personal descriptions from the pure phenomenology of the spiritual  experience. 

One member described Latihan to me like this: “Imagine shopping at Safeway among random strangers, when suddenly, the archangel Michael of burning brand rips the whole roof off the building. How would people react to the sudden proof and immediate presence of god? They would lose their sh**, right? Some would sing, while others danced; some would cry, others knelt, while still others rolled around on the ground speaking in tongues.” Kind of sounds like an old school art jam to me.

A second practitioner, describing the exact same practice, put it to me like this: “The Latihan is like coming in from the garden, where you were doing dirty work, and washing your boots—it’s a spiritual cleanse.”

I’m guessing here, but perhaps those two wildly different descriptions of the same exercise fit together as form and function where a refreshing and spiritual cleanse is the effect of spontaneous ecstatic worship.

A third attempt at clarifying what Subud is was provided by Meldan Heaslip—a long-standing member and “helper” at the Marin chapter of Subud (there are chapters all over the world). As we spoke, Heaslip was at pains to emphasize that he is not an official representative and has no special authority within the movement. He also spoke in a gentle Irish brogue.

Cincinnatus Hibbard: How do you do the Latihan? What is the instruction?

Meldan Heaslip: The only instruction that goes with the exercise is that we “let go.”

I understand what “results” is a spontaneous worshipful expression. So apart from the form, perhaps go through the stages?

Well, before beginning the exercise, we start with 10-15 minutes of quiet, sitting meditation. Then, everyone stands up, and for the next half hour, people are following whatever comes to them, which usually manifests in the form of movement, maybe singing—chanting, or being very quiet and still. The goal is that this is totally authentic and completely unique—no one copying anyone else. 

Across that half hour, there is a period in which one is energetically throwing off what’s happening in their life right now—which is cleansing. Then I find there is a period of prayer or being filled with grace. And then, sometimes, if I am lucky, there is also an element of receiving guidance.

Interesting. It seems like the Latihan is zazen sitting meditation, primal scream therapy, ecstatic dance and prayer rolled into one.

Subud is not for everyone. But for those that like meditation and movement and yoga, want to be a part of something without leaders or dogma and are searching for something that is both deeply spiritual and incredibly practical, then just maybe there is something here for you.

Learn more.: subudcalifornia.org/subud-california-at-marin/

Autumnal Artistry, Marin’s Fall Arts Guide

Despite the traditional Bay Area summertime heatwave lingering late into the season, it is once again time to announce autumn in Marin … and all the art that comes with it.

That’s right—with fall’s starting date officially only one month away, now is when local artists, art lovers and active community members alike can get excited about the mutual passion they share: art.

Art aficionados of Marin, don’t be shy to don those berets and harness that inner art critic or arts ’n’ craftsin’ spirit. ’Cause come autumn, it’s all aboard the fall art hype train. Destination? Every exhibition, performance, recital, show, author talk, film festival and otherwise miscellaneous local art marvel is almost close enough to touch (note: please do not touch the exhibitions, performers, etc…).

So, time to dive into this year’s can’t-miss art events and get those calendars packed with activities before autumn even arrives.

First up for fall art in the North Bay is the kind of creativity one can only see up in lights on the silver screen. Films, movies, mini-documentaries, live screenings and more make up perhaps the most renowned of Marin’s fall arts categories. The Mill Valley Film Festival, for instance, is a gathering that draws film buffs from near and far. This year, the festival will take place from Oct. 2 to 12, and participating venues include the Smith Rafael Film Center, Sequoia Cinema, Lark Theater, BAMPFA and the Outdoor Art Club.

Meanwhile, the Bolinas Film Festival is set for Sept. 18 through 21. This film festival gives its quintessential West Marin twist to the local film festival spirit, celebrating local community and creativity hand in hand.

Alongside film festivals, Marin’s cinematic scene is ripe with delicious tidbits of film to keep entertainment alive and well into the autumn. The Lark, for instance, will continue to host its Marin Jazz installments, including Mariah Parker’s Indo Latin Jazz ensemble on Sept. 27. Or for those inclined more toward storytelling than music, the Lark’s Simply Said improv show takes place on Sept. 16 and Oct. 21.

And don’t forget the carefully curated lineup of seasonal movies that are bound to begin as soon as the leaves turn color enough to warrant playing only Halloween movies. From Frankenstein to Dracula to the whole Rock Horror Picture Show, with many howling werewolves in between, monster movie classics are another facet of fall arts that nobody wants to miss.

The line between film and theater is a bit blurred (in the best way), so following that natural segue takes the fall arts hype train tour to its next natural stop: the performance arts. 

Whether one wants to watch plays, dancers, fire twirlers or just the artistry in the people passing by, Marin has a fall art for that. The Ross Valley Players, for instance, are set to perform Tartuffe, the pre-release image for which is a literal wolf in a fluffy sheep’s coat, from Sept. 12 through Oct. 12. Meanwhile, if the Bard more speaks to thine heart, consider Marin Shakespeare Company’s performances, such as Hamlet, which will run Sept. 5 through 21. Plus, the Marin Theatre will perform Sally & Tom from Oct. 30 to Nov. 23. Now that’s a wide variety of options for stage performances this fall.

Still on the topic of live stage performance art, let’s delve into this season’s concert lineup. Between Marin’s big-name music venues like HopMonk Tavern, the Throckmorton and the Sweetwater Music Hall, it’s hard to go wrong choosing one, two or more than one’s fair few performances to attend before autumn ends. And that’s not even mentioning the open mic nights and comedy happening between all those musical tunes, too.

Arts exhibitions and gallery shindigs are the bread and butter of any artistic city’s scene, and Marin’s lineup of art-centric events is … nearly never-ending. The Mill Valley Fall Arts Festival, for example, is meant to delight local art lovers and feature artists and their statements on Sept. 21 and 22. And then there’s Art Works Downtown, an ongoing resource for local art, during autumn and throughout the rest of the year as well. This fall, Art Works Downtown will feature galleries on the second Friday of every month—that means veritable art parties on Sept. 12, Oct. 10 and Nov. 14.

Individual galleries are also hosting unique and intriguing exhibitions and events this autumn. The Sausalito Center for the Arts, for example, will host High Level Living, Where Space, Style and Spirit Align on Sept. 24. What’s more artistic than making one’s own life like art? One may check out other galleries, such as Cedars, MarinMOCA, Bolinas Museum, Gallery Route One or many, many more.

Another art form to consider during the onset of fall is, naturally, literature. Luckily, Marin is brimming with local authors, author talks, writing workshops and more. One may check out what’s happening at bookworm gathering places, including but not limited to Book Passage, Wayfinder, Point Reyes Books, Sugarfield Books Inc. and Copperfields. Although this section includes too many incredible authors and novels to list, one example of the literary itinerary coming this fall is the release of local author Samantha Kimmey’s novel, The Extremities!

Now, were this list longer, one could possibly hope to fit in all the astounding art, artists and art appreciators that comprise the fall art mini-ecosystem in Marin. But to avoid leaving behind some crucial, less easy to categorize but no less important tidbits, let’s end this list with a few miscellaneous fall art staples.

First up, the art workshops for youth and adults alike at Mystic in Mill Valley—there, people can take lessons in tarot, full and new moon painting and many other completely unique arts and crafts opportunities. In the same vein, one may consider hitting up those local libraries and seeing what sorts of arts and crafts they have in store for the community this season. For those who love the outdoors and the creative nature and gardens provided, they may consider checking out the Marin Art and Garden Center and its never-ending lineup of exhibitions, workshops and more.

Last but certainly not least, those craving more art this autumn may want to head out to the local farmers’ markets and maker’s spaces, such as the Maker’s Market at the Mill Valley Lumber Yard on Sept. 20, Oct. 18 and Nov. 15. These markets are where one is bound to find perfect examples of local artistry and craftsmanship … the kind one can buy for a loved one before the holiday rush (hint hint, wink wink).

So, summer’s lease may hath all too short a date, but the plethora of local fall arts, crafts and more promises plenty to be thankful for in the months to come. 

For more fall arts selections, visit pacificsun.com/events-calendar.

AI Costs Us Far More Than Money: The Hidden Price of Big Data Surveillance

Unbeknownst to much of the public, Big Tech exacts heavy tolls on public health, the environment and democracy. 

The detrimental combination of an unregulated tech sector, pronounced rise in cyberattacks and data theft, and widespread digital and media illiteracy is exacerbated by legacy media’s failure to inform the public of these risks. 

Marietje Schaake, an AI policy fellow at Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered AI Policy, argues that Big Tech’s unrestrained hand in all three branches of the government, the military, local and national elections, policing, workplace monitoring and surveillance capitalism undermines American society in ways the public has failed to grasp. 

Indeed, little in the corporate press helps the public understand exactly how data centers—the facilities that process and store vast amounts of data—do more than endanger personal identifiable information (PII). Greenlit by the Trump administration, data centers accelerate ecosystem harms through their unmitigated appropriation of natural resources, including water, and the subsequent greenhouse gas emissions that increase ambient pollution and its attendant diseases.

Adding insult to the public’s right to be informed, corporate news rarely sheds light on how an ethical, independent press serves the public good and functions to balance power in a democracy. A 2023 civics poll by the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School found that only a quarter of respondents knew that press freedom is a constitutional right. The gutting of local news in favor of commercial interests has only accelerated this knowledge blackout.

The demand for AI by corporatists, military AI venture capitalists and consumers—and resultant demand for data centers—is outpacing utilities infrastructure, traditional power grid capabilities and the renewable energy sector. Big Tech companies, such as Amazon and Meta, strain municipal water systems and regional power grids, reducing the capacity to operate all things residential and local. 

In Newton County, Georgia, for example, Meta’s $750 million data center, which sucks up ​​approximately 500,000 gallons of water a day, has contaminated local groundwater and caused taps in nearby homes to run dry. What’s more, the AI boom comes at a time when hot wars are flaring and global temperatures are soaring faster than scientists once predicted.

Constant connectivity, algorithms and AI-generated content delude individual internet and device users into believing that they’re well informed. However, the decline of civics awareness in the United States—compounded by rampant digital and media illiteracy, ubiquitous state and corporate surveillance, and lax news reporting—makes for an easily manipulated citizenry, asserts attorney and privacy expert Heidi Boghosian. This is especially disconcerting given the creeping spread of authoritarianism, smackdown on civil liberties and surging demand for AI everything.

Open AI

While the companies that develop and deploy popular AI-powered tools lionize the wonders of their products and services, they keep hidden the unsustainable impacts on our world. At the most basic level, consumers should know that OpenAI, the company that owns ChatGPT, collects private data and chat inputs, regardless of whether users are logged in or not. 

Any time users visit or interact with ChatGPT, their log data (the Internet Protocol address, browser type and settings, date and time of the site visit, and interaction with the service), usage data (time zone, country and type of device used), device details (device name and identifiers, operating system and browser used), location information from the device’s GPS and cookies, which store the user’s personal information, are saved. Most users have no idea that they can opt out.

OpenAI claims it saves data only for “fine-tuning,” a process of enhancing the performance and capabilities of AI models, and for human review “to identify biases or harmful outputs.” OpenAI also claims not to use data for marketing and advertising purposes or to sell information to third parties without prior consent. Most users, however, are as oblivious to the means of consent as to the means of opting out. This is by design.

In July, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit vacated the Federal Trade Commission’s “click-to-cancel” rule, which would have made online unsubscribing easier. The ruling would have covered all forms of negative option marketing—programs that give sellers free reign to interpret customer inaction as “opting in,” consenting to subscriptions and unwittingly accruing charges. 

Even if OpenAI is actually protective of the private data it stores, it is not above disclosing user data to affiliates, law enforcement and the government. Moreover, ChatGPT practices are noncompliant with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the global gold standard of data privacy protection. Although OpenAI says it strips PII and anonymizes data, its practice of “indefinite retention” does not comply with the GDPR’s stipulation for data storage limitations, nor does OpenAI sufficiently guarantee irreversible data de-identification.

To no one’s surprise, the EU code has already become politicized, and the White House has issued its own AI Action Plan to “remove red tape.” The plan also purports to remove “woke Marxist lunacy in the AI models,” eliminating such topics as diversity, equity, and inclusion and climate change. 

As Donald Trump crusades against regulation and “bias,” the White House-allied Meta decries political concerns over compliance with the EU’s AI code. Meta’s claim is coincidental; British courts, based on the United Kingdom’s GDPR obligations, ruled that anyone in a country covered by the GDPR has the right to request Meta to stop using their personal data for targeted advertising.

Big Tech’s Open Secrets

Information on the tech industry’s environmental and health impacts exists, attests artificial intelligence researcher Sasha Luccioni. The public is simply not being informed. 

This lack of transparency, warns Luccioni, portends significant environmental and health consequences. Too often, industry opaqueness is excused by insiders as “competition” to which they feel entitled, or blamed on the broad scope of artificial intelligence products and services—smart devices, recommender systems, internet searches, autonomous vehicles, machine learning; the list goes on. Allegedly, there’s too much variety to reasonably quantify consequences.

Those consequences are quantifiable, though. While numbers vary and are on the ascent, there are at least 3,900 data centers in the United States and 10,000 worldwide. An average data center houses complex networking equipment, servers and systems for cooling systems, lighting, security and storage, all requiring copious rare earth minerals, water and electricity to operate.

The densest data center area exists in Northern Virginia, just outside the nation’s capital. “Data Center Alley,” also known as the “Data Center Capital of the World,” has the highest concentration of data centers not only in the United States but in the entire world, consuming millions of gallons of water every day. International hydrologist Newsha Ajami has documented how water shortages around the world are being worsened by Big Data. For tech companies, said Ajami, “water is an afterthought.”

Powered by fossil fuels, these data centers pose serious public health implications. According to research in 2024, training one large language model (LLM) with 213 million parameters produced 626,155 pounds of CO2 emissions, “equivalent to the lifetime emissions of five cars, including fuel.” Stated another way, such AI training “can produce air pollutants equivalent to more than 10,000 round trips by car between Los Angeles and New York City.”

Profits Over People

AI is rapidly becoming a public utility, profoundly shaping society, surmise Caltech’s Adam Wierman and Shaolei Ren of the University of California, Riverside. In the last few years, AI has outgrown its niche in the tech sector to become integral to digital economies, government and security. AI has merged more closely with daily life, replacing human jobs and decision-making, and has thus created a reliance on services currently controlled by private corporations. 

Because other essential services such as water, electricity and communications are treated as public utilities, there’s growing discussion about whether AI should be regulated under a similar public utility model.

That said, data centers need power grids, most of which depend on fossil fuel-generated electricity that stresses national and global energy stores. Data centers also need backup generators for brownout and blackout periods. With limited clean, reliable backup options, despite the known environmental and health consequences of burning diesel, diesel generators remain the industry’s go-to.

Who’s Watching the Watchmen?

Surveillance has long been the purview of authoritarian regimes, but in so-called democracies such as the United States, the scale and intensity of AI use is leveraged both globally through military operations and domestically to target and surveil civilians. In cities such as Scarsdale, New York and Norfolk, Virginia, citizens are beginning to speak out against the systems that are “immensely popular with politicians and law enforcement, even though they do real and palpable damage to the citizenry.”

Furthermore, tracking civilians to “deter civil disobedience” has never been easier, evidenced in June by the rapid mobilization of boots on the ground amid the peaceful protests of ICE raids in Los Angeles. AI-powered surveillance acts as the government’s “digital scarecrow,” chilling the American tradition and First Amendment right to protest and the Fourth Estate’s right to report.

The public is only just starting to become aware of algorithmic biases in AI training datasets and their prejudicial impact on predictive policing, or profiling, algorithms and other analytic tools used by law enforcement. City street light and traffic light cameras, facial recognition systems, video monitoring in and around business and government buildings, as well as smart speakers, smart toys, keyless entry locks, automobile intelligent dash displays and insurance antitheft tracking systems are all embedded with algorithmic biases.

Checking Big Tech’s Unchecked Power

Given the surreptitiousness and level of surveillance, the media are doubly tasked with treading carefully to avoid being targeted and accurately informing the public’s perception of data collection and data centers. Reporting that glorifies techbros and AI is unscrupulous and antithetical to democracy: In an era where billionaire techbros and wanna-be-kings are wielding every available apparatus of government and capitalism to gatekeep information, the public needs an ethical press committed to seeking truth, reporting it and critically covering how AI is shifting power.

If people comprehend what’s at stake—their personal privacy and health, the environment and democracy itself—they may be more inclined to make different decisions about their AI engagement and media consumption. An independent press that prioritizes public enlightenment means that citizens and consumers still have choices, starting with basic data privacy self-controls that resist AI surveillance and stand up for democratic self-governance.

Just as a healthy environment, replete with clean air and water, has been declared a human right by the United Nations, privacy is enshrined in Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Although human rights are subject to national laws, water, air and the internet know no national borders. It is, therefore, incumbent upon communities and the press to uphold these rights and to hold power to account.

This spring, residents of Pittsylvania County, Virginia, did just that. Thanks to independent journalism and civic participation, residents pushed back against the corporate advertising meant to convince the county that the fossil fuels powering the region’s data centers are “clean.” 

Propagandistic campaigns were similarly applied in Memphis, Tennessee, where proponents of Elon Musk’s data center—which has the footprint of 13 football fields—circulated fliers to residents of nearby, historically Black neighborhoods, proclaiming the super-polluting xAI has low emissions. “Colossus,” Musk’s name for what’s slated to be the world’s biggest supercomputer, powers xAI’s Hitler-loving chatbot, Grok.

The Southern Environmental Law Center exposed with satellite and thermal imagery how xAI, which neglected to obtain legally required air permits, brought in at least 35 portable methane gas turbines to help power Colossus. Tennessee reporter Ren Brabenec said that Memphis has become a sacrifice zone and expects the communities there to push back.

Meanwhile, in Pittsylvania, Virginia, residents succeeded in halting the proposed expansion of data centers that would damage the region’s environment and public health. Elizabeth Putfark, attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center, affirmed that communities, including local journalists, are a formidable force when acting in solidarity for the public welfare.

Best Practices

Because AI surveillance is a threat to democracies everywhere, we must each take measures to counter “government use of AI for social control,” contends Abi Olvera, senior fellow with the Council on Strategic Risks. 

Harlo Holmes, director of digital security at the Freedom of the Press Foundation, told Wired that consumers must make technology choices under the premise that they’re our “last line of defense.” Steps to building that last line of defense include digital and media literacies and digital hygiene, and at least a cursory understanding of how data is stored and its far-reaching impacts.

Best defensive practices employed by media professionals can also serve as best practices for individuals. This means becoming familiar with laws and regulations, taking every precaution to protect personal information on the internet and during online communications, and engaging in responsible civic discourse. A free and democratic society is only as strong as its citizens’ abilities to make informed decisions, which, in turn, are only as strong as their media and digital literacy skills and the quality of information they consume.

Tempest Tossed, Season Ender

The adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest by M. Graham Smith is a good example of how to adapt a show for modern audiences without losing the soul of the original text. 

Marin Shakespeare Company has a production at Dominican University’s Forest Meadow Amphitheatre in San Rafael through Sept. 14.

Prospero has summoned a storm as revenge on those who have betrayed her and her daughter, Miranda. The court of Naples is washed ashore to face her wrath. Now she must decide between revenge or forgiveness.

From the magnificent set design by Nina Ball that showcases a deep understanding of theatrical magic to the lush costume choices of Bethany Deal Flores to the outstanding puppets by Peter Q. Parish, the show is pure theatrics in the best way possible.

Stacy Ross gives a nuanced, thoughtful performance as Prospero. Her more introspective take shows a Prospero who really is working for the good of her daughter and not just for her own revenge. 

Anna Ishida’s Ariel similarly shows both a deep understanding of the original work and yet tempers the sometimes harsh sprite with a quiet innocence that allows the audience to sympathize with the mischievous but imprisoned spirit. 

Other standouts include DeAnna Driscoll as Trinculo and Stevie DeMott’s Stephano. The two clowns are a welcome comic relief as they stumble through the island, showing off a natural handling of the language and impressive physical comedy. Ditto Jordan Covington’s Ferdinand, who showcases his comedy chops during an epic battle with a log. 

Both Bridgette Loriaux’s choreography and Dave Maier’s fight direction work together so seamlessly that it’s difficult to know where the work of one ends and the other begins, creating a seamless whole that tells a cohesive story.

Of course, nothing is perfect. Some of Chris Steele’s choices for Caliban, like the larger comedy with Trinculo and Stephano, work very well. However, Steele falters a little when having to throw off the comedy for the character’s darker parts. To be fair, Caliban is a complex test of an actor’s abilities.

Overall, even with the few rough edges, this is a polished and enjoyable production of The Tempest. It reminds us that Shakespeare is at his best when we allow ourselves to indulge in a little magic.

‘The Tempest’ runs Thurs–Sun through Sept. 14 at the Forest Meadows Amphitheatre at Dominican University of California, 890 Belle Ave., San Rafael. Thurs–Sat, 7:30pm; Sun, 5pm. $15-$49. 415.388.5208. marinshakespeare.org.

Back to School: Tony Award-Winning ‘Eureka Day’ Opens in Marin

When Jonathan Spector wrote Eureka Day for the 2018 New Play Development at Aurora Theatre in Berkeley, he didn’t set out to write a Tony Award-winning script that has become more timely (and hilarious) as the years passed. 

He was just following the old writing adage: Write what you know.

“Every critic in London said the same thing,” Spector says. “The characters are clearly exaggerated. But I was just writing my neighbors.” 

“I grew up in Berkeley,” says Josh Costello, artistic director of the Aurora Theatre and the director of both the 2018 premiere there and the upcoming revival at Marin Theatre. “My kids went to Berkeley schools. Jonathan’s kids were in Berkeley schools. Our costumer just brought in pictures of the other parents. These are real people that we all know.”

Berkeley’s classic kookiness became a Tony Award-winning hit. Returning cast member Charisse Loriaux had an inkling, recalling, “The first preview performance (in 2018) with a live audience was a huge indicator of just how special this script was.” Loriaux adds that during one scene, “The laughter was so loud, the actors could barely hear each other. I had never experienced anything like it before.”

The play centers on a mumps outbreak at a private Berkeley elementary school, causing the school board to rethink their loose vaccine policy. The school’s utopian, policy-by-committee board quickly descends into a woke vaccine war zone. The premise in 2018 may have seemed an odd fringe argument, but today, post-Covid, it’s one that hits home.

“The stakes are higher now,” Costello says. “We’ve seen the results of false information.”

What else has changed?

“There are a few edits and language additions that allow the story to move forward and that enhance character development, but overall, it is the same beautiful show that made audiences laugh, cry, think and reflect in 2018,” Loriaux says. 

Earlier this year, Eureka Day had its planned performance at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. cut due to financial decisions. Though it was never made clear what those decisions were, it set a precedent for other cuts that were soon to ripple throughout the nation. 

The prevailing discussion about what is deserving of funds has made for a bittersweet homecoming for Eureka Day. Aurora Theatre has become the latest Bay Area theater to announce that it will cease operations due to budget cuts, loss of federal grants and falling attendance. The recently closed The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe was its final show.

“There could still be a Hail Mary,” Costello says. “But either way, it’s great that we are doing this partnership with Marin Theatre that allows us this homecoming.” Costello continues, “Despite all the challenges, it’s worth it. Theater is really important. It brings us together.”

Loriaux agrees, saying, “To truly connect, we need to listen with a genuine curiosity and a non-judgmental attitude. Our beliefs and facts shape us, but empathy and understanding foster authentic conversations and human connection, which is needed now more than ever. Theater is where human interconnectedness is a priority.”

“Plus,” Spector adds, “it’s a very funny play.”

‘Eureka Day’ runs Aug. 28 through Sept. 21, Marin Theatre, 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley. Weds–Sat, 7:30pm; Sat & Sun, 2pm. $15-$89. 415.388.5208. marintheatre.org.

Culture Crush, Aug. 20

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Sebastopol

Advanced Style 

Style knows no age—one needs to just ask Ari Seth Cohen. The celebrated photographer and creator of the Advanced Style fashion blog brings his vibrant vision to the Sebastopol Center for the Arts for a screening and panel event celebrating fashion’s most fearless icons of a certain age. Expect bold looks, big personalities and a lively discussion moderated by Andrea Caron of Silk Moon. A book signing and Advanced Style film screening round out the afternoon. Yes, all are expected to dress accordingly. 2–4pm, Saturday, Aug. 23 at Sebastopol Center for the Arts, 282 S. High St. Free. Details at sebarts.org.

Petaluma

Vintage Vows

Say yes to the dress—dozens of them—at Decades of I Do, a vintage bridal fashion show unfolding in the Petaluma Museum garden court. From Edwardian lace to 1980s excess, this stylish stroll through wedding fashion history comes complete with petite quiches, French brownie bites, and sips of Korbel bubbly or Bedarra rosé. Bonus: prize raffles from local shops and access to the museum’s I Do exhibit of historic Petaluma wedding attire. 11am–1pm, Saturday, Aug. 24 at the Petaluma Historical Library & Museum, 20 4th St. $45 ($35, ages 16 and under). Tickets at Eventbrite via bit.ly/i-do-decade.

Novato

The Heavy Heavy

British duo The Heavy Heavy brings their bluesy, ’60s-inspired rock to life with a sound that evokes Bowie, Britpop and a particularly groovy kind of déjà vu. Now expanded to a five-piece, the Brighton-based band lands at HopMonk Novato fresh off the release of Live, a half-studio, half-stage album that captures their vintage swagger and wall-of-sound harmonies. Bank on organ swells, fuzzy riffs and that smile that follows a “heavy heavy” night. 8pm, Friday, Aug. 22 at HopMonk Tavern Novato, 224 Vintage Way. $36.79. Tickets at hopmonk.com/novato.

San Rafael

China Camp Heritage Day

China Camp’s signature festival returns with a full day of cultural celebration at the historic shoreline village. Visitors can enjoy traditional Chinese “lion” dancing, thunderous drumming, steamed buns and live music, along with stories from original China Camp residents. Families will find hands-on activities like dragon kite-making and toy boat building, while others can test their skills at mahjong or simply take in the festive atmosphere by the bay. 11am–3pm, Saturday, Aug. 23 at China Camp Village, San Rafael. Free admission; $5 parking. More info at friendsofchinacamp.org.

Free Will Astrology, Aug. 20-26

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): When glassmakers want to cool a newly blown piece, they don’t simply leave it out to harden. That would cause it to shatter from the inside. Instead, they place it in an annealing oven, where the temperature drops in measured increments over many hours. This careful cooling aligns the internal structure and strengthens the whole. Let’s invoke this as a useful metaphor, Aries. I absolutely love the heat and radiance you’ve expressed recently. But now it’s wise for you to gradually cool down: to allow your fervor to coalesce into an enduring new reservoir of power and vitality. Transform sheer intensity into vibrant clarity and cohesion.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): To paraphrase Sufi mystic poet Rumi: “Don’t get lost in your pain. Know that one day your pain will become your cure.” In my astrological opinion, Taurus, you have arrived at this pivotal moment. A wound you’ve had to bear for a long spell is on the verge of maturing into a gift, even a blessing. A burdensome ache is ready to reveal its teachings. You may have assumed you would be forever cursed by this hurt, but that’s not true. Now it’s your sacred duty to shed that assumption and open your heart so you can harvest the healing.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): As you enter a Tibetan Buddhist temple, you may encounter statues and paintings of fierce spirits. They are guardian figures who serve as protectors, scaring away negative and destructive forces so they can’t enter the holy precincts. In accordance with astrological omens, Gemini, I invite you to be your own threshold guardian. Authorize a wise and strict part of you to defend and safeguard what truly matters. This staunch action doesn’t have to be aggressive, but it should be informed with fierce clarity. You can’t afford to let the blithe aspect of your personality compromise your overall interests by being too accommodating. Assign your protective self to stand at your gate and say: “I protect this. I cherish this. I won’t dilute this.”

CANCER (June 21-July 22): “Dear Dr. Feelgood: Lately, you seem to be extra nice to us hypersensitive Crabs. Almost too kind. Why? Are you in love with a Cancerian woman, and you’re trying to woo her? Did you hurt a Cancerian friend’s feelings, and now you’re atoning? Please tell me you’re not just coddling us. —Permanently Drunk on a Million Feelings.”

Dear Drunk: You use your imagination to generate visions of things that don’t exist yet. It’s your main resource for creating your future. This is especially crucial right now. The coming months will be a fertile time for shaping the life you want to live for the next 10 years. If I can help you keep your imagination filled with positive expectations, you are more likely to devise marvelous self-fulfilling prophecies.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In traditional Chinese medicine, the heart is the seat of joy. It’s also the sovereign that listens to the wisdom of the other organs before acting. Dear Leo, as you cross the threshold from attracting novelty to building stability, I encourage you to cultivate extra heart-centered leadership, both for yourself and for those who look to you for inspiration. What does that mean? Make decisions based on love and compassion more than on rational analysis. Be in service to wholeness rather than to whatever might bring temporary advantage.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In Mesoamerican myth, the god Quetzalcoatl journeys to the underworld not to escape death, but to recover old bones needed to create new life. I propose you draw inspiration from this story, Virgo. In recent weeks, you have been gathering pieces of the past, not out of a sense of burdensome obligation, but as a source of raw material. Now comes the time for reassembly. You won’t rebuild the same old thing. You will sculpt visionary gifts for yourself from what was lost. You will use your history to design your future. Be alert for the revelations that the bones sing.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): In the Hebrew language, the word for “face” is plural. There is no singular form for panim. I love that fact. For me, it implies that each of us has a variety of faces. Our identity is multifaceted. I think you should make a special point of celebrating this truth in the coming weeks, Libra. Now is an excellent time to explore and honor all of your many selves. Take full advantage of your inner diversity, and enjoy yourself to the max as you express and reveal the full array of truths you contain.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): In the ancient Hindu holy text known as the Upanishads, ananda means bliss, though not so much in the sense of physical or psychological pleasure as of deep, ecstatic knowing. I believe you are close to attracting this glorious experience into your soul, Scorpio—not just fleetingly, but for a while. I predict you will glide into alignments that feel like coming home to your eternal and perfect self. Treasure these moments as divine gifts. Immerse yourself with total welcome and gratitude. Let ananda inform your next steps.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): In Daoist cosmology, the nature of life is characterized by cyclical, flowing patterns rather than linear, static motions. In my study of its gorgeous teachings, I exult in how it inspires me to honor both contraction and expansion, the power of circling inward and reaching outward. With this in mind, Sagittarius, I invite you to make the spiral your symbol of power. Yes, it may sometimes feel like you’re revisiting old ground. Perhaps an ex will resurface, or an old goal will seek your attention. But I guarantee it’s not mere repetition. An interesting form of evolution is underway. You’re returning to longstanding challenges armed with fresh wisdom. Ask yourself: What do I know now that I didn’t before? How can I meet these interesting questions from a higher point of the spiral?

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Inuit artworks are often made from materials available in their environment, like driftwood, stones, walrus ivory, whale bones, and caribou bones and antlers. Even their tools are crafted from that stuff. In part, this is evidence of their resourcefulness, and in part, a reflection of how lovingly they engage with their environment. I recommend you borrow their approach, Capricorn. Create your practical magic by relying on what’s already available. Be enterprising as you generate usefulness and fun out of scraps and leftovers. Your raw material is probably better if it’s not perfect.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The medieval alchemists had a central principle, rendered in Latin as follows: Visita interiora terrae, rectificando invenies occultum lapidem. Translated, it means, “Seek out the lower reaches of the earth, perfect them, and you will find the hidden stone.” I invite you to go on a similar underground quest, Aquarius. The purpose is not to wallow in worry or sadness, but rather to retrieve a treasure. Some magnificence beneath your surface life is buried—an emotional truth, a creative impulse, a spiritual inheritance. And it’s time you went and got it. Think of it as a quest and a pilgrimage. The “hidden stone,” an emblem of spiritual riches, wants you to find it.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In ancient Greece, the god Janus presided over doorways. He had two faces, one looking outward and forward, one gazing inward and backward. I believe this is your Janus phase, Pisces. Before you launch into your next fluidic quest, pause and take inventory. Peer behind you, not with regret but with curiosity and compassion. What cycle has fully ended? What wisdom has settled into your bones? Then face the future, not with shyness or foreboding, but with eager intention and confidence. What goals, rooted in who you are becoming, can inspire an exciting new plot thread?

Your Letters, Aug. 20

Midterm Squirm

One of the worst things is the basic dishonesty of the MAGA operators. The MAGA wing of the Supreme Court has chosen to misinterpret and ignore laws and the Constitution. 

They cannot claim to have honestly done their jobs nor fulfilled their oaths of office. There is nothing in the future and no honest interpretation of laws and of what they have done that can change this. 

The same is true for many of the legislators in both houses of Congress. They are willfully flouting duties prescribed to them by law and precedent. This is not red or blue or green—they are being fundamentally dishonest. Unfortunately, this dishonesty has somehow commandeered our government. The Founding Fathers never imagined that justices could be so dishonest. 

Here’s what will happen next: The Trump regime is going to try to stage a military occupation of the whole country ahead of the midterm elections. Courts and Congress can’t stop them now, especially since the military and security forces take orders from Donald Trump. 

If they can’t rig the election enough to ensure staying in power, they will find a way to “postpone” it. I hate this, but we might as well try to prepare ourselves for what is coming.

Michael Rosen
Healdsburg

Right On, Brother

I’d like to second editor Daedalus Howell’s response to Micah D. Mercer (Letters, Aug.13). Any act of creativity during the Trump regime is an act of defiance. Sure, we’ve got to pay attention and respond accordingly. But, remember, you go behind the curtain in Oz, and nobody’s home. Not really. 

Outside of his own mind, Donald Trump is a nobody, a non-entity. Don’t let Trump or his flying monkeys suck your soul down the black hole of their charade. Write, sing, dance. Paint, sculpt, do stand-up. Make movies. Trump is the last gasp of a dying aeon. The future is ours.

David Madgalene
Windsor

Ocean Notion: Chef Alan Bedient of Coast Kitchen

Alan Bedient of Timber
Born and raised in Cazadero, chef Alan Bedient first ignited his love for cooking during his high school years through El Molino’s culinary program.  While pursuing further education at Santa Rosa Junior College, he honed his craft at Raymond’s Bakery for seven years, developing expertise in artisan breads and pastries, and helped establish the bakery’s presence at farmers’ markets and...

Free Will Astrology: Aug. 27 – Sept. 2

Weekly astrological readings
ARIES (March 21-April 19): In some Buddhist mandalas, the outer circle depicts a wall of fire. It marks the boundary between the chaotic external world and the sacred space within. For seekers and devotees, it’s a symbol of the transformation they must undergo to commune with deeper truths. I think you’re ready to create or bolster your own flame...

Subud Marin Member and ‘Helper,’ Meldan Heaslip

Meldan Heaslip, member and helper at Subud Marin
Strikingly, Subud is an international spiritual movement without leaders. It has no rules and just one spiritual practice. Absent any authority, Subud’s “members” have no single, authoritative conception of god among them. Some members choose to “submit themselves to the will of almighty god” (who one just knows is a man), while others choose to surrender to the goddess,...

Autumnal Artistry, Marin’s Fall Arts Guide

Autumnal Artistry
Despite the traditional Bay Area summertime heatwave lingering late into the season, it is once again time to announce autumn in Marin … and all the art that comes with it. That’s right—with fall’s starting date officially only one month away, now is when local artists, art lovers and active community members alike can get excited about the mutual passion...

AI Costs Us Far More Than Money: The Hidden Price of Big Data Surveillance

'Surviellance capitalism'
Unbeknownst to much of the public, Big Tech exacts heavy tolls on public health, the environment and democracy.  The detrimental combination of an unregulated tech sector, pronounced rise in cyberattacks and data theft, and widespread digital and media illiteracy is exacerbated by legacy media’s failure to inform the public of these risks.  Marietje Schaake, an AI policy fellow at Stanford University’s...

Tempest Tossed, Season Ender

Marin Shakespeare Company's production of The Tempest
The adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest by M. Graham Smith is a good example of how to adapt a show for modern audiences without losing the soul of the original text.  Marin Shakespeare Company has a production at Dominican University’s Forest Meadow Amphitheatre in San Rafael through Sept. 14. Prospero has summoned a storm as revenge on those who have...

Back to School: Tony Award-Winning ‘Eureka Day’ Opens in Marin

‘Eureka Day,’ the Tony Award-winning play, opens at Marin Theatre. directed by Josh Costello
When Jonathan Spector wrote Eureka Day for the 2018 New Play Development at Aurora Theatre in Berkeley, he didn’t set out to write a Tony Award-winning script that has become more timely (and hilarious) as the years passed.  He was just following the old writing adage: Write what you know. “Every critic in London said the same thing,” Spector says. “The...

Culture Crush, Aug. 20

Sebastopol Advanced Style  Style knows no age—one needs to just ask Ari Seth Cohen. The celebrated photographer and creator of the Advanced Style fashion blog brings his vibrant vision to the Sebastopol Center for the Arts for a screening and panel event celebrating fashion’s most fearless icons of a certain age. Expect bold looks, big personalities and a lively discussion moderated...

Free Will Astrology, Aug. 20-26

Astrologer Rob Brezsny provides horoscopes for each of the 12 zodiac signs
ARIES (March 21-April 19): When glassmakers want to cool a newly blown piece, they don’t simply leave it out to harden. That would cause it to shatter from the inside. Instead, they place it in an annealing oven, where the temperature drops in measured increments over many hours. This careful cooling aligns the internal structure and strengthens the whole....

Your Letters, Aug. 20

Midterm Squirm One of the worst things is the basic dishonesty of the MAGA operators. The MAGA wing of the Supreme Court has chosen to misinterpret and ignore laws and the Constitution.  They cannot claim to have honestly done their jobs nor fulfilled their oaths of office. There is nothing in the future and no honest interpretation of laws and of...
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