Gifts for the Hipster

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A subscription to Equator Coffees

In the first wave of coffee, most folks weren’t picky—instant coffee, canned grocery store blends and diner brews were all part of the norm. The late 1960s marked the second wave, bringing a shift towards artisanal sources and unique blends that celebrated coffee origins. 

Today, third-wave coffee takes it further, embracing “specialty coffee” with a commitment to quality and craftsmanship, elevating the brew from a quick caffeine fix to an art form. 

The third-wave is alive and well in Marin thanks to local purveyors Equators Coffees, an LGBTQ-owned coffee company locally founded in 1995. 

Lauded as the “Best coffee subscription of the year” by Rolling Stone, Equator Coffees Subscriptions encourages coffee lovers to find a favorite from a bounty of high-quality and sustainably sourced coffees expertly roasted by their team and—simply put—deliver them to your giftee’s door. Your order will be roasted fresh to order and shipped as soon as you sign up.

For your resident espresso drinker, consider one of  Equator’s 13 espresso options, available in a $17.50 bag subscription. For all other brewing methods, select from a single-origin or a blend curation, chosen by the fine folks at Equator each week or month, depending on the subscription. To paraphrase a first-wave slogan: It’s good to the last bean.

Locations in Mill Valley, Larkspur and Sausalito. equatorcoffees.com.

Red Devil Records

A vinyl emporium in the heart of San Rafael.

894 4th St., San Rafael. reddevilrecords.net.

Vintage Ruse

A locally-owned and operated vintage clothing store located at “Tam JunKtion.” 

256 California 1, Mill Valley. vintageruse.square.site.

Marin Theater Companies Deliver Holiday Cheer

The holiday season will soon be upon us, and with it a plethora of live theater choices with which to escape pushy crowds, long lines, traffic, overbearing relatives and the thought of what Jan. 20, 2025 holds in store for our nation.

There’s a conspicuous absence of productions of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol this year, but that may be because the thought of a cold-hearted, bitter and selfish man seeing the error of his ways and undergoing a transformation would require a suspension of belief currently beyond human capability. 

Instead, Marin County theater companies are offering several options for theater goers looking for some holiday cheer or just a reason to get out of the house.

The College of Marin Performing Arts Drama Program will be presenting Stuart Paterson’s musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow Queen. This fairytale with music will be performed in the Studio Theatre on the college’s Kentfield Campus from Nov. 22 through Dec. 15. Tickets are free with an online reservation. (pa.marin.edu)

Marin Theatre in Mill Valley will be hosting five performances of the Transcendence Theatre Company annual Broadway Holiday production from Dec. 12 through 15. This all-new production features festive musical favorites, hit tunes and other on-stage antics by Broadway performers from such hit shows as Frozen, Mrs. Doubtfire and Wicked. (marintheatre.org)

Marin Shakespeare Company enters the holiday fray with a late season run of The Winter Wonderettes. This jukebox musical is a sequel to Roger Bean’s The Marvelous Wonderettes. The original was about a high school Songleader squad performing at their prom and a 10-year reunion. 

The sequel finds the ladies toiling at a hardware store and pressed into entertainment action when the Santa Claus scheduled for their company Christmas party goes missing. It features 1960s versions of holiday classics including “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town,” “Jingle Bell Rock” and “Winter Wonderland.” The show runs in Marin Shakes’ indoor theater in downtown San Rafael from Dec. 20 through Jan. 5. (marinshakespeare.org)

For those missing the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come, the Ross Valley Players are offering a couple of substitute ghosts via their production of Noël Coward’s Blithe Spirit. The three-act farce features a London socialite and his new wife being harassed by the medium-summoned, temperamental ghost of his first wife. The Barn Theater at the Marin Art and Garden Center in Ross will be haunted starting Nov. 15. (rossvalleyplayers.com)

As always, Marin theater companies would appreciate your consideration of gifting season tickets to your arts-minded family and/or friends. Support live local theater… while we can.

Local Holiday Experiences Put the ‘Art’ in Artisanal

It is hard to believe that the holidays are, once again, almost here. This year, Marin is already bursting at the seams with joy and good cheer—and, of course, with a whole lot of opportunities to showcase local arts, crafts and community. So, it’s time to read on and see where to get festive with it in Marin this holiday season.

Sausalito’s Holiday Celebration of Makers and Artists

Sausalito is hosting a Holiday Edition Makers and Artists Celebration of design, craft, fashion, textiles and art Nov. 15 through 17. The celebrations kick off on Friday from 10:30 to 11:30am with a tour inside Heath Ceramics. 

Saturday’s itinerary begins with a tour of Craig Steely’s modern houseboat masterpiece from noon to 1pm. Then from 1 to 4pm is the Maker Studio Visit entitled “Inside the Minds of Marinship Studios: An Artist Talk Series.” After that comes “Cutting Edge,” the VIP Maker Studio Visit from 4 to 7pm. “Cutting Edge” will showcase collaborations with textile artist Simon Ungless as interviewed by style writer Gail Goldberg. This segment of Sausalito’s holiday arts and crafts celebrations also includes a hands-on print-making and felting demo. 

Sunday marks the last day of Sausalito’s holiday arts extravaganza. From 10:30 to 11:30am is another tour of Heath Ceramics. Then from 11:30am to 2:30pm is a holiday pop-up shopping experience that’s all about fashion. And last but not least is the 2:30 to 3:30pm studio talk and tour from master landscape designer Alain Peauroi of Terremoto.

Visit the website at designsausalito.org to learn more about this citywide celebration of arts and crafts and possibly stock up on some holiday gifting material.

San Rafael’s Small Works Exhibit

In San Rafael, holiday shoppers are in for a real treat with Art Works Downtown’s Small Works Exhibit. This showcase of local art is the perfect place to find a special item for that art lover in one’s life. Attendees may browse the 80-plus artistic pieces on display and available for both appreciation and for purchase before this collection comes to an end on Jan. 20 of next year.

The Small Works Exhibit is located at 1337 Fourth St. in San Rafael. The exhibit is open for holiday shoppers Thursday through Sunday from 1 to 8pm. There will be two receptions and art walks affiliated with the Small Works Exhibit, from 5 to 8pm on Dec. 8 and again on Jan 12.

To learn more about San Rafael’s local art scene as well as the Small Works Exhibit, visit artworksdowntown.org.

The Marin Art and Garden Center’s Winter Wonderland

The Marin Art and Garden Center is all set to host its annual Winter Wonderland holiday extravaganza from Dec. 6 through 15. This coincides with its Marin Open Studios holiday showcase of 100 local artists, which will span from Nov. 15 through Dec. 15, with an opening reception from 2 to 5pm on Nov. 16. Plus, the Ross Valley Players are set to perform Noel Coward’s Blithe Spirit in the Art and Garden Center’s on-premises Barn Theater from Nov. 17 to Dec. 17. 

The Marin Art and Garden Center is located at 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. in Ross. To learn more about Winter Wonderland, visit maringarden.org/winterwonderland.

Novato’s Holiday Craft Fair

In Novato, holiday shopping is as easy as attending the Holiday Craft Fair at the Margaret Todd Senior Center. Between 6 and 9pm on Dec. 6 or from 10am to 4pm on Dec. 7, one may get the chance to shop from a wide selection of homemade items. Guests can also check out the event’s specialty foods, entertainment, ornaments, wreaths, bath and body works, ceramics, jewelry and oh so much more.

Note that not all vendors for this event are equipped to accept credit cards, so it may be a good idea to bring some cold hard cash. The Margaret Todd Senior Center is located at 1560 Hill Rd. in Novato. To learn more, visit novato.org/events.

Mill Valley’s Holiday Craft Fair

Mill Valley has its own Holiday Craft Fair on the horizon to help locals get immersed in the local art scene (and ahead on holiday shopping), from 10am to 4pm on Saturday, Dec. 7. Both new and returning artists are coming to the craft fair to showcase their unique handmade wares. Shoppers can anticipate a wide variety of items to shop for, including (but not limited to) woodwork, jewelry, glasswork, ceramics, decorations, knitwear, fiber arts, plants and much more. So one may swing by the Mill Valley Holiday Craft Fair to peruse and purchase presents ahead of the holiday gifting season.

The Holiday Craft Fair is free to attend and will be held at the Mill Valley Community Center, which has ample parking spots for Marin’s shoppers to park close and load up their goodies after the fact. To learn more, visit the website at millvalleyrecreation.org.

Muir Beach Holiday Arts Fair

For over 40 years, the Muir Beach Holiday Arts Fair has helped locals see and celebrate each other’s creative talents and provide an opportunity for holiday shoppers to shop locally. This event runs from 10am to 5pm on Dec. 7 and from 10am to 4pm on Dec. 8. The Muir Beach Holiday Arts Fair first began through the Muir Beach Quilters and now hosts over 40 local artists from Marin and the Bay Area. 

Holiday shoppers can get into the community spirit and shop local selections of hand-made jewelry, ceramics, textiles, woodworking, home and fashion accessories, wreaths, ornaments, children’s books, holiday knick-knacks and garden items too. The Muir Beach Quilters will also be in attendance with plenty of hats, scarves, gloves and quilts to choose from. The Muir Beach Volunteer Firefighters will also be there to sell their dog logo clothing, hats, stainless-wear and accessories, the benefits of which will go toward funding the department.

The Muir Beach Holiday Arts Fair is held in the community center located at 19 Seascape Dr. To get very descriptive directions or learn more about the fair, visit muirbeachartsfair.com.

Fairfax’s Craft Faire and Wreathmaking

It’s nearing the time to come on out to Fairfax on Dec. 14 for the city’s annual gathering of community, craft, art and holiday spirit. Anyone is welcome to attend the event, make some wreaths and be jolly along with the rest of the community. The faire itself lasts from 11am to 5pm, while the quintessential wreath-making experience will last from 1 to 4pm. 

The Fairfax Craft Faire and Wreathmaking event will take place at 142 Bolinas Rd. To learn more, visit townoffairfax.org.

Bolinas’ Winter Faire

With the Bolinas Winter Faire coming to town, one can mark those calendars and come check out what sort of local holiday shopping is going on in West Marin this year. The main highlight of the Bolinas Winter Faire is the handmade treasures for sale, all of which were made by the crafters and artists of West Marin. Everyone is invited to eat, drink and be merry at the festive celebration. The faire is open 5 to 10pm on Dec. 13, noon to 8pm Dec. 14 and 11am to 6pm Dec. 15. 

To learn more, visit bocenter.org.

Free Will Astrology: Week of Nov. 13

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): You may be on the verge of the breakthrough I prophesied a while back. Remember? I said you would be searching for the solution to a boring problem, and on the way you would discover a more interesting and useful problem. That exact scenario is about to happen. I also predict that the coming weeks will be a time when you tame an out-of-control aspect of your life and infuse more wildness into an overly tame part of you. I will speculate on one further stroke of good fortune: You will attract an influence that motivates you to be more passionately pragmatic about one of your key dreams.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): It’s time for some friendly warnings that will, if heeded, enable you to avoid problematic developments. 1. An overhaul in your self-image is looming; your persona requires tinkering. 2. Old boundaries are shifting and in some places disappearing. Be brave and draw up new boundaries. 3. Familiar allies may be in a state of flux. Help them find their new centers of gravity. 4. Potential future allies will become actual allies if you are bold in engaging them. 5. Be allergic to easy answers and simplistic solutions. Insist on the wisdom of uncertainty.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): To honor and celebrate your melancholy, I’m turning this horoscope over to Gemini author T. H. White and his superb formulation of the redemptive power of sadness. He wrote: “The best thing for being sad is to learn something. That is the only thing that never fails. You may lie awake at night listening to the disorder of your veins, you may miss your only love, you may see the world about you devastated by evil lunatics or know your honor trampled in the sewers of baser minds. There is only one thing for it then—to learn. Learn why the world wags and what wags it. That is the only thing which the mind can never exhaust, never alienate, never be tortured by, never fear or distrust and never dream of regretting.”

CANCER (June 21-July 22): A Massachusetts woman named Andrea Martin loves chickens so much she treats them as family. A few years ago, she took pity on one of her favorites, a young bird named Cecily, who had been born with a damaged tendon in one of her legs. Martin arranged to have the limb amputated. Then she made a prosthetic device on a 3-D printer and had it surgically grafted onto Cecily’s body. Success! The $2,500 cost was well worth it, she testified. I propose we make Andrea Martin one of your role models for the coming weeks. May she inspire you to take extra good care of and shower bonus blessings on everyone and everything you love. (PS: This will be really good for your own health.)

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Once a year, the city of Seoul in South Korea stages a Space-Out Festival. Participants compete to do absolutely nothing for 90 minutes. They are not allowed to fall asleep, talk or check their phones. To test how well they are banishing stress, burnout and worries, their heart rates are monitored. The winner is the person who has the slowest and most stable pulse. If there were an event like this in your part of the world sometime soon, Leo, I’d urge you to join in. I expect the winner would be a member of your astrological tribe, as you Leos now have a high potential for revitalizing relaxation. Even if you don’t compete in a Space-Out Festival, I hope you will fully cash in on this excellent chance to recharge your spiritual batteries.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): My favorite Virgos love to learn. They are eager to add to their knowledge. They have a highly honed curiosity that is always percolating, continually drawing them towards new comprehension. On the other hand, some of my favorite Virgos are inefficient at shedding long-held ideas and information that no longer serve them. As a result, their psyches may get plugged up, interfering with their absorption of fun new input. That’s why I recommend that you Virgos engage in regular purges of your mental debris. Now would be an excellent time for one of these sessions. P.S. The futurist Alvin Toffler said that a key to intelligence is the ability to learn, unlearn and relearn. I invite you to act on that counsel.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): I endorse Libran tennis star Serena Williams’ approach to self-evaluation—especially for you right now. She testified, “I’m really exciting. I smile a lot, I win a lot and I’m really sexy.” I’m convinced you have the right to talk like that in the coming weeks—so convinced that I suggest you use it as a mantra and prayer. When you wake up each morning, say what Williams said. When you’re asking life for a sweet breakthrough or big favor, remind life why it should give you what you want. Feel free to add other brags, too, like, “I’m a brilliant thinker, a persuasive negotiator and a crafty communicator.”

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You are entering a phase when you can acquire more mastery in the arts of self-care and self-sufficiency. I hope you will become more skillful in giving yourself everything that nurtures your emotional and physical health. Have you gathered all you need to know about that subject? Probably not. Most of us haven’t. But the coming weeks will be a favorable time to make this your main research project. By the way, now is also an excellent time to kick your own ass and unbreak your own heart.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): My father was a big fan of the military. As a young man, he served as a lieutenant in the army and for a time considered making that job his career. I’m the opposite of him. I keenly avoided becoming a soldier and have always been passionately anti-war. I bring this subject to your attention because I think now is an excellent time for you to get clearer than ever about how you don’t resemble your parents and don’t want to be like them. Meditate on why your life is better and can get even better by not following their paths and ways. There’s no need to do this with anger and blame. In fact, the healthiest approach is to be lucid, calm and dispassionate.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): At age 49, James Patterson retired from his job as an advertising writer. Until then, he had produced a few novels in his spare time. But once free of his 9-to-5 gig, he began churning out books at a rapid pace. Now, at age 77, he has published over 305 million copies of 200+ novels, including 67 that have been No. 1 New York Times bestsellers. Would you like to make an almost equally memorable transition, Capricorn? The coming weeks and months will be an excellent time to plan it and launch it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): The Breakfast Club was an iconic 1985 film about teenagers coming of age. Critics liked it. At the box office, it earned 100 times more than it cost to make. Aquarian director John Hughes wrote the screenplay for the 97-minute movie in two days, on July 4 and 5 of 1982. I predict that many of you Aquarians will have a similar level of productivity in the coming weeks. You could create lasting improvements and useful goodies in short bursts of intense effort.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Ben & Jerry’s is a wildly successful ice cream maker that sells its products all over the world. Its founders are two Pisceans who met in seventh grade. Over 45 years since they launched their business, they have become renowned for their wide variety of innovative flavors and their political activism. When they first decided to work together, though, their plans were to start a bagel business. They only abandoned that idea when they discovered how expensive the bagel-making equipment was. I suspect that you are near a comparable pivot in your life, Pisces: A time to switch from one decent project to an even better one.

Homework: Can you feel less anger about a person who wronged you? It would be good for your health to do so. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Your Letters, 11/6

Shrinkage

I guess shrinking the space you devote to “This Modern World” in your papers, which made reading the feature difficult, was not enough.

Now, the text is blurry, too.

It appears that you are deliberately trying to discourage readers from enjoying Tom Tomorrow’s brilliant and scathing commentary on the lies and rants of the Pussy Grabber In Chief and his cronies.

For shame!

Ed Flesch

Healdsburg

For the Win

One wonders what would have happened on January 6, 2021, had the Forty-Niners played the Washington Commanders in our nation’s capital. Would Nick Bosa have rushed the Commanders’ quarterback or the Capitol? And would it have been a peaceful and loving attempted sack?

Craig J. Corsini

San Rafael

Free (Range) Speech

How is it that “..nine barrels shooting at her…” and  “…guns trained on her face” are protected under “free speech”? How is this not considered provocative or threatening?

If common-sense guidelines can’t somehow be reinstated in political rhetoric, the civil discourse we have all come to cherish as a hallmark of our society will most surely end.

Peter Behel

Santa Rosa

Ballot Balks: Now What?

“I love working the polls!” a friend told me recently. “It strengthens my trust in the whole process. And it’s fun getting to help eligible voters flex their civic muscles.”

I think about my friend’s experience as I hear stories about mistrust in our elections. 

National and state laws set some guardrails for our elections, but elections are managed locally. That means that our friends and neighbors run elections. Thousands of veterans and members of military families work at polling stations, as do nurses, retirees, small business owners and others. “We the People,” indeed.

In this spirit, what can we do to build trust in elections and ensure that everyone feels votes have been counted fairly?

As individuals, we can learn how a polling place works. 

We can check out the website of our state board of elections and learn about the many levels of observation and control. We can learn about poll workers’ training, the oath they swear to run a fair and transparent process and the many safeguards against cheating. We can think about our concerns: cyber attacks? Are people voting multiple times? Are ineligible voters casting ballots? Physical intimidation at the polls? Then, we can explore how our own jurisdictions guard against those threats. 

As humans, we’re hardwired to receive most of our information subconsciously. That means we’re very susceptible to repetition of claims that “there will be problems.” We can refuse to accept such claims at face value and instead research and conclude for ourselves.

Candidates can be mindful of the fear that is causing both sides to worry about losing the election—the fear of being left out and overridden. They can promise a seat at the table so that everyone’s voice is heard, such as by forming bipartisan commissions to study issues facing the community. 

Finally, and very importantly, candidates can uphold peaceful forms of civic participation, reminding voters that violence has no place in our elections. We can remind them of this responsibility, further living out the extraordinary promise of our nation—“We the People.” 

Melinda Burrell, PhD, is a former humanitarian aid worker.

Culture Crush 11/6

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Mill Valley

String Theory, Reimagined

Chamber Music Marin kicks off its 52nd season at 5pm, Sunday, Nov. 10, at Mt. Tamalpais United Methodist Church, with the Jasper String Quartet, one of America’s most celebrated quartets of the 21st century. Expect an intimate evening where fresh compositions dance alongside timeless classics. On the program: Still’s “Lyric String Quartette,” Fung’s “String Quartet No. 2” and Dvořák’s “Quartet No. 14 in A-flat Major.” With their knack for mixing new music with the classical canon, the Jasper String Quartet will make one forget what century they’re in—in the best possible way. Tickets are $48, with great value on season subscriptions. Youths 18 and under are always free—tickets are available at chambermusicmarin.org. The venue is located at 410 Sycamore Ave., Mill Valley.

Stinson Beach

Doc Film Fest

The 8th Annual Stinson Beach Documentary Film Festival returns for three evenings of compelling documentaries and community connection. Kicking off at 5:30, Friday, Nov. 8, the opening night features a gala with paella by chef Davey Jones, a short film on Bolinas photographer Ilka Hartmann and the feature Skywalkers, blending daring acrobatics with romance. Playing at 5pm, Saturday, Nov. 9, is Daughters, an inspiring story about incarcerated fathers and their daughters, followed by dinner and The Greatest Night in Pop, a look behind the iconic “We Are the World.” Sunday, Nov. 10 at 5 pm, are showings of Planetwalker, the story of environmentalist John Francis, and Will and Harper, following Will Ferrell and his friend Harper Steele’s journey across the U.S. Tickets range from $40 to $225. Visit stinsondocfest.org for full details. Stinson Beach Community Center is located at 32 Belvedere Ave.

Glen Ellen

Dinner and Show

Forget Six Characters in Search of an Author by Luigi Pirandello—Glen Ellen’s chef Jessy Manuel is planning an immersive six-course dinner lit like a theatrical stage, blending culinary artistry with powerful performance and storytelling. Halenia, a Chef’s Story draws inspiration from the rich tapestry of Southeast Asian and island cuisine, featuring unique flavors like banana leaf-wrapped chicken with fermented rice, crab fat noodles and persimmon marinated in hibiscus. Stories of resilience, courage and love will be told as Manuel shares personal narratives tied to her late father, weaving emotion into every course. Guests can savor rare offerings like makgeoli, a traditional Korean rice wine. Communal seating enhances the intimate atmosphere. Dinner is set for 6 to 10, Monday, Dec. 16, at 14301 Arnold Dr., Glen Ellen. Tickets are $150. Visit bit.ly/chefs-story.

Mill Valley

Stranger Danger

Wreckless Strangers are back at the iconic Sweetwater Music Hall to celebrate their latest release, Blue Sky Fantasy. Expect fan favorites alongside fresh tracks from the new EP—a mix of contemporary blues, Americana and funk, all wrapped up in their signature “Bay Area Gumbo” style. With soaring harmonies and blazing instrumental improvisation, Wreckless Strangers will remind why they’re keeping San Francisco’s rock ’n’ roll flame alive. Opening act Beau Beau Band gets things started at 8pm, Thursday, Nov. 21, with doors opening at 7pm. Tickets are $26.28. For more info, visit sweetwatermusichall.com. The location is 19 Corte Madera Ave., Mill Valley.

Intriguing Lab Work by San Rafael Artist Lara Myers

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When I met Lara Myers at her downtown San Rafael art studio, she was most excited to tell me about “Gently Bang Your Head Against The Wall Here: An Installation About The 2016 Electoral College” (part of it is pictured behind her in the accompanying photo). It’s telling that the art’s statement remains all too relevant in 2024.

What do you do?  

I create large documentary art installations that address pressing societal issues: the electoral college, pandemic statistics, sexism, climate change and human migration.  

Where do you live?  

The west end of San Rafael.

How long have you lived in Marin?   

20 years after 10 years in Russian Hill, San Francisco.

If you had to convince someone how awesome Marin is, where would you take them? 

Art Works Downtown to wander the halls and visit artists in their studios.

Where can we find you when you’re not at work? 

At my studio, Lara’s Lab, located in the cool and funky underground level of Art Works Downtown in San Rafael or watching my hilarious 17-breed street dog play at the dog park.

What’s one thing Marin is missing? 

A roller skating rink complete with a disco ball, cool light projections and in-the-dark skating sessions for ages 21+. And rental skates with glittery wheels.

What’s one bit of advice you’d share with your fellow Marinites? 

Find your form of creativity, and fill your life with it.

If you could ask anyone to join you at dinner, whom would you invite? 

I’m a military brat and lived in 10 states and went to 12 schools by the end of high school. I’d invite my best friends and crushes from each place I lived. Maybe two versions of each person: at the age I knew them and their current age. That would be fascinating.

What’s some advice you wish you knew 20 years ago? 

Remain in your focus, be keen in your goals, dream your thoughts into action and always be you.

What’s something that 20 years from now will seem cringeworthy? 

Ask me again in five minutes…

Big question. What’s one thing you’d do to change the world? 

Invent a real-time fact-checking device to identify, confront and quash dangerous mis- and disinformation online and in real life.

Keep up with Myers at laraslab.com.

Know a Marin local I should profile? Email me at ni******@***il.com or find me on the ’gram at @IveGotNissues.

From BA to AI, Students Seek Careers in Artificial Intelligence

Nathan Lim, a Cal Poly San Luis Obispo student, spent the summer working on an artificial intelligence tool.

Lim’s goal is to help students evaluate their senior project ideas for ethical and social justice implications—using AI.

He is one of many California college students choosing to learn about AI theory and its emerging applications while preparing to enter an ever-changing workforce. Simultaneously, colleges and universities across the state are working to expand and develop AI courses and degrees to keep up with demand. 

With hopes of bolstering these efforts, Gov. Gavin Newsom recently announced the first statewide partnership with a tech firm to bring AI curriculum, resources and opportunities to California’s public higher education institutions. The partnership with Nvidia, a leading AI software development company, will bring AI tools to community colleges first. In the future, the hope is to add partnerships for the California State University and University of California systems as well, according to the governor’s press release

As colleges and universities are developing AI programs, these partnerships will give students more access to the technology that tech companies use while teaching students how to use it,  said Alex Stack, a deputy communications director for Newsom.

Lim is a junior studying music and computer science, with a concentration in AI. He sees the potential for AI in both learning how to play instruments and making music more accessible. 

“What if there was an AI private teacher to answer questions and provide feedback on playing?” Lim asked. “This could make it available to so many more people that can’t afford $50 to $100 an hour for private lessons.”

The college student learned to play the violin, guitar and piano with help from a middle school teacher and YouTube tutorials. He said his family could not afford private lessons, so he is mostly self-taught. While the internet helped him evolve as a musician, he thinks AI will drive society’s next revolution in technology.

“It almost feels like, obviously I wasn’t around for it, but the creation of the internet,” Lim said. “People were like, ‘Oh, I don’t want to use that.’ Now if you don’t use it, I mean, what are you doing? So I feel like it’s going to get to a point like that with AI, if not already.”

In Lim’s data science course this quarter, the program that he uses to complete homework assignments, Google Colab, has AI embedded that will generate the needed code for him if prompted correctly. 

“Learning is much less about what we can remember and memorize, and much more about asking the right questions because that’s what AI is,” Lim noted. 

Lim’s dad also studied computer science in college and encouraged him to explore coding from a young age; the rapid growth of AI focused the younger Lim’s career path. 

“Someone asked me a question about why I want to specialize in AI in the computer science field,” Lim said. “I told him, ‘I feel like if I don’t, then my job is gonna get replaced by someone who does.’”

Developing Paths to AI careers

Many California colleges and universities are racing to prepare students for high-paying AI engineering jobs, although the path to these careers often require a master’s or doctoral degree. Community colleges and universities are working to lay the groundwork for students to pursue those more advanced degrees, while also finding ways to get students involved in AI at the undergraduate level.

Over the next decade, computer and mathematical jobs, which include AI, are projected to grow by 12.9%, the second-fastest of any industry, according to a report by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. At tech companies such as Meta and Google, postings for AI-related jobs list six-figure salaries, with many reaching above $200,000 annually. 

“The growth of computer and mathematical occupations is expected to stem from demand for upgraded computer services, continued development of artificial intelligence (AI) solutions and an increasing amount of data available for analysis,” the labor report states.

Angel Fuentes, the dean of business and workforce development at Evergreen Valley College in San Jose, is pushing for community colleges to foster AI literacy, so that students across disciplines understand the basic terminology, uses and ethics of AI, even if they aren’t pursuing a tech career. He said AI literacy is important because AI is starting to impact fields from medicine to the humanities to business. 

Fuentes also stated he’s started to see more “blue-collar AI” opportunities popping up, with jobs that work with AI, but don’t necessarily develop or innovate with it, and that typically don’t require master’s degrees. One example is a prompt engineer, which is someone who writes the inputs that companies use to get responses from AI platforms such as ChatGPT. Prompt engineers may use AI to help create presentations or streamline a company’s internal processes, for example.

In part to prepare students for those more accessible AI jobs, eight California community colleges now have AI degrees or certificates, with more in the works, Fuentes said. These programs focus on skills such as computer programming and entrepreneurship. 

“The world is changing so fast, and we want our students to be prepared,” Fuentes said.

The California partnership with Nvidia aims to create AI programs, software and dedicated AI spaces for community college students, educators and workers.

Louis Stewart, the head of strategic initiatives at Nvidia, said the partnership will initially last three years, allowing students to get “AI-enabled.” Stewart emphasized the importance of “reskilling and upskilling” workers, including people who are returning to school to switch careers, by teaching them about AI.

Nvidia is not being paid by the state, and the company is covering the costs of teaching students and faculty about AI, Stewart said.

“The community colleges are a great starting point because it is a great way to get tools and resources into these classrooms that might have a harder time accessing it,” said Stack, with the governor’s office.

Even though only one in five community college students transfer to a four-year university, officials hope to equip and inspire students to continue their AI studies beyond community college, or enter the workforce in AI-adjacent roles.

A key point for some administrators and faculty in the community college system is ensuring students understand the ethical and unethical uses of AI, as well as the terminology and real-world applications. 

Some efforts to integrate AI in education have gone wrong. The volatility of a tech startup led to Los Angeles Unified shelving one AI tool, while school board members for San Diego Unified were in the dark about AI technology they had approved in a broader contract. In both of these districts, problems arose when clear communication and expectations surrounding AI were not established. Experts have warned that it’s crucial for decision makers to vet AI solutions, and be thoughtful when it comes to implementation of AI in education.

The idea behind the AI literacy push is that “AI is here to stay,” and various sectors, not just tech, “should embrace it,” said Nasreen Rahim, a professor at Evergreen Valley College who trains teachers on how to best use technology. 

“You can’t just shut your mind to AI and have that be your mindset,” Rahim explained. “It’s about having an open mind.”

The California community college system has a new set of academic integrity guidelines for AI, which aim to ensure “expectations are clear” for students in terms of what is considered responsible use of AI, and what isn’t.

Brian Sawaya, a biomedical engineering student at Foothill College in Santa Clara County, has found a network of peers at the community college level who, like him, are dedicated to exploring tech fields, including AI.

“Community college students are some of the most driven and most ambitious people you’ll meet,” Sawaya said. “Because community college students are underrepresented in terms of access to opportunities, and companies are trying to diversify their workforce, it’s important to have opportunities for community college students.”

Sawaya is the president of his college’s robotics team, and he said he uses AI to help his club’s robots better detect objects and avoid obstacles. He stated he is excited to transfer to a four-year university next year to continue his studies in the field of wearable technology, which includes prosthetics. 

How Four-year Universities Are Adding AI Programs

As Newsom pointed out, the UC and Cal State systems will also benefit from AI industry partnerships in the future. 

The Cal State board of trustees announced in September that the university system is seeking $7 million in its 2025-26 budget request to fund AI infrastructure for students and faculty. 

Four universities in the Cal State system have AI programs: Cal State East Bay, San Francisco State, San Jose State and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. The CSU generative AI committee convened for the first time this fall in response to some CSU campuses’ demand for systemwide guidance on developing AI programs and managing AI use.

At Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, students in the Computer Science and AI Club meet every Sunday afternoon in a large lecture hall. On a recent Sunday, 80 students, mostly computer science freshmen, sat in front of two projectors to learn about AI basics from club leaders.

“As the president this year, I’m trying to champion a place where people who know more about AI come to teach people who know less and are very interested,” said Leo Horwitz, a computer science senior at Cal Poly. 

The club offers workshops to teach the foundations of AI to students and is working on original AI application projects—for example, one that will research and generate code and another that will automate and referee games of red light, green light. The club partners with local companies to raise funds, and it gets money from the student government, which sponsors clubs, Horwitz said. 

Horwitz is excited about the possibility of Cal Poly working with a leading AI developer in the future. 

“A direct partnership with a company in the industry is productive because it’s easy for academia to fall behind,” Horwitz noted. “No matter what [the partnership] is, we’re interacting with them. This is a way for us to force ourselves to be in the thick of it with the cutting edge stuff.”

Horwitz’s professor, Franz Kurfess, offers opportunities for his students to work with companies as part of his courses. He is also leading the project that Cal Poly junior Lim is working on to use AI in evaluating students’ senior projects. 

“Working with an external company is an excellent opportunity for students to learn about practical applications of AI in a context that they might experience later in their career,” Kurfess said. “It also exposes them to professional work practices where they may not be able to get away with things that they are doing for class assignments because they have other people depending on their work.”

In another partnership with CalMatters, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo faculty and students recently worked with the news organization to build Digital Democracy—an AI-powered website that tracks lawmakers, legislation, campaign contributions, and congressional hearings and sessions.

Across the UC system, leaders are working to incorporate AI across disciplines, while balancing the potential pitfalls of the technology. A UC presidential working group chose a list of “responsible AI principles,” which include transparency about AI use, safety and privacy.

For Chris Mattmann, the chief data and artificial intelligence officer at UCLA, ongoing developments in the world of generative AI mean it’s crucial to “innovate and experiment,” but to do so with the guidance of “responsible and ethical principles.” Mattmann began at UCLA earlier this year, and his role is the first of its kind at any UC. 

Mattmann works to oversee AI strategy across UCLA, including how the technology is used by faculty, students, staff and researchers. He emphasized the importance of developing AI literacy across disciplines. UCLA recently became the first California college to offer ChatGPT enterprise accounts, allowing a limited number of student groups and faculty to use the technology through the university.

“(Our goal) is to hopefully demystify AI, so people really understand what’s coming, what’s here, the opportunity, but also the need to really be guided by ethics,” Mattmann said.

Beyond the public higher education systems in California, private universities are also working to create AI opportunities for students. While some private universities such as Stanford have added concentrations or minors in AI, USC is developing a new AI major in response to the immense demand for AI instruction, said Nenad Medvidović, the computer science department chair at USC. 

Medvidović says that some students are driven by an academic curiosity of how AI works, but others are driven by making sure they are employable after they graduate. 

“I’ve seen many waves of technology that have kind of come along and matured,” Medvidović recalled. “Nothing has come close to what we’re seeing right now with AI and machine learning and large language models.”

Film Review: Home alone in ‘Heretic’

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Hugh Grant isn’t used to being mixed up in a screenplay quite as messy and perplexing as Heretic’s is. Although, he’s undoubtedly visited the outskirts of the M&P neighborhood in his 42-year stint as one of the most recognizable actors working in English-language films.

Let’s just say the role of a creepy senior citizen terrorizing a couple of young women in his old dark house doesn’t immediately spring to mind as a likely career option for the onetime light-comedy leading man of Bridget Jones’s Diary and Mickey Blue Eyes, as he carefully navigates his dotage.

People who fret over the durability of movie stars and the trendiness of genre pics are doubtless a bit dazed and confused about Grant’s association with latter-day fright-flick auteurs Scott Beck and Bryan Woods—makers of the popular A Quiet Place franchise, in which blind aliens hunt terrified Earthlings by sound. We keep picturing Grant cowering in his flat, trying to tame his stammering to avoid being eaten up. Silly stuff, but Grant needs to work like everyone else.

Heretic isn’t quite as dumb as A Quiet Place, at least at first. A pair of young, female Latter Day Saints missionaries, Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East), are out in the boondocks, ringing doorbells in a mountainous community somewhere—the exteriors were shot in British Columbia—and idly chit-chatting to kill time. The talk turns to penis size, then the porno industry, before settling down to the business at hand: promoting the faith, working off a list. Someone checked a box in a Mormon questionnaire.

On Barnes and Paxton’s sucker list is a little house tucked into a hillside, where dwells a soft-spoken geezer named Mr. Reed (Grant), the type of Mid-Atlantic-accented fellow who favors sweaters, comfy house slippers, a cuppa tea and books—lots and lots of books. Uh-oh. 

SPOILER ALERT: POTENTIAL AUDIENCE MEMBERS WHO WANT TO BE SURPRISED AT THE PLOT MECHANICS OF HERETIC SHOULD STOP READING HERE. 

Mr. Reed’s house fits the profile of a movie murder scene to a T: eerie lighting, austere furniture arrangement, outré wallpaper and more. And he asks more “icky questions” than Barnes and Paxton’s typical customers, about polygamy, comparative religions and other touchy subjects. He won’t shut up, and presses slices of “homemade blueberry pie” on the increasingly uneasy women. They notice that their cell phones don’t work, and it turns out the walls are lined with metal. This odd old coot may initially seem like a routine house call, but it soon dawns on the Sisters that they, not Mr. Reed, are the goats.

It is at this point, before the shock-cuts and the various ultra-grotesqueries popping out of the walls in Reed’s basement—yes, there’s one of those—that horror movie mavens will connect the dots all the way to the grisly end and wonder: Is that all there is? The answer to that is in Reed/Grant’s laborious method of questioning the questioners, a genuinely disturbing monologue combining menace and Grant’s patented bumbling humor, now veering off in sinister directions more suited to grim art-house character studies than youth-market popcorn shockers.

In some horror movies sex is the goal line. Not here. Matched up against both women’s desperately wised-up parries—they’re trying to save their lives—is Reed’s pedantic history lesson on the One True Religion. He’s the true Nutty Professor, just as didactic in his mealy-minded way as the conversational calls to war of David Mamet or the ravings of the Marquis de Sade.

As disheartening as it is to imagine, Grant’s performance in Heretic may give life to the logical, gloves-off, maniacal character lurking in the shadows of his namby-pamby roles in Four Weddings and a Funeral and the endless milquetoast rom-coms: the sadistic secret life of the pushover. Nice try, but it doesn’t really add up—unless Mr. Reed’s strategy is to bore his victims out of their minds before he kills them. 

* * *

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Film Review: Home alone in ‘Heretic’

Film Review: Home alone in 'Heretic'
Hugh Grant isn’t used to being mixed up in a screenplay quite as messy and perplexing as Heretic’s is. Although, he’s undoubtedly visited the outskirts of the M&P neighborhood in his 42-year stint as one of the most recognizable actors working in English-language films. Let’s just say the role of a creepy senior citizen terrorizing a couple of young women...
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