Colorado Film Commission, Take 2

Colorado, Take 2 “I found it in Colorado.” That’s how Billy Crystal explains his smile at the end of City Slickers, the 1991 movie filmed largely in Colorado, and it’s the final scene on David Emrich’s promotional reel touting Colorado filmmaking and the more than 375 movies at least partially…

Wake-Up Call: Denver Festival Society keeps rolling

While most of the employees of the Denver Film Society are back at work, they’re not quite sure if they’re still employees, because twenty of them had officially resigned before the board voted to dismiss new executive director Bo Smith last Friday. And there’s also the matter of a major…

Wake-Up Call: All over but the shouting

The last bill of the legislative session has been signed, and it’s all over but the shouting — particularly in front-page stories over the governor’s vetoes of union-friendly bills (and likely when the governor is on Mike Rosen’s show at 9:15 a.m.). But Bill Ritter also managed to please at…

Eat your words, Bill Husted

In today’s Denver Post, Bill Husted writes about Jason Sheehan’s upcoming book, Cooking Dirty: A Story of Life, Sex, Love and Death in the Kitchen, and quotes from a negative (and very entertaining) review published last week in the Los Angeles Times by that paper’s food writer, Russ Parsons. “You…

Wake-Up Call: Back to the future

It was 1969 all over again yesterday, when Governor Bill Ritter signed a bill that, as of July 1, 2009, will establish the Colorado Office of Film, Television and Media. Re-establishes that office, actually: On July 1, 1969, Colorado became the first state in the country with a state film…

A tourist in her own town

As Mindy Sink discovered, it’s not easy being a tourist in your own town — especially when you’re writing a guidebook with a deadline months ahead of when the book actually hits the streets. The Colorado native worked for six months last year on Denver, a Moon Handbooks guide that…

Wake-Up Call: Commerce City gets the business

The name “Commerce City” may not be the most marketable. Still, two years ago residents voted two-to-one to keep the business-boosterish name. But that doesn’t mean Commerce City can’t work on its tarnished image — and, in fact, it’s paying a consultant $80,000 to help bring high-end projects to the…

Wake-Up Call: The rest is history

This year marks the 150th anniversary of the “Rush to the Rockies.” As rumors of the May 1859 gold find echoed back east, hordes of fortune-hunters started the arduous trek across the plains to the confluence of the Platte and Cherry Creek. Many never made it to what was then…

Wake-Up Call: Throwing the book

Here’s the great thing about a book. Once you have it in your hands, it never goes offline. The Denver Office of Cultural Affairs hasn’t been so lucky with the web site where the city’s residents are invited to help choose the next One Book, One Denver selection. Voting allegedly…

The Week Ahead: No storybook endings

Now that we won’t be spending the week buying our Birdman hair gel and getting our support-the-Nuggets tats, it’s time to get back to reality. And there’s plenty of that. Today marks the start of Denver’s “Home Renovation Bonanza,” a two-week period in which homeowners and licensed contractors can get…

Wake-Up Call: No more educational regional directors or Tancredos

The U.S. Department of Education is eliminating several regional director jobs, disappointing Coloradans hoping for an appointment, the Denver Post reports today. According to a notice outlining the job eliminations,”These political appointees have not had substantial policy or administrative functions.” Maybe not while they were in the office — but…

Wake-Up Call: Your-Name-Here Field at Mile High

John Hickenlooper’s political career was launched when the then-barkeep campaigned to keep the name “Mile High Stadium” at the new football palace the taxpayers were building for Pat Bowlen and the Denver Broncos. Hick didn’t win that one: The stadium district overseeing the project sold the naming rights to Invesco,…

Bucking to visit every Starbucks

Former Westword staffer and Denver native Julie Jargon is now a reporter at the Wall Street Journal, on the restaurant beat, and proving with every story just how interesting the restaurant industry can be. Last week’s front-page story, “A Fan Hits a Roadblock on a Drive to See Every Starbucks,”…

Tony’s Market now open on Broadway

Farewell, Diamond Shamrock: Tony’s has opened at 950 Broadway, and we may have eaten our last convenience-store burrito. That’s because Tony’s stocks homemade breakfast burritos, as well as dozens of other ready-to-go food items — and, of course, many more prepared dishes and packaged ingredients that just need a little…

Wake-Up Call: Week starts with a win

It wasn’t just the decisive win that made last night’s Nuggets victory so gratifying. And it wasn’t the fact that Denver looked so good — if very, very wet — on national TV. What was particularly sweet about this chapter in the Cinderella story is that the Nuggets were never…

Argyll goes far afield to tout its patio

Argyll might bill itself as “a gastroPub,” but it doesn’t see itself as a neighborhood pub — not unless you consider all of Denver just one big neighborhood. I live several miles and fifteen minutes from Cherry Creek (and that’s if the lights on Speer are synchronized), and last night…

Wake-Up Call: Waterboarded!

“Do you believe in waterboarding?” The question was not from President Barack Obama or former vice president Dick Cheney, who are all over the news today for their comments on torture and terrorism yesterday. It was posed by former senator Gary Hart, who long before 9/11 was warning of the…

Wake-Up Call: The show must go on

“Denver Stories” is a genius marketing move: Every May, Curious Theatre Company picks four local celebs (or what passes for a celeb in this town), has a local playwright create a short play about them, and then produces all four on one evening that turns into a giant fundraising event…