Feb 1-7, 2023

Feb 1-7, 2023 / Vol. 28 / No. 17
Peter Edelmann is Transforming an Essex Mall Into a Town Center and Vermont ‘Experience’; Black High School Athletes Speak Out About Racism in Vermont Sports; Morrisville’s Concept2 Rowing Machines Propel the Action at the World Rowing Indoor Championships; Burlington’s Paradiso Hi-Fi Spins Tunes and Plates

Cover Story

Residents to Move Into Elmwood Avenue Pods This Week

The first residents of the Elmwood Avenue shelter pods will move in this week, Burlington city officials said on Monday. They spoke in the shelter’s community center, located in the former parking lot at 51 Elmwood Avenue that has been transformed into a fenced-off pod community. Workers hurriedly applied finishing touches during a press conference. All 35…

Is a 20- to 30-Year Age Gap Realistic in a Relationship?

Dear Reverend, I’m an old man looking for a lady to share life and love. Recently, I have shared consecutive crushes on two much younger ladies. Both crushes mutually faded. My parents had a three-year age difference. Some friends say a 10-year difference is all right. Given the circumstances, 20 to 30 years seems more…

Letters to the Editor (2/1/23)

A Way to Pay I was reading through the “Who Cares?” article [January 11], about Vermont’s dysfunctional childcare system, when the amount families spend per month on childcare jumped out at me: $1,350 to $1,500. Why, that’s about the cost of fuel to fly one F-35 jet bomber for 15 minutes! If just one of…

Now Playing in Theaters: February 1-7

new in theaters 80 FOR BRADY: Sally Field, Jane Fonda, Rita Moreno and Lily Tomlin play four friends determined to meet Tom Brady at the SuperBowl in this sports comedy directed by Kyle Marvin. (98 min, PG-13. Bijou, Capitol, Essex, Majestic, Palace, Welden) THE AMAZING MAURICE: A clever cat (voice of Hugh Laurie), a young…

Black High School Athletes Speak Out About Racism in Vermont Sports

Racist incidents in Vermont school sports involving both players and spectators have been in the headlines frequently over the past year and a half. But often, media coverage of these events doesn’t include the voices of students of color, who are most affected by the behavior. In January, a TikTok video that included the N-word…

Free Will Astrology (2/1/23)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “I want to raise up the magic world all round me and live strongly and quietly there,” wrote Aquarian author Virginia Woolf in her diary. What do you think she meant by “raise up the magic world all round me”? More importantly, how would you raise up the magic world around…

From the Deputy Publisher: Camp Counsel

This summer, would the kids in your life like to practice hip-hop dance, learn to use a laser cutter, or build a kayak and paddle it the length of Lake Champlain? Would they enjoy horseback riding, harvesting and preparing their own food, or building Rube Goldberg machines? All these activities are on offer at Saturday’s…

Theater Review: ’Bov Water, Northern Stage

It’s easy to list what the new play ‘Bov Water doesn’t contain — a plot, a conflict, even a stable sense of time and place. Yet viewers may find themselves steeped in an experience of tragedy, triumph, wisdom, suffering, compassion and love. How those emotions arise is the difficult part to describe, but feeling them…

Dari Bay, ‘Longest Day of the Year’

(Self-released, digital) Teenage bands are cute, but they don’t always pass muster. Life experience fuels art. If you haven’t lived that long, you might not have a well of exploits and relationships deep enough to make truly absorbing work. But Brattleboro’s the Snaz were an exception — and exceptional. The defunct teenage quartet made preposterously…

Freddie Losambe, ‘daydreams & folly’

(Self-released, digital) To abuse a cliché, former Burlingtonian Freddie Losambe is “criminally slept on.” That’s a haggard phrase referring to great artists who are neglected despite their prolific talent. Losambe is a producer, rapper, singer and multi-instrumentalist whose catalog displays huge range and superb, thoughtful writing — yet he seldom gets the acclaim he deserves.…

Burlington’s Paradiso Hi-Fi Spins Tunes and Plates

Back before Wi-Fi, there was hi-fi — shorthand for sound systems that play music with high fidelity to the original recording. Fidelity also means devotion, an apt descriptor for what drove the creation of Paradiso Hi-Fi, the Burlington listening lounge and restaurant that opened in late November tucked inconspicuously behind its sister business, Dedalus Wine…

Hinesburgh Public House Defines ‘Community Restaurant’

Inside the entrance to the Hinesburgh Public House sits an antique wooden shelf full of cookbooks such as Gourmet Vegetarian Cooking, Jane Fonda’s Cooking for Healthy Living and The Great American Seafood Cookbook. The lower shelves hold children’s books and cribbage boards. It isn’t just an entertaining collection for customers to leaf through while they…

Burlington Landmark Henry’s Diner For Sale

The past several years have brought major changes to Burlington’s downtown breakfast scene, including the move of Mirabelles Café to South Burlington after almost 30 years and the closure of Penny Cluse Café just shy of its quarter-century anniversary. But the longevity of those two landmarks pales in comparison with that of Henry’s Diner, which…

Vermont Cider Lab to Open in the Essex Experience

The Essex Experience is already a bustling beverage destination with a brewery, a distillery and a wine bar (see “Minding the Stores”). Soon the former outlet mall will add a cidery. Chris Line and Karen Wisehart will open Vermont Cider Lab in Suite 214 — between Magic Mann and the Mad Taco — in late…

Kitsune Pops Up at Tälta Lodge in Stowe for the Winter

Popular Stowe-based Japanese pop-up Kitsune has a winter home at Tälta Lodge. The nomadic biz, run by chef Matt Hiebsch and his wife, Alina Alter, offers dishes such as mushroom-and-bacon steamed buns, chicken katsu curry, and spicy miso ramen three nights a week at the hotel at 3343 Mountain Road. Kitsune ran a seasonal pop-up…

The Magnificent 7: Must See, Must Do, February 1-7

It’s Electric Saturday 4 Andrew Crust, the final candidate for music director of the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, makes his case at the Flynn in Burlington conducting Electric Dreams. This high-energy program includes works by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky and Canadian composer Jocelyn Morlock and hits its crescendo with a newly commissioned concerto by Latin Grammy Award-winning…


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