2011-06-27/07-03 Weekly LOVIEE

With the Fourth of July just around the corner, it’s looking to be a great week to head out and have fun. I will be posting a LOVIEE specifically for the Fourth of July as the weekend approaches (probably sometime during the afternoon/evening Friday, possibly early Saturday morning if I’m still behind schedule).

I’m in the process of revamping the it-only-looked-forgotten ongoing LOVIEE which as noted there will be expanded into multiple topic-specific pages given that it soon will become too large for just one page.

Wednesday 06-29

Cody Kouba, Blanco’s Bar and Grill, 3406 W. Alabama, 7pm. 11-W26-1

Thursday 06-30

Grady Skelton, Blanco’s Bar and Grill, 3406 W. Alabama, 7pm. 11-W26-2

Espantapajaros/Chase Hamblin/Nathan Quick, Fitzgerald’s, 2706 White Oak, doors 8pm, $5 (21+)/$8 (20 and under). 11-M06-6

Thursday 06-30 and Friday 07-01

Movies at Miller, Miller Outdoor Theatre, Hermann Park, 8:30pm, free admission. Thursday night’s screening will be E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Friday night will feature 2001: A Space Odyssey. Both nights are non-ticketed events. 11-M06-5 / 11-M07-1

Friday 07-01 (Recurring)

2600 Magazine meeting, The Galleria, Ninfa’s Express next to Nordstrom’s (in Galleria IV), 6pm-?. Gathering of computer and technology enthusiasts centered around the magazine’s readership. Z-14

Friday 07-01 (One-time)

Anarchitex CD Release Party, Fitzgerald’s, 2706 White Oak, 8pm-?, free (21+)/$? (under 21). Also featuring The Energy, Black Congress, Delta Block. 11-M07-3

Saturday 07-02

Not Your Normal Ice Cream Social, McGonigel’s Mucky Duck, 2425 Norfolk, noon-3pm. Featuring homemade ice creams made from different beers and wine, as well as non-alcoholic options such as root beer floats. 11-W26-3

Sunday 07-03

Velcro Pygmies, BFE Rock Club, 11528 Jones Rd, 8pm, $11 (advance)/$?? (at door). Up-and-coming rock band based in Louisville, Kentucky. 11-M07-2

 

2011-06-21/26 Weekly LOVIEE

First, some administrivia: for this Weekly LOVIEE I am only covering six days, Tuesday-Sunday, and returning to the usual Monday-Sunday for the following week (2011-06-27/07-03). Later in the week I will also be posting a Special Edition LOVIEE for Independence Day (July 4th).

Thursday 06-23

Mitch Jacobs, Blanco’s Bar & Grill, 3406 W. Alabama, 7pm-?, no cover. Local rockabilly/alt-country artist. 11-W25-1

Friday 06-24

CastleLights/Finnegan/The Rocketboys/Brent Nettles, 2706 White Oak, 8pm-?, $8. A showcase of Texas-based musicians: CastleLights and Finnegan are both local to the Houston area, The Rocketboys hail from Austin, and Brent Nettles is based in Brenham. 11-M06-3

Sophi, Sugar Land Town Square, 2711 Town Center Blvd. (Sugar Land), 7:30pm, no admission fee. Sophi is an up-and-coming pop sensation who is already starting to make a name for herself at the tender age of 12. 11-W25-2

Saturday 06-25

Summer Solstice: Wine, Cheese and Bats, Houston Arboretum & Nature Center, 4501 Woodway, 7-9pm, $45 (non-member)/$30 (member). Dr. Cullen Geiselman, a specialist in bat/plant interaction in the neotropics, gives a brief summary of the world’s bats species, their habitats, their life histories, and busts some common bat myths. This speech is followed by a “bat walk” on the Arboretum grounds. Event will be held indoors in case of rain. 11-M06-4

Joe Ely, Firehouse Saloon, 5903 Southwest Freeway, show 9:15pm, $22 (tickets available online). Texas music legend whose career has wandered across different sub-genres including progressive country, alternative country, and country rock. 11-W25-3

Sunday 06-26

Benefit for Claire & Clint Pickett, BFE Rock Club, 11528 Jones, noon-6pm. BBQ plates for $10, live music, raffles, and silent and live auctions to benefit the two children who suddenly lost both parents. 11-W25-4

 

2011-06-20/07-31 Monthly LOVIEE

Beginning in August the Monthly LOVIEEs will be back to a normal schedule covering exactly a full calendar month, and hopefully will remain that way for the forseeable future. I do realize as of the initial posting that I only have through July 9 accounted for; I will be filling in the remainder of the month before the end of the week (Friday, June 24).

Friday 06-24

CastleLights/Finnegan/The Rocketboys/Brent Nettles, 2706 White Oak, 8pm-?, $8. A showcase of Texas-based musicians: CastleLights and Finnegan are both local to the Houston area, The Rocketboys hail from Austin, and Brent Nettles is based in Brenham. 11-M06-3

Saturday 06-25

Summer Solstice: Wine, Cheese and Bats, Houston Arboretum & Nature Center, 4501 Woodway, 7-9pm, $45 (non-member)/$30 (member). Dr. Cullen Geiselman, a specialist in bat/plant interaction in the neotropics, gives a brief summary of the world’s bats species, their habitats, their life histories, and busts some common bat myths. This speech is followed by a “bat walk” on the Arboretum grounds. Event will be held indoors in case of rain. 11-M06-4

Thursday 06-30 and Friday 07-01

Movies at Miller, Miller Outdoor Theatre, Hermann Park, 8:30pm, free admission. Thursday night’s screening will be E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Friday night will feature 2001: A Space Odyssey. Both nights are non-ticketed events. 11-M06-5 / 11-M07-1

Thursday 06-30

Espantapajaros/Chase Hamblin/Nathan Quick, Fitzgerald’s, 2706 White Oak, doors 8pm, $5 (21+)/$8 (20 and under). 11-M06-6

Friday 07-01

Anarchitex CD Release Party, Fitzgerald’s, 2706 White Oak, 8pm-?, free (21+)/$? (under 21). Also featuring The Energy, Black Congress, Delta Block. 11-M07-3

Sunday 07-03

Velcro Pygmies, BFE Rock Club, 11528 Jones Rd, 8pm, $11 (advance)/$?? (at door). Up-and-coming rock band based in Louisville, Kentucky. 11-M07-2

Saturday 07-09

The 71s/Black Queen Speaks, Warehouse Live, 813 St. Emanuel, doors 8pm, show 8:30pm, $10 (purchase tickets online). Two local rock legends headline this show. Also featuring Brannigan and The Vehement Burn. 11-M07-4

Opening Friday 07-15

“Meaning In Motion” by Pablo Gimenez Zapiola, Spacetaker ARC, 2101 Winter Street #B11, opening reception 7-10pm. 11-M07-5 / 11-PGZMM

Friday 07-15 and Saturday 07-16

Glitter Guts & Glory, Frenetic Theater, 5102 Navigation Blvd, 7:30pm (both nights), $15 in advance/$20 at door. Chroeographer jhon r. stronks and The Magic Unicorn Dance Crew present an evening-length dance theater performance event not to be missed. 11-M07-6

Saturday 07-23

Dayglow “The World’s Largest Paint Party”, Stereo Live, 6400 Richmond, 9pm, $35 GA/$59.99 VIP (tickets available at website), 18+. A spectacular show that fuses high-energy music, art, dance, and paint into one mind blowing combination that must be seen to be believed. 11-M07-7

Friday 07-29 and Saturday 07-30

Blaggards — Friday show: R&R Sports Bar & Grill, 3338 FM 528 (Friendswood), show 10pm, 21+, call venue at 281-996-8300 for cover/ticket info. Saturday show: Molly Malone’s, 7824 Louetta Rd (Spring), show 10pm, no cover. It seems like the local champions of “stout Irish rock” have been spending more time performing outside of the Houston area than in it. Here’s a chance to catch them for their only local show this month. 11-M07-8 (R&R) / 11-M07-9 (Molly Malone’s)

 

Commentary regarding Houston Beer Fest (11-M06-1)

Once again, an event I promoted here has fallen short of even rather generous event planning and organizing standards. For those who have not read these posts (both by Katharine Shilcutt, food editor for the Houston Press):

Some of the summarized highlights in case these posts should disappear:

  • The venue was way oversold: there is dispute over how many tickets were actually sold, but somehow, “nearly 20,000 people” were admitted to a venue that could only support 12,000.
  • There are suspected violations of TABC regulations regarding ticket sales, specifically VIP tickets promising “all you can drink” beer in violation of TABC administrative rule §45.103.
  • The organizers executed inexcusably poor post-event handling of public relations and social media, creating a Facebook group which essentially bashes the event (entitled “I hate the Houston Beer Fest”), and taking the festival’s Twitter account private. There is no good reason to do either of these.

I did, unintentionally, omit the Houston Beer Fest from the Weekly LOVIEE; in retrospect, with how the event turned out, it’s just as well. It was, however, mentioned in the Monthly LOVIEE. I normally reserve the Monthly LOVIEE for more prominent and special events.

Let me step back a bit and explain how I choose events to promote on this blog, and the rather generous standards I set for organizers of those events.

I do not always plan to attend every event I mention in a LOVIEE. Often, I simply do not have the budget. Most events I post are events I would attend if I had no limits on time or finances. There is a hierarchy to the events featured here; those events featured only in a Weekly LOVIEE are the first tier; those events mentioned in the Monthly LOVIEE are the next higher tier; and there are a few events I consider worthy months in advance in an On The Horizon post (which implies inclusion at the Monthly LOVIEE level for the month in which the event takes place).

Overall, I do expect the events in the LOVIEEs to live up to the tagline “The best of Houston’s arts, events, and happenings.” While it is the goal, I don’t expect every single event to be executed flawlessly. Things will go wrong at events and not all of them are in control of the event organizers or the venue management.

I do expect event organizers to get the basics right. The first of those basics is: don’t oversell one’s venue capacity. If it’s an outdoor venue that can support 12,000, don’t sell or give away more than that many tickets. As an event organizer myself (not that I’d feel confident enough to organize an event this large anytime soon), I’d feel much more comfortable capping total tickets at 11,000 to 11,500 to provide some margin for error.

The second of those basics is: obey the law. (This includes administrative rules such as those of the TABC.) If the laws that one’s event are subject to are unknown, one should consult legal counsel.

There are others of course. But if an event’s organizers get these two wrong, it’s inviting disaster. And disaster, in this case, is exactly what we got.

With that, I will officially state in as many words I regret promoting the Houston Beer Fest on Quinn’s Big City. If you attended based on my promotion of the event and did not enjoy it, I’m sorry. Had I known in advance the event would be executed this poorly, I would not have mentioned it on the site at all. In fact, I am considering disqualifying the Houston Beer Fest from future promotion on the site.

This is not a step I take lightly. I value my reputation as the editor of this blog, and I will not allow my reputation and that of Quinn’s Big City, the site, to be thusly tarnished. Henceforth, Quinn’s Big City does not knowingly promote events that do not comply with the law, nor those organized in an incompetent manner.