The top of the label prominently displays four ingredients—"Water, Barley, Rice, Hops"—but it’s what’s underneath that really matters. “Calories: 110.”
What on Earth did he say that sounds desperate? And Kool aid is very delicious. I’ll always drink it. Again, you are giving us opinion. The only think that wreaks of desperation is you trying to convince yourself that Kyle is desperate.
What: Six albums deep and Juno Award winner Kellylee Evans is still shaking it up on Come Over, her latest Decca album. The stylistic connoisseur has tackled everything from jazz to R&B to pop in such previous tasty classics fight or flight? Nina her Juno-winning tribute to the legendary Nina Simone – and I Remember When.
The most political – and the most famous – HipCo singer is Code 146′s 37-year-old owner. Jonathan Koffa was so central to the mid-2000s Monrovia-based genesis of HipCo that he became known as Takun J, the name being a Kolokwa take on Tycoon. In 2015, he wrote a sort of anthem, "They Lie to Us," that I listened to repeatedly on the plane. "I sayayaaa," Takun cries out in that song, stretching his words. "They lie. Lay pepoh fool us oh. Lay pepoh lie to us." Right now, as the crowd swells for a Friday-night open mic, Takun is surrounded by an entourage and sucking meditatively on a large reefer as he eyes the stage. The show begins around 10, and it stars a medley of rappers. Amaze takes the stage to rip through a frenetic, muscular 10-minute set featuring a tightly written rap about a corrupt teacher who takes "kini kini" (small change) to keep "wackin’ it" (eating, that is). After rapper Lady Skeet performs, fans surge toward her, showering her with money until the air above the stage is a blizzard of Liberian five-dollar bills, each one worth about 3 U.S. cents.
5. Our leading electricity company knows where its bread is buttered: A lead sponsor for all three of these events, which celebrate in their own ways the glories of having the power meter running on cold winter nights, is ComEd.
When: March 18 to March 22, 2019Time: 10 am to 3 pmWhere: Burnaby Lake Regional Park – Meet at Burnaby Lake Nature House – 4519 Piper Avenue, BurnabyAdmission: Free
Our One Stop, 550 E. High St., Elizabethtown, March 1. Walk-in cooler floor has debris and residue accumulations. Food facility does not have available sanitizer test strips or test kit to determine appropriate sanitizer concentration.
“That was not the intent of the ordinance,” Fiorentini’s spokesman Shawn Regan told WHAV. “At the Mayor’s request, they will not be charging for the use of paper checkout bags.”
HipCo sees the disenfranchised speaking truth to one another – in their own language, no less. The "co" in HipCo is short for "Kolokwa," which is the dialect that the Liberian underclass has been improvising since the early 19th century, blending the English brought by 19,000 ex-slaves with words from about 15 native tongues to attain a soft-sounding patois. Kolokwa is 99 percent an oral language – as yet, there is not a single full book in the dialect – and it is all but incomprehensible to the American ear. In Liberia, the cultural elite have long shunned it as lowbrow. Which means that when HipCo artists inject a few choice snatches of Kolokwa into otherwise English lyrics, their words have political zing.
Another, more earnestly curated show now hangs at MARTE. "Where There Was Fire," on display until 2022, presents work by 24 of El Salvador’s best contemporary artists and includes a three-minute video by Nadie titled "It’s the cumbia that rules my country." The film purports to celebrate a danceable folk music, but as it delivers cheesy shots of purple-clad trumpeters swaying in unison, it’s brutally spliced with images from El Salvador’s war: a burning bus, snipers, a medley of corpses. When we reach the third corpse, a soldier in combat boots, Nadie lingers on the body for a full four seconds as the upbeat soundtrack goes silent. We know, watching, that it’s more than the cumbia that rules Nadie’s country. But what exactly is this guy saying about El Salvador?
This fun and invigorating boxing class is open to all fitness levels and will be followed by a short learning session from leading nutritionists. Participants can also sample delicious eats and treats that their body will thank them for.
“Over a can of beer, we can take a peek into several important moments in Colorado’s past,” said Sam Bock, lead developer for “Beer Here!” and public historian for History Colorado, in a press statement. “But more importantly, by looking at the past through a pint, can help us understand how this wonderful place called Colorado came to be.”
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