Most Popular
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Sexual Healing
Sad stories and otherwise freaky tales from Florida's last sexual surrogate
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Backbreaker
A half-kilo of blow, machine-gun blasts, and a millionaire chiropractor. Does this make sense?
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Switch Hitter
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side. Gay or straight? Or something else?
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To Hug a Porcupine
Three little boys set out to destroy the parents who loved them. This isn't how adoption is supposed to work.
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Hanging Chads
Nothing spices up a storyline like QB Controversy
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Hanging Chads
Nothing spices up a storyline like QB Controversy
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Body & Soul
Claire Chafee may be the perfect playwright for Sol Theatre
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Art Finds a Way
Shattered mirror, raining jellyfish, delicate entrails: harsh images made beautiful at the Museum of Art
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Bad Sex
With Blowing Whistles, Sol Theatre gives the bad news about good times
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Fuzzy, Fuzzy Fuzz
The Women's Theatre Project's True Blue leaves us truly blue. And confused.
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Houston Press
A flight attendant's smackdown with the wife of mega-preacher Joel Osteen inspires a whole new set of commandments.
By Rich Connelly
City Pages
Today Denver, tomorrow the Twin Cities.
By Matt Snyders and Bradley Campbell
Village Voice
The provocateur who brought you "Piss Christ" pinches off a new concept.
By Lynn Yaeger
Viral Fungus Among Us
Published on September 06, 2007
History buffs and flower-power vets of the ´60s remember AmericaÂs all-consuming fascination with the space race and its mad scramble to monopolize the worldÂs nuclear warheads -- that is, until a different fixation oozed into public consciousness: biological warfare. Michael CrichtonÂs 1969 sci-fi techno-thriller novel The Andromeda Strain is more than just pages ripe with sickeningly-antiseptic rooms, hermetically-sealed underground labs, gooey green alien viruses, and scientists yielding to a rigorous 16-hour sanitizing program that filled its pages: it is the perfect barometer for an era of American Cold War paranoia. And Robert WiseÂs 1971 film adaptation followed suit; in fact, it may be even better if you like ´50s B-movie throwback dialogue like ÂGood God  the bacteria is growing! (Ah, pure camp heaven.) But donÂt take our word for it -- catch the Weston Branch Library (4205 Bonaventure Blvd., Weston) FREE screening this afternoon from 3 to 5:15 p.m. to celebrate International Literacy Day, then pick up CrichtonÂs infectious bestseller for a comparison. Call 954-389-2098 x-243, or visit www.broward.org/library/branch_we.htm.
Sat., Sept. 8, 3 p.m.