zebra1.JPG

To add your name to our networking event invite list, email us.

Main

April 24, 2009

Bush and Moses

Recently, while going through an airport during one of his many trips, President Bush encountered a man with long gray hair, wearing a white robe and sandals, and holding a staff. President Bush went up to the man and said, "Has anyone told you that you look like Moses?" The man didn't answer. He just kept staring straight ahead.

The president said, "Moses!" in a loud voice.The man just stared ahead, never acknowledging the President. The President pulled a Secret Service agent aside and, pointing to the robed man, asked him, "Am I crazy or does that man not look like Moses to you?" The Secret Service agent looked at the man and agreed.

"Well," said the President, "every time I say his name, he ignores me and stares straight ahead, refusing to speak. Watch!" Again the president yelled, "Moses!" and again the man ignored him.

The Secret Service agent went up to the man in the white robe and whispered, "You look just like Moses. Are you Moses?" The man leaned over and whispered back, "Yes, I am Moses. However, the last time I talked to a bush, I spent 40 years wandering in the desert and ended up leading my people to the only spot in the entire Middle East where there is no oil."

From my friend Malcolm.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

April 9, 2009

Sacramento Philharmonic - Ansel Adams - Almost Sold Out

The Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra presents a new composition by the legendary Dave Brubeck entitled Ansel Adams: America. The piece is orchestrated by his son Chris Brubeck. This performance will be for one night only Saturday April 11, 2009 at 8pm in the Sacramento Community Center Theater, located at 1301 L street Sacramento California 95814.

Dave Brubeck composed this work as a tribute to the legendary California photographer Ansel Adams. Adams’ iconic photographs will be projected in the theater above the orchestra on a high definition video display, while the Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra performs music composed especially to be performed with the photography.

The project is part of the orchestra's ongoing California Compositions, recognizing composers, musicians and people who have contributed to the cultural and historical richness of the Golden State. Chris Brubeck and Levi Saelua will co-host a pre-concert lecture at 7pm in the Auditorium of the Community Center Theater.

For tickets call the Community Center Theater Box Office at (916) 264-5181 or www.tickets.com. For group sales call the Sacramento Philharmonic offices (916) 732-9045 ex. 103 Greg Wellman

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

March 19, 2009

California Lectures: Jim Lehrer in Sacramento

Another fabulous evening is on tap when California Lectures welcomes Jim Lehrer to Sacramento's Crest Theater on April 2nd at 7:30PM.

Jim Lehrer is the acclaimed author of 18 novels, two memoirs and three plays. He is the executive editor and anchor for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on PBS and has been the moderator for 10 nationally televised debates among candidates for the presidential elections.

Turn on the NewsHour on PBS and remember how news anchors used to be smart and insightful and respectful. Remember how much we miss that. Then jump online and buy tickets to see Jim Lehrer in person.

Tickets are $27 (students are $15) and can be bought through Tickets.com

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

October 21, 2008

Sean "P. Diddy" Combs Raps On Sarah Palin

What is Sean "P. Diddy" Combs up to these days? Well, he has a website and I found this little Sarah Palin diddy on his blog. It is funny!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

September 23, 2008

An All-American Family's Wedding

Gillian and I attended our dear friend's wedding in St. Catharines, Canada on Sunday. Rob was touched by our willingness to travel from Dallas to Toronto for the event. But we would not have missed it for the world!

Earlier, on Friday evening, we dined at Sassafraz in the posh Yorkville district of Toronto with the couple and Caroline Rook. The wine list served us well. We laughed and reminisced about old times. We had nine years to catch up, as the five of us had not been together since our wedding in Sonoma in 1999. The restaurant was a scene and a place to be seen. I felt like it was straight out of Caroline's home town of Santa Monica. Sassafraz was a great choice to begin the weekend.

The wedding was set in Canada's wine country on the Niagara Peninsula at the Hernder Estates Winery. About 100 guests witnessed the lovely affair, including Rob's mom and dad, and his three brothers, all who reside in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Rob, the oldest son, proudly introduced us to his brothers - a school teacher, an electrician, and a truck driver. Mom and Dad were beaming on their son's wedding day. They were truly an all-American family!

The ceremony was a tear jerker. Almost everybody cried - men and women alike. Tears rolled uncontrollably down my face. It was so special for us to share the moment with the couple. The two had been together for twenty-one years. It was time to tie the knot.

And on this fine day, the last day of summer and the day before the September equinox, we celebrated the wedding of our two friends - Rob and Gary!

Oh Canada!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive


September 6, 2008

The Big Guns At The Democratic National Convention

We went to the Democratic National Convention in Denver last week with great expectations and we were not disappointed. Check out these shots - Gillian had superb vantage points at the Pepsi Center and Invesco Field.

Barack Obama

barack%20obama%20325.jpg


Joe Biden

joe%20biden%20325.jpg


Hillary Clinton

hillary%20325.jpg


Bill Clinton

bill%20clinton%20325.jpg


Al Gore

al%20gore%20325.jpg


Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive


August 27, 2008

I Am Just A Paparazzi In Denver

andrew%20youn%20300.jpgGillian remarked to me this week that I have found my calling - paparazzi.

I am shameless - chasing people down the street as I did earlier on Monday when I spotted a black Lincoln Navigator pulling up to the curb in front of the Denver Center for Performing Arts. We were alone as the SUV stopped in front of us. I told Gillian, "Lincoln Navigator alert! Someone big is about to come out of the SUV."

And it was Andrew Young. I raced down the sidewalk to get in front of his entourage with my Canon camera in hand. He approached me and saw what I was doing. He quickly buttoned his blazer. I snapped the picture. We exchanged nods. He passed by and I quietly said, "What a legend!"

My thoughts briefly went to my deceased brother Varick. I enjoyed the moment. He would have too!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

July 9, 2008

California Lectures to Host John Updike and Garrison Keillor

(Sacramento, CA) – California Lectures has announced its sixth season of literary presentations with a line-up of award-winning authors that includes bestselling novelist Julia Glass, one of our country’s best known and most prolific authors John Updike, literary author (a.k.a. Lemony Snicket) Daniel Handler, acclaimed author and screenwriter Richard Price, PBS news anchor and author Jim Lehrer, former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove, and a special event with A Prairie Home Companion host and author Garrison Keillor.

The season will kick off with a special event with Keillor at a 1:00 p.m. matinee Wednesday, Sept. 17 at the Crest Theatre. The Six-Lecture Subscription series follows on Oct. 23 (Glass), Nov. 11 (Updike), Feb. 5 (Handler), Mar. 12 (Price), Apr. 2 (Lehrer), and May 13 (Dove) at the Crest Theatre at 7:30 p.m.

Each author presentation includes a lively Q&A with the audience and a book signing when patrons can meet the author. The evening also includes the popular “Lecture Previews” – biographical overviews about the featured authors presented by professors from Sacramento State University. These previews take place at the Crest Theatre one hour prior to each lecture.

“This season offers another memorable array of authors from legendary John Updike and news anchor Jim Lehrer, to former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove,” said Suzette Riddle. “Our seasons often sell out, so I invite everyone to subscribe early.”

Season subscriptions are on sale now ($162) at (916) 737-1300 or www.californialectures.org. Single tickets for Keillor will go on sale August 25 ($30), and single tickets for all other authors will go on sale Sept. 29 ($27).

SIX-LECTURE SERIES SUBSCRIPTIONS $1627:30 p.m. | Crest Theatre, 1013 K Street, Sacramento

Includes Glass, Updike, Handler, Price, Lehrer and Dove. Subscriptions ($162) are on sale now at California Lectures: www.californialectures.org or (916) 737-1300.

GARRISON KEILLOR SPECIAL EVENT $30
1:00 p.m. Sept. 17, 2008 | Crest Theatre, 1013 K Street, Sacramento

Tickets to Garrison Keillor ($30) can be purchased in advance with the Six-Lecture Subscription Series.

SINGLE TICKETS
Single tickets for Garrison Keillor ($30) go on sale August 25.
Single tickets for all other authors ($27) go on sale September 29.
Purchase tickets through: Tickets.com or (800) 225-2277, or in person at the Crest Theatre Box Office.

September 17, 2009, 1:00 p.m.
GARRISON KEILLOR – Special Event
Garrison Keillor, host and author of the National Public Radio hit, A Prairie Home Companion, will read from and discuss his newest book, Liberty, A Lake Wobegon Novel. Keillor has authored more than 17 books including Good Poems for Hard Times and his most recent New York Times bestseller, Pontoon. Keillor was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1994.


October 23, 2008, 7:30 p.m.
JULIA GLASS
Julia Glass won the National Book Award in 2002 for her first novel, Three Junes, which was also a Book Sense Bestseller and a selection of ABC/Good Morning America’s READ THIS! Book Club. Her second novel, The Whole World Over, was also a Book Sense Pick and bestseller. She will be discussing her newest book, I See You Everywhere (October 2008) — a candid double portrait that reveals the very nature of sisterhood.


November 11, 2008, 7:30 p.m.
JOHN UPDIKE
Widely recognized for his careful craftsmanship and prolific output, John Updike is the author of more than 50 books, including collections of short stories, poems, and criticism. Updike is the recipient of the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, National Book Critics Circle Award, among other honors, and he will be presenting his newest novel, The Widows of Eastwick (October 2008). This rare speaking engagement is not to be missed.


February 5, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
DANIEL HANDLER

Daniel Handler is the author of three literary novels and the bestselling sequence for children, A Series of Unfortunate Events (written under the name Lemony Snicket), which sold more than 53 million copies and was the basis of the film starring Jim Carrey. Also known as a composer and screenwriter, Handler has also written for The New York Times and Newsday among other publications. Handler will be appearing as himself – not the persona of Lemony Snicket “who ruined forever his dream of a scruffy, anonymous, bohemian life.”


March 12, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
RICHARD PRICE

Richard Price is the author of seven novels, including Bloodbrothers, Clockers, Freedomland and the recent New York Times bestseller, Lush Life. He was nominated for an Oscar for his screenplay, The Color of Money, and he won the 2007 Edgar Award for his writing on the HBO series, The Wire. Price has also written for Esquire, The New Yorker, the Village Voice and Rolling Stone, and taught writing at Columbia, Yale and New York University.


April 2, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
JIM LEHRER

Jim Lehrer is the acclaimed author of 18 novels, two memoirs and three plays. He is the executive director and anchor for The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer on PBS, and he has been the moderator for 10 nationally televised debates among presidential candidates. He is the recipient of the National Humanities Medal and two Emmys, and he was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame and elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science.


May 13, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
RITA DOVE

Former U.S. Poet Laureate, Rita Dove has published more than 13 books, including poetry, essays, a collection of short stories, a novel and a play. Her poetry collection, Thomas and Beulah, won the Pulitzer Prize. Other works include American Smooth, On the Bus with Rosa Parks and Sonata Mulattica (May 2009). Dove is the recipient of 22 honorary doctorates and numerous awards including the National Humanities Medal and the Duke Ellington Lifetime Achievement Award.

# # #

California Lectures is a public service literary arts organization based in Sacramento, California. The organization presents speaking engagements by distinguished novelists, poets, filmmakers, historians, journalists, and cultural figures who talk about themselves, their work, and issues of contemporary culture. The presentations take place at the Crest Theatre and many are broadcast on National Public Radio affiliate stations in Northern California and Nevada. In addition to lectures, the organization provides education and outreach services benefiting the greater Sacramento Region.

Information at (916) 737-1300 or on the website.

Congratulations to Suzette Riddle who has nurtured this amazing series from its start 6 years ago to what it has become today. The array of talent this season is incredible. This series continues to put Sacramento on the cultural map. Pierre and I loved attending these events, hearing the impressive authors, and we especially enjoyed the diversity of the works. Don't miss this. The price is a bargain and supporting cultural events like this in Sacramento is our duty - and a pure delight!

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

May 16, 2008

Does Charles Barkley Have A Gambling Problem?

I like Charles Barkley. He was a great basketball player. He's fun to watch as a basketball analyst for TNT. But Charles apparently is a very bad gambler, claiming to have lost $10 million in the casinos over the past twenty years.

The news and sports shows are a buzz this week about him owing $400,000 to the Wynn Las Vegas Resort from a bad night at the tables this past October.

Now for the $64,000 question - does Charles Barkley have a gambling problem? I don't think so. But what is his problem then, if he has lost $10 million in the past twenty years at the casinos?

It's simple. He has a math problem. Charles doesn't understand the mathematical principles behind Las Vegas casinos - the house has an advantage when it comes to odds. And Charles has not figured it out - if you play for twenty years in Las Vegas, it's almost certain you will lose over the long run.

Charles, stop gambling with the Las Vegas house. Go someplace else, where you can get better odds, preferably when the odds are in your favor.

Charles, it's simple - you have a math problem. Fix it.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 24, 2008

Dosa - A San Francisco Treat

Gillian and I had a fabulous time in San Francisco last weekend. And we survived without a car.

On Saturday we discovered two unexpected city treats - a trip to 826 Valencia, the writing center for students age 6 to 18, founded by Dave Eggers, and a wonderful Indian restaurant Dosa, which offers south Indian cuisine.

The writing center has been supported by powerhouse authors such as Michael Chabon, Isabel Allende, and Amy Tan. It was a treat to meet two of our children and their “spouses” (i.e., significant others) at the writing center. My daughter Rebekah and I have a mutual admiration for Dave Eggers and we were both excited to journey to the center where we met my son Nathan.

After a tour of the facility, which doubles as a pirates supply store, we set off on foot along Valencia Street in search of lunch. Two blocks away we found an inviting restaurant – Dosa. The six of us squeezed into the last available table, as the place was busy and we were treated to the best meal of the weekend. The ambience was great, the service outstanding, and the food – well it was fantastic.

What a magical afternoon! And we had not even seen the Cirque du Soleil show “Koosa” yet – our Sunday adventure.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 15, 2008

How A Control Freak Gives Up Control

circus.jpg
Gillian point blank says I am a control freak. In the kitchen it must be done my way - clean as you go. Loading the dishwater - there's only one way to do it - my way. Washing the dishes can only be done in the right-hand side sink. Driving home from the local interstate can only be done my way - why would you go a different route if it takes longer? And when we travel, we must have a rental car at the other end - I won't take the subway with my luggage in tow.

Until now. Today we are off to San Francisco for a weekend of dining, wine, and the circus (Cirque du Soleil - Kooza). We are flying to SFO and taking the BART to our friend's condo in downtown San Francisco, with luggage in tow. And then on Saturday, over to Berkeley via the BART to visit our son.

"Can you imagine Pierre giving up control?" - Gillian and our friend Paul muse over the decision.

"My Dad is going green for the weekend!" my daughter Rebekah exclaims to Gillian.

Yep, I am giving up control - no car for the weekend. Just the subway and walking. No hassles parking in the City. No rental car bill. Oh how my views are changing in my attempt to live smaller. What control will I give up next?

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 4, 2008

Sacramento Film "Her Minor Thing" To Be Aired on National TV

Today, I received the following email from Jim Meyers, writer and producer of the movie "Her Minor Thing", filmed and produced in Sacramento.

Hi All,

Hope you're doing great. Womens Entertainment (WE) cable network has finally told us that they plan to start airing "Her Minor Thing" in May. Originally, the network planned to start showing it this past fall, but then it decided to wait. Although we have to wait a bit longer to see all those great Sacramento locations on national television, I think it will be worth it. WE
tells me that they plan to promote the film heavily. Let's hope they pull in a lot of viewers.

WE has 62 million subscribers, more than HBO and Showtime combined. It's a great chance for our film to be seen by a large audience. Although the film's been shown on television in other countries around the world, it's very exciting for us to have the film be seen nationwide on television here in the U.S. I'll let you know the exact date(s) once we have that information. 'Til
then, take care, and watch good movies!

Jim Meyers
Writer/Producer, "Her Minor Thing"

Jim, well done! Congratulations.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 3, 2008

The New York Giants Win Super Bowl 42 Big Time!

I told you so.

Never, ever bet against the trend. That's what I said yesterday and learned today as the New York Giants beat the New England Patriots in an awesome battle in Glendale, Arizona, 17 - 14.

Wow! First the Cowboys, then the Packers, and now the Patriots.

Congratulations!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 2, 2008

Is Giving The New York Giants Twelve Points In The Super Bowl Too Much?

The Las Vegas oddsmakers are making the New York Giants a twelve point underdog in Sunday's Super Bowl. Is this too much to give on a wager? I think so. I'm taking the Giants and the twelve points.

Why? Most people didn't see the Giants slipping past the Cowboys and the Packers. And most people don't see them beating the Patriots either. But one thing I've learned in Las Vegas, especially on the Roulette tables - don't bet against trends. My gut tells me to stick with the hot hand. Also, twelve points is just too many to turn down.

Go Giants! Get ready for a new chapter in the Manning family football legend.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

January 15, 2008

Is Your Vote Safe?

If you are worried about the effect of electronic voting, then attend the West Coast premiere of Uncounted, January 15th at the Crest Theatre. Shows are at 5:30PM and 8PM. There will also be a Q&A with the filmmaker David Earnhardt and maybe some surprise guests too.

Tickets are $10 - $8.50 for students and seniors.

Uncounted, features noted computer programmers, statisticians, journalists, and experienced election officials who provide evidence that election fraud changed the outcome of the 2004 and 2006 elections and will have an even greater impact on the elections of 2008. Check it out.

Thanks to Robert McKeown for passing along.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive


December 19, 2007

California Lectures Presents Willie Brown

Here's a great last minute stocking stuffer:

California Lectures presents legendary political powerhouse, Willie Brown, February 19, 2008 at 7:30 p.m. at the Crest Theatre in downtown Sacramento. In conversation with Phil Isenberg, Willie Brown will be discussing and reading from his new book Basic Brown: My Life and Our Times (February 2008).

Willie Brown has been at the center of California politics, government and civic life for an astonishing four decades. He rose from the rural, segregated Texas of the Depression to become the two-term mayor of San Francisco, the longest-serving Speaker of the California Assembly (1980-1995), and one of the most influential black politicians in American history.

In his new biography -- an anecdote-filled compendium of advice and candid rules about surviving today’s power politics -- Brown discusses contemporary political figures including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Condoleezza Rice, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mark Warner, Colin Powell and George W. Bush, and the secret weapon that can win the presidency for the Democratic Party in 2008.

With a career that has spanned the American Presidency from Lyndon Johnson to George W. Bush, Willie Brown has worked with every California governor from Pat Brown to Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Washington Post has referred to Brown as “the last Political Showman of the 20th Century.” Currently he heads the Willie L. Brown, Jr. Institute on Politics and Public Service.

Tickets are $25 and available at Tickets.com or (800) 225-2277, or can be purchased in person at the Crest Theatre box office. California Lectures season line up also includes bestselling author, Sue Miller, Pulitzer Prize winner Geraldine Brooks, and internationally acclaimed authors Richard Powers and Tobias Wolff. For program information call (916) 737-1300 or visit the website.

Lecture Date | Time
February 19, 2008 at 7:30 p.m.
Lecture Preview at 6:30 p.m., a biographical discussion presented by CSUS Professor Tim Hodson. Doors open at 6:15 p.m. Books available for purchase and book signing after the event. For program information call (916) 737-1300.

Lecture Location
Crest Theatre, 1013 K Street, Sacramento

Tickets on sale December 12: $25
Tickets.com or (800) 225-2277. Or at the Crest Theatre Box Office, 1013 K Street:
Monday – Thursday, 4:30-8:00 p.m. | Friday – Sun

Gillian Parrillo
SacWomen

November 10, 2007

California Lecture Series Awaits

Check out the wonderful authors coming to Sacramento under the auspices of the California Lecture Series. Tickets are still available. The opportunity is waiting for your enjoyment. Don't miss out.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

October 27, 2007

Sacramento Airport Solicits Holiday Performers

The Sacramento County Airport System is soliciting Statements of Qualifications (SOQ) from performers to offer entertainment to the traveling public November - December 2007. A number of performace slots exist to accomodate performers with varied availability.

All performers who have not previously participated in the Holiday Entertainment Program are encouraged to respond as soon as possible to ensure adequate time for a member of Marketing and Public Relations team to attend one of your performances and/or schedule an audition.

Based upon evaluation of the qualifications and auditions data, several performers will be selected to pariticipate in the program. A copy of the Holiday Entertainment RFQ is posted on the website. If you have questions, please contact Gina Swankie at swankieg@saccounty.net or (916) 874-0791.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

September 27, 2007

CNN American Style

I clicked on CNN International this morning and watched in horror the crackdown on the citizens of Burma. The people, led by the Saffron robed monks who are revered as the moral authority of Burma, were peacefully demonstrating when the military began firing into the crowd. Many were dragged away and beaten. The monasteries around Burma were raided during the night and many monks were taken away. The rest were looked into their monasteries. Eyewitnesses were calling CNN International and relating the facts and begging for help from the world community. It reminded me of the student protests in Tiananmen Square, China, where many died also. And the world watched on CNN worldwide as witnesses to the brutal government crackdown.

After watching for 30 minutes or more, I switched to CNN (the American version) to see their take on the subject. Escaped Gorilla was the first story, 100 Cosmo girls appearing bikini-clad on Bondi Beach in Australia to beat a Guinness World Record. 30 minutes later, not one word about what was happening in Burma.

Maybe that was the most horrifying part for me. The rest of the world is shown, and chooses to watch, real news, the United States is watching Entertainment Tonight masquerading as real news. When did this diversion take place? When did the population of the United States agree to watch pablum over hard hitting news? As Rome burns...

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

August 5, 2007

Gillian & Pierre Cruising To Alaska

alaska%20P%26P%20%28768%20x%20576%29%20%28384%20x%20288%29.jpg

The beginning of the 4-hour workweek?

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

May 2, 2007

A Must See Movie - The Black Book

Pierre and I went to see this movie last weekend after reading the excellent review in the newspaper. It was terrific. I still keep thinking about it. And not a slow moment the entire movie. Simply thrilling and a very novel take on a subject we have seen covered many times. It is sub-titled but much is spoken in English and the sub-titles are not distracting. Go check it out this weekend - it opens nationwide on the 5th of May. Here is a review:

'Black Book' a riveting war thriller By LIZ BRAUN - Sun Media

Black Book is a fast-paced war thriller distinguished by its own ambiguous morality. Paul Verhoeven’s film about Holland and the Dutch resistance eschews the notion of black hats and white, and investigates the shades of grey involved in any tale of survival.

Rachel (Carice von Houten) is a young Jewish singer in Holland hiding from the Nazis near the end of the war. She is warned by a member of the resistance that the Germans are on to her, and she visits her family lawyer to secure the money she needs to escape the country.

The lawyer (Dolf de Vries) has been quietly arranging for his Jewish clients to be smuggled out of Holland and he holds their money until they need it. He gives Rachel the funds she needs. The lawyer carefully enters a notation about each such transaction in his little pocket diary, the black book that gives the film its title.

Rachel is delighted to be reunited with her parents and her brother for the secret crossing into Allied territory. But the Germans find out about the planned escape, and Rachel barely escapes an ambush. She eventually joins the Dutch resistance and begins working against the Nazis from the inside, with a new name and a new identity.

The key players in the story include Thom Hoffman and Derek de Lint as fellow members of the resistance, Sebastian Koch as a high-ranking German officer who is seduced by Rachel, Halina Reijn as a Dutch party-girl type who happily works for the Nazis as a secretary, and Waldemar Kobus as a particularly ruthless German officer. All of the characters are based on real people (or composites of real people), and all of the storylines are based on actual events from WWII.

What’s harrowing about Black Book is a combination of thrilling events and tension-filled atmosphere. The story is framed in doubt. It’s full of wartime narrow escapes and acts of daring, but it’s all played out against the growing suspicion that some of the good guys are traitors. Then again, not all the Nazis are villains.

Black Book, which has won nine major film awards around the globe, is the first movie Paul Verhoeven has made in the Netherlands in 20 years. After making brilliant films such as Turkish Delight and The Fourth Man in Holland, Verhoeven moved to America and, inexplicably, directed such outings as Total Recall, Basic Instinct and Showgirls.

Luckily Black Book, which is in Dutch and German with subtitles, makes up for all that.

(This film is rated PG)



April 23, 2007

California Lectures Highlights Native American Writers

California Lectures will host two Native American writers on Thursday April 26th at the Crest Theater. Leslie Marmon Silko, considered the most accomplished Native American writer of her generation, author of Ceremony (Contemporary American Fiction Series)which is newly released in a 30th Anniversary edition, will be in conversation with Sherman Alexie. Mr. Alexie is a prolific writer of books and screenplays, including Reservation Blues, Indian Killer and Smoke Signals.

Admission is $23, students' rate is $15.

You can buy tickets by clicking here or calling 800-225-2277 or in person at the Crest Theatre.

I think you will have a great time. And what the heck, there are no Kings playoff games to go to. Seems like there might be a lot more Mavs playoff games to go to soon either!


Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

March 15, 2007

Our Son, The Millionaire

Our son Nathan is living the dream of every parent. Good kid. No trouble with the police. College graduate with two majors in less than four years. Great job with a leading Wall Street firm. Debt free. And he's just 22 years old - well on his way to becoming fabulously wealthy. In fact, he is on track to be a multi-millionaire with just a $20,000 investment. How is he doing it?

Simple. Time, discipline, and a 401K tax-deferred plan. Now wait a minute. Surely this is too good to be true. Au contraire!

Nathan is investing $4,000 his first year in his company's 401K plan. Not including the company match, at 12% annual return, the first year investment will grow to $585,670 in 45 years. What a terrible mistake he's avoiding by doing what most people don't do - invest at the age of 22.

If Nathan invests $4,000 five years in a row, beginning at the age of 22, his investment (with a 12% return) will grow to $2,364,554. Imagine - the cost of not investing $20,000 results in a loss of $2.4 million. Amazing! If Nathan keeps up the $4,000 investment for 45 years, his portfolio will be worth $5,432,920.

Presto! A multi-millionaire! That's our boy. We are very proud of Nathan's actions. We've hammered this message home to our kids for several years.

The time value of money. Do your kids know about this and are they doing something about it?

The message has not yet sunk in with Nathan's twin sister. Maybe she will get it next year. But this year she lost $585,670. Ugh!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

March 13, 2007

Sacramento's Mike Posehn Is A Top Director on YouTube



Sacramento's film maker Mike Posehn is in the top 100 directors' list at YouTube. Mike's short films are gaining popularity on YouTube and currently enjoys a ranking of 94th on the all-time list, where over 3 million people have viewed his movies.

Mike - keep it up! How about a flick on wine lovers? Let's put a trip together for Tuscany, Bordeaux, Barossa Valley, and Mendoza? I will volunteer as a camera person! Title of the new flick? Gillian's brainstorm - "Drinking at the Speed of Light".

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

Note: for better resolution check out the following links:

BrightCove
DivX on Stage6

February 16, 2007

Fascinating Crocker Museum Exhibition

I don't know why I never went to the Crocker during all the time I was in Sacramento. Well, truth is that I went to some events - a wedding, a reception, a holiday party - but never just to an exhibit. Maybe I didn't feel a personal connection to any of the exhibits. A huge billboard outside the museum with the exhbition titles and dates - not enough detail for a personal connection.

Here in Dallas we have gone to quite a few special exhibitions. Matisse: Painter as a Sculpter; shared between the Nasher and the Dallas Museum of Art, Van Gogh at the Dallas Museum of Art, Hatshepsut: From Queen to Pharaoh at the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth and even BodyWorlds, a somewhat creepy display of plastinated human dead bodies. We even have a trip planned to Houston for the end of April to see the Masterpieces of the French Paintings from the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art (they will be on loan to the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston during the Mets renovation project).

All of this 'culture-vulturing' as my parents called it, left me wondering about the Crocker, which led me to make a great discovery of their current exhibition - Yosemite 1938. On the Trail with Ansel Adams and Georgia O'Keefe.

In 1938 friends Ansel Adams, Georgia O'Keefe, David McAlpin and the Godfrey Rockefellers set out on a 10 day trip through Yosemite. Here is a description of the trip from the University of Wyoming Art Museum's website:

Adams, O'Keeffe, McAlpin, and the Rockefellers departed for the High Sierra on Sunday, September 11, 1938. With them came a pack-string of fourteen mules, enough animal-power to haul all the camping, kitchen, and photo equipment, with a few extra mounts for those who wished to ride. The ten-day trip through the high country was not particularly arduous, outfitted as they were with plenty of blankets, food, and hired help. Assisting the group were local backcountry experts Al Kay, Alvin Rhode, Robert Barnett, and Lile Pierce, who assumed the duties of guiding, packing, unpacking, setting up camp, and cooking. Five campers with four hired hands is a luxurious ratio when it comes to wilderness treks. Adams had arranged everything with convenience in mind, so the campers could photograph, hike, or relax as the mood struck them.

It was reportedly quite cold on a number of evenings, particularly after the group climbed to 10,000 feet and camped near Tuolumne Pass. Ever positive, Adams recalled that everyone considered it a "prime adventure." Mornings began with hot coffee and a good breakfast. Adams was an early riser, who liked to be up with the sun so he could take advantage of dawn's dramatic light. During the day, the party made small excursions from their base camp or trekked to their next campsite. Gas lamps enhanced the light of the campfire at night and the party scheduled dinner for after sunset, to allow for more photography at dusk.
To have the group in Yosemite, seeing and appreciating the land that he loved, must have been uplifting for Adams. His later reports of the excursion are glowing. In his autobiography, he wrote, "O'Keeffe loved campfires and would stand close to them in her voluminous black cape, her remarkable features and her dark hair gleaming in the flickering light. She never seemed bored or tired and enjoyed every moment of the trip.

After the trip was over, Adams, even then a well-known photographer of the California wilderness, made 3 photograph albums, including personal notes, and sent them to his fellow travellers.

Adams' most famous photographs are of sights in Yosemite. This trip might well have been the beginning of his great awe for the wondrous beauty of this spectacular area.

The exhibition is made possible because the heirs of David McAlpin donated his album to the National Museum of Wildlife Art, Jackson Hole, Wyoming and this album has become the basis for the exhibition at the Crocker.

The exhibition runs until May 6th. You can get more informaiton on the Crocker website.

I am going to check it out when I am next in Sacramento. It sounds fascinating.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive


January 16, 2007

Things To Do With A Pre-Schooler In Sacramento

There's a new website launching in Sacramento that provides information on things to do for families with preschoolers. PreschoolRock.com Sacramento focuses on fun and exciting things to do with young children in Sacramento. The site, the first local edition for PreSchoolRock.com, has hired a local correspondent, a long-term resident of Sacramento and mother of twin boy preschoolers, who reports on the advantages and disadvantages of many local sites. PreschoolRock.com Sacramento also includes a preschool listing and a listing of preschool parenting resources specific for the Sacramento area.

Check it out. Sacramento has some fabulous things to do with young children - especially fun for grandparents too!

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

January 8, 2007

Her Minor Thing; The Full Story

Thirteen months ago, I first reported on a Sacramento filmmaker's quest for funding so he could buy some time to sell the rights to his film Her Minor Thing , which was filmed in Sacramento. hmt_poster_short%20%28262%20x%20359%29.jpg And then a few months later, we reported that foreign rights had been sold and US rights were close. So, here's the end of the story from filmmaker Jim Meyers:

Hi All, Happy New Year! Hope you're doing great. Don't forget that "HMT" comes out on DVD nationwide on Jan 16. The film will be available in Canada sometime thereafter.

I'll get some more info from our distributor soon, but I believe the film will be available pretty much everywhere (Netflix, Blockbuster, Amazon, Best Buy, and lots of other big retailers). I know you can actually pre-order it on a lot of the web sites already.

If you get a chance, check out the fun new stuff we added to our MySpace page:

"behind-the-scenes" video
music
discussion forum
various other info

You can see all this and more, even if you're not a MySpace member, at: http://www.myspace.com/herminorthing

JANUARY 16! SEE THE FILM! TELL YOUR FRIENDS!

I have seen it, shown it to friends, and have always really enjoyed it. Icing on the cake are all the scenes shot in Sacramento.

Not a home run, (major worldwide distribution into movie theaters, Academy awards, etc. etc.), but much better than a vast majority of films that are conceived and that's because the material is great and Jim just wouldn't take no for an answer. Passion and belief in your product can make all the difference.

Congratulations, Jim and all of those involved. Can't wait for the next movie! And check out the review yesterday in the New York Times:

The ongoing war of the sexes soars to new and hilarious heights in this tale of a successful twenty-five-year old professional lusted after by every man in the city after her boyfriend reveals on live television that she is a virgin. Pursued by men who long to be her first and flooded with advice from women who implore her to punish her boyfriend for his public blunder, the one time die-hard romantic soon finds her belief in love quickly fading. Estella Warren, Rachel Dratch, Kathy Griffin, and Victoria Jackson star in a film directed by Charlie Matthau. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

January 7, 2007

Sacramento Native Joan Didion Is On Broadway

didion%20play%20%28215%20x%20290%29.jpg
National Book award winner and author Joan Didion is heading to Broadway with her play "The Year of Magical Thinking". Didion, a native of Sacramento, will open her new play starring Vanessa Redgrave on March 6. The play, directed by internationally acclaimed playwright and director Sir David Hare, is scheduled for a 24-week engagement at the Booth Theatre. Tickets go on sale today.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

January 3, 2007

Sacramento's Native American Artist Harry Fonseca Dies

HarryFonseca.jpg
It is with extreme sadness that we learned last night the passing of Sacramento native Harry Fonseca on December 28, 2006.

Harry, born in 1946 in Sacramento, was of Nisenan Maidu, Hawaiian, and Portuguese heritage. He studied at Sacramento City College and later with Frank LaPena at Sacramento State University.

Gillian and I discovered the wonderful artwork of Harry Fonseca at the Smithsonian Institute this past Thanksgiving holiday (see our November 30th post).

Recently, we purchased a house in Dallas and have been looking for contemporary artwork to complement our living space. We booked an April visit of the Santa Fe, New Mexico art galleries. Knowing that Harry has a studio in Santa Fe, we decided to put his studio on the must see list.

Unwittingly, last night we checked out his website in preparation of our visit, and saw the announcement of his passing.

Harry Fonseca was a great inspirational artist. Sacramento and beyond will miss this extraordinary talent.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

Lang Lang at Mondavi Center

Looking for a great night out to hear a musical prodigy. Attend Lang Lang's concert at the Mondavi Center on January 19th at 8PM.
lang%20lang.jpg

Acclaimed in the major concert halls of North America, Europe, and Asia, Lang Lang—at the age of 22—has demonstrated an extraordinary ability to connect with audiences on a deeply personal level and has established himself as one of the most exciting pianists of our time. He is the first Chinese pianist to be engaged by the Berlin Philharmonic and all “Big Five” American orchestras. He will perform works from his new album Memory, which features works by Mozart, Chopin, Schumann, and Liszt.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

November 30, 2006

Harry Fonseca Goes To Washington

fonseca%20%28648%20x%20486%29%20%28214%20x%20160%29.jpgWe visited the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian in Washington D.C. last weekend. On the third floor of the museum we spotted an acrylic on canvas painting that looked like it was from Central America. Upon closer inspection we were taken back to find the artist - Harry Fonseca - was from Sacramento. The photo above (excuse me for the poor light, as it was captured without flash) is from a section of the painting titled "Creation Story, 2000". The wonderful painting (6’ 1” x 17’ 3”) was a gift to the Smithsonian from Peggy and George Wessler, avid collectors of Fonseca's works.

Fonseca, of Maidu, Hawaiian, and Portuguese heritage, studied art for a period of time at Sacramento City College. He presently has a studio in Santa Fe.

I think I've become a Fonseca fan.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

November 19, 2006

A San Francisco Minute, By Mike Posehn

We've all heard the saying "In a New York Minute". Well here's Mike Posehn's version of "In a San Francisco Minute".



Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

October 12, 2006

Movie Friday Night?

From Robert McKeown:

Reminder: Friday night - Independent America: The Two-Lane Search for Mom & Pop

This documentary follows husband and wife NBC journalists-turned-filmmakers
Hanson Hosein and Heather Hughes as they hit the road and travel 13
thousand miles through 32 states looking for an America unchained by
corporate retail and for the hardy souls fighting for the right to remain
independent. They set out to follow two rules in their travels: no
interstates - they could only use secondary roads; and no business with
chains - only mom & pop businesses.

It's a film that encourages people to think hard about where they spend
their money and offers a compelling view of the state of small business in
America.

Friday October 13 at 7 PM - $5 gets ya in. Presented by Shiny Object and
Fools Foundation. Location: Fools Foundation - 1025 19th St, Sacto. 19th &
K - in the alley, in the basement. Digital projection on to a big screen.
Seating is on folding chairs - feel free to bring a pillow or cushion or
whatever.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

October 6, 2006

Daddy Hunger - Crest Theatre - October 18th

First Fridays announces the Premiere of movie Daddy Hunger, which will be hosted by Actor Ernie Hudson and Thomas Drayton of Fox 40 News. Daddy Hunger features interviews with "lifers" inside California state prisons; mothers who have raised their children without a father's influence; and men, women, and youth who have experienced extreme consequences of this serious issue - growing up without a father. The film also features surprising commentary by the controversial Fillmore Slim; rapper, J.T. Tha Bigga Figga; and Poet Terry Moore.

Jon Johnson, who was so tragically shot in Elk Grove a few months ago, was the Director of Photography for this film and a portion of the proceeds will be awarded to a scholarship recipient in his memory.

Tickets on sale at The Crest or at Tickets.com for $20. Click here for more details

Sounds like an important subject and a great cause.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

October 3, 2006

Great Resource for California Travel

Check out The Best of California website. It's loaded with 117 streaming videos of destinations within California. No more excuses along the lines of there's nothing to do. Check out this website for unlimited inspiration. California is truly the destination of all destinations...and you are lucky enough to be right in the middle of it all. Take advantage of it. And don't forget to check out the travel discounts offered on the site. 50% off the combined ticket for SF venues - that's a deal!

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

October 1, 2006

Sacramento Script Writer Shares His Plan

Last week I had a chance to meet with an incoming class member of the Sacramento Entrepreneurship Academy. It's always such a privilege to meet these young people who are so full of ideas and hope and energy. During our discussion, he mentioned his father was raising money to make a movie. I offered the Sacramento Executive forum as a place for his father to preview his plan and recruit local talent to assist. So, what follows is the plan synopsis his father sent. If the movie turns out half as well as this bright, charming young man, it should be an Academy award winner!

Sasquatch Entertainment LLC, is proud to be part of the Northern California film-making community. The goal of Sasquatch Entertainment, a new independent film company, is to produce profitable, feature length films in Sacramento, using local talent to fulfill that endeavor.

It wasn’t until seven years ago that the owner of Sasaquatch Entertainment, David W. Keon put his lifetime passion for films into action as a screenwriter. David has written three screenplays and has five others (2 Thrillers, 2 Comedies, 1 Drama) in development phase. In early 2004, one of his screenplays, (Money For Nothin), a big-budget, action buddy-cop film caught the attention of Hollywood and was optioned by The Donners Company (Lethal Weapon, X-Men) and had interest as well from Todd Phillips Company (Starsky and Hutch, Old School), C-2 Pictures (Die Hard3, Terminator) and Davis Entertainment (The Firm, Behind Enemy Lines).

David started Sasquatch Entertainment after rebounding from his Hollywood disappointments, heeding the words of many within the industry, “you have the talent to produce your own works”. David took this advice to heart and used his schooling from The Hollywood Film Institute to do exactly that and formed Sasquatch Entertainment, LLC in late 2005.

With the average cost of a Hollywood studio production sitting around $40 million, the door has swung wide open for the fast growing independent film market. Based in Sacramento, Sasquatch Entertainment will play a major role in this ever expanding marketplace and supply film audiences with quality, enjoyable entertainment.

Presently, Sasquatch Entertainment has numerous projects at various stages of development. One such project titled “Xtra space,” has moved from the development phase into pre-production. The four phases of filmmaking are development (script), pre-production (cast, crew, budget and funding), production (filming) and then post production (editing, marketing and distribution). Principal photography (filming) is tentatively set for early 2007. “Xtra space” should carry a PG-13 rating.



Continue reading "Sacramento Script Writer Shares His Plan" »

September 13, 2006

Reno Balloon Race 2006

Mike Posehn, entrepreneur, angel investor, Kings' fan, and photographer, made another of his fun time-elapsed films - in his own words he describes the film-

106 balloons in a mass ascension (including Jesus!). Even the cow jumps over the moon.
Check it out at this link.

Nice shoot Mike!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

September 4, 2006

Summer Is Over, School Is In

Rough First Day

Today is Labor Day. Happy Labor Day! By this time on Tuesday, most kids in America will have returned to school. I found this cartoon on Blaugh.com, to commemorate the first day of school. I think it's funny.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

August 25, 2006

Are You Getting All You Can From HDTV?

According to market research firm In-Stat, only one-third of U.S. households with HD-capable sets are tuning in to HD-programming. Most likely reason, when you buy an HD TV no one tells you that you need to sign up for additional services or buy additional equipment.

So, next time you plunk down the extra bucks for HD gear, make sure you ask what else you need to get the full benefit.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

August 19, 2006

Geeks and Grapes - Silicon Valley Meets Napa Valley

clos de la tech.jpgLast December I wrote about technologists moving over to the wine-making business in an article titled For the Love of Technology and Wine. It seems I was ahead of my time. In the current edition (August 21, 2006) of Fortune Magazine, Kate Bonamici authored The Grapes of Math, the featured story in Fortune's Business Life section. Ms. Bonamici concludes that high-tech tools help make better wine.

Chuck McMinn, an ex-Intel chiphead, employs several high-tech gadgets at his Napa winery, Vineyard 29 - mositure probes to monitor water use, weather stations, sap flow sensors, microturbines to produce electricity, Tanknet software to regulate fermentation, a titrator to test chemical balances. McMinn has taken his ex-boss Andy Grove's advice from the chip days and is applying it to wine-making -

If you can't measure it, you can't improve it.

Apparently HP's former CEO Lew Platt instilled the love of wine-making in his employees (Lew, recently deceased, left the top spot at HP to lead Kendall Jackson a few years ago). Former HP director of Internet Marketing and inventor of the term "Laser-Jet", Bill Murphy spends his days at his vineyard Clos LaChance near the Santa Cruz Mountains, applying his techical know-how to the art of growing grapes.

Ms. Bonamici reports that Acrolon Technologies, Inc's Tanknet software is now in use at over 80 vineyards. Tanknet is adding 20 to 30 new clients each year. I was rather surprised to find a software provider with such a niche focus - fermentation control. After a quick search of wine related software products (using my new found search engine - ask.com), I found over 40 companies offering winery software solutions on Wine Busienss Online in specialties from vineyard operations to wine production to sales.

Oh by the way, the career path of chiphead to winemaker seems to be rather popular. T.J. Rodgers, CEO of Cypress Semiconductor, has his own winery - Clos De La Tech. You gotta love the name! Unbelievably, people are snapping up his Pinot Noir at $101.50 per bottle. And one other thing - the bottle comes with a pair of chips, that's right, semiconductors with 107 million transistors on them embedded in sealing wax!

These techies have a lot of love for wine!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

icon

July 24, 2006

100 Folding Chairs = A Sponsorship

Watch for an exciting new entry on the independent films scene. Shiny Object Digital Video, Inc. is working with Fools Foundation (located next to the Old Spaghetti Factory downtown) to begin a weekly series of film screenings of independent, foreign and documentary films.

If you happen to have 100 or so folding chairs to donate, they are looking and could even be persuaded to offer a sponsorship for the donation. Let me know and I will pass on the info.

Sort of the urban equivalent of funding a chair at a university?

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

July 22, 2006

Sacramento Speakers Series Ken Burns - Preview 7/24

As we wrote previously, the Sacramento Speakers Series has a first class lineup planned for its upcoming season. One of the speakers, Ken Burns, has a new documentary scheduled for release in September 2007. The documentary, entitled The War, examines how World War II affected four cities across the Nation. The city from the West just happens to be Sacramento. Should be a very interesting evening at the Sacramento Speakers Series when Ken Burns shares local stories and interviews on April 24th, 2007.

If you would like to have a preview of what's in store, be sure to catch his interview on Monday, July 24th on KXJZ Capitol City Radio’s “Insight” show with Jeffrey Callison from 2p-3p. PST.

For more information on purchasing tickets for the upcoming Sacramento Speakers Series, visit their website

For more information on Ken Burns' interview on PBS visit their website

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

May 21, 2006

Kahlil Gibran On Action

Kahlil Gibran's thought on action:

A little knowledge that acts is worth infinitely more than much knowledge that is idle.
Kahlil Gibran, 1883 - 1931; the celebrated Lebanese poet, artist, and philosopher.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacrameto Executive

March 17, 2006

Sacramento Speakers Series Announces New Lineup

The Sacramento Speakers Series has just announced a very exciting lineup of speakers for next year's events. In addition, they announced they will be moving from the Memorial Auditorium to the Sacramento Community Center Theater. They believe the Community Center Theater offers more comfortable seating arrangement, better acoustics, and a more intimate setting for all subscribers. The amount of seating will also drop by 35%, so signing up early would be wise.

Speakers for 2006-2007:

Tim Russert, host of Meet the Press
Mark Russell, political satirist
Gen. Richard Myers (Ret.) - former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Stuart Varney, former co-host of CNN's MoneyLine News Hour
Madeline Albright, former Secretary of State
Ken Burns, documentarian. Interestingly his new documentary will examine the ways that World War II touched the lives of everyday families and he includes stories from Sacramento
Alison Levine, captain of the first American Women's Everest Expedition.

Season ticket holders have until April 14th to renew their subscription. After that the remaining seats will be offered to the general public.

I urge you to subscribe to this terrific series. At a very reasonable entire series ticket price ranging from $275 to $400 per seat, you will be challenged, provoked, and entertained. And you can grab a great dinner at one of the many restaurants nearby to make it a special evening out.

When the series started last year, it was a mark that Sacramento was growing up and could support a professional speaking series. The fact that it is coming back with an even stronger lineup is a testament to the intellectual capacity and thirst for knowledge of Sacramentoans. And many kudos to Andy Eppinger, the young entrepreneur who throw himself (and his family and friends) into this and made it work. Great job.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

March 8, 2006

Upbeat Progress Note - Her Minor Thing

Yesterday we received a very encouraging update on a previous story.

When we wrote the story in mid-December, film maker Jim Meyers was looking for some investment to tide the company over until he received the foreign rights royalties and made progress on selling the US rights.

He ended up having a choice between investors in LA and another group in Sacramento. He went with the local guys - good choice! And now he has been notified that the film - Her Minor Thing - was accepted into the Phoenix Film Festival (where it will have 3 screenings, Mar 24-26). The film is also on the short list to get into another festival in April.

Like a true entrepreneur, Jim reminds me he will be looking for investors again soon for his next movie!

Many congrats, Jim. Let's hope this movie gets lots of playtime and viewers around the world see how great Sacramento is.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

February 28, 2006

Personalizing Your Ringtone

Soon after settling on my latin beat salsa ringtone, I realized that many women 'of a certain age' had settled on the same ringtone as me. Are we living vicariously through our ringtone?

If you want something different, check out WolftramTones which allows you to compose your own personal ringtone with thousands of choices in multiple categories. You can even choose which blend of instruments you want. And the download charge is only around $2.

A pretty good chance you won't be digging in your pocket when someone else's phone is ringing.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

February 16, 2006

Bob Newhart Visits Sacramento

Last night the Sacramento Speakers Series hosted Bob Newhart at the Memorial Auditorium. Bob was terrific! Look for next season's line-up to be announced at the March 15 event, where Jean Michel Cousteau will share his passion of the oceans with Sacramento.

I can't wait to see who will be Andy Eppinger's headliners for the second season.

Andy, well done!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

February 10, 2006

New Egyptian discovery after 3000 years

Michael Theodoulou writes at the TimesOnLine

EIGHT decades have passed since the British archaeologist Howard Carter discovered the tomb of Tutankhamun, the boy king, in Egypt in 1922. Most experts had abandoned hope of finding further treasures in the Valley of the Kings, the desert valley near the ancient city of Luxor where the pharaohs were buried.

They were wrong. Journalists were yesterday given their first peek inside a tomb that had, until last week, lain buried and unopened for three millennia. Inside were five wooden sarcophagi with painted masks, surrounded by more than 20 large alabaster storage jars, their seals intact. Such jars were used in sets of four to hold the mummified entrails of a dead person.

Continue reading "New Egyptian discovery after 3000 years" »

February 5, 2006

Bob Newhart Is Next Up At The Sacramento Speakers Series

sacto speaker series.jpgThe Sacramento Speakers Series's inaugural season has been a big hit and the hits just keep on coming. Next up is Bob Newhart on February 15, at Sacramento's Memorial Auditorium. I can't wait to see the slate of speakers that Andy Eppinger, CEO of Sacramento Speakers Series, is putting together for next year. For ticket information and upcoming events, visit Andy's website.

To sign up for the Sacramento Speakers Series free newsletter click here.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

January 30, 2006

February 4th - Free Museum Day

February 4th will celebrate the 9th annual Sacramento Museum Day. Free admission will be available at 24 area museums and attractions, including the Sacramento Zoo, Fairytale Town, the Historic Sacramento City Cemetery in Land Park. Hours at 10AM-5PM, last admission are accepted at 4PM. Free shuttle buses will connect the museums and guides on the buses will offer history and information along the routes.

Continue reading "February 4th - Free Museum Day" »

January 23, 2006

Sacramento Featured on NPR

Who would imagine? Sacramento is featured on NPR Morning Edition. The show is describing how Sacramento is going to have the tallest residential complex on the West Coast. At 600 feet, the Saca Towers will be 180 feet higher than the tallest tower in San Francisco. The show goes on to discuss how vibrant our downtown is becoming. More than 130,000 residents have moved to the downtown area in the past 4 years. One more instance of how people who don't live here are much more appreciative about Sacramento than those of us who do.

Sirius Satellite Radio

Listen to the piece here

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

January 18, 2006

News from Auburn - Smith & Boggs Studio/Galleries

Catching up with an entrepreneur from a startup long ago, he tells me that his wife, mother in law and father in law have a new gallery. Here's the news:

NOW OPEN SMITH & BOGGS STUDIO/GALLERIES

J. Randall Smith is proud to announce the relocation of his current studio/gallery. He will occupy a charming, historical Spanish building at 1130 High Street in mid-town Auburn, known for years as the home of "Music and More".

Smith, his wife Catherine and daughter Marin, have teamed up to offer another incredible art destination in this beautiful foothills community. Smith will continue to create and display his non-traditional works in his studio/gallery, with the added pleasure of the "Marin Nichole Gallery", operated under the direction of his daughter Marin. It will be a fantastic mix of local artists, as well as new works by noted artists outside of the area. The galleries will be a welcome offering of "visual choices," bringing only the best to the creative mix.

Continue reading "News from Auburn - Smith & Boggs Studio/Galleries" »

January 16, 2006

XM: I Hardly Knew You

OK, so no one said that burglars are rocket scientists, but why, oh why, did you have to steal my brand new XM satellite radio receiver out of my car last night? OK, so thanks for not taking the registration – that would have taken me weeks to replace. And thanks for leaving the charger for my phone…and thanks for not breaking the window or doing major damage to the car. And maybe you did me a favor by stealing the CDs out of the console because maybe there was a reason they were in the console and I can’t remember what CDs they were – read, they had been there for quite a while and not missed, even now. But, jeez, I just got the XM receiver two weeks ago. And it’s not the top of the line or anything. And, for goodness sake, the moment I noticed it was gone – clue: the car door was wide open at 6:30AM today – I called and reported it stolen and now there is no way to get it registered it for an XM subscription, unless you guys have figured out how to steal that too.

Living in a city didn’t seem as cool this morning.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

January 15, 2006

Joan Didion's Book Reaches Number Two

Sacramento native Joan Didion's latest book "The Year of Magical Thinking" is now number two on the New York Times Non-Fictional Best Seller List.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

January 14, 2006

XM Radio To Get Voice



XM Satellite Radio has joined with VoiceBox Technologies to create a voice-enabled XM radio platform for the automotive industry. Users will be able to search through the more th 160 channels by using their voice. Hands-free channel surfing - now that's cool.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

January 10, 2006

Joan Didion's Latest Book Is On New York Times Best Seller List

140004314X.01._AA_SCMZZZZZZZ_Sacramento native Joan Didion's latest book "The Year of Magical Thinking" is now number five on the New York Times Best Seller List. As previously reported here by the Sacramento Executive, Joan's book won the prestigious National Book Award in 2005. The book has been in hot demand since the New York Times noted it as one of the ten best books in 2005 (also reported here by the Sacramento Executive in an ealier post). Will this book become a number one best seller? Based on my wife's read of the book, which found its way into her stocking for Christmas, this book has a chance of making it to number 1.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

January 6, 2006

More Press For Sacramento Author William Vollmann

0143036599.01._AA_SCMZZZZZZZ_
Local Sacramento award-winning author William Vollman is in the press again! This past Wednesday, Associated Press writer Juliet Williams published a superb human perspective piece on Vollman titled "Book Award Winner Probes Human Motivation". The article appears on SacUnion.com's blog.

Previously, Sacramento Executive's Gillian Parrillo reported Vollmann's book "Europe Central" won the prestigious National Book Award.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

December 29, 2005

Paul's Presents

If it wasn't for our friend Paul we would still be living in the dark ages.

Sony Television Free Shipping

Every year he drags us, kicking and screaming, a little closer to technology nirvana. A couple of years ago, he bought us a CD jukebox for Christmas. What a cool deal. All of those CD cases ‘stored’ in complete disarray and all of those leaning CD racks and towers, completely eclipsed in one fell swoop. We took our almost 300 CDs and put them into the CD jukebox, making them instantly more accessible. It was like a walk down memory lane. Remember this one? Oh, remember when we bought this one? Oh, we still have this one? Our CD jukebox is right at the top of the list for most used Christmas gifts.

Continue reading "Paul's Presents" »

December 23, 2005

UC Davis Historian Alan Taylor's Latest Book

Taylor_Alan.jpgSacramento area author Alan Taylor’s latest book "The Divided Ground – The Northern Borderland of the American Revolution” hits the bookstores on February 21, 2006. Taylor is a UC Davis history professor and winner of the 1996 Pulitzer Prize and Bancroft Prize for his book “William Cooper’s Town”.

In “The Divided Ground”, published by Knopf Publishing Group (a division of Random House, Inc.), Taylor explores the borderlands history of Canada and the United States in the aftermath of the American Revolution.

0679773002.01._AA_SCMZZZZZZZ_Based on his previous success with "William Cooper's Town, and having heard him speak at one of the Sacramento Public Library Foundation’s Authors on the Move events, I expect this book will be a great piece of work.

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

December 20, 2005

The Games Families Play


Real Networks

This story was first published in Inside the City in December 2004

Dust off the board games, clear off some flat space; the family is arriving for the holidays.

Games are magical. They teach us so much about others and ourselves. They allow the best and the worst to come out, often within a span of a few minutes.

Take the smallest child of your family to a quiet corner and teach them a simple card game, or bring out a well-worn, and well loved, copy of Shoots and Ladders. Watch the ‘thrill of victory and agony of defeat’ flash repeatedly across their little faces. How they learn to deal with both emotions is one of the greatest lessons we can provide. Know that they will remember the first games they learned and loved forever and will share them just as lovingly with the next generation. And maybe it’s time to invest in a new game to be passed on to the next generation. If so, try Cranium Cariboo. It’s a delightful mix of number and letter recognition with prizes for the right answer. And one of those seriously educational games that is still lots of fun.

Continue reading "The Games Families Play" »

December 4, 2005

Sacramento Largest List Just Got One Smaller

telescope.jpg As discussed in a recent article Googling Sacramento, one of the items on the list of 'Sacramento is the largest' was an embarrasing entry. Sacramento is the largest metropolitan center without a state-of-the-art planetarium and observatory.

All that changed last week with the announcement that construction would begin in the spring of 2007 on the Science and Space Center at the CSUS campus. The building will contain a planetarium. The projected cost has risen recently from $8M to $10M.

Congresswomen Doris Matsui related how her husband, the late Robert Matsui, helped get $1.5M for the project, with $950,000 recently being granted from the California Assembly. A further $400,000 was bequeathed to the project by two former CSUS physics professors - Royal Vanderberg, together with his wife Kirsten, and Chien Yuan Hu.

Sacramento just took a big step up. Congratulations to all who made this happen.

But how do we get an entry changed in Google?

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

All The Good Ones are Taken

wedding bells.jpg

All of you bachelors and bachelorettes. Listen up. You are going to have to step up your search. Two of your prospects just got snapped up.

Yesterday, shock rocker Marilyn Manson married his long-term girlfriend, burlesque dancer Dita Von Teese. No bachelor party. When soon-to-be wife Dita asked him why he wanted to have a party to get drunk and look at naked women when he does that on a daily basis, he had to agree she made sense. Sounds like she will be setting the parameters for their marriage.

And if that wasn't enough bad news for singles worldwide, it was also announced that Greek billionaire Athina Roussel Onassis wed a Brazilian Olympic equestrian star yesterday. A pre-nuptial agreement reportedly was signed. Another woman in control!

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

December 3, 2005

For The Love Of Technology And Wine

cbc_label_logo.gifWhat a stark contrast - technology geeks and wine! It’s almost an oxymoron. How many technologists do you know that have gone on to become CEOs of information technology companies and then moved into the wine business? Not many you might say. Au contraire! The truth is, as my wine enthusiasm deepens, I discover more and more technology geeks engaging in the entrepreneurial spirit of the wine industry. It’s fascinating. Go figure – contrary to popular opinion, geeks do come out of the lab every now and then and can have some fun.

Continue reading "For The Love Of Technology And Wine" »

December 2, 2005

And Now For Something Entirely Different

NATIONAL ROMANIAN DAY - James Barrera displays fancy lariat routines and astonishing bullwhip stunts at the National Romanian Day Celebration, 3:30 p.m. Saturday at the Greek Orthodox Church, 614 Alhambra Blvd., Sacramento. tickets, $25. Call (916) 868-5395.

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

December 1, 2005

Robust 4th Quarter iPod Sales In Store?

Pardon the pun, but it looks like Apple is "in store" for great fourth quarter sales of their iPod and iTunes product lines. The digital music website of Playlist.com reports:

iTunes Music Store beat out Tower Records, Sam Goody and Borders Inc. in NPD’s third quarter ranking to crack the top ten for the first time ever, said the NPD Group in a Monday report. The steep climb of the online music service to seventh place from fourteenth during the same time last year reflects the speed at which users are turning to music online.

“With the growing interest in digital music, forecasts of more iPod demand this holiday, plus the stocking-stuffer appeal of iTunes gift cards, we can expect Apple to increase its share even more by year’s end,” said Russ Crupnick, music and movies industry analyst for the NPD Group, in the report.

Hey geof, people really are buying their music from online sources!

Will Sacramento's local Digital Musicworks International be able to take advantage of this trend? Sorry for another bad pun, but, stay tuned.....iTuned that is!

Pierre Cutler
The Sacramento Executive

The Earth From Above - A Real Treat

I was on another blog early this morning and followed a link to Yann Arthus-Bertrand.org

I had no idea what a treat was in store for me. Click on welcome and check out the Earth from Above photos.

It is breathtaking.

It's one of those sites you can't wait to share with friends and family.

Makes me want to do something amazing to protect the world today!

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

November 22, 2005

Sacramento River Documentary - November 29th - KVIE

A one-hour journey into Sacramento's past and future airs on KVIE on Tuesday November 29th at 9PM.

The documentary includes the work of two UC Davis scientists and was inspired by Charlie Soderquist, UC Regent, who lived on the Sacramento River and had a deep regard for it. He was also an avid fly fisherman. Before his death in 2004, he urged KVIE's general manager, David Hosley, to make such a documentary.

drawbridge (240 x 180).jpg

Sadly, Charlie Soderquist died at the age of 57, but his memory lives on in many ways, not the least of which through the donation he made to the Nature Conservancy to two Conservancy preserves - the Sacramento and Consumnes Rivers. The donations were made in the name of his grandson, Scotty.

Be sure to watch on Tuesday night.

Gillian Parrillo,
The Sacramento Executive

November 21, 2005

My Journey to the Crest

Over the years I have grown very soft in the transportation department. When I was a kid I would ride my bike everywhere. It didn't matter how far I had to go, I simply hopped on my bike and went. Thirty five years later, I still do the same thing, except now it's my car. My bike is in a heap in the garage, collecting dust.

If I need to go to the local Raley's grocery store, even though it's in walking distance, I take the car. If I want to rent a movie, I go to the local Blockbuster Video store, and again, I jump in the car to drive two blocks. Or Vic's Ice Cream, over on 7th Avenue (a mere four blocks away) - yep, you guessed it - I hop in the car to buy the ice cream cone.

Continue reading "My Journey to the Crest" »

November 17, 2005

First-class Cathedral For A Great City

After a renovation that took two years and $34 million, the downtown Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament is ready for viewing.

Cathedral 4 (256 x 192).JPG

"Every great city worth its salt has a first-class cathedral," said the Rev. James Murphy, the cathedral rector, "and now Sacramento has one."

(Full story...)

Gillian Parrillo
The Sacramento Executive

November 15, 2005

Daytrip To Alcatraz

Meet the Sacramento Executive publishers - Gillian Parrillo and Pierre Cutler.

pierre and gillian sf (256 x 192).jpg

Here we are on a quick day trip to Alcatraz Island.

Continue reading "Daytrip To Alcatraz" »

November 14, 2005

Sacramento Antique Faire

When: Every second Sunday 6:30AM-3PM
Where: 21st Street between W and X (Map)
Cost: $3 (no charge for parking or under 16)

Continue reading "Sacramento Antique Faire" »

Second Saturday, November 12

This monthly event, started more than a decade ago, is a great way to explore the city’s galleries and other fun places in midtown Sacramento and along Del Paso Blvd. Most participating businesses are open from 6-10PM and many serve free wine and appetizers and have live music. Some even hold special contests for singles. Sacramento News and Review has a map of all the open businesses to allow for some advance planning. And the Sacramento Bee provides information in the Ticket Section. There is also a website with helpful tips on where to park and a map of participating businesses.

Continue reading "Second Saturday, November 12" »


Sponsors

CBLogo_webjpg (180 x 92).jpg

caroline%20jensen%201%20%28180%20x%2068%29.jpg

Pillsbury.jpg

legacy%20capital%20%28180%20x%2062%29.jpg

MPSC logo (180 x 64).jpg

Comstock2.jpg



eMail Us

comstocks (180 x 53).jpg
prosper_logo (180 x 28).jpg
re_bannerad.jpg

Website Contributors

AmplifyOEROverLogo.gif