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AHA MEDIA and W2 Community Media Art Society are proud to present Tragic Magic featuring Silas Howard and Heather Ács + Vancouver DJs: Dance Mix Ninety-Six, Ugly, OCDJ, Women&Song – Sunday, August 2, 10pm-4am, $5.
TRAGIC MAGIC
featuring Silas Howard and Heather Ács
+ Vancouver DJs: Dance Mix Ninety-Six, Ugly, OCDJ, Women&Song
W2 Flack Block Gallery
click here for W2 website event listing and flyer
157 W Hastings @ Cambie
Sunday, August 2, 10pm-4am, $5.
Silas Howard of Tribe 8 and New York City downtown performance artist Heather Ács present an evening of new solo works, traversing through a multi-media world of string theory, social trespassing & loopholes in the American dream. Through ruminations on desire, shame, and loss these two escape artists invite us into a non-linear landscape scattered with fragmented mothers, renegade chickens, tranny jazzmen, and the mysterious figure of Mr. Hollywood in order to ask what is the price of letting go, selling out, or rewriting the script?
“Tragic Magic was so good it hurt…Thank Goodness I brought moist towelettes!” Justin Bond
Heather Ács’ piece “what the brain forgets and the heart denies, the body remembers…” explores illness, death, grieving and loss refracted through working class Appalachian and Mexican cultural imagery, creating a nonlinear world layered with movement, gesture, storytelling, soundscape, video, and installation. In this multi-media solo performance piece, time and testimonies loop, break apart, burrow, reemerge, and cross over. Breath taking, glass breaking, gifts are bestowed. Sparrows descend, tortillas and tears sizzle on the comal, a river flows with dirt and glitter. Lesley Gore croons cotton candy lyrics laced with razor blades while dust gathers in an empty house. Stitch it all together with string theory and skeleton keys, stuff into a mason jar, shake until your heart might break, check your pulse, make a wish, and see what rises to the surface.
Howard’s Thank you for Being Urgent is a textured tale of a transman coming up in the queer punk world of San Francisco and spilling into the crappy and exalted glitter of Hollywood. He searches for true tales of fierce outsiders and re-imagines the mainstream, never loosening his grip on the underground. Our hero begs sanity from mystery man Mr. Hollywood through playful and plaintive letters, ruminating on desire, shame, and the infinite loopholes in the American Dream. Traversing serendipitous heights and punishing ironies, Thank you for Being Urgent chronicles burlesque dancers with dementia, tranny jazzmen and film executives, using archival photos, monologues and charm.
Bios:
HEATHER M. ÁCS
Heather M. Ács is a multi-media theatre performance artist, activist, educator and high-femme troublemaker. Her gritty, glittery work has been featured at the Culture Project, HERE Arts Center , the Kitchen, the Public Theater, Theater for the New City , and the New York City International Fringe Festival. She performs and facilitates workshops at community spaces, colleges and conferences from coast to coast. Heather has worked with Nao Bustamante, Karen Finley, Claude Michelle-Wampler, J. Ed Araiza of the SITI Company, and Steven Soderbergh. Heather is also a dedicated teaching artist. She uses theatre as a tool for social change with low-income youth in cities throughout the U.S. and has studied with Cornerstone Theatre Company, Sojourn Theatre, and Augusto Boal.
SILAS HOWARD
Silas Howard, (writer, director, and musician), co-directed his first feature, By Hook Or By Crook, with Harry Dodge. The indie classic was a 2002 Sundance Film Festival premiere and five-time Best Feature winner. Silas Howard’s next film, Exactly Like You, (co-written with Nina Landey), is based on the life of Billy Tipton. Howard’s short documentary, What I Love About Dying also premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival.
For eight years, Howard toured with his band Tribe 8, the notorious queer punk band (a band boycotted by republicans and women at Michigan womyn’s music festival). The band has been featured in Rolling Stone, The Village Voice, and The Los Angeles Times. You can check out Howard’s music videos, short musical and documentaries which have aired on MTV and LOGO networks and at Disneyland, Anaheim (weird, yet true). Howard’s writing is also featured in the anthologies, “Without a Net: Growing Up WorkingClass” and “Live Through This ,” as well as the artists’ journal, “LTTR.” Currently Silas is working on a novel set in San Francisco’s mid-90’s homocore scene.
W2 Community Media Arts Society
#205 – 163 W. Hastings St. (Flack Block)
Vancouver, BC V6B 1H5
www.creativetechnology.org
Mobile: 604.644.4349 • Fax 604.844.7441
Twitter: @W2Woodwards @FearlessCity
AHA MEDIA is very proud to present CABARET L’AMOUR FOU!Thursday, July 23rd and Friday the 24th at The Russian Hall, 600 Cambell Ave in Strathcona area of East Vancouver

We , the Ancient Rugged Revival, in association with The Dusty Flower Pot Cabaret do cordially invite you to an evening of delectable theatre and revelry…. . .. .
Casting anchor down on weathered docks,
the Ancient Rugged Revival arrives
Is it a band, or is it a play?
Is it a vaudville act or a didactic fable?
A barrage of sailor’s songs,
tap dancing,
shadow puppetry,
erotic mumblings,
gale storms and mutiny
C’EST CABARET L’AMOUR FOU!
we present
CABARET L’AMOUR FOU!
at The Russian Hall, 600 Cambell Ave in Strathcona
Tickets $15-25 sliding scale
CABARET L’AMOUR FOU! offers up a 12-person spectacle of genre-bending collaboration by East Vancouver’s Ancient Rugged Revival. Recently returned from the Montreal Fringe Festival, here is what folks have been saying about this viewer-rated FESTIVAL TOP TEN performance:
“Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant… hilarious… truly entertaining.” — The Montreal Hour
“Over the top joyous and maddening as love itself” — The Montreal Hour

AHA MEDIA is very proud to present Traces: Projecting Neighbourhood Stories July 24-25, 2009 in Vancouver Downtown Eastside (DTES)
![Traces-Digital-Postcard[1] Traces-Digital-Postcard[1]](https://ahamedia.ca/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/traces-digital-postcard1.jpg?w=595)
Traces: Projecting Neighbourhood Stories
July 24-25, 2009, 9:15-11:00pm
various venues along 400-block East Hastings
between Jackson and Dunlevy
August 1, 2009, 9:15-10:30pm
Woodland Park
as part of the Powell Street Festival
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Traces to activate and illuminate Hastings Corridor
It’s only a few days until a stretch of Vancouver’s East Hastings Street will be animated and illuminated by Traces: Projecting Neighbourhood Stories. The latest community art project from Media Undefined, Traces is inspired by the Strathcona and Downtown Eastside neighbourhoods, their people, and their stories. The project will be unveiled in a series of outdoor screenings on the evenings of July 24 and 25.
For the past several months, teams of artist mentors and youth interns have been interviewing merchants, seniors, and longtime residents in the neighbourhood and turning their stories into works of video, animation, and shadow puppetry. Participants have been struck by their common interests, including the role of food in the neighbourhood (which boasts a number of thriving community gardens), and the relationship between people and architecture. That latter relationship will be a central focus for the project’s shadow puppetry play, which will animate buildings through the stories of people who live there. The multi-lingual video component of the event will zero in on stories of people from the four corners of Hastings and Jackson. The stop motion animation piece features the story of a neighbourhood resident and his dog’s neighbourhood wanderings to reflect the type of conversations and interactions artists and youth have been having through the project.
AHA MEDIA is proud to announce that our Director, Hendrik Beune’s image has been made into a puppet form and has a hilarious story in Traces: Projecting Neighbourhood Stories!!

Venues for the event, all located along the East Hastings corridor, are the storefront window at the Patricia Hotel, the empty lot at the corner of Hastings Street and Jackson Avenue, and outside the Chapel Arts Centre on Dunlevy Street. The work will also be presented at Woodland Park as part of the Powell Street Festival on August 1. And in September 2009, Traces will travel to community gathering places throughout the neighbourhood including schools, libraries, and community centres.
Traces is being developed by Media Undefined’s Jaimie Robson in partnership with the Strathcona Community Centre. Robson and mentoring artists Tamara Unroe, Madoka Hara, Diana Leung, along with Alicia Horner and Hoi Bing Mo, are working with a team of youth interns collecting stories from longtime residents of the neighbourhood. Paul Bennett is producing a short documentary about the project. Youth interns for the project are Alicia Anderson, Lisa Cao, Jane Chow, Jessica Coccimiglio, Leticia Coutinho, Ernst Klaussen, Faber Neifer, Robin Prince, Geoffrey E A Vincent, and Patrick White, and Maggie Winston. For more detailed information on the project, visit www.mediaundefined.ca.
Pivot Presents Justice Rocks on Aug 29, 2009 in Strathcona Park in East Vancouver
Justice Rocks 2009
On August 29, Pivot will host the second annual Justice Rocks music festival in Strathcona Park. Justice Rocks aims to fuse music and pop-culture symbols with engagement in social and environmental change in a relaxed, family friendly, fun atmosphere.
“We wanted to hold an end of the summer party that brings together music and ideas for social change,” said John Richardson, Executive Director of Pivot. “Music has always been an important medium for expressing the importance of values like justice, and we wanted to bring that to the heart of East Van.”
So come out and enjoy the music, the food, the park, the social change and each other. Check out the website to learn more about the festival and how you can get involved as a participating non-profit, a volunteer, or a business sponsor!
AHA MEDIA sees PIVOT’s Rights Blanket being used on East Hastings street in Vancouver Downtown Eastside

http://www.pivotlegal.org/News/07-12-17–RightsBlanket.html
Pivot and MEC to blanket homeless with legal rights
Vancouver – December 17, 2007
Tomorrow (Tuesday) afternoon, Pivot Legal Society will begin giving away the first run of its new Rights Blanket to homeless individuals living in the Downtown Eastside.
The high-tech Blanket, co-designed and produced by Mountain Equipment Coop, is designed for homeless people, made of waterproof dernier nylon and features a printed list of people’s rights in relation to housing, security guards, police and welfare.
“We wanted to create a product that would be not only useful on the practical level for someone living on the streets, but also effective as way of informing people about their rights under the law,” said John Richardson, executive director of Pivot Legal Society.
A joint project between Mountain Equipment Coop and Pivot, the Rights Blanket is light-weight, rugged, and easy to pack. Made of the same material as MEC’s high-end rainjackets, the Rights Blanket acts like a large, light-weight tarp with footpockets, drawstrings and a built-in stuffsack. It wraps around a sleeping person, their clothing and insulating blankets, protecting them from water and wind. Silk-screened onto the inside of the Blanket, in 26 point font, are various need-to-know rights for homeless people, including their rights in relation to panhandling, security guards, housing, policing, and welfare.

RIGHTS BLANKET
Read article Pivot and MEC to blanket homeless with legal rights

International and National Rights
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 25(1): You have the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of yourself and your family including food, clothing, housing, medical care, necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond your control.
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Article 11: You have the right to an adequate standard of living for yourself and your family; including adequate food, clothing, housing and you have the right to the continuous improvement of living conditions.
Canadian Charter on Rights and Freedoms, Section 7: You have the right to life, liberty and security of the person; and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
Rights in Relation to Panhandling
How you ask. You have the right to ask for money as long as you do not swear or make threats, or block a person’s path, or continue to ask after they have said no.
When you ask. You have the right to ask for money if the person is alone and away from their vehicle.
Where you ask. You have the right to ask for money on public property if the person is five metres away from a bank machine, public pay phone, public bathroom, or bus stop or vehicle. Note: parking lots are not public property.
Permission. You can ask for money within five meters of a bank machine if you have permission from the owner of the property where the bank machine is located.
Rights in Relation to Security Guards
All property is either private or public. The owner of PRIVATE property can make rules about how it is used and what activities are allowed to be carried out on the property. Security guards can have the authority of the owner to enforce these rules on private property, but they have no power to enforce rules on PUBLIC property (like sidewalks and alleys).
You can only be banned from “private” property. A security guard can ban you from private property if you don’t obey the rules of the owner. However, these rules cannot discriminate and must be applied to everyone equally and fairly. You have the right to be judged by your actions, but not your appearance. If you are banned, they must tell you why.
Security guards can only arrest in limited situations. Security guards can only arrest you if they see you committing a crime or running from police. If they arrest you, they must tell you why you are arrested and hand you over to police as soon after as possible. Guards can’t arrest you for refusing to identify yourself or for not showing ID. If you are arrested, you have a right to, and should, speak to a lawyer before saying anything.
Security guards can only search in limited situations. Guards can’t search you unless you give them permission or they have arrested you. If they arrest you, they can only do a pat-down or quick search for weapons. Guards can’t search your bags or packages, but they can hold them until police arrive.
You have the right to the same treatment and courtesy as anyone else. You must be treated equally even if you come from a different ancestry, colour, place of origin, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, mental or physical disability, marital or family status or any combination of these factors.
You can make a complaint. You can report a guard that abuses you, swears at you, discriminates against you or violates your rights. It’s important that you get the guard’s name, and the security company they work for. You can call 1-877-689-8474 to make your complaint.
Rights in Relation to Police
If you are arrested by the police: stay SILENT and calm, use your common sense and try to remember your rights and what is happening to you.
You have the right to silence. You can refuse to talk to police or answer their questions. The exceptions are if you are in a bar or a cinema, driving a car, or they say you broke the law, then you must give your name, birth date and address, or show your ID, but you do not have to say any more.
You have the right to say “NO” if the police ask permission to search. Saying “NO” does not mean you have something to hide. If you are being strip-searched, you have the right for it to be done in private and by officers of the same sex.
You have a right to be told why you are being detained or arrested. You can leave at any time if you are not being detained or arrested. If you are arrested, you have a right to speak privately to a lawyer without delay – even if you can’t afford to pay.
You have the right to make a complaint. You have the right to know a police officer’s name and badge number. You have the right to report a police officer who abuses you, swears at you, or violates your rights. To report a police officer to the Police Complaint Commission call: 1-800-663-7867. To speak to a Legal Aid lawyer call: 1-888-978-0050
Rights in Relation to Outdoor Camping
Sleeping outdoors is illegal in Vancouver. City of Vancouver bylaws say that you are not allowed to sleep or set up camp on sidewalks or in parks. However, Pivot Legal Society believes that these laws may be unconstitutional if the shelters are full. If you are given a ticket for sleeping in a park after being turned away from a full shelter, call Pivot at (604) 255-9700.
Rights in relation to health care
The Government of Canada’s key law on healthcare. The goal of the Canada Health Act is: to protect, promote and restore your physical and mental well-being and to facilitate your reasonable access to health services without financial or other barriers.
Rights to Health Services travel with you. If you just moved to BC from another province, then you will continue to be covered by your home province during any waiting period under 3 months.
Some clinics do not require health cards. Public health clinics in the Downtown Eastside may not require a health card for you to get treatment. These clinics are:
Downtown Community Health Centre: 604-255-3151, 569 Powell Street.
Native Health Walk-In Clinic: 604-255-9766, 449 East Hastings Street.
Pender Community Health Centre: 604-669-9181, 59 W. Pender Street
Health Contact Centre: 604-658-1224, 166 East Hastings Street
In an emergency, you will not require a health card to be treated at any hospital. Call 911 for an ambulance for yourself or anyone who needs urgent medical care.
Rights in Relation to Subsidized Housing
There is no right to housing in Canada. However, there are programs to assist you in finding housing, and you have a right to welfare to pay for that housing.
Apply for affordable government housing through BC Housing. Call 1-800-257-7756. You can also go to BC Housing Home Office at Suite 101, 4555 Kingsway, in Burnaby. It is important to update your application at least once every six months, and any time your information changes. You can fax your application and any updates to (604) 439-4729.
Rights in Relation to Welfare and Disability
Your rights. You have the right to be treated with respect at a welfare office.
Where to apply. You can apply for welfare at:
- 180 Main Street (Dockside)
- 205 Powell Street (Kiwassa)
- 687 Powell Street (Strathcona Mental Health)
- #201-475 East Broadway (China Creek)
- 2350 Commercial Drive (Grandview)
For other office locations call 604 660-2421 (Enquiry BC) and ask for the nearest Ministry of Employment and Income Assistance Office to you.
People who can help you apply. The following organizations provide advice and advocacy for you with welfare offices:
- Downtown Eastside Residents’ Association (DERA) 604-682-0931, 12 East Hastings Street.
- BC Coalition of People with Disabilities 604-872-1278, #204-456 West Broadway Street.
- First United Church 604-681-8365, 320 East Hastings Street.
- Vancouver Community Legal Assistance Society 604-685-3425, #300-1140 West Pender Street.
- United Native Nations 688-1821, #110-23 West Pender Street.
Increasing your monthly cheque. If you are only receiving basic welfare but you have one of the following:
- have been unemployed for a long period of time
- have a long-term sickness like HIV, HEP C, or TB
- have a mental health disability like depression or schizophrenia
- have a physical disability
call one of the advocates above and ask if you would qualify for disability assistance, which provides you with more money each month.
In a financial emergency. If you desperately need money to rent housing or buy clothing or food, ask the welfare worker for an “Emergency Needs Assessment.” Welfare has the ability to give you small grants in urgent situations.


