Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.
Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/71882
Best of Fayetteville Awards Who will be this year's "Best of the Best"? Look for ballots in this issue! Up & Coming Weekly's 15th Annual COMING SOON! www.upandcomingweekly.com Corporate Sponsors: Vote Online! Utley & Knowles CPAs Body of Work TV by DEAN ROBBINS BOOKKEEPING POSITION AVAILABLE UP & COMING WEEKLY publications UP & COMING WEEKLY publications is currently seeking a quali ed individual for the position of bookkeeper. • Candidates must have experience in accounts receivable, accounts payable and payroll as well as other related duties. • QuickBooks experience is a must • Experience in Account Scout is bene cial but not required. • Must be a team player Please fax resume to 910.484.9218, email Editor@upandcomingweekly.com or send to Up and Coming Weekly, P.O. Box 53461, Fayetteville, NC 38305 The Outdoors Make for Great Childhood Memories Visit us Mom and Dad! Wisit us Mom and Dad! We have a wide selection of Sportswear & Sportsgear for your child and you! otr You've got all summer! i t T like any grandmother I've ever known. In the documentary Marina Abramovi: The Artist Is Present (Monday, 9 p.m., HBO), Abramovi shows that she is still committed to messing with our minds after a long and painful career in the artis- tic trenches. And I mean "painful" quite literally. Abramovi's canvas is her often naked body, and she has submitted it to slapping, fasting, whipping and other indignities to challenge our notions of reality. That makes her sound like a madwoman, but the Abramovi we meet is down- to-earth, droll, even self-deprecating. We learn what makes her tick and what her work signifies on the eve of a retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. As a TV critic who watches the same-old same-old every day (sitcoms, cop shows and other formulaic entertainment), I appreciate her fervent desire to make us see life afresh. After experiencing her work, you'll never again take sitting in a chair or walking through a doorway for granted. I only request that, after you finish read- ing this blurb, you slather it with mustard and eat it. Marina Abramovi is called the Grandmother of Performance Art, but she's not Baby Daddy Wednesday, 8:30 pm (ABC Family) This new sitcom has a very old premise. A baby is dropped on a guy's doorstep, meaning he and his two male sidekicks must fumble with diapers, bottles and other unmanly domestic tasks. Baby Daddy exploits our weakness for gender ste- reotypes, not to mention cute baby antics. The soundtrack fills with AWWWW's whenever little Emma smiles at the silly men trying to take care of her. Could there be a cheaper sitcom ploy? Luc Bilodeau and Tahj Mowry won me over with their comic skill. And, dammit, that baby really is adorable. I'm just going to set aside all pretense of critical de- tachment and end this review with AWWWW…. At least, that's what I thought at first. But cast members Chelsea Kane, Jean- Take Me Out Thursday, 8 pm (Fox) In this dating series, one dude after another tries to impress a bunch of dimwit- ted women standing at consoles. If he's not hunky enough, they switch off the console's light. "If you're not turned on, turn off!" brays host George Lopez. Lopez is just awful in his role as the so-called Love Doctor. He seems to think his jokes are funny just because they're raunchy. "Let the hot dog see the buns!" he shouts by way of introducing another piece of beefcake to the ladies. True Blood Sunday, 9 pm (HBO) TV series don't get more wonderfully lurid than True Blood, in which vampires and humans coexist thanks to a new synthetic blood. This mass-produced product lets people off the hook as a nutritional source — at least in theory. So far, season five has had no shortage of the old fangs-in-the-neck maneuver, including a spectacular example this week. Tara (Rutina Wesley), newly turned into a vampire, is presented with a young maiden whom she resists at first. "Don't you realize I was human three days ago?" she asks her "maker," Pam (Kristin Bauer van Straten). "I can't look at another person like she's dinner!" In True Blood, however, "hu- manity" comes and goes. In this in- stance, it goes. Two Great Businesses Under One Roof! www.trophyhouseinc.com 3006 Bragg Blvd. 910.323.1791 20 UCW JUNE 27 - JULY 3, 2012 Performance artist, Marina Abramovic, uses herself as a canvas Meanwhile, hapless heroine Sookie (Anna Paquin), the Louisiana waitress and faerie, is wrestling with her con- science. She has committed murder and, unlike many of the other char- acters, can't just shrug it off. "I'm sick of lying and covering and ruining people's lives!" she sobs to brother Jason (Ryan Kwanten). She may be sick of it, but I'm sure not. I hope to watch Sookie lie, cover and ruin people's lives for many seasons to come. WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM P ci k a p o o g e & S t h D e r !