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WED

THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY
Bottoms Up

2-4-1 Wells

College Night,
DJ Slim

7/16:  Villanova

7/23: Pistoltown

DJ Shawty Slim
20's Pub
Karaoke, 8p
Karaoke, 8p

7/16: Project 77

7/23: Sugar Creek


Karaoke, Happy Hour til 7pm
Loco's Bar & Grill
Trivia night, big payouts!

7/15: Exit 172

7/22: tba

Happy Hour $2.50 wells
Happy Hour $2.50 wells
The Rookery
Trivia, 8pm
Dueling pianos, only place in town!
Happy Hour 3-7, 241 wells

Happy Hour 3-7, 241 wells

 

BJ's Karaoke with Mitch, 9pm Happy Hour 2-7pm, $2 wells & domestics
Happy Hour 2-7pm, $2 wells & domestics $1 shots during happy hour!
CJ's 2-4-1 wells and $2 Domestics until 8pm

Cornhole,

241 wells & jagerbombs

DJs Brad & Julie

7/17: B Keith Williams
Friends Nightly Poker Karaoke 7:30 Bud Bingo
Billy's Clubhouse
Happy hour everyday 11-7
Poker, 7pm

7/16: Dale Walker

7/23: Caleb Grimes

7/30: Matt & Lewis

7/17: Chapter 13

7/24: Randy Wesson & Co

7/31: Loose Skrews

Macon Mellow
Ladies Night: $1.50 house wine, $4.50 jagerbombs
College Night: 10% off with ID, $2.25 PBR tall boys, $3 wells, $3 ritas

7/16: Jeremy Johnson

7/23: K-Mo

7/17: Matt Moncrief

7/24: Caleb Grimes

The Bird

Ladies Night free wells for the gals after 8pm, Team Trivia

7/22: Drag Queen Bingo, $10 admission, free drinks for gals

7/16: Josh Roberts & the Hinges

7/23:  Capt Midnight Band

7/17: Big Mike & Booty Papas

7/24: Tokyo Spa

Wild Wing Cafe
Gone country with Matt Pippen
Thirsty Thursdays, live local music

7/16: Soulshine

7/23: Gary Ray & the Heartwells

7/17: John Stanley Band

7/24: Radio Cult

Rivalry's Skirts $2 drinks

7/16: Avery Dylan

7/23: Brian Smith

7/17: Exit 172

7/24: The Sit-Downs

Shamrock Trivia 9p

7/16: Josh Carson

7/23: Stribling

7/17: Planet Retro

7/24: 2nd Wind

Asylum
543 Plum Street
DJ Dance Party

7/23: Uncrowned with Greedy White Citizens


DJ Extreme

Doors open at 10:12

The Grid
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Submit events to the 11th Hour's Culture Calendar by clicking on Submit Calendar Listing link on the home page.

 

Fri Aug 27

This day in history: (1953) Roman Holiday opens, featuring Hepburn’s first starring role.


“The Hundred Dresses” at Georgia Children’s Museum. Friday & Saturday, 7 p.m. Saturday & Sunday, 2 p.m. Tickets $5 - $8, includes Museum admission. 478.755.9539. GeorgiaChildrensMuseum.com. 370 Cherry St.

College Hill’s Big Screen Movie Nights at Tattnall Park.
Showing The Neverending Story. Co-presented by Macon Film Festival. Outdoor movie screenings. 8 p.m. Free. 478.301.2008. CollegeHillMacon.com. 

Macon Architecture: a Story of Structures opens at the Museum of Arts & Sciences. New exhibit featuring Macon’s architectural gems. Hands-on components teach science, technology & artistry. Tuesday – Saturday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 – 5 p.m. $4 - $8. Free for students & Bibb Co. residents the last Friday of each month, 5 – 8 p.m. 478.477.3232. MASMacon.com. 4182 Forsyth Rd.

Sat Aug 28
This day in history: (1917) President Woodrow Wilson is picketed by woman suffragists who demand that he support an amendment to the Constitution that would guarantee women the right to vote.

City Market on Poplar Street Green Weekly market offers seasonal fresh and organic produce, skillfully created arts and crafts, free-style arts, baked goods, plants and herbs, handmade soaps, jewelry and more. 9am - 1pm.

Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit in Concert Friends of Mike Weaver Foundation, Inc. present Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit and Tron Jackson – Live In Concert. Doors Open at 8:15 p.m., Concert at 9:00 p.m. Admission: $20.

Fall for the Arts Festival at the Grand Opera House.
Family friendly arts fair with live performances & info about arts seasons and classes of multiple arts & cultural orgs. 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Free. 478.743.6940. MaconArts.org. 651 Mulberry St.

Wed Sept 1
This day in history: (1864) Union Army General William Tecumseh Sherman lays siege to Atlanta, Georgia.

Dinner & a Classic Movie at Cox Capitol Theatre. “I Want to Live" (1958) 6:30 pm. Call or check website for menus & films. $5 or $17.50 with dinner. 478.257.6381 CoxCapitolTheatre.com.

Thur Sept 2
This day in history: (1969) America's first ATM makes its public debut in New York.

Robert McDuffie Festival for Strings at Mercer University. Sept. 2, Distinguished Artists Concert. 6 p.m. Free. Fickling Hall, McCorkle Music Bldg. 478.301.5751. 1400 Coleman Ave.

Fri Sept 3
This day in history: (1990) President George Bush meets with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The theme of the meeting was cooperation between the two superpowers in dealing with the Iraqi crisis.

“Honky Tonk Angels” at Macon Little Theatre. “Dreamgirls” meets the “Dixie Chicks”…Country music revue. Join us on a hilarious, rollicking and touching journey that celebrates the voices of women in country music. Experience Stand by Your Man, Coal Miner’s Daughter, Delta Dawn, 9 to 5, Harper Valley PTA, I Will Always Love You and many other great songs through the voices of the three country gals who meet on a bus on their way to NashvilleWednesday – Saturday, 8 p.m. Sunday matinees, 2:30 p.m. $10 - $18. September 3 – 12. 478.471.PLAY. MaconLittleTheatre.org. 4220 Forsyth Rd.

The Electric Social at the SoChi Gallery.
The best in electronic music featuring: Dark Shadow, Element, and Old Flame. 10 p.m. – 2 a.m. $5 - $7. 478.238.6630. TheSoChiGallery.com. 534 Second St.

First Friday Alzheimer’s Benefit & art exhibit at Joycine’s. Ceramics by Rheetah! Flanagan, paintings by Martha Adams Thompson. 5:30 – 9 p.m. Free. 478.743.3144. 333 Cotton Ave.

Sat Sept 4
This day in history: (2002) Kelly Clarkson, a 20-year-old cocktail waitress from Texas, wins Season One of American Idol.

Battle of the Baddest Bands
Insurrection Sound, in conjunction with Storey Communications presents the second annual Battle of the Baddest Bands at 7:00 PM, September 4th,  at the Cox Capitol Theatre.
This event is the grand finale of a five-week competition where the preliminary rounds were held at Wild Wing Cafe. Four of Middle Georgia's best up and coming bands will battle it out for prizes from exclusive music retail sponsor Music Masters in Byron, GA, recording time at Insurrection Sound, a live DVD of the event from Storey Communications and other prizes. Show starts at 7p.m. and tickets are $10.

Urban Hike Series: Walk and Learn in the Corridor
7pm Trees of the Corridor: Learn how to identify common trees found in the corridor with plant ecologist Dr. Heather Bowman Cutway of Mercer University.  Meet at the corner of Coleman Ave. and College St.

Mon Sept 6
This day in history: (2002) Kelly Clarkson, a 20-year-old cocktail waitress from Texas.

Vineville Neighborhood Association Wine & Music Festival
Featuring five local bands and wine tastings by Michael’s on Mulberry. 3-9p.m. at the Big House, 2321 Vineville Ave. Ticket prices are $20 for adults, $10 for students, $5 for kids under 6.

Wed Sept 8
This day in history: (1986) Oprah goes national.

Dinner & a Classic Movie at Cox Capitol Theatre. “The Bridges at Toko-Ri" (1954) 6:30 pm. Call or check website for menus & films. $5 or $17.50 with dinner. 478.257.6381 382 Second St.

Thur Sept 9
This day in history: (1939) Audiences are treated to surprise preview of Gone with the Wind at Fox Theatre in California.  Gone with the Wind debuted in Atlanta on December 15, 1939, and became an instant hit, breaking all box office records.

Lord T & Eloise in concert at the Cox Capitol Theatre This duo are know as Crunk artists and performers based out of Memphis, TN. The two self-proclaimed ‘intergalactic time travelers’ and ‘forebearers of the Rapocalypse” have spent the last three years touring the United States, sharing the stage with some of the industry’s most important modern performers, and bombarding the American media with their own sense of style, bravado and showmanship.
“No matter how hard I tried, I just couldn’t hate it…as good, if not better than most of the rap I hear these days…polished, unique, and catchy as hell...funny, relevant, and original.”
- THE SAN FRANSISCO BAY GUARDIAN
Show presented by Adam Smith Productions. Concert starts at 9pm. Tickets are $9 in advance, $11 at the door.

Steve Penley exhibit at Georgia Music Hall of Fame. Preview Party – Sept. 9. Ribbon cutting, meet Penley, hors d’oeuvres & drinks. $10 Members, $25 general admission. Macon native artist’s portraits of Macon-related artists. Opens to public Sept. 10. Monday – Saturday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 – 4 p.m. $3 - $8. 478.751.3334. GeorgiaMusic.org. 200 M.L. King, Jr. Blvd.

 

Arts
New Macon Co-Ed Book Club:
Looking for a hobby? Love to read? Want to make new friends? Possess intellectual conversation? The new macon co-ed book club is just what you are looking for. For more information please call 912-227-4212.

Macon Arts Gallery September 3 – 25 – “Postcards to Macon” at Macon Arts Alliance. Photographs by Maryann Bates, ceramics by Michael DeBerry. First Friday opening, Sept. 3, 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday – Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free. 478.743.6940. MaconArts.org. 486 First St.

“Harriet Tubman: A Moses to Her People” at the Tubman African American Museum. Weekdays, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, Noon – 4 p.m. $4 - $6. 478.743.8544. TubmanMuseum.com. 340 Walnut St.

Steve Penley exhibit at Georgia Music Hall of Fame. Macon native artist’s portraits of Macon-related artists. September 9 – July 11  Monday – Saturday, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 – 4 p.m. $3 - $8. 478.751.3334. 200 M.L. King, Jr. Blvd.

Joycine's Art, Attitude & Accessory Gallery Costume jewelry, art and so much more!
333 Cotton Ave. For schedule and information contact Barbara at 478-743-3144.

Through Aug. 13 – “By Land, Sea or Air” at Middle Georgia Art Association. Tuesday – Friday, Noon – 5 p.m. Saturday, Noon – 3 p.m. Free. 478.744.9557. MiddleGeorgiaArt.org. 2330 Ingleside Ave.

“Images of Monroe” and “Fascinating Food” at Monroe Arts Alliance Gallery September 8 – 24. Wednesday – Friday, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. Free admission. 478.994.8668. MonroeArts.blogspot.com. 54 N. Jackson St., Forsyth.

family
“Sky Over Macon”, Fridays at 8p.m. Mark Smith Planetarium 4182 Forsyth Rd. Weekly, live star talk explore the constellations and far away celestial objectsvisible from Middle Georgia. Admission by donation. 477-3232.

Live music for kids every First Saturday at
Georgia Music Hall of Fame Every first Saturday from noon until 2 p.m., Included with museum admission, $3.50 ages 4-17. Featuring Pilar Wilder and Hayiya Dance Theatre.

Through October 10 – The World of Giant Insects at the Museum of Arts & Sciences. “Buggy Saturdays.” Tuesday – Saturday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Sunday, 1 – 5 p.m. $4 - $8. 478.477.3232. 4182 Forsyth Rd.


ongoing - movies

Macon Film Guild: Every second Sunday of the month. Show times are 2 p.m., 4:30 p.m. & 7:30 p.m. Douglass Theatre, 355 M.L.K., Jr. Blvd. For more information visit www.douglasstheatre.org.

Sunday Supper at the Cox Capitol Theatre Doors open at 5pm, movie begins at 6. $12.50 admission includes dinner. $6 child’s plate available.

Dinner and a Classic at the Cox Capitol Theatre: Doors open at 5:30 p.m, movie at 6:30p.m. $17.50 includes dinner. Reservations are GREATLY appreciated by calling (478)257-6391, ext. 6.

museum - gallery hours

The Musuem of Arts & Sciences
Monday - Saturday, 10 - 5 p.m., Sunday, 1 - 5 p.m. Last Friday of Each Month, 10 a.m. - 8 p.m. Admission - Adults $8, Students 12-17 $5, Children 2-11 $4, Museum Members Free

Georgia Music Hall of Fame 9am-5pm Mon-Sat, 1pm-5pm Sun. 1-888-GA-ROCKS. $8/$3.50.

Georgia Sports Hall of Fame 9am-5pm Mon-Sat, 1pm-5pm Sun. Admission $8, children 4-16 $3.50.

The Hay House, 934 Georgia Ave. Open Tuesdays-Saturdays 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. and Sundays 1 p.m. - 4 p.m. Tours are on the hour with the last tour at 3 p.m. $8 adults, $4 students. Children under 6 free.

Tubman African American Museum
Monday-Saturday 9a.m.-5p.m. Admission  $5
for adults $3 for Children 4-17. 340 Walnut Street.

Culture Calendar
Home Feature
Features
What They Think PDF Print E-mail
Written by Brad Evans   
Wednesday, August 25 2010 19:42

A Talk With Some of those Deep in Macon's Underground

HEARD IN A LIVING ROOM ON HIGH STREET
AS TOLD BY

clarkClark Bush, Macon GA
24 Years Old
“My subway Sandwhich artist thinks I look like Jesus.”
Night Job: Sound Engineer at Wild Wing Café.  As promoter at Golden Bough Bookstore, Clark has booked close to a hundred shows over the last year, which have become the heart of the burgeroning Macon Music Scene. He’s also the co-editor of the new Macon Fanzine, Macon Noise.  Associated with Nomenclature, Truffelina, City Council, and the Georgia House Band.

 

 

 


seanShawn Williamson, Macon GA
28 Years Old
“I’m all about putting “Fuck” in the paper.
Day Job: Ingleside Village Pizza. Co- Editor of Macon Noise and he helped put together the Compilation album.
Associated with Citizen Insane, Truffelina, Trendlenberg, Mother Cunt

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

lacy Lacy “Bad Ass” Hortman, Macon GA
26 Years Old
Day Job: X Ray Tech
Associated with Mother Cunt and Citizen Insane

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

chisChris Nylund, South Jersey
Day Job: Retired English Teacher, Assistant Curator and Educator at the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. Freelance writer for 11th Hour (see Elko Boggin is Redneck Heaven)
Associated with Magnificent Bastard, Royal Fireworks, Trendlenberg Orchestra, Citizen Insane

 

 

 

 

 

 


ellenEllen Banas, Chicago, IL
(And no, she is not a Cubs fan)
28 Years Old
“I Despise Musicians”
Day Job: Retired Art Teacher, Currently Admin Assistant at Mercer & starving artist
Associated with Magtard via her long time beau Chris (see above).

And Luke Goddard (not pictured) founder of TheBlueIndian.com

And Jessie, the drummer for citizen insane is also not pictured.

We also talked with Justin Cutway, the Godfather of this scene but were too late for printing time. We do love him though.

 
C. Jack is back… maybe… probably… we think… PDF Print E-mail
Written by ChrisHorne   
Thursday, August 12 2010 08:59

Why the 2011 primary is the one you should have your eye on


cjack_2Running a little late, Clarence Jack Ellis makes a quick, warm introduction and explains in the vaguest possible terms that he’s had a long, eventful day thus far. Sitting down, the former mayor of Macon puts his neatly folded tie in an adjacent seat and offers an apology for the time. A broad smile spreads across his face, radiating sincerity, and with that, he opens himself up to questions.

Though the next mayoral election won’t officially start until April 2011, when candidates must qualify to run, C. Jack Ellis is already in midseason form, displaying the charm and polish of a politician neck deep in a campaign.
And maybe he is in a campaign. This interview, he tells me, is his last “official” appointment of the day. Everyone may be wondering if he’s running for mayor, but I’m wondering if he’d even be here now if he weren’t.
He remains coy, quoting himself.

“Like I said last week to the electronic media, I was 90 percent sure then, and I’m still 90 percent sure, and moving closer,” Ellis said. If there’s any real uncertainty, he isn’t showing it. Instead, he attributes the remaining 10 percent to precaution as he solicits feedback from his base of supporters.


Déjà vu all over again

 
SPLOST. Any Questions? PDF Print E-mail
Written by Eric Brown/Photo By Misty Churchwell   
Thursday, July 15 2010 11:21

Just about every Bibb County resident knows that the quickly approaching July 20th primary election is going to have some far-reaching effects on Georgia as a state. It’s the day when both Republicans and Democrats will choose who runs for each party. Already, things are heating up as Roy Barns, Georgia’s former democratic governor, works to secure the nomination from competitors such as David Polythress and Thurbert Baker. On the other side, Republicans are split between John Oxendine, Karen Handel, and Nathan Deal as successors to the current Republican governor. It may not be as glamorous as the November 2nd general election, but it’s an important day in Georgia’s future.

Nevertheless, many people aren’t as aware of what effect the primary election could have on Bibb County specifically. Also listed on the day’s ballot is a referendum on a proposed special-purpose local-option sales tax (or SPLOST) that will increase the Bibb County sales tax rate by 1% in order to fund various projects around the county. This proposed tax has proven quite controversial in Macon’s political circle, with many conservative voices in the community coming out strongly against the proposed tax. Because of the confusing and sometimes contradictory statements from both sides of the argument, the 11th Hour has attempted to answer as many questions as possible in time for the July 20 primary election.

 
Hippies In Dixie PDF Print E-mail
Written by Candice Dyer   
Thursday, July 01 2010 07:59

 

Photos by Carter Tomassi More here!

Recollections of the Second Atlanta Pop Festival tend to begin one of two ways.
Attendees either talk first about the music, notably the Allman Brothers Band and Jimi Hendrix -- homecoming kings because of their Macon ties -- and others who provided the ecstatic, note-bending soundtrack of a revolutionary era when jam sessions carried real consequences.
Or their nostalgia starts with the nudity, that tableau of bare bodies, capering, skinny-dipping, and rutting unselfconsciously among the pecan trees. “This was the only time I've ever seen a naked, pregnant woman riding a motorcycle - looked about eight months along,” someone calling himself “Papa” marveled on one of the many chatboards that have sprung up about the festival.
Either way, the party known locally as the Byron Pop Festival, which marks its 40th anniversary July 3 to 6, was cataclysmic.
A crowd ranging from 200,000 to 600,000, depending on the source, converged on the Middle Georgia Speedway for an event billed as the “Woodstock of the South,” the largest public gathering in the state’s history before the 1996 Olympics. Traffic was backed up for more than 100 miles, all the way to the Varsity in Atlanta. Tickets for the festival were priced at $14, but organizers eventually shrugged and threw open the gates after the crowds started tearing down the plywood fences. Drug bazaars and O(ver)D(ose) tents reportedly lined the pathways, with bemused Georgia State Patrolmen looking on, realizing they were simply, overwhelmingly outnumbered, albeit lovingly. The answers were not so much blowing in the wind as suspended in the soup-like humidity, so revelers took to the creeks, and a water-truck, manned by “some ol’ naked guy in a fireman’s helmet” helpfully hosed everyone down, says Michael Pierce, a festival volunteer, adding, “I don’t think he was a real fireman.”

 
Middle GA's Guide To Living Dangerously PDF Print E-mail
Written by Amber Whitley, PHoto by Mistey Churhwell   
Thursday, June 17 2010 09:50

fightingRUSH MIXED MARTIAL ARTS

MACON (478) 742-8197

With the increasing popularity of fighting leagues such as the Ultimate Fighting Championship, mixed martial arts (or MMA) is one of the fastest growing competitive sports, and with good reason. Because it combines many martial arts disciplines from around the world, including boxing, Jiu-Jitsu, and wrestling, mixed martial arts is technical, brutal, and thoroughly entertaining to watch. Macon’s own Bubby Mitchell, owner of Rush Mixed Martial Arts gym, gave a glimpse at what it takes to join the competitive and rewarding world of mixed martial arts.

“It’s easy to get involved,” said Mitchell. “If you want to come in and train on either a   competitive or a noncompetitive level, all you have to do is sign some paperwork, buy about $100 worth of gear, and come in regularly to train. If you set aside time to train about 3 or 4 times a week, you’ll come in and really make progress.”

Mitchell emphasized that anyone can come in and easily get involved with the exciting world of mixed martial arts. One of the most talented fighters out of Mitchell’s Rush Gym is Bryan Goldsby, who was turned on to the mixed martial arts scene after his time spent wrestling in the Navy. For Goldsby, who has been making a splash in the scene after winning fights at Bellator 14 and Clash of the Kings, fighting is a full-time career; his wife is deployed on active duty in Afghanistan and Goldsby supports his family through his endeavors in mixed martial arts. With his twice-a-day training regimen and impressive professional record, MMA has become his passion.

 
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