BOOGIE BURGER: Now
that cars are for losers, are old auto shops Portland’s new hotspots?
Voodoo Doughut Too is in a converted car lot, and Tres Shannon planned
to put the sadly unopened Portland P Palace in an old tire shop. Now Boogies Burgers & Brew is going into a former used-car lot at 910 E Burnside St. Voluptuous Sassy’s strip club proprietress Stacy Mayhood
owns the biggest stake, although the shop’s liquor-license application
says Boogies will be “family friendly.” (Scoop’s call was not
immediately returned, but the application’s nude-entertainers box is
unchecked.) We’re pretty sure we understand the burgers and brews, but
what are these planned-for boogies?
BEER BUZZ: A shocker from San Diego, where a little-known Portland brewery snatched two silver medals at the World Beer Cup. In 2010, Columbia River Brewing Co.
took over the original Laurelwood Brewing Company location at Northeast
40th Avenue and Sandy Boulevard. Who knows what the buzzless brewery
has been up to since, but it (apparently) makes great oatmeal stout and
coffee beer. Brewmaster Rick Burkhardt is a former manager at Sears who spent 30 years home brewing but never worked in a commercial brewery. >> Meanwhile, surprising no one, Logsdon Farmhouse Ales’ Peche ’n’ Brett, which has been on shelves less than a week, won gold. There’s a review at here. >> Other winners include the Commons, Hop Valley, Upright, Laurelwood, Caldera and Breakside. >> Pacific City’s Pelican Pub & Brewery will be checking a second bag filled with trophies en route to PDX: Pelican was named the world’s best large brewpub.
FUND RAZE: Portland director Sarah Gertrude Shapiro wants to make a movie. Specifically, she wants to make Sequin Raze,
a darkly comedic feminist critique of reality TV, for which she wrote
the script. Referred to as “Lena Dunham crossed with Aaron Sorkin,”
Shapiro was recently accepted into the American Film Institute’s
exclusive Directing Workshop for Women. While the program is free, AFI
does not pay for filmmaking expenses. Naturally, Shapiro has launched a
Kickstarter campaignto cover the movie’s $30,000 budget.
IN-FEST-ATION:
Having trouble keeping track of Oregon’s busy summer music festival
season? Us too, and it’s only going to get more complicated from here on
out. Recently announced fests include one geared for fans of untz-untz
music (the second annual Closer Electronic Music Festival, June
21-24 at various Portland venues), an outdoor microfestival built around
local troubadour Jerry Joseph (the fourth annual Dixie Mattress Festival,
June 22-24 at Pendarvis Farm in Happy Valley), and two
classical-leaning fests in Astoria (June 15-July 1) and Sunriver (all
summer, basically). The powers that be here at WW, though, humbly suggest that our own MusicfestNW is the greatest summer festival of all. It runs Sept. 5-9.