Vol. 25, No. 43
Pooling the Money
To the TIF victors go the spoils in Crestwood
By D.J. Wilson
Feeding Frenzy
Two developers, three cities, the airport and the county are engaged in a dogfight over 438 acres of prime North County land. And there's plenty of sleaze to go around.
By Elizabeth Vega
Letters
Week of October 24, 2001
Who Currently Has the Most Memorable Spots in St. Louis Advertising?
By Wm. Stage
Welch the Revelator
Gillian Welch's new record marks a testing of the very limits of that "confessional singer/songwriter" mode
By Roy Kasten
It's Their Thing
Despite changing fashions and lineup upheavals, the Isley Brothers are still going strong, some 45 years after forming
By Steve Pick
Raising the Ceiling
The Tin Ceiling looks for ways to thrive, not just survive
By René Spencer Saller
Tori Amos with Rufus Wainwright
Saturday, Oct. 27; Fox Theatre
By Niles Baranowski
Richie Hawtin with Foster
Thursday, Oct. 25; Z
By Jay A. Babcock
Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks with Pinetop Seven
Tuesday, Oct. 30; Mississippi Nights
By Matt Harnish
Slayer
God Hates Us All (American)
By Andrew Marcus
Mississippi Burning
Laclede's Landing welcomes Diablo! Café, where you can have a hot time in the old city
By Melissa Martin
Side Dish
COCA gets things cooking with a new series of classes for the culinary-minded
Dust and Bones
Dickerson digs up an undead Snoop Dogg and every horror cliché he can find
By Luke Y. Thompson
Mr. Fix-It
The American belief in progress, and the resultant failures, makes for high comedy in Jonathan Franzen's The Corrections
By Eddie Silva
Roll in the Hay
Daniel Brewster, through his DiMBy productions, seeks to raise hell and consciousness this Halloween
By Byron Kerman
Twisted Sister
Sit down and shut up, class. Sister has a wonderful lesson to teach -- though it's never the same one twice.
By Brian Hohlfeld
Year of the Cat
Author Mark Salzman gets by with a little help from a friend
Emmy or Not to Emmy?
That's been the long, hard decision for TV academy chairman Bryce Zabel
By Robert Wilonsky