All in Writing
A University of Illinois at Chicago study recently confirmed what some writers have been trying to prove for centuries: Alcohol enhances creativity. According to the study, a moderate alcoholic high loosens a person's focus, making it easier to find connections between remotely related ideas. Of course, innumerable authors have taken this theory a step further, purporting that if two drinks are good for the creative process, then a thermos full of sherry must be better. Ultimately, many of them became, as Irish poet Brendan Behan so eloquently put it, "drinker[s] with writing problems." Here are the libations of choice of scribes known as much for their brilliant writing as their prolific (and sometimes tragic) partying.
Jeremiah Griswold of Walnut Hills’ White Whale Tattoo shades the Venn diagram between self-expression and social justice. While living in Guatemala in 2007, he fell in love with the country and began volunteering in schools and gang prisons in La Limonada, one of Central America’s largest slums, helping design cover-up tattoos for former gang members who were starting over.
Do you like drinking outside? Sure. We all do. It’s a chance to get some fresh air, vitamin D and take selfies with colorful cocktails. But how do you know which bar patio is the best place to enjoy your simmering summer evening or Saturday afternoon with alcohol in hand? Solution: We made a list.
Nestled in the industrial belly button of Camp Washington, equidistant from the I-75 on-ramp, River City Correctional Center and everyone’s favorite salt dome, is an unassuming and unexpected oasis: the Camp Washington Urban Farm.
It’s true that blood may be thicker than water, but there’s more than a color palette that bonds blood to wine — especially when you’re talking about a family of Italians with viticulture in their veins. The son of Italian immigrants, Anthony Maieron grew up watching his father make wine with his friends in the garage of his family’s Indiana home, drinking out of juice glasses from the cupboard instead of something with a stem and generally embracing la bella vita.
n an effort to continue to ingest our vitamins and vegetables with as little chewing as possible, bars and restaurants have started adding greens to mixed drinks — and we’re not just talking about in bloody marys.
Walking into a DANCEFIX class at the Cincinnati Ballet center on a Saturday morning is a bit like walking into a mid-summer tent revival. The air is humid and slightly salty from the evaporated sweat of a previous workout; little kids in pink leotards buzz around the lobby while parents try to catch them and stuff them into jackets; and an unexpected velvet-gray French bulldog comes bounding out of nowhere, chasing a ball.
No matter who you're shopping for this holiday season — cooks, cuddlers, tiny humans, furry friends — our 2016 Gift Guide has you covered with present ideas for the people you know.
CityBeat’s 2016 Love List will introduce you to, in a strictly platonic way, 10 passionate Cincinnatians in various service, creative and philanthropic industries who have turned what they love into their lifestyles. These are portraits of lovable locals striving to make a difference in the world by pursuing a path that celebrates the best in humanity — art, music, kindness, creativity and the ability to dream.
If you haven’t planned for a full-blown getaway this long holiday weekend, there’s still time to design a regional road trip — something a little closer to home, but equally as interesting. We’ve compiled a list of drive-worthy finds within a couple hundred miles of Cincinnati to satisfy all types of people (or at least some types). With selections spanning art adventures, epicurean escapes, interesting oddities and tiny towns, you’re bound to find a reason to buckle up and go.
We decided to look into Ohio and Northern Kentucky laws to see if there was anything else totally absurd (possibly sexist) left in writing in the Ohio Revised Code/Cincinnati Municipal Code/other codes. And while there was nothing too bizarre — logically, you can’t walk around in a mask, even a luchador one, in case you rob a bank or stab somebody — but some of the laws’ requirements and wording are hilarious, incredibly obvious and/or idiotic. We’ve collected some of our favorites to keep you up-to-date on what you can and cannot do in areas around town. Be warned: You have to keep a lot of your bodily fluids to yourself.