Wake-Up Call: Commerce City gets the business

The name “Commerce City” may not be the most marketable. Still, two years ago residents voted two-to-one to keep the business-boosterish name. But that doesn’t mean Commerce City can’t work on its tarnished image — and, in fact, it’s paying a consultant $80,000 to help bring high-end projects to the…

Wake-Up Call: The rest is history

This year marks the 150th anniversary of the “Rush to the Rockies.” As rumors of the May 1859 gold find echoed back east, hordes of fortune-hunters started the arduous trek across the plains to the confluence of the Platte and Cherry Creek. Many never made it to what was then…

Wake-Up Call: Throwing the book

Here’s the great thing about a book. Once you have it in your hands, it never goes offline. The Denver Office of Cultural Affairs hasn’t been so lucky with the web site where the city’s residents are invited to help choose the next One Book, One Denver selection. Voting allegedly…

The Week Ahead: No storybook endings

Now that we won’t be spending the week buying our Birdman hair gel and getting our support-the-Nuggets tats, it’s time to get back to reality. And there’s plenty of that. Today marks the start of Denver’s “Home Renovation Bonanza,” a two-week period in which homeowners and licensed contractors can get…

Wake-Up Call: No more educational regional directors or Tancredos

The U.S. Department of Education is eliminating several regional director jobs, disappointing Coloradans hoping for an appointment, the Denver Post reports today. According to a notice outlining the job eliminations,”These political appointees have not had substantial policy or administrative functions.” Maybe not while they were in the office — but…

Wake-Up Call: Your-Name-Here Field at Mile High

John Hickenlooper’s political career was launched when the then-barkeep campaigned to keep the name “Mile High Stadium” at the new football palace the taxpayers were building for Pat Bowlen and the Denver Broncos. Hick didn’t win that one: The stadium district overseeing the project sold the naming rights to Invesco,…

Bucking to visit every Starbucks

Former Westword staffer and Denver native Julie Jargon is now a reporter at the Wall Street Journal, on the restaurant beat, and proving with every story just how interesting the restaurant industry can be. Last week’s front-page story, “A Fan Hits a Roadblock on a Drive to See Every Starbucks,”…

Tony’s Market now open on Broadway

Farewell, Diamond Shamrock: Tony’s has opened at 950 Broadway, and we may have eaten our last convenience-store burrito. That’s because Tony’s stocks homemade breakfast burritos, as well as dozens of other ready-to-go food items — and, of course, many more prepared dishes and packaged ingredients that just need a little…

Wake-Up Call: Week starts with a win

It wasn’t just the decisive win that made last night’s Nuggets victory so gratifying. And it wasn’t the fact that Denver looked so good — if very, very wet — on national TV. What was particularly sweet about this chapter in the Cinderella story is that the Nuggets were never…

Argyll goes far afield to tout its patio

Argyll might bill itself as “a gastroPub,” but it doesn’t see itself as a neighborhood pub — not unless you consider all of Denver just one big neighborhood. I live several miles and fifteen minutes from Cherry Creek (and that’s if the lights on Speer are synchronized), and last night…

Wake-Up Call: Waterboarded!

“Do you believe in waterboarding?” The question was not from President Barack Obama or former vice president Dick Cheney, who are all over the news today for their comments on torture and terrorism yesterday. It was posed by former senator Gary Hart, who long before 9/11 was warning of the…

Wake-Up Call: The show must go on

“Denver Stories” is a genius marketing move: Every May, Curious Theatre Company picks four local celebs (or what passes for a celeb in this town), has a local playwright create a short play about them, and then produces all four on one evening that turns into a giant fundraising event…

Denver is ready for its close-up in Hick Town

John Hickenlooper didn’t even know he had a cousin named George until one day in 1991, when a fellow in town for the Denver International Film Festival went over to the Wynkoop Brewing Company for a beer. Hickenlooper isn’t a very common name, and those who carry it tend to…

Wake-Up Call: Don’t touch that dial!

The tipster poured her story into my ear, a long, involved tale of bureaucrats behaving badly. “I’ll talk to the writers and see if we can get that in the paper,” I told her. “Oh, I don’t care about the paper,” she said. “I want it on TV.” Since I…

Wake-Up Call: Here in Hick Town

George Hickenlooper has spent the last several months with Jack Abramoff, the jailed influence-peddler who’ll be the focus of his next film, which stars Kevin Spacey. For his last effort, the filmmaker used a much less experienced crew of actors: the staff of Denver mayor John Hickenlooper, who just happens…

Wake-Up Call: All aboard for a wonky week

I’m looking over the Platte Valley at the sliver of the “Travel by Train” sign I can still on Union Station through pricy lofts and office buildings constructed over the last few years. And some day there will be a lot more of them, if current plans for the revelopment…

Wake-Up Call: Back-to-school special

This morning, the 2009 class of North High School will rehearse for tomorrow’s graduation ceremonies at the Colorado Convention Center. The entire graduating class. That’s because on Tuesday, Denver Public Schools put a halt to North principal Ed Salem’s plan to prohibit about 50 out of 180 graduating seniors from…

Wake-Up Call: Ken Gordon starts the conversation

Ken Gordon was term-limited out of the Colorado Senate in 2008 — but he’s not going quietly. In fact, he’s started a new blog, where he offers this thesis: “I believe that the American people fundamentally misunderstand their form of government and their place in it.” As proof, he offers…

Send North High’s principal to detention

School Daze Against all odds, Michael Ballez will be graduating from North High School this year. Those odds include: the classmates who’ve dropped out, one by one, until only a handful of the kids he started with as a freshman remain in school. The pressures he’s faced — and fought…

Colorado Public Employee Appreciation Week lasts a day

Shortly after midnight on Saturday, May 9, all state employees received this e-mail from Julie Postlethwait in the Department of Personnel & Administration: “This past Wednesday, Governor Ritter took time out of the last week of a busy legislative session to acknowledge all you do for our State; he officially…