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Your D.C. weekend: Smithsonian Craft Show, Georgetown French Market

Your D.C. weekend: Smithsonian Craft Show, Georgetown French Market

Axios24-04-2025
Feelin' crafty? Lucky you — it's the Smithsonian's annual craft show this weekend.
The big picture: The gathering is all about artisanal, contemporary American craftsmanship and showcases 120 artists picked by a jury.
And when we say crafts, we mean work like handcrafted furniture, ceramics, jewelry, wearable art or basketry (not pipe cleaners and googly eyes).
This year's theme is "Visionaries," with artists creating pieces about what they think "might be" as they craft raw elements into new objects.
State of play: The craft show runs through Sunday at the National Building Museum.
It's part exhibit, part market, with the artists showcasing their crafts in booths. (Tickets are $25 for a single day, $35 for unlimited.)
Tix are currently sold out for Thursday's conversation with the artist Nick Cave, who's this year's recipient of the 2025 Smithsonian Visionary Award — but fear not!
You can get your Cave fix at his upcoming exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
More weekend fun:
📖 Local celeb chef José Andrés will discuss his new memoir, "Change the Recipe," with "How I Built This" podcaster Guy Raz at George Washington University's Lisner Auditorium on Thursday. (Tickets start at $45.)
🌻 Drool over Pinterest-worthy backyards during Virginia's Historic Garden Week kicking off Saturday and running through May 3. Local spots on this weekend's lineup include Old Town and Middleburg. (Ticket prices vary.)
🎶 Get groovy at Petworth PorchFest on Saturday. Hop between jam seshes hosted on neighborhood porches from 2-6pm, then head to the main stage by the Petworth Rec Center for tunes from 5-8pm. (Free.)
😋 Come hungry to Saturday's New Kitchens on the Block, which lets attendees sample menus from several buzzy restaurants soon opening in D.C. On the list: Concepts from the likes of Moon Rabbit's Kevin Tien and celeb chef Marcus Samuelsson. (General admission tickets are $119.)
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Wimbledon: Ben Shelton pleaded for extra time off for his sister at Morgan Stanley. It worked
Wimbledon: Ben Shelton pleaded for extra time off for his sister at Morgan Stanley. It worked

Hamilton Spectator

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Wimbledon: Ben Shelton pleaded for extra time off for his sister at Morgan Stanley. It worked

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The High Art of Pro Wrestling
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The High Art of Pro Wrestling

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'Salt, sweat, noise, smell,' Brook writes, 'the theatre that's not in a theatre, the theatre on carts, on wagons, on trestles, audiences standing, drinking, sitting round tables, audiences joining in, answering back.' Pleased by the show, spectators will chant This-is-awe-some! or Ho-ly-shit! and the wrestlers will throb happily and seem to float. But a match that leaves the crowd cold will congeal before your eyes. It's alarming to watch: The wrestlers are huffing and puffing and sweating like fiends to 'get over' (elicit a reaction)—but apparently someone has installed an evil energy-draining, drama-draining magnet under the ring. Nothing works. Nothing can work while this terrible magnet is operative. They heave, they thrash, they pound the canvas with their palms. Nothing. The crowd will not engage, insisting rather on exercising its fatal mandate of indifference. Such loneliness in the ring! This is the despair of wrestlers: unredeemed perspiration, useless bruises. 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If it happens, then you're on a 'run'—a gorgeous (and very profitable) slalom through the Wrestling Mind, fed into, collaborated with, psychically crowdfunded by the fans. It can last six months, a year, two years even, depending on how skillfully it's handled. Most of the time it doesn't happen. But sometimes it really, really does. In Say Hello to the Bad Guys: How Professional Wrestling's New World Order Changed America, the ESPN reporter Marc Raimondi chronicles one of those times. His book is sort of a cultural study, sort of a business story, but primarily it expounds upon a very powerful moment in wrestling storytelling: when Hulk Hogan turned heel. July 7, 1996, Daytona Beach, Florida. The event is the ' Bash at the Beach,' a televised showcase for the Ted Turner–owned World Championship Wrestling, rival to Vince McMahon's World Wrestling Federation. In the ring, two flaming heels, two bullyboys—Scott Hall and Kevin Nash—are brawling with, and somewhat getting the better of, a three-man tag team: Sting, Lex Luger, and 'Macho Man' Randy Savage. Nash has already kicked Savage in the gut—the cheap shot, the low blow!—thus guaranteeing the odium of the arena, and Luger has been knocked out cold (really? fakely? unclear!) and gurneyed away. So now it's two on two, Hall and Nash versus Savage and Sting, and we're in the wallowing, slo-mo, death-blow phase of the match, the moves heavier and more reverberative, the wrestlers shining with exhaustion. Soon all four wrestlers are prone on the canvas, stunned, rolling feebly. (This is a standard tableau in pro wrestling, its version of the last scene of Hamlet : bodies everywhere.) But wait! Someone is storming toward the ring. Who, what? ' Hulkamania! Hulk Hogan is here! Hulk Hogan is here!' scream the announcers, their voices blending in frenzy. 'Go get 'em, Hulkster!' Okay: pause. Rewind. A little context here. At this point, Hulk Hogan—real name Terry Gene Bollea—has been on the WCW roster for roughly two years. Prior to that, he wrestled for Vince McMahon in the WWF, where he and McMahon created the extraordinarily successful Hulk Hogan character: a babyface all the way, an all-American hero, beloved of children (his little Hulkamaniacs), clad in bright reds and yellows like a beautifully muscled crayon or piece of candy. A hunk with platinum hair, platinum mustache; friendly, bald crown; kind, droopy eyes; and a patriotic, virtue-promoting line in big-man patter—'Train. Say your prayers. Eat your vitamins. Be true to yourself, true to your country. Be a real American. Ooof!' So the expectation, as Hogan makes his way toward the ring, is that he's going to lay the heels—Hall and Nash—low. Hogan climbs into the ring; he tears off his SpongeBob-yellow tank top; he dazzles the terraced fans with the gleaming caramel planes of his torso. And then he bounces once off the ropes and does a leg drop—not on Hall or Nash, but on 'Macho Man' Randy Savage. Treachery! After which he stands up and gloatingly high-fives the two heels. In the arena, joy's fuse is quenched. Stillness. Sour, scattered sounds of outrage. The commentary team is apoplectic with despair: 'What the hell is going on? Oh my God! Are you kidding me?!' The announcers' horror rises. 'A career of a lifetime right down the drain, kid.' A hail of fast-food wrappers and paper cups starts falling in the ring. 'He has slept with the devil!' There had been heel turns before, and there have been heel turns since—but this one was a doozy. Who gets the credit here, the writer's credit? That would be Eric Bischoff, WCW senior vice president. Having lured Hogan over from the WWF, Bischoff had noted a gradual ebbing in the current of Hulkamania. 'After the new car smell went away,' he told Raimondi, 'it was kind of like a 'seen that, done that, been there, what's next' kind of thing.' Bischoff was also in the mood for some sensational, reality-busting storytelling. 'When you see things you've never seen before, your brain automatically shifts into 'Oh my God, I've never seen this before—it must be real.' ' He pitched it to Hogan in 1995: What if he became a bad guy? Hogan threw him out of his house. A year later, he was ready for it—although not without his doubts, as he told Raimondi. 'I went, 'Oh boy, when I turn heel, this is going to either destroy my career or this is going to be the greatest thing that ever happened in wrestling.' ' At Daytona Beach, the Hulkster went on to announce that he, Nash, and Hall were now a team: a heel trinity called the New World Order, which was soon the hottest thing in pro wrestling. Hall, Nash, and Hogan—now wearing black and cultivating vicious dark stubble around his platinum mustache—were stylish meanies. They were stylish meta-meanies: Nash and Hall broke into the control room during WCW's show Monday Nitro and pushed the producers around—wrestling as reality TV. By now it will be clear that the real world, where most of us spend at least a couple of hours every day, is basically a footnote to pro wrestling. But it does exist, so it is necessary to recall the image of Hogan ranting at the 2024 Republican National Convention. 'Let Trumpamania run wild, brother! Let Trumpamania rule again!' Wrestling as politics, politics as wrestling: Many have pondered the connection. Did the success of the New World Order seed the culture with a virus of heeldom triumphant, which would eventually flare up and flourish in the gleeful malevolence of Trumpism? Did Bischoff's bravura storytelling end up breaking off another chunk of consensus reality, like ice from a melting glacier? Raimondi hauls in some sociology professors at the end of his book, for intellectual heft, but his case is already made: The ones least caught out by the rise of Donald Trump were the real wrestling fans. To them, it was all very familiar. Pro wrestling happens (mainly) in the ring; it also happens in the imagination. Those booming, rattling arenas, and those riotous little halls, are imaginary spaces. Sometimes the action is rough theater; sometimes it's opera buffa; sometimes it's sheer absurdity; sometimes it's close to tragedy. Could it be better? Better written, better organized, a more efficient vehicle for whatever it is in the moment? No doubt it could. But if it was better, it would be worse.

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