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	<title>2017 &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>2017 &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>2017: Year In Review</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/2017-year-in-review/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Dec 2017 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2017]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Year in Review]]></category>
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  <span class="clan editors uppers"><h4>Twenty of the most pivotal events in Baltimore this year, in chronological order.</h4><p style="font-size:1.25rem;"><strong>By <i>Baltimore</i> magazine editors</strong> <br/>Photo illustration by Aaron Hope</p></span>
  
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  <h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Best of Baltimore</h6>
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  Twenty of the most pivotal events in Baltimore this year, in chronological order.
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  <p class="byline">By <i>Baltimore</i> magazine editors. Photo illustration by Aaron Hope.</p>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Trump/marches</b> <br/>
  The day after President Donald Trump’s inauguration, millions of people marched all over the country to champion women’s rights. Whether it was marchers filling up at Penn Station to travel down to D.C., or our very own Women’s March in Baltimore, oppressed voices were loud and proud on January 21—and remained that way throughout the year.
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Guinness opening</b> <br/>
  In January, it was announced that Guinness would open its first U.S. brewery in 60 years on a manufacturing site in Halethorpe, brewing primarily Guinness Blonde and other experimentation. Though the full site won’t open until summer of 2018, beer drinkers got a preview when Guinness opened a test taproom in October, which featuring on-site brews like the Golden Series, IPA, and Milk Stout. <i>Photography by Guinness.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Sagamore Development/UA</b> <br/>
  Despite Under Armour’s financially tumultuous year, Kevin Plank’s Sagamore Development has been hammering away and reshaping the city’s skyline. Projects like the Pendry Hotel, Sagamore Spirit Distillery, and the genesis of Port Covington have gotten underway, with surely more to come in the years ahead. 
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Corrupt BPD</b> <br/>
  The Baltimore Police Department—and the city’s effort to curb spiraling gun violence—were shaken by corruption charges against seven officers assigned to a gun-tracing task force.  Federal prosecutors alleged they stole money from falsely detained victims, filed for overtime not worked, lied to investigators, and wrote fake police reports. 
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Baltimore Blast</b> <br/>
  While some of the city’s other professional teams haven’t been wowing us with post-season play, the Baltimore Blast continues to shine, winning the team’s second championship in a row and ninth overall. Plus, the team made the move from Royal Farms Arena up to Towson University’s SECU Arena, giving even more fans the chance to watch the nationally recognized team in action. <i>Photography by Baltimore Blast.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Parkway opening</b> <br/>
  On May 3, the lovingly restored Parkway Theater—first built in 1915 and resplendent with the kind of hand-painted murals and ornate plasterwork popular in the day—re-opened to the public on the corner of North Avenue and Charles Street. The mission of the theater, which is run by the Maryland Film Festival, is to bring offbeat, foreign, and esoteric film and film discussion to Baltimore. <i>Photography by Justin Tsucalas.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Transportation woes</b> <br/>
  The temporary shutdown of the Baltimore Bike Share system due to theft and vandalism issues was certainly frustrating after several years of anticipation, but it wasn’t the city's only transportation fail. The revamping of the city bus system fell flat among commuters and then, in November, CSX unexpectedly decided not to seek an expansion of Howard Street tunnel, which had been seen as a boon for the Port of Baltimore. 
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Columbia turning 50</b> <br/>
  In June, Jim Rouse’s vision of a racially and economically diverse suburban city in Howard County turned 50 with great fanfare. Rouse famously wanted to create “a garden for growing people” who were “creative, tolerant, and caring.” While not perfect, it’s hard to argue with the results—in 2016 Columbia was the best place to live in the country by one national magazine. <i>Photography by Michael Oberman.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Confederate monument removal</b> <br/>
  Unannounced and under the cover of night, Mayor Catherine Pugh ordered the removal of four city Confederate monuments in August days after a violent conflict in Charlottesville, VA over plans to remove a statute of Gen. Robert E. Lee there. The move was both a surprise and long awaited—coming more than a year and a half after a city panel recommended removing or reinterpreting the monuments. <i>Photography by Brian Schneider.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Baltimore on film</b> <br/>
  Screens both big and small featured true stories out of Baltimore this year. The ripples of a long-ago murder made waves in the present with <em>The Keepers</em> on Netflix, HBO showcased a movement born of a moment in <em>Baltimore Rising</em>, and <em>STEP</em> and <em>Rat Film</em> hit the festival circuit, earning awards, nominations, and accolades along the way. <i>Photography by Fox Searchlight.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Solar eclipse</b> <br/>
  The solar eclipse made its way across the continental United States on August 21 and, if you were lucky enough to score a pair of eclipse glasses before the rush, they at least shielded your eyes from the rain and thunder that moved into the Baltimore area, blocking our view of the phenomenon just before it hit totality. Talk about a total eclipse of the heart. <i>Photography by Ron Cassie.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Amazon bid</b> <br/>
  Baltimore became a multi-city bid in October with both Port Covington and Old Goucher vying to be the home of Amazon second headquarters.  In Maryland overall, other bids were submitted from Prince George’s, Howard, and Montgomery counties—a fate that would bring 50,000 jobs and tens of billions of dollars worth of investment to the winning bid. 
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;"><i>City Paper, Baltimore Beat</i></b> <br/>
  One day after the last <em>City Paper</em> hit stands in early November, it was announced that a new alt-weekly newspaper, <em>Baltimore Beat</em>, would be joining the local media landscape, helmed by former Sun editor Lisa Snowden-McCray with an assist from <em>CP</em>’s Brandon Soderberg and Maura Callahan, upon publication, promising to be a place “where all parts of the city are seen and heard.”
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">ICE raids</b> <br/>
  Undocumented residents across Maryland flocked to nonprofit immigrant-counseling organizations, desperate for advice following increased federal sweeps and arrests by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The raids causing the panic, especially among Muslims and Hispanics, were linked to President Trump’s executive orders targeting aliens, and brought protests from Democratic state and local officials. <i>Photography by Larry Cohen.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Opioid state of emergency</b> <br/>
  The national opioid crisis continued to tighten its grip on Maryland and Baltimore in 2017. The first half of the year saw opioid-related overdose deaths rise by nearly 18 percent over 2016 statistics for the same time span. The majority of the deaths have come in Baltimore City, followed by Baltimore and Anne Arundel counties. The deaths are largely attributable to the increased presence on the black market of fentanyl and carfentanil, two synthetic opioids that are 50 and 100 times more potent that heroin.
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Amy Sherald to Paint Michelle Obama</b> <br/>
  After being the first woman to win the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition at the National Portrait Gallery in 2016, Amy Sherald rose to national attention this year when the gallery selected her to paint its official portrait of Michelle Obama. Sherald, who has studio space at the Motor House, is known for her her vibrant, figurative pieces that explore identity, gender, and race. <i>Photography by Christopher Myers.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Detective Suiter</b> <br/>
  Detective Sean Suiter, a 18-year veteran of the Baltimore Police Department, was shot while investigating a 2016 homicide case in West Baltimore and died from his injuries at University of Maryland Medical Center on November 16. He was scheduled to testify before a grand jury the following day in an ongoing federal investigation of the BPD’s gun task force. <i>Photography by AP Photo/Patrick Semansky.</i>
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Gun Violence, Homicides</b> <br/>
  For the third consecutive year, Baltimore City has posted more than 300 homicides. And as usual, the vast majority of those homicides have resulted from gun violence. Despite two community-organized, citywide ceasefire attempts—one in August, one in November—the numbers kept growing all year, bringing the city within sight of its all-time high murder rate of 353, a grim tally that was set in 1993, when the city had about 110,000 more residents.
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;"><i>House of Cards</i> drama</b> <br/>
  In October, Netflix cut ties with <i>House of Cards</i> star Kevin Spacey amid allegations of sexual misconduct. Subsequently, the show—which has contributed millions to the local economy since it started shooting in the Baltimore area five years ago—will resume local production for its final season in early 2018, with Robin Wright’s character as the new lead.
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  <b class="uppers" style="letter-spacing: 2px;">Medical marijuana</b> <br/>
  Maryland’s first medical marijuana dispensaries opened in early December, opening doors to the 10,000 Maryland residents who are qualified for medical cannabis throughout the state. While no locations are currently available in Baltimore, Curio Wellness of Baltimore County hopes to open its Timonium dispensary in January, while Temescal Wellness plans to eventually open a location in Baltimore City. 
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/2017-year-in-review/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Best Drinks of 2017</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/best-drinks-of-2017/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Dec 2017 14:36:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2017]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[amaro]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bars]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[beer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[breweries]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cocktails]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Year in Review]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=28261</guid>

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			<p>Every year in review for 2017 has a tinge of exhaustion, WTF happened, and a need for self-healing. So while imbibing seems like an obvious stress cure, I also found some other through-lines besides alcohol in my drink choices this year. There have been a lot of soothing honey and herbaceous notes, some much-needed coffee flavors (did I mention I was tired?), and a lot of Maryland firsts, which, in particular, have put a welcome and positive spin on this past year. </p>
<p><strong>Handsome Devil at <a href="https://www.thebluebirdbaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Bluebird Cocktail Room</a></strong><br />This past May, the top floor of 3602 Hickory Avenue was transformed into a beautiful, European-style bistro. With a name inspired by a Charles Bukowski poem, the literary theme is everywhere at The Bluebird Cocktail Room—especially on the drink menu that is laid out in chapters. I recently tried the new selection of winter drinks (which is phenomenal), and was so happy to see the Handsome Devil still available. With honey gin, wildflower honey, amaro, and activated charcoal (good for a hangover!), this black cocktail is as balanced and botanical as it is beautiful in appearance.</p>
<p><strong>Love Potion #8 at <a href="http://www.minnowbaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Minnow</a></strong><br />There are some serious magic tricks going on at Minnow, the restaurant from the owners of La Cuchara that opened up in Riverside this year. Take the bar&#8217;s Toddies for Two, which uses a vacuum siphon to infuse a traditional toddy with rosemary and citrus. Or the smoky and ethereal Love Potion #8, in which Wint &amp; Lila pure grain vodka, elderflower, and a house-made tea-based liqueur made with spearmint and peppermint all gets poured over dry ice for dramatic effect. But, beyond the bells and whistles, the proof is in the flavors and Minnow&#8217;s cocktail menu is full of some of the most herbaceous and exciting ones around. </p>
<p><strong>Dust Rings from <a href="https://www.unioncraftbrewing.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Union Craft Brewing</a> and <a href="http://www.stillwater-artisanal.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Stillwater Artisanal</a></strong><br />Brewed to commemorate the 9th annual Baltimore Beer Week, Dust Rings was created by two local powerhouses. The double dry-hopped sour ale took advantage of lupulin, a concentrated hop powder that beer nerds were going crazy for in 2017. Because of its density, lupulin bursts with zesty flavors and funky hop notes—and those notes really came through in Dust Rings, which poured a hazy yellow color and tasted of sour lemon, melon, and pine. This one was best enjoyed straight from the source at Union Craft or at sour mecca Wet City in Mt. Vernon.</p>
<p><strong>Guinness Hazy IPA #1 from <a href="https://www.newguinnessbrewery.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Old Gate Brewery &amp; Barrel House</a><br /></strong>Another exciting development in the beer world was Guinness opening its first U.S. brewery in 60 years right near Halethorpe. Though the main campus, tasting room, and shop won&#8217;t be open until summer 2018, diehard Dublin fans got a preview of what the brewers are putting out when the test taproom opened in October. So far, I&#8217;ve loved working my way through the Golden Series and seeing how each iteration differs, but my favorite Guinness variety brewed in Maryland is the Hazy IPA #1, packed with juicy flavors of grapefruit and pineapple. I can&#8217;t wait to see what&#8217;s in store for next year.</p>
<p><strong>Seeds &amp; Skins from <a href="http://www.oldwestminster.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Old Westminster Winery</a></strong><br />Speaking of firsts, Old Westminster Winery became the first of its kind in the tri-state area to produce wine in a can. The Western Maryland operation debuted its first three creations in Baltimore at Parts &amp; Labor and, while there&#8217;s a time an a place for the fizzy chardonnay and and the full-bodied cab franc, I was immediately drawn to Seeds &amp; Skins, a skin-fermented pinot gris that pours a slight amber hue. The brief contact between the grape&#8217;s skin and juices during fermenting adds to its color, gives it more body, and explains its description as a &#8220;rosé for fall.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Banana Old Fashioned at <a href="https://www.thepointtowson.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Point in Towson</a><br /></strong>I know, I know. Why mess with a classic? I, too, was skeptical when I first saw this on the menu at The Point&#8217;s newest location on York Road in Towson. What was encouraging, however, was that The Point house-infuses its Jameson with banana so you don&#8217;t have to worry much about overly sweet flavors or additives in some other flavored liquors. Plus, the addition of walnut bitters, Angostura, and citrus added a sweet and earthy body to the drink. It was as cozy as a warm loaf of banana bread straight out of the oven.</p>
<p><strong>Annabel Tea at <a href="https://r.housebaltimore.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">R. Bar</a></strong><br />When R. House opened just over a year ago, the food hall&#8217;s main focus, of course, was the cuisine. But now its central, square-shaped R. Bar has really hit its stride, creating innovative and thoughtful menu options utilizing its best source: the food hall&#8217;s vendors. Take a cocktail from its fall, Edgar Allan Poe-themed menu called the Annabel Tea combining Rittenhouse Rye, amaro, lime, bitters, and chai tea from corner stall Ground &amp; Griddled. Look out for other ingredients like wasabi from Hilo and apple brandy from Baltimore Whiskey Company. </p>
<p><strong>Baltamaro at <a href="http://www.thebaltimorewhiskeycompany.com" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Baltimore Whiskey Company</a></strong><br />While we&#8217;re talking about them, the Baltimore Whiskey Company has been up to quite a lot. We gave them a nod for <a href="{entry:46380:url}">&#8220;Best Boozy Parties&#8221;</a> and the distillery is making nice progress on its barrel-aged whiskey. For the past two years, they&#8217;ve also been developing three lines of amari (bitter Italian liqueur) and launched them a few weeks ago. The three lines consist of a Fernet-style, a Szechuan-peppercorn, and a coffee-flavored amaro. I got a sneak peek of the Szechuan-peppercorn earlier this year and, while it&#8217;s certainly an outside-of-the-box take on the traditional liqueur of the Amalfi coast, I loved the bold smoky and spicy notes. Plus, shoutouts for amazing branding!</p>

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			<blockquote class="instagram-media" data-instgrm-captioned data-instgrm-permalink="https://www.instagram.com/p/BbFBcVvFadb/" data-instgrm-version="8" style=" background:#FFF; border:0; border-radius:3px; box-shadow:0 0 1px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.5),0 1px 10px 0 rgba(0,0,0,0.15); margin: 1px; max-width:658px; padding:0; width:99.375%; width:-webkit-calc(100% - 2px); width:calc(100% - 2px);"><div style="padding:8px;"> <div style=" background:#F8F8F8; line-height:0; margin-top:40px; padding:38.101851851851855% 0; text-align:center; width:100%;"> <div style=" background:url(data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAACwAAAAsCAMAAAApWqozAAAABGdBTUEAALGPC/xhBQAAAAFzUkdCAK7OHOkAAAAMUExURczMzPf399fX1+bm5mzY9AMAAADiSURBVDjLvZXbEsMgCES5/P8/t9FuRVCRmU73JWlzosgSIIZURCjo/ad+EQJJB4Hv8BFt+IDpQoCx1wjOSBFhh2XssxEIYn3ulI/6MNReE07UIWJEv8UEOWDS88LY97kqyTliJKKtuYBbruAyVh5wOHiXmpi5we58Ek028czwyuQdLKPG1Bkb4NnM+VeAnfHqn1k4+GPT6uGQcvu2h2OVuIf/gWUFyy8OWEpdyZSa3aVCqpVoVvzZZ2VTnn2wU8qzVjDDetO90GSy9mVLqtgYSy231MxrY6I2gGqjrTY0L8fxCxfCBbhWrsYYAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC); display:block; height:44px; margin:0 auto -44px; position:relative; top:-22px; width:44px;"></div></div> <p style=" margin:8px 0 0 0; padding:0 4px;"> <a href="https://www.instagram.com/p/BbFBcVvFadb/" style=" color:#000; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:14px; font-style:normal; font-weight:normal; line-height:17px; text-decoration:none; word-wrap:break-word;" target="_blank">Out TODAY. The first #amaro made in Baltimore. Available at the distillery noon-4 and at your local liquor store soon</a></p> <p style=" color:#c9c8cd; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:14px; line-height:17px; margin-bottom:0; margin-top:8px; overflow:hidden; padding:8px 0 7px; text-align:center; text-overflow:ellipsis; white-space:nowrap;">A post shared by <a href="https://www.instagram.com/tbwc/" style=" color:#c9c8cd; font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:14px; font-style:normal; font-weight:normal; line-height:17px;" target="_blank"> The Baltimore Whiskey Company</a> (@tbwc) on <time style=" font-family:Arial,sans-serif; font-size:14px; line-height:17px;" datetime="2017-11-04T15:32:42+00:00">Nov 4, 2017 at 8:32am PDT</time></p></div></blockquote> <script async defer src="//platform.instagram.com/en_US/embeds.js"></script>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/best-drinks-of-2017/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>My Favorite Movies of 2017</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/my-favorite-movies-of-2017/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Max Weiss]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Dec 2017 12:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2017]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[films]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[movies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Year in Review]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=28151</guid>

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			<p>It goes without saying that the biggest entertainment story of the year was the #MeToo movement and how it took down—and continues to take down—some of the most powerful men in Hollywood. Kevin Spacey was replaced, at the eleventh hour, by Christopher Plummer in Ridley Scott’s <em>All the Money in the World</em> (a film I’ve yet to see) and, for his efforts—which he apparently did without breaking a sweat—Plummer was rewarded with a Golden Globe nomination. Louis C.K.’s <em>I Love You, Daddy</em> was yanked by its studio shortly before its release (I’ve seen it; trust me, you’re not missing much). The seemingly endless Harvey Weinstein stories continue to be stomach churning—and show that he wasn’t just an alleged sexual abuser and predator, but a man who wielded his enormous power to blacklist and intimidate intelligent actresses, including Salma Hayak, Mira Sorvino, and Ashley Judd.   </p>
<p>And of course, the less said about Dustin Hoffman, the better.</p>
<p>But let’s focus on the positive: 2017 was also a great year for film—with unusually good blockbusters (<em>Thor: Ragnorak, The Last Jedi</em>, and my beloved <em>Wonder Woman</em>), all sorts of interesting and weird art films, many of which you’ll see on my list, and some solid old-school cinema from the likes of Christopher Nolan and Steven Spielberg. For me, the biggest surprise of the year was how much Netflix continues to emerge as a powerhouse: Two Netflix films are in my Top 10; one receives honorable mention. Looking at my list, I don’t see any coherent theme, which is actually kind of cool. Film can be so many different things—and can move us so many different ways. The films below were the ones that moved me the most.</p>
<p><em>*Most of the blurbs are partially excerpted from my previous reviews. <br /></em><em>*</em>*<em>As of press time, I had not yet seen Paul Thomas Anderson&#8217;s </em>The Phantom Thread<em>. </em></p>
<p><strong><em>1. Call Me By Your Name<br /></em></strong>Master sensualist Luca Guadagnino brings us this ravishing film about the exquisite agony of first love. In Northern Italy, a bookish young man named Elio (Timothee Chalamet) becomes obsessed with Oliver (Armie Hammer), the rakish graduate student staying with his family for the summer. The two young men trade barbs and try to impress each other until they eventually succumb to their desire. All the while, Elio’s intellectual parents watch, with concern for their son mixed with jealousy, because is there anything more heady than young love? </p>
<p>As he did so well in <em>A Bigger Splash</em>, Guadagnino draws us into this bourgeois-bohemian life: the lazy days spent reading and playing music, sunbathing by the lake, eating al fresco, drinking wine and smoking cigarettes (<em>so</em> many cigarettes). As I watched the film, I’m not sure what I was longing for more: A passionate romance like the kind shared by Elio and Oliver; or a shabby chic summer house in the Italian countryside. (Spoiler alert: It’s the vacation house.) Michael Stuhlbarg, as Elio’s father, empathically delivers the film’s climactic monologue, where he tells his son to lean into his emotions, even the messy stuff. And young Chalamet, bringing all of Elio’s smarts, self-loathing, and romantic rapture to life, gives a performance for the ages.</p>

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<p><strong><em>2. The Florida Project</em></strong><br />By all accounts, 6-year-old Moonee (Brooklynn Prince), the heroine of Sean Baker’s remarkable <em>The Florida Project</em>, should not be having a happy childhood. She lives with her young mother, Halley (Bria Vinaite) in a seedy motel in the shadow of Disney World. Halley is a dope smoker, a petty thief, a hustler, selling perfume knockoffs and anything else she can swipe on the streets. And yet Moonee <em>is</em> happy. She sees the series of motels as her own personal playground, with best friends—also children of broken families and poverty—as her co-conspirators. They run around freely, breaking into abandoned rooms and buildings; scamming for free ice cream at the local soft serve; spitting on cars in the parking lot to see who has the best aim—all done with an incredible sense of mischief and discovery and fun. Brooklynn Prince, the young actress who plays Moonee, is an absolute find—naturally funny and impish with an impeccable sense of comic timing. One of the best things about Moonee—and Baker’s film in general—is that she is actually funny, not just “kids say the darndest things” funny. The film is enormously respectful of her <em>personhood</em>.</p>

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<p><strong><em>3. Mudbound</em></strong><br /> Something about Dee Rees’ epic <em>Mudbound</em> is so elemental, so deeply humane, so steeped in the soil and sins of the South, that it already feels like a work of great American cinema. The story is deceptively simple: Two families, one black and one white, share a muddy slog of a farm in the early ’40s south. The white family, while poor, owns the farm. The black family are sharecroppers. They both have young men who go to war. Jamie (Garrett Hedlund) is handsome with a quicksilver charisma. Ronsel (Jason Mitchell) is a devoted son and brother; he bears the extra burden of knowing how much his family needs him to work the farm. The film is narrated, in a kind of sing-song near poetry, by many of the characters, primarily the women. The matriarch of the black family is Florence (Mary J. Blige), a midwife and paragon of unsentimental strength.  Laura (Carey Mulligan), married to the solid, unglamorous Henry (Jason Clarke) dutifully endures this life she never asked for. The performances, top to bottom, are unfussy, clear-eyed, and note-perfect. Particular props to Blige, who gives such a confident, understated performance, you’d think she was a canny screen veteran. And Garrett Hedlund and Jason Mitchell will absolutely wreck you.</p>

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<p><strong><em>4. Dunkirk</em></strong><br /> Christopher Nolan’s stunning WWII saga is an injection of pure cinema: It’s filled with arresting images which it uses to stir, to terrify, and at times to nearly overwhelm its audience. During World War II, thousands of Allied soldiers—the majority of whom were British—were stranded on the shores of Dunkirk, France and surrounded by Nazis, who could easily pick them off from the skies. Their only hope is to be rescued—by fighter pilots and, in a remarkable true twist, by everyday fishermen, who brave the journey across the English channel save them. The story, told by Nolan on three surfaces—land, sea, and air—is, in many ways, about the simple honor of surviving—and, of course, about the stiff upper lip and indomitable pluck of those regular British seamen, embodied perfectly here by the ever-wonderful Mark Rylance. On land, Nolan gives us the single most memorable cinematic image of the year: Overhead, a German bomber approaches, and the allied troops—all 400,000 of them—duck in a kind of harrowing and beautiful choreography of doom, their helmets providing only illusory cover against the assault that’s about to come.</p>

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<p><strong><em>5. Okja</em></strong><br /> South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho may be a vegetarian, but I can only assume he is a cinematic omnivore, influenced by B-movies, Spielberg, Kurosawa, Miyazaki, Kubrick, <em>Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory</em>, and everything in between. His own cinematic vision is a wonderful mishmash of these styles—sentimental yet edgy; dreamy yet caustic. In this film, a line of superpigs are being bred as a potential future food source. When 13-year-old villager Mija (adorably poker-faced Ahn Seo Hyun) finds out the fate of her beloved pig, Okja, she embarks upon an adventure to save him—first to Seoul, then New York, eventually teaming up with a renegade group of animal activists called ALF led by the true believer, Jay (Paul Dano). Tilda Swinton and Jake Gyllenhaal ham it up wonderfully as the villains from the multinational corporation hoping to the breed (and eat) Mija’s pig. As for the computer animation, it’s stunning. Okja, in all her snouty, wrinkly enormity, feels as real as the mutt currently farting and snoring at your feet.</p>

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<p><strong><em>6. Get Out</em></strong><br />In Jordan Peele’s excellent horror-cum-satire, he takes a lowkey nightmare—a black man having to endure his white girlfriend’s performatively “woke” parents—and turns it into an actual horror of body snatching and would-be eugenics. The genius of the film is watching our hero, Chris (an excellent Daniel Kaluuya) realize these are not the microaggressions as usual. With Bradley Whitford and Catherine Keener as the super attentive parents, Allison Williams as the breezy post-racial cool girl, Lakeith Stanfield as a zombified black man barely clinging to his humanity, and the wonderful (and criminally overlooked) Betty Gabriel as the eerily submissive maid.</p>

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<p><strong><em>7. Beach Rats</em></strong><br />With <em>It Felt Like Love </em>and now <em>Beach Rats</em>, Eliza Hittman has arguably become our greatest chronicler of teenage ennui. It’s summer in Brooklyn and Frankie (Harris Dickinson) spends his long, listless days getting high with his buddies on the beach and his nights prowling the internet looking for older men to hook up with. He’s still deeply in the closet—to his friends, to his mother, even to himself—and he hopes against hope that the feelings will go away. A flirty, pretty girl (Madeline Weinstein) falls for him and he begins to date her—both as an alibi to his friends and to try to will himself to be straight. Meanwhile, his father has just died of cancer, giving him something of a built-in excuse for his moodiness. In a way, the film is about the battle for Frankie&#8217;s soul—will he succumb to his friends&#8217; toxic masculinity or will he be true to his own delicate heart? And Dickinson—a Brit!—is extraordinary in his film debut. He plays Frankie as sad and still and wary, with just a barely discernible yearning to be truly seen and understood.</p>

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<p><strong><em>8. Personal Shopper</em></strong><br />The beauty of Kristen Stewart—well, aside from her literal beauty, that is—is that she can do almost nothing on camera and still be arresting. I think this is partly because of all the fascinating contradictions she embodies: both feminine and masculine, aloof and inviting, fragile and tough. In <em>Personal Shopper</em>, her second collaboration with French writer/director Olivier Assayas, she plays Maureen, an artist and would-be medium who is also a personal shopper for a spoiled celebutante. Maureen’s twin brother Lewis recently died of a rare heart defect and, thanks to a pact the two shared, she expects him to contact her from the beyond. One day, Maureen is sitting on a bus when she gets a text message from an unknown number. The texter seems to be omniscient—it knows where Maureen is going and claims it’s watching her—and encourages Maureen to ask it questions. “Are you alive?” Maureen asks, chillingly. On Twitter, I noted that <em>Personal Shopper</em> was the most French horror film I’d ever seen (it’s mostly in English, with the occasional French subtitle) and this is because of its obsession with fashion and surfaces, its languid rhythms, and its comfort with ambiguity. The film is largely about loss—how we can essentially haunt ourselves through grief.</p>

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<p><strong><em>9. Ingrid Goes West</em></strong><br /><em>Ingrid Goes West</em> focuses on an especially <em>au courant</em> obsession—Instagram,<br />
that little corner of the social media universe where we post images of<br />
perfectly pedicured toes on sandy beaches, cute corgis in hats, and<br />
crave-worthy waffles. But for Instagram to work there has to be a yin and yang:<br />
both the person who curates an idealized version of themselves and the person<br />
who buys into that persona, hook, line, and sinker. Ingrid (Aubrey Plaza) falls<br />
into the latter category. Early in the film, she drives to southern California<br />
to meet and attempt to ingratiate herself into the life of her current<br />
Instagram obsession: boho-chic social media influencer Taylor Sloane (Elizabeth<br />
Olsen). Director Matt Spicer has obviously spent a lot of time lurking on<br />
Instagram pages and he gets the lingo, the forced fun, the desperate attempt to<br />
seem like you’re not desperate. The message of <em>Ingrid Goes West</em> is a fairly standard one—people<br />
aren’t what they seem on social media. But the execution is spot-on. The cast<br />
is stellar. Plaza makes Ingrid’s unhinged desperation both a little scary and a<br />
lot heartbreaking. As for Olsen, she’s the perfect foil—utterly believable as a<br />
self-styled So-Cal princess.</p>

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<p><strong><em>10. A Ghost Story</em></strong><br />It’s hard to quantify the<br />
audacity it took for David Lowery to make this film. It’s a ghost story, a<br />
haunting meditation on life, loss, and mankind’s place in the universe, that<br />
features a man under a sheet with the eye holes poked out. Yes, the ghost of<br />
the title is your last minute Halloween costume from when you were a kid—and<br />
somehow, improbably, that’s part of the film’s poignancy. When the film starts,<br />
we meet a married couple, played by Casey Affleck and Rooney Mara—called C and<br />
M in the credits. </p>
<p>As a couple, they have a natural physical intimacy, a nearly<br />
wordless simpatico. And then, there’s a car crash and C dies. M goes to ID the<br />
body; she’s not histrionic, just slow and sad, in keeping with the film’s<br />
rhythms. After, C gets up from the gurney in the morgue, the sheet draped over<br />
him, the eyeholes poked out, and follows her home. Mostly, he just stands<br />
there, useless, sad, silent. Time passes, because that’s what time does. M<br />
leaves the house, but C is stuck there. The film is almost defiantly slow. But<br />
your patience will be more than rewarded. <em>A<br />
Ghost Story</em> has images, ideas, a deep reservoir of sadness about<br />
life, death, and grief, that will stay with me for a while. It unsettled me,<br />
deeply, and rocked me way out of my comfort zone. More films should do that.</p>

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			<p><strong><em>11. Battle of the Sexes</em></strong><br />A perfectly timed film: In the midst of the women’s lib movement, tennis player Billy Jean King (Emma Stone) breaks away from the patriarchal ATP and forms a free-wheeling, all female tennis league of her own, while also taking tentative steps toward coming out of the closet. Meanwhile, professional irritant Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell), a former pro, several years her senior, challenges her to an exhibition tennis match, to once and for all prove the athletic dominance of men. She has no choice but to agree. The final showdown—about so much more than sports—had my audience on the edge of its seat and cheering lustily for the feminist hero to beat the two-bit conman. </p>
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<p><strong><em>12. The Post</em></strong> <br />Just as <em>Spotligh</em>t showed how dangerously close the Archdiocese was to <em>The Boston Globe</em>, <em>The Post</em> shows how chummy the D.C. press corps can be with politicians and political operatives they covered. Katharine Graham (Meryl Streep), who inherited <em>The Washington Post</em> from her late husband (who, in turn, had inherited it from her father), was as much socialite as newspaper woman, until she is forced to make the most crucial decision of her life. On the eve of her newspaper going public, and to the mortification of her advisors and investors, she agrees—egged on by her tenacious editor Bill Bradlee (Tom Hanks)—to print the Pentagon Papers, the leaked documents proving that the government long-knew the Vietnam War was unwinnable. Helmed by the great Steven Spielberg, <em>The Post</em> is, of course, a snappy newspaper-intrigue movie, filled with last-minute scoops and hush-hush meetings. But watching Streep as Graham come into her own, find her voice as a journalist, a woman, and a moral leader, provides the film’s greatest thrills.   </p>
<p><strong><em>13. The Lost City of Z</em></strong> <br />James Gray’s has directed the most overlooked film of the year—a true story of obsession and near madness in pursuit of an important archeological and sociological truth. Early in the 20th century, reluctant British cartographer Percy Fawcett (Charlie Hunnam) goes deep in the Amazonian jungle and finds what he believes to be evidence of an ancient, civilized society. The problem is, no one believes him. He keeps returning to the jungle—risking his life, sullying his already fragile reputation, and abandoning his family for long stretches of time. The Brits, of course, can’t stomach the idea that brown people may have been civilized before they were, which makes Fawcett’s journey as righteous as it is wildly impractical.  With shades of <em>Apocalypse Now</em> and <em>Mosquito Coast</em>, this film deserves its place among the best of the man’s-obsessive-quest genre. </p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/the-disaster-artist-tda-05209r-rgb.jpg" alt="the-disaster-artist-TDA-05209r_rgb.jpg#asset:54669" /></p>
<p><strong><em>14. The Disaster Artist</em></strong><br />James Franco’s comedy about the making of the worst film of all time is both a riveting portrait of a singular weirdo and a sneaky celebration of movie-making and the American dream. As Wiseau, Franco is hilarious and oddly touching, especially in the scenes he shares with Tommy’s increasingly disenchanted best friend (played by Franco’s real-life brother, Dave Franco).</p>
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<p><strong><em>15. Step</em></strong><br />The sneaky genius of Amanda Lipitz’s documentary <em>Step</em> is how it manages to tell an important story—about how hard it is to thrive academically when your home life is chaotic and how it takes a village to nurture and support under-served children—in the form of a triumphant “Big Game” narrative. Yes, the Step team at the Baltimore Leadership Academy for Girls has an all-important competition at the end, just like what you might see at the end of a film like <em>Pitch Perfect</em> or <em>Remember the Titans</em>. But the story is really about these girls—the first graduating class of the academy whose goal is to send every student to college—and the amazing group of Baltimore women who raised them.</p>
<p><strong><em>16. The Big Sick</em></strong><br />One of the funniest, warmest, and most closely observed films of the year essentially tells two love stories: The one between Pakistani stand-up comedian Kumail Nanjiani and his grad-student girlfriend Emily (Zoe Kazan) and the one between Kumail and Emily’s squabbling parents (Holly Hunter and Ray Romano) when Emily has a major health scare and is put in a medically induced coma. Based on the unlikely true story of Nanjiani and co-writer Emily Gordon’s own courtship and marriage, the film has lots to say about love, family, and faith. It also has a true generosity of spirit—the characters, flawed as they may be, are all completely endearing. </p>
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<p><strong><em>17. Baby Driver</em></strong><br />Edgar Wright’s wildly inventive and entertaining film—part winking heist flick, part musical—about a reluctant getaway driver (Ansel Elgort) who moves, drives, and lives to the beat of his own soundtrack is a pure rush of cinematic adrenaline.    </p>
<p><strong><em>18. Wonder Woman</em></strong><br />While so many super hero films feel like they were created in a boardroom, Patty Jenkins’ <em>Wonder Woman</em> vibrates with passion and authenticity and life. It wears its influences on its sleeve—a little <em>Raiders of the Lost Ark</em> here, a little <em>Wizard of Oz</em> there—but manages to be its own special triumph. The now-legendary No Man’s Land scene, where Diana/Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot) ignores the protests of her cohort Steve (Chris Pine) and leaps boldly into the battlefield to save a village is the “f**k yeah!” moment of the year.    <br />
   </p>
<p><strong><em>19. My Cousin Rachel </em></strong><br />I call this one Gothic Lite. It has all the elements of the genre: a mysterious death, a desiccated mansion in the hills, a forbidden romance. But it’s remarkably light on its feet—and quite funny. It would work best at a midnight screening, so the crowd can scream “nooooo!” as our dimwitted young hero (Sam Clafin) gets slowly sucked in by the wiles of the mysterious woman he’s convinced killed his cousin. But the film, which will keep you guessing until the end, defies the tropes of the genre at every turn, and provides a perfect showcase for Rachel Weisz’s beguiling charms. </p>
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<p><strong><em>20. The Lovers</em></strong><br /> A middle-aged couple, played delectably by Debra Winger and Tracy Letts, are each having extramarital affairs. They sneak around, creating elaborate stories about working late and overdue drinks with friends, but all of that is unnecessary—they’ve stopped seeing each other. Then, one day, they watch an old movie and drink wine together on the couch—by their tentative behavior you can tell they haven’t done this in ages. A few days later, they wake up, face-to-face to bed and accidentally kiss each other. Soon, they are cheating on their lovers—with each other. Azazel Jacobs’ film is drolly funny and insightful about the ways marriages ebb and flow. The film would be higher on my list were it not for a bizarre sequence involving the couple’s rage-filled son. But it’s refreshing to see a film that takes the desires and inner lives of 50somethings so seriously.</p>
<p><strong>Runners Up</strong>: <em>Blade Runner: 2049; Colossal; Dawson City: Frozen Time; Girls Trip; Lady Bird; The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected); Motherland; Nocturama; Only the Brave; Rat Film</em>. </p>

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		<title>Best Bites of 2017</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/best-bites-of-2017/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jane Marion]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Dec 2017 12:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2017]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dishes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[food]]></category>
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			<p>To say that I made more reservations this year than meals at home would be an understatement. I worked my way through countless crab houses, taquerias, vegetarian spots, and restaurants of every conceivable kind from chop houses to soul food spots to New American bistros. From Cockeysville to Federal Hill to Fulton, I slurped squid ink pasta, raw oysters, and matzoh ball soup, devoured plates of steak and baskets fried chicken with Old Bay—and I loved it all. </p>
<p>There’s a reason why comfort foods ranked high on my greatest hits list this year. When I think back on 2017, it was a year to remember, mostly for the wrong reasons between the #MeToo movement, post-election fallout, record-setting gun violence, and natural disasters, to name a few. In times of trouble, nothing soothes like breaking bread with friends and family. Here are the foods that satisfied my soul.</p>
<p><strong>S’oupe a L’Oignon Gratinée at <a href="http://www.petitlouis.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Petit Louis Bistro</a><br /></strong>The onion soup at Petit Louis is hardly a new find, but a recent visit to this Roland Park bistro reminds me why it’s considered a classic. On a chilly fall night, I enjoyed an order of this soothing soup rife with onions, spiked with sherry, and a raft of cheese blanketing the top. Think of this as French penicillin in a crock. </p>
<p><strong>Salmon Tikka Masala at <a href="http://www.royaltajmd.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Royal Taj</a><br /></strong>Baltimore is blessed with many great Indian restaurants, but The Royal Taj in Howard County was a new discovery for me, as was a fragrant dish of salmon tikka masala, which our server suggested. The masala sauce—with a touch of cream and a vivid smoky tomato flavor—was more delicate than the usual fare, allowing the seafood to really shine. </p>
<p><strong>Eggplant Parmesan at <a href="http://www.tagliatarestaurant.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Tagliata</a><br /></strong>Sometimes you just want the simple comforts of a red-sauce dish at a time when the classics have given way to one too many servings of beets and kale. Enter the eggplant Parm at this new Harbor East stunner. This rendition is comprised of a soul-satisfying version of top-flight ingredients including house-made mozzarella, a stellar tomato sauce, a crispy crust of eggs, breadcrumbs, and Parm that oozes, appealingly, over the copper gratin dish it’s served in.  </p>
<p><strong>Maryland Rockfish at <a href="http://ryestreettavern.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Rye Street Tavern</a><br /></strong>The Maryland rockfish at Rye Street Tavern puts a mid-Atlantic spin on southern shrimp and grits. A fat, just-caught piece of our state fish is paired with shrimp, tomatoes, and grits for a beautifully balanced dish that offers hints of sweetness and smoke. I’m not alone in my adoration—Under Armour CEO, and Rye Street owner, Kevin Plank orders this dish as a regular part of his repertoire when he dines here. You’d be wise to make it yours.  </p>
<p><strong>The Green Chile Burger at <a href="http://www.dylansoyster.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Dylan’s Oyster Cellar</a><br /></strong>Ordinarily, I’d say that any burger in a sea of seafood, including some of the best-shucked oysters in the city, is a throwaway item for only the most recalcitrant carnivore at the table. But if I said that while supping at Dylan’s Oyster Cellar, I’d be wrong. The burger arrives cooked to order on a bun that strikes the right balance between squishy and sturdy. The meat is of high-quality, and the whole affair is topped with nothing more than some green chile and so-called “special sauce” that more than lives up to its name. </p>
<p><strong>Tacos at <a href="https://www.facebook.com/cocinaluchadoras/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Cocina Luchadoras</a> <br /></strong>This sweet new spot in Upper Fells does everything right from the lovely agua fresca for a hot summer’s day to the house-made mole sauce to some of the best tortilla chips in town. Every inch of the tacos—from the tortilla to the chorizo—are handmade here (and topped with homegrown microgreens), many of them by owner Rosayln Vera’s mother, Margarita. </p>
<p><strong>The Pastrami Reuben at <a href="https://www.greatpastrami.com/pikesville/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">The Essen Room</a><br /></strong>Surprising to say, but Pikesville badly needed a Jewish deli, and it arrived just in time as my craving for corned beef, kreplach, potato knishes, and the Eastern European foods of my heritage kicked in. The pièce de résistance is the pastrami reuben—towering high onto well-seeded rye with three inches of meat, some sauerkraut, and a dollop of spicy mustard and Russian dressing. You will not be able to eat a whole in a single sitting.</p>
<p><strong>Crab Cake at <a href="https://www.woodberrykitchen.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Woodberry Kitchen</a><br /></strong>In Baltimore, a crab cake is as ubiquitous as a burger on area menus, and as long as they&#8217;re made with Maryland meat (in season) and from the Gulf (out of season), they’re always good. But Woodberry Kitchen takes it to the next level with their six-ounce cakes (a mixture of lump and backfin) made with nothing more than fish pepper, oil, and egg. The simplicity of the dish, in combination with the purity of the ingredients, is what makes this shine.</p>
<p><strong>Bread Pudding at <a href="https://www.idabstable.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Ida B’s Table</a><br /></strong>If you’re going to eat dessert, make your calories count. The bread pudding at this new downtown soul food spot is worth every spoonful. Made by co-owner Tonya Thomas, it’s drizzled with crème Anglaise and topped with cloud-like sorghum whipped cream. I try not to eat my emotions, but this cures everything that ails me. </p>

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		<title>One Is Too Many</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/one-is-too-many-mothers-of-gun-violence/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Aaron Hope]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Dec 2017 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[2017]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[murder rate]]></category>
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  <span class="clan editors uppers"><p style="font-size:1.25rem;"><strong>By Amy Mulvihill</strong> <br/>Photography by David Colwell</p></span>
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  <h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Education & Family</h6>
  <h1 class="title">One Is Too Many</h1>
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  Looking Baltimore's gun violence epidemic in the eye, one grieving mother at a time.
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  <p class="byline">By Amy Mulvihill. Photography by David Colwell.</p>
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  <h4 class="mobileHero text-center" style="color:#ffffff; background-color:#000000;"><i>Baltimore</i> magazine would like to gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Millie Brown and her foundation,
  A&nbsp;Mother’s&nbsp;Cry, in bringing this feature&nbsp;to&nbsp;fruition. </h4>
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  <b><span class="uppers">t is often said that there is no loss in life</span></b> like the loss of a child. The four women photographed and interviewed on the following pages know this all too well. 
  As 2017 draws to a close and Baltimore exceeds 300 homicides for the third consecutive year, these women are part of an ever-growing web of parents for whom this unthinkable loss is the new reality.
  </p>
  <p>
  Of course, the crisis is not confined to just our city. Whether we’re talking about mass shootings, suicides, or the steady stream of gun homicides that plague cities such as Chicago, St. Louis, and, yes, Baltimore, the problem is inarguably a national and longstanding one. In fact, public health officials—including Baltimore Health Commissioner Leana Wen and the dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Ellen MacKenzie—are increasingly pressing lawmakers to treat America’s high rate of gun violence as they do other health epidemics, like obesity or opioid addiction.
  </p>
  <p>
  Still, Baltimore’s gun violence—a sickeningly reliable drumbeat of murder that predominantly strikes young African-American men from low-income neighborhoods—feels like its own specific strain of the national disease. And while there’s no doubt that the parents and loved ones of the victims suffer most acutely, this backdrop of violence warps all of our daily lives, no matter how far removed we might like to think we are from the carnage. When we quietly detour because police tape blocks our commuting route; when we lock the doors and close the blinds as a helicopter spotlight probes our backyard or alley; when we send cards and flowers, cook casseroles, and attend vigils; when we avoid entire neighborhoods; when we continue—in ways small and large—to accommodate the constant violence, we are, in some sense, admitting defeat. 
  </p>
  <p>
  So while it’s necessary to examine the data for patterns that can inform smart policy, we must never accept the homicide stats as if they’re some kind of macabre box score. We must recognize that each statistic is a human being, a life specific and meaningful, and that even one loss is one too many.    
  </p>
  <p>
  In that spirit, we asked these mothers to share their stories. That they were willing to speak publicly is no small gift to us. May we repay their generosity by listening carefully to their voices, and continue to ask ourselves, “Is this honestly the best that we can do?” 
  </p>
  <p>Baltimore<i> magazine would like to gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Millie Brown and her foundation, A Mother’s Cry, in bringing this feature to fruition. </i></p>
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  <h2>L’Tonya Carrothers</h2>
  <h5 style="color:#c79453;">Lost Sherman Carrothers Jr., February 8, 2017</h5>
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  On the night of February 8, Sherman Carrothers Jr. returned home from visiting his mother and interrupted burglars robbing his house. The burglars opened fire, killing Carrothers, a 42-year-old father of seven and grandfather of four. He is also survived by three brothers and his mother, L’Tonya. No arrests have been made in Carrothers’ murder.
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  <p>
  That particular night, my son was at my house. We live directly around the corner from each other. We laughed and talked about football, as usual, and food. He ate dinner with me. He got there about quarter of eight, and he left exactly at 10 after nine. 9:32, he was dead. 
  </p>
  <p>
  He walked into his house, and I don’t think the burglars had any lights on. As he got inside, he went to lock the door up for the night, and they just started shooting. And evidently, he was trying to—he did—make it out the front door. They shot him as he was going. They shot him four times. The fourth bullet is what killed him. 
  </p>
  <p>
  About 9:20, I got a phone call from a neighbor who said I needed to come up there right away, they believed that my son was shot. I got up there a few minutes later. They had already taken him to the hospital, so my other son and I went over to Johns Hopkins. He was dead when I got there.
  </p>
  <p>
  About 9:20, I got a phone call from a neighbor who said I needed to come up there right away, they believed that my son was shot. I got up there a few minutes later. They had already taken him to the hospital, so my other son and I went over to Johns Hopkins. He was dead when I got there.
  </p>
  <p>
  I don’t know if he recognized [the burglars]. I don’t know. My son was very popular because he was a soft-spoken man. He was friendly. As far as I know, he didn’t have any enemies. He wasn’t nothing but a big old teddy bear. 
  </p>
  <p>
  We had been looking for houses [to buy together]. We just wanted a bigger house because we had all these grandchildren, great-grands, and we wanted a bigger yard so we could put [in] a swimming pool. This happened on Wednesday night, and we were supposed to go the next day to a second showing at a house that we both liked. That Friday, I told my other son, ʻI’m going to get that house.ʼ And I’m in that house today. I had to [move]. You know I couldn’t stay in that area.
  </p>
  <p>
  These people out here these days, they just don’t know what they’re doing, but, then again, they <i>do</i> know, but they don’t care. They need to get that evil fought because Satan is taking over. We don’t have to bother anybody. Folks out there: Put them guns down. So you’re angry with somebody—and that’s okay. That’s an emotion that’s okay to feel. Be angry with somebody. I get angry, too, once in a while, but I don’t want to go out and kill nobody. If I had my way, a police officer wouldn’t even have a gun. I didn’t care for them before. I <i>really</i> don’t care for them now. 
  </p>
  <p>
  It’s really hard to accept your child’s death. I know he’s with God, so I don’t worry about that part. The thing my mind keeps going to is how he died. I can’t deal with that. It was a violent death. 
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  <p class="artquote uppers unit">He ate dinner with me. He got there about quarter of eight and he left exactly at 10 after nine. 9:32, he was dead. </p>
  </div>
  </div>
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  <h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Sherman Carrothers Jr.</center></h5>
  </div>
  <p>
  Where do you go from here? I ask myself a million times, ‘Why my child?’ But then I ask God, ‘Why anybody’s child?’ One is too many, it’s just too many. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Some folks I’ve talked to still have their children. I don’t care for anybody who comes up to me and says, ‘I <i>know</i> how you feel.’ No, you don’t. You don’t have a clue how I feel. You can say, ‘I’m sorry for your loss,’ but for those whose children are still walking around, I don’t want to hear no stuff about, ‘I know how you feel.’ 
  </p>
  <p>
  I hold on to my faith. These people think that they have destroyed my family. They haven’t. They shook us up. They broke our hearts. Sometimes I don’t even want to get out of the bed. As a result of this—I had four sons—the other three keep a lot of things bottled in. They don’t even want to talk about their brother’s death. But I know I’ve gotta go on. [Sherman] had seven children. Two are minors, two little boys. One just turned five and the other will be seven on November 11. I have to keep going because I have to help those two little boys. He [also] has four granddaughters. I gotta be strong for them. 
  </p>
  <p>
  There’s never going to be any closure. What’s closure? I want some <i>justice</i>, but there’s never closure. If I’ll never miss nothing else in my life, I miss my son. I don’t know what else to say. 
  </p>
  </div>
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  <h2>Sharonda Rhodes</h2>
  <h5 style="color:#c79453;">Lost Markel Scott, March 16, 2017</h5>
  </div>
  </div>
  
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  <p class="mothers">
  <i>
  On March 16, 2017, 19-year-old Markel Scott was on his way home from hanging out with friends in East Baltimore when an unknown assailant or assailants shot him six times, including twice in the face. At the time of his death, Scott was a senior at Excel Academy, an alternative high school in West Baltimore, where he was just weeks away from graduation. He was the fourth of five Excel Academy students killed by gun violence during the 2016-2017 school year. A sixth was killed over the summer. 
  </i>
  </p>
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  <p>
  I work at night as a mental health technician. I was running late for work. And I just thought he was calling me, ‘Ma, can you come pick me up before you go to work?’ To hear those words: ‘Your son was shot.’ I just couldn’t even imagine. This was like one of my biggest fears, actually, because I worked in trauma as a nurse technician at [University of Maryland] Shock Trauma, and I’ve seen the violence. But me and my son always thought that violence don’t happen unless you do something, you know? People don’t bring no harm to you, unless you did something directly. But this wasn’t the case. He only had $5 in his pocket. He had his earphones on. He had his book bag.
  </p>
  <p>
  He made me proud. He had his moments, you know, but he was funny. He liked to dress—he really liked to dress; that’s what he was known for. He was talented. He was one of them kids who used to say, ‘No, I’m going to find a way.’ And he was very intelligent. 
  </p>
  <p>
  I loved Markel so much. I fought for my son. I wasn’t one of them mothers who turned a blind eye. I was one of the mothers who went through his room, went through his Facebook, if he left his phone open, went through his Instagram. He came in the house plenty of times when I’m searching his room and he’s like, laughing, because he knows I’m not going to find nothing. It was just for my own peace. 
  </p>
  <p>
  When he dropped out of school in 2015, I would wake him up at 7 o’clock like, ‘No, you gotta get out of here. You’re not staying in here if you don’t want to go to school.’ And it didn’t even dawn on me that he had lost like three friends right around the same time. He might have had post-traumatic stress, and that might have contributed to him dropping out of school. 
  </p>
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  <div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">
  <p class="artquote text-cneter uppers unit">Now, seven months later, I’m still angry because we don’t know who killed my son. so there’s this paranoia, this fear that I carry with me.</p>
  </div>
  </div>
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  <img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/DEC17_Feature_mothers_rhodes_son.jpg"/>
  <h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Markel Scott</center></h5>
  </div>
  <p>
  I think it was November or October of 2016 [that] he woke me up one morning. I had worked that night. I, myself, was eight credits away from finishing a nursing program. So I was tired, and I said, ‘Let me get an hour or two of sleep.’ And he woke me up like, ‘Ma, can you take me to school?’ I turned over all groggy, like, ‘Boy, I am tired. I just came from work.ʼ And I just put the covers over me like, ‘Can you shut my door?’ And then I jumped up and said, ‘School?!’ He started laughing. He was like, ‘Yeah, I already went to North Avenue and reenrolled myself. All you’ve got to do is just drop me off.’ He had already got everything straight. That’s all he wanted to do. He was supposed to graduate this year. I had a funeral, a graduation, and birthday for this same child within 12 weeks. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Now, seven months later, I’m still angry because we don’t know who killed my son. Nobody has been arrested for it. So I know he’s still among us, so there’s this paranoia, this fear that I carry with me. It makes me shelter my other kids, too. It’s like I’ve got to keep a hold on them, which is kind of bad, but good at the same time.
  </p>
  <p>
  I was so numb for the first couple months. I’m really just coming around to getting a little bit of feeling in me. There are no stages no more because some days I’m happy, some days I’m sad, some days I’m punching a wall, some days I’m screaming, some days I’m crying, and some days I just want to know ‘Why, God? Why? What was the testimony in this?’
  </p>
  </div>
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  <h2>Donyelle Brown</h2>
  <h5 style="color:#c79453;">Lost Louis Cody Young, July 1, 2017</h5>
  </div>
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  <p class="mothers">
  <i>In the early morning of July 1, Louis Cody Young was a passenger in a car that had stopped to refuel at a gas station in Northwest Baltimore. Shortly after Young and his party arrived at the gas station, a Volkswagen Passat pulled in and two men jumped out and began shooting. Young was hit multiple times and died of his wounds shortly thereafter. Young’s mother and his ex-stepfather, prominent Baltimore defense attorney Warren Brown, offered a $10,000 reward for the capture of the perpetrators, and police have arrested two suspects. Young was a stranger to his assailants, and the crime is described as one of “opportunity.”   
  </i>
  </p>
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  <p>
  It’s just senseless. There was no attempted robbery. There was no, ‘I’m going to gain revenge.’ He never even spent time over on that side of town. All of his friends are [either] at Stevenson University [or] they live on, like, the east side of Baltimore. None of this added up for us. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Cody was 22. Cody had taken off a year [from college]. He’s been playing football since the age of probably 12 or 13, but he left to play in different states starting at the age of like 14 or 15. He had an extensive career, and if you Google him, he’s there. And this is actually the first year he’s been really home, in Baltimore, for the whole year. 
  </p>
  <p>
  You do blame yourself sometimes. You do. You blame yourself like, ‘Why couldn’t I have just told him to . . .’ He’s twenty-something years old. I can’t say, ‘Get your butt in here now. Come home.’ These are grown kids, literally. He has a driver’s license. He’s legal age. I can’t stop him. But then you think about, ‘Well, had he stayed in college and never come back for a year . . .’ Your mind just tells you all kinds of things. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Cody and I were very, very close. His determination to help people, his level of loyalty was incredible. He defended everyone he loved. He would never let you go somewhere by yourself. Like that night, he didn’t let his step-brother, who is my ex-husband’s son, go to the gas station by himself. That’s the level of commitment. What he had tattooed on his arm was ‘loyalty over royalty.’ That’s all he said, ‘Mom, loyalty over royalty.’ I said, ‘Cody, what does that mean?’ He said, ‘I am loyal to those that love me. Royalty, money, materialistic things, that’s not success, mom. Me being loyal to what I’m passionate about is.’ And that was the biggest joy I got from him. He pretty much knew who he was.
  </p>
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  <div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">
  <p class="artquote text-cneter uppers unit">You have a city that’s so fearful. Do we walk in fear? Or do we take a stand and win back 
  with love?</p>
  </div>
  </div>
  <div class="picWrap4">
  <img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/DEC17_Feature_mothers_Brown_son.jpg"/>
  <h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Louis Cody Young</center></h5>
  </div>
  <p>
  I think [his death] has had a great impact in realizing how we need to stick together as a family and understand that when we disagree, that we don’t let it just fester. I think, more than that, it has affected my 7-year-old grandson, my daughter’s son. He knows Uncle Cody has gone to be with God, but he thinks sometimes, if it rains, Uncle Cody could come through the rain. But he plays football for Uncle Cody. He does well in school for Uncle Cody. 
  </p>
  <p>
  I can honestly say—maybe I grieve differently—sometimes I believe he’s still coming home. That gets me through. Sometimes I don’t believe he’s gone. If I believe, like, ‘He’s away at college,’ that keeps me alive. I think if I really just went home and said . . . and I can’t say it. 
  </p>
  <p>
  You know, I promise, if it takes me everything, if some days I can’t get out of the bed, I get out of the bed, because his life will matter. I’m working on his foundation, The Cody Young Foundation, which provides mentorship to children. This is not just about this individual child, that individual child. This is about people collectively. We are suffering. This thing doesn’t have a face. It doesn’t identify with your ZIP code, your address, where you live anymore. It has taken innocent lives. 
  </p>
  <p>
  I prayed not too long ago and the message that kept on coming to me was, ‘Baltimore is not a leftover. Let’s just begin to make it over.’ I think that these kids have lost so much hope. You have a city that’s so fearful. Do we walk in fear? Or do we take a stand and win back with love? See, anybody knows that love conquers everything. If you tell the most hateful person, ‘I love you,’ you’re going to love the hate out of them. We’ve got to start looking at things from that perspective, and I think that’s what my son did for me. He loved me. And so I went places—because he was 270 pounds, 6 feet tall—I was like, ‘My son got me. He loves me.’ I’ll never have that again. But I can have that if I build that in other people.         
  </p>
  </div>
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  <h2>Nicole Tilghman-Smith</h2>
  <h5 style="color:#c79453;">Lost Sean Williams Jr., June 18, 2017</h5>
  </div>
  </div>
  
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  <p class="mothers">
  <em>
  To those familiar with Baltimore’s dirt bike culture, Sean Williams Jr. was something of a celebrity. Also known as Biker Boy Sean, Williams was a member of Baltimore’s famed dirt bike crew, the 12 O’clock Boys, and a aspiring motocross racer. The 18 year old was shot in June while riding his dirt bike through West Baltimore. His murder remains unsolved.     
  </em>
  </p>
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  <p>
  He was murdered on Father’s Day. I was at a Father’s Day cookout, and I had just seen him. I noticed that he was gone, and I got this funny feeling. I asked his stepbrother, ‘Where’s your brother?’ and he said, ‘Oh, he’s over there shooting dice,ʼ or ‘He went to take the bike back.’ So I was like, ‘Something ain’t right.’ And then my oldest daughter called me yelling and screaming and said Sean had gotten shot off of a bike.
  </p>
  <p>
  I got to the scene as they were wheeling him to the ambulance. The EMT asked me to get into the ambulance. So I got in and just began to pray and started trying to call people to come meet me at the hospital because I knew that if anything happened to him that I wasn’t going to be no more good. So I was just praying, and the EMT was just saying, ‘Please don’t scream and yell, because that could make him go into shock,’ so they closed the curtain, and we went to Shock Trauma, University of Maryland. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Once one person found out he was shot, it just traveled. So it was like 200, 300 people at the hospital. Then maybe 45 minutes after he had been there, the chaplain, the nurse, the doctor, and all these security guards came back downstairs and told me that he didn’t make it. I just lost it because he had only been home for five days.
  </p>
  <p>
  He had been six months in prison. It’s illegal to ride dirt bikes in Baltimore City, so once he turned 18, they just put all of his dirt bike charges against him. I begged him to stay off the bike, but he wouldn’t. There was a gun charge against him [too] because one of his friends had called the police and told the police that Sean had a gun in my house without my knowledge.
  </p>
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  <div class="medium-10 push-1 columns">
  <p class="artquote text-cneter uppers unit">the population these days, it seems like everyone has a gun—and I don’t understand why. And that’s where a big part of the violence is coming from. </p>
  </div>
  </div>
  <div class="picWrap4">
  <img decoding="async" class="singlePic" src="https://52f073a67e89885d8c20-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/DEC17_Feature_mothers_tilghman-smith_son.jpg"/>
  <h5 class="captionVideo thin"><center>Sean Williams Jr.</center></h5>
  </div>
  <p>
  He just said that he [had the gun because he] wanted to protect himself with all these people getting killed. I told him, ‘That’s not the way to protect yourself. I don’t want you playing with guns. That’s not the answer.’ We really didn’t talk a lot about it because he knew how I felt about the guns. But the population these days, it seems like everyone has a gun—and I don’t understand why. And that’s where a big part of the violence is coming from. 
  </p>
  <p>
  Sean was a fun kid. He was an agitator. Irky. He liked to pick with people. He liked to make jokes. He liked to dress real nice. He liked to go out partying. He was family-oriented. He loved his nieces and nephews. He loved family gatherings. He always had to come through on a bike. From a young age, all he wanted to do was ride a dirt bike. Take ’em apart, put ’em back together. He did the motocross last January for the first time, at the Baltimore Arena. He came in fourth place. He just kept saying when he became a professional dirt bike rider, he wanted to move [me] out of Baltimore City. 
  </p>
  <p>
  I’m just an emotional wreck really, because I’m trying to wrap my mind around the fact that I’m never going to see him again. I work for the University of Maryland department of psychiatry. It took me like two and half months to go back to work because I’m in the field of helping people. So I just felt like listening to other people’s problems would not help me. [My colleagues] give me hugs and just try to console me. I’ve had a lot of support. I go to counseling. Sometimes I want to be bothered, and sometimes I just want to be to myself. But for the most part I just pray to God to give me the strength.
  </p>
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  <div class="row parallax bgimage1 memorium">
  <div class="medium-10 push-1 columns ">
  <h1 class="text-center" style="color:#ffffff;">IN MEMORIAM</h1>
  <h3 class="text-center" style="color:#c79453;">2017 Gun Homicides Baltimore City (as of December 8, 2017) </h3>
  <p class="text-center"><b>Total Homicides</b>: 325 | <b>Gun Deaths</b>: 28 | <b>Gun deaths as percentage of total homicides</b>: 87.7 percent<br>
  *Indicates a victim was shot in a prior year but died from his or her injuries on the date listed. <br>One victim, Terry Wells, was shot in 2007 and died in September 2016. His death was ruled a gun-related homicide on March 19, and is therefore included here. <br>**This information was collated from multiple sources, including <em>The Sun</em>’s homicide map, <em>City Paper</em>, and the Baltimore Police Department. In some cases, records were incomplete. <br>To correct an error or omission, email <a href="mailto:mamy@baltimoremagazine.net"> mamy@baltimoremagazine.net</a>.</p>
  
  <div class="medium-4 columns uppers">
  <ul style="margin-left: 0rem; list-style: none; line-height: 2rem;">
  <li>*Terry Wells, 29, September&nbsp;23,&nbsp;2016</li>
  <li>Sheamon Perlie, 20, January&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>James Williams, 33, January&nbsp;1 </li>
  <li>Davonte Jackson, 24, January&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Jamal Washington, 38, January&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Timothy Stephens, 32, January&nbsp;4 </li>
  <li>Jeffry Douglas, 47, January&nbsp;7</li>
  <li>Chris Pennington, 32, January&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Cody Boyd, 26, January&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Teshombae Harvell, 27, January&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Desean Mcelveen, 17, January&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Domonique Thaniel, 37, January&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Dominique Hall, 24, January&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Rashawn Fenner, 24, January&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Andrew Zachary, 23, January&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>George Cookson, 31, January&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Angelo Wheeler, 38, January&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Herbert Allen, 44, January&nbsp;20</li>
  <li>Shawn Davis, 34, January&nbsp;20</li>
  <li>Antonio Paesch, 24, January&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Sherman Johnson, 59, January&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Michelle Mettee, 34, January&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Kelvin Armstead, 34, January&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Stephanie Hullihen, 30, January&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Marvin Odell, 31, January&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Lennell Reece, 27, January&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Raheem Payne, 22, January&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Dontia Akins, 33, January&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Donnell Delbridge, 25, January&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Maryus Smith Jr., 31, January&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Brandon Anderson, 21, February&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Donald Sympton, 20, February&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Tonja Chadwick, 20, February&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>*Derrell Smith, 32, February&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Jessie Worthen, 53, February&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>James Hendricks, 24, February&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Lawrence Jones, 25, February&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Dominick Marshall, 21, February&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Tyrone Donelson, 22, February&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Sherman Carrothers, 42, February&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Davon Williams, 28, February&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Deontae Bluefort, 21, February&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>*Nathan Matthews, 62, February&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Sir Moodie, 27, February&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Bryant Beverly, 18, February&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Antoine Mayo, 41, February&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Jackie Burris, 26, February&nbsp;21</li>
  <li>Sherman Smith, 40, February&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Thomas Lee Jr., 38, February&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Derron Strickland, 35, February&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Laron Griffin, 31, February&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Jamil Owens, 40, March&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Sean Wood, 26, March&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Kalil Matthews, 23, March&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Dominick Smith, 30, March&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>William Lesane, 33, March&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>Andrew Jackson, 30, March&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Montell Pridgett, 24, March&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Markell Scott, 19, March&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Davon Fair, 24, March&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Donya Rigby, 28, March&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Dashon Houston, 26, March&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Alphonza Watson, 38, March&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Melvin Chisholm, 40, March&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Victorious Swift, 19, March&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Ernest Solomon, 26, March&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Fernando Riley, 30, March&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Brandon West, 27, March&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Lamar Chambers, 22, April&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Larry Miller, 20, April&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Douglass Holt, 36, April&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>*Lyndon Waddell Jr., 29, April&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Maurice Walker, 27, April&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Tyrone McMillian, 30, April&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Darian Watson, 27, April&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Corey Earl Brown, 40, April&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Tion Singletary, 22, April&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>Shaquan Trusty, 16, April&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Trayvon Chesley, 22, April&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Victor Lane, 50, April&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Phillip Bradford, 57, April&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Shahidah Barnes, 28, April&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Mario Jones, 28, April&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Michael Wise, 25, April&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Rominico Roland, 39, April&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Lavander Edwards, 17, April&nbsp;20</li>
  <li>Gregory Jones, 38, April&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Michael Scott, 33, April&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Mackinley Williams, 53, April&nbsp;24 </li>
  <li>Ronald Rice, 29, April&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Andrew Terrell, 41, April&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Steven Jackson, 18, April&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Larry Lawson, 29, April&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Ashley Long, 29, April&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Edgar Powers, 35, April&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Darrien Singleton, 23, April&nbsp;30</li>
  </ul>
  
  </div>
  <div class="medium-4 columns uppers">
  <ul style="margin-left: 0rem; list-style: none; line-height: 2rem;">
  <li>Donald Holbrook, 26, May&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Dartania Tibbs, 49, May&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Kevin Watkins, 30, May&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Charles Frazier, 44, May&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Tyrell Matthews, 24, May&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Tarrol Carroll, 39, May&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Raynesha Hunt, 24, May&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Carlos Montgomery, 44, May&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Channon Simpkins, 28, May&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Tony Tingle, 31, May&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Charles Gatuthu, 35, May&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>D’andre Johnson, 25, May&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Kwame Cheeks, 29, May&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Deandre Coleman, 19, May&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Michael Duncan, 37, May&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Joshua Perry, 32, May&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>Vincent Curtis, 53, May&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Dashanae Woodson, 17, May&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Tomez Lee, 32, May&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Brandon Lucas, 26, May&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Tyrelle Williams, 26, May&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Damontez Hudgin, 20, May&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Thomas Wyatt, 48, May&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Dorian Lumpkins, 20, May&nbsp;21</li>
  <li>Bruce Chester, 66, May&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Maurice Stovall, 33, May&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Tyrone Dickens, 27, May&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>*Dorian Faulkner, 29, May&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Bernard Madison, 28, May&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Jermaine Mitchell, 23, May&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Troy Horton Jr., 30, May&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Everette Brown, 35, May&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Omar Farabee, 31, May&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Donta Culp, 38, May&nbsp;31</li>
  <li>Donald Cherry, 25, June&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Greg Manuel, 24, June&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Robert Smith Jr., 28, June&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Stephanie Weissner, 29, June&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Tyione Brown, 19, June&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Name and Age Unreleased, June&nbsp;9</li>
  <li>Marco Stevenson, 22, June&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Rodney Wheatley, 28, June&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Charmaine Wilson, 37, June&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Sebastian Dvorak, 27, June&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Antonio Griffin, 26, June&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Tereze Pinkney, 22, June&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Sean Williams, 18, June&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Larry Bustion, 53, June&nbsp;20</li>
  <li>Khaya Lambert, 23, June&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Charles Johnson, 31 June&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Dante Hicks, 23, June&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Randy Rochester, 32, June&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Robert Gardner, 28, June&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Marquette Hall, 25, June&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Kamal Thomas, 40, June&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Dione Maurice Solomon, 29, July&nbsp;1 </li>
  <li>Louis Cody Young, 22, July&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Dionay Smith, 24, July&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Malcolm Parker, 47, July&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Ronnie Banks, 56, July&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Charlie Stevenson, 54, July&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Eingming Huang, 63, July&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Darryl Owens, 23, July&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Elijah Stratton, 32, July&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>George Thompson, 43, July&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Alves Stephens, 50, July&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Antoine Fritz, 23, July&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Devontae Woodley, 23, July&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Christopher Hockaday, 31, July&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Melvin Truesdale, 24, July&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Maurice Finney, 22, July&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Rashaw Scott, 26, July&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Malone Sanders, 21, July&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Vince Waters, 24, July&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Kevin Joyner, 46, July&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Rashad Parks, 19, July&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Necole Raheem, 28, July&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Donnell Pierce, 23, July&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Dustin McNeil, 26, July&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Montez Macklin, 33, July&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Dawan Hawkins, 29, July&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Donta Cook, 24, July&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>*Antonio Littlejohn, 55, July&nbsp;31</li>
  <li>Wayne Damon, 34, August&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Ronald Mundell Jr., 36, August&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Degoul Pietros, 36, August&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>*John Gray, 47, August&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Donte Johnson, 37, August&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Lamontrey Tynes, 24, August&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Barry Lee, 34, August&nbsp;7</li>
  <li>Deric Ford Sr., 54, August&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>*Thomas Chambers, 49, August&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Tyrese Davis, 15, August&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>George Madariaga, 69, August&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Thomas Johnson, 16, August&nbsp;11</li>
  </ul>
  
  </div>
  <div class="medium-4 columns uppers">
  <ul style="margin-left: 0rem; list-style: none; line-height: 2rem;">
  <li>Theron McClary, 29, August&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>Carlos Watkins-Smith, 23, August&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>James Wellman, 32, August&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>Terrance Newman, 23, August&nbsp;14</li>
  <li>Rondell Williams, 29, August&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>David Deminds, 23, August&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Devante Monroe, 24, August&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Allen Rice, 22, August&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Keith Davis, 54, August&nbsp;21</li>
  <li>Jeremy Hall, 24, August&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Jeffrey Quick, 15, August&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Devin Booze, 35, August&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Derrian Griffin, 32, August&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Troy Gladney, 40, August&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Vaughn Riley, 27, August&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Nakim Turner, 25, August&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Carlos Jones, 27, August&nbsp;31</li>
  <li>Vasunlala Irvin, 41, September&nbsp;2 </li>
  <li>Antoine “Georgie” Rich, 46, September&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Joshua Bayne, 25, September&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Tyrone Ray, 22, September&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Sheldon Chase, 36, September&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Theodore Pigford, 26, September&nbsp;6</li>
  <li>Kevin Nixon, 36, September&nbsp;8</li>
  <li>Ricardo Lyles, 39, September&nbsp;11</li>
  <li>Shawn Armstrong, 31, September&nbsp;16</li>
  <li>Branston Lewis, 32, September&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Rahine Doughtry, 43, September&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Darnell Rice, 30, September&nbsp;19</li>
  <li>Robert Bridgeman, 27, September&nbsp;21</li>
  <li>Kevin Bailey, 43, September&nbsp;22</li>
  <li>Jeima Bell, 29, September&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Earnest Brown, 48, September&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Michael Cudnik Jr., 22, September&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Michael Blevins, 24, September&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Kevin Crockett, 18, September&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Gerry Hall, 41, September&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Sean White, 23, September&nbsp;25</li>
  <li>Charles Hamilton, 39, September&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Angelo West, 42, September&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Kenneth Burton, 27, September&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Anton Carter, 39, September&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Bernard Mackey, 51, September&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Larry Brown, 18, October&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Devante Wright-Felder, 24, October&nbsp;1</li>
  <li>Daniel Brinkley, 24, October&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Bruce Williams, 24, October&nbsp;2</li>
  <li>Robert Breen, 68, October&nbsp;3</li>
  <li>Dontais Gaines, 40, October&nbsp;4</li>
  <li>Malik Michael Perry, 19, October&nbsp;5</li>
  <li>Dandre McLaughlin, 19, October&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Derrean Mills, 24, October&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>James Steadman IV, 26, October&nbsp;10</li>
  <li>Anthony Foster, 31, October&nbsp;12</li>
  <li>James Steadman IV, 26, October 13</li>
  <li>Daryl Singleterry, 43, October&nbsp;13</li>
  <li>Terrill Kennedy, 29, October&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Donald Rouse, 43, October&nbsp;15</li>
  <li>Julio Valdes, 42, October&nbsp;17</li>
  <li>Demetrius Mitchell, 21, October&nbsp;18</li>
  <li>Kendel Lecompte, 27, October&nbsp;23</li>
  <li>Reggie Adams Jr., 25, October&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Antwan Bond, 26, October&nbsp;24</li>
  <li>Elijah Johnson, 32, October&nbsp;26</li>
  <li>Melvin Ford, 35, October&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Reginald Jefferson, 29, October&nbsp;27</li>
  <li>Phillip Johnson, 44, October&nbsp;28</li>
  <li>Anthony Cheeks, 17, October&nbsp;29</li>
  <li>Dontay Parker, 26, October&nbsp;30</li>
  <li>Robert Brown, 54, October 31</li>
  <li>Janie McCray, 57, October&nbsp;31</li>
  <li>Maurice Byrd, 31, November 2</li>
  <li>Dimitrius Jones Jr., 31, November 2</li>
  <li>Ashley Quaster, 33, November 2</li>
  <li>Tony Mason Jr., 40, November 4</li>
  <li>Winfield Parker, 51, November 6</li>
  <li>Gerald Gardner, 33 November 12</li>
  <li>Dashon Griffin, 26 November 12</li>
  <li>Alexander Wrobleski, 41, November 14</li>
  <li>Sean Suitor, 43, November 16</li>
  <li>Levar Bailey, 40 November 21</li>
  <li>Travon Johnson, 30, November 24</li>
  <li>Preston Nichols, 34, November 24</li>
  <li>Stefon Cook, 20, November 25</li>
  <li>Alexus McBride, 35, November 25</li>
  <li>Joshua Richardson, 26 November 27</li>
  <li>Danny Grant, 50, November 28</li>
  <li>John Stevenson, 34, November 28</li>
  <li>Darryl Burks Jr., 25, November 29</li>
  <li>Malik Hall, 21, November 30</li>
  <li>Jon Hickey, 31, November 30</li>
  <li>Anthony Hall, 26, December 2</li>
  <li>Raekwon Leach, 22, December 3</li>
  <li>Name Unreleased, Age Unknown, December 6</li>
  <li>Name Unreleased, Age Unknown, December 7</li>
  
  
  </ul>
  
  
  </div>
  </div>
  </div>
  </div>
  
  
  </div>
  </div>
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