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	<title>Star Spangled Spectacular &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Star Spangled Spectacular &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Top Baltimore Moments in 2014</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/top-moments-that-defined-baltimore-in-2014/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2014 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amazon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baltimore Orioles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Horseshoe Casino Baltimore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Larry Hogan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marijuana]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Michael Phelps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Molly Shattuck]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[National Aquarium]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ray Rice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Serial]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Under Armour]]></category>
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<h1 style=""  class="number">1</h1><h2 class="event">Orioles Advance to the American League Championship Series for the First Time in 17 Years</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>In what felt like a</strong> “team of destiny” sort of season (until the bitter end, of course), the Baltimore Orioles overcame all odds to accomplish a feat they hadn’t achieved in nearly 20 years. Despite losing All-Stars Manny Machado, Matt Wieters, and Chris Davis to injuries and some negligent paperwork, the Orioles prevailed, clinching the American League East Division and sweeping the Detroit Tigers in the ALDS. Yes, we all know how the season ended, with some other “team of destiny” (I think they were from Missouri?) surpassing us and advancing to the World Series (only to lose to the San Francisco Giants). But it was too late. Baltimore had already fallen head over heels for the 2014 Orioles, as our skyline glowed orange, the bird logo was plastered on every surface, and a new generation got a taste of Orioles Magic. Job well done, boys. </p>

<blockquote>“We reminded the 
country what a great 
baseball city, and city in 
general, Baltimore is. I feel good about that.” 
 &mdash; Buck Showalter, Orioles manager</blockquote>
<!--2-->

<h1 style=""  class="number yellow">2</h1><h2 class="event">Hogan Defeats Brown 
for Governor</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>As a two-term Lieutenant Governor </strong>with the backing of the Democratic Party establishment, Anthony Brown was supposed to win in a walk. But Marylanders flipped the script on election night when Republican Larry Hogan was elected governor in a state where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans 2 to 1. And while the results &mdash; Hogan won by five percentage points &mdash; stunned political prognosticators, in retrospect, the signs were there to be read. Hogan shrewdly framed the election as a referendum on outgoing Gov. Martin O’Malley’s often-divisive, tax-heavy policies, saying a vote for Anthony Brown would be tantamount to a third O’Malley term. Then, there was June’s Democratic primary, which revealed weak support for Brown in some areas of the state. In contrast, voters were receptive to Hogan, an Anne Arundel County businessman, who promised lower taxes and fewer regulations on free enterprise. Though both sides hustled at the end (Bill Clinton and Michelle Obama appeared for Brown, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie stumped for Hogan), the race was already over &mdash; we just didn’t know it yet.</p>

<blockquote>“Wow, what a historic night 
in Maryland. They said it couldn’t 
be done here in Maryland. 
But together, we did it.” 
&mdash; Governor-elect Larry Hogan at his victory party</blockquote>

<!--3-->

<h1 style=""  class="number purple">3</h1><h2 class="event">Ray Rice Scandal 
Starts National Conversation about the NFL and Domestic Abuse</h2>

<p class="event-desc xm"><strong>The first video, released</strong> by TMZ on February 19, was damning enough. It showed Ravens running back Ray Rice dragging the unconscious body of his then-fiancée, now wife, Janay, from a casino elevator in Atlantic City. Ravens fans hoped against hope that our eyes were lying to us: Maybe he had struck her by accident? Maybe she was unconscious from alcohol? The NFL suspended Rice for two games, which most agreed seemed too slight. Then, the bombshell: On September 8, TMZ released the footage from inside the elevator and it was the worst-case scenario: a punch to the face that instantly knocked Janay out cold. The Ravens terminated Rice’s contract almost immediately, and, shortly thereafter, the league suspended Rice indefinitely. But the saga was far from over: ESPN’s <em>Outside the Lines</em> wrote a blockbuster story that implied that both the Ravens and the league knew much more than they had let on and were essentially involved in a cover-up. Many called for the resignation of league commissioner Roger Goodell. In a press conference, Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti denied all charges. The league stiffened its penalties for domestic violence to a mandatory six-game suspension and vowed to take the problem more seriously going forward. Meanwhile, Ray and Janay remain married. At press time, Rice was appealing the suspension. </p>

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<h1 style="margin-top: 24px;"  class="number brown">4</h1><h2 style="margin-top: 36px;"  class="event">Baltimore Throws a Really Big “Shew”</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Charm City never looked</strong> better on national TV than it did in mid-September, when we threw what might have been our biggest bash ever, Star-Spangled Spectacular, celebrating the 200th anniversary of the defense of Baltimore against the British and the penning of the words to the national anthem by a little-known Georgetown lawyer named Francis Scott Key. The final reports on attendance and economic impact aren’t available yet, but earlier tallies counted more than 1 million visitors during the event’s week of Blue Angels acrobatics, visiting tall ships, concerts, battle re-enactments, and epic fireworks displays. Even Vice President Joe Biden stopped by for the climatic (and televised) Saturday night ceremony at Fort McHenry. It’ll be a long time before there’s another event the size of Star-Spangled Spectacular, which was a follow-up to 2012’s equally successful Sailabration. The only downside to a party that successful? Wondering how we’ll ever top it.</p>

<blockquote>“We’re obviously looking for the next great thing that we can promote.”&mdash; Tom Noonan, CEO of Visit Baltimore</blockquote>

<!--5-->

<h1 style=""  class="number orange">5</h1><h2 class="event">Horseshoe Casino Opens Big</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Regardless of whether</strong> you voted for or against gaming in Maryland, the long-awaited opening of the $442-million behemoth Horseshoe Casino Baltimore was proof positive that the folks at Caesars Entertainment know how to make an entrance. With sexy showgirls and death-defying aerial artists, as well as pop star Iggy Azalea and celebrity chefs Duff Goldman, Aarón Sánchez, John Besh, and Guy Fieri, the August 26 kicff celebration for Baltimore City’s first casino was an affair to remember. And though, days later, a fight broke out between two patrons waiting in the food court’s pizza line, that didn’t seem to deter anyone’s appetite for staying &mdash; and playing. In its first weekend, more than 50,000 guests came to visit, and throughout September &mdash; the casino’s first full month of operation &mdash; Horseshoe raked in $22,390,602.91, helping boost statewide casino revenue to a record $82.4 million. So far at least, it seems like Lady Luck is on Horseshoe’s side. 
</p>

<blockquote>“Thank you to everyone waiting so patiently, we have reached capacity but are working efficiently and diligently to get people in quickly.”
&mdash; Horseshoe Casino Twitter post on opening night</blockquote>

<!--6-->

<h1 style=""  class="number blue">6</h1><h2 class="event">Shooting at 
The Mall in Columbia Terrifies
</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>January 25 was an</strong> unexceptional mid-winter day until news broke just before noon that a shooting was underway at The Mall in Columbia. There were reports of people sheltering in the food court, police and SWAT teams on the scene, and families desperately trying to contact loved ones inside. The day’s grim tally: three dead (the shooter, 19-year old Darion Marcus Aguilar; 21-year-old Brianna Benlolo; and 25-year-old Tyler Johnson), plus five injured. In the days and weeks that followed, a fuller picture emerged, and it was a sadly familiar one. Aguilar, a College Park resident, had not known his victims; was obsessed with mass shootings, especially the 1999 Columbine massacre; and had been hearing voices. The incident recalled any number of recent tragedies——from the Aurora, CO, movie-theater and Sandy Hook school shootings of 2012 to the D.C. Navy Yard shooting of 2013. Still, disbelief reigned. “I truly never thought something like this would ever happen here,” one mall employee told CBS News. “It’s really, really shocking.”
</p>

<blockquote>“I swear everyone is running.” &mdash; Tweet from mall employee Rachel Hunter during the shooting</blockquote>

<!--7-->

<h1 style=""  class="number green">7</h1><h2 class="event">The Landslide Brings 26th Street Down</h2>

<p class="event-desc xm"><strong>On a rainy late-April</strong>  afternoon, stunned residents in Charles Village watched as their parked cars, streetlights, and sidewalk &mdash; slowly at first, then all at once &mdash; collapsed, landing atop the CSX railroad tracks below. Naturally, one of the neighbors caught the entire scene on video, which went viral, racking up more than 10 million views. In addition to the spectacle, the landslide (to be clear, it was not a sinkhole) became a rallying point for those tired of city government’s seemingly <em>laissez-faire</em> attitude toward infrastructure maintenance. It turned out residents had been complaining about the block’s instability to both the city and CSX for several years but to little effect. Fortunately, no one was injured, but some residents were forced to leave their homes for weeks until gas and water lines could be restored. And though rebuilding is now underway, the costs keep mounting. In addition to the $18.5 million the city says it will take to reconstruct the block, some residents are considering legal action.</p>

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<h1 style=""  class="number yellow">8</h1><h2 class="event">Michael Phelps Busted for DUI, Enters Rehab</h2><p class="event-desc"><strong>Watching Michael Phelps exceed</strong>  limits in the pool is one thing, but on the road and behind the wheel? Quite another. But that was the situation when the Olympic champ was pulled over after driving erratically when returning from the Horseshoe Casino on September 30. He failed field sobriety tests, registered a blood-alcohol level of .14 (well over the state’s .08 limit), and was subsequently charged with DUI, excessive speed, and crossing double lane lines in the Fort McHenry Tunnel. Of course, this is not the first time Phelps’s golden boy reputation has been tarnished. He pleaded guilty to driving while impaired in 2004, and a photo was released of him smoking pot in 2009. Banned from competition for six months by USA Swimming as a result of the arrest, Phelps checked himself into a six-week in-patient substance-abuse program at the beginning of October. Let’s hope he got the help he needed &mdash; or at least instructions for how to download Uber. </p>

<blockquote>“I recognize that this is not my first lapse in judgment, and I am extremely disappointed with myself.” 
&mdash; Michael Phelps</blockquote>

<!--9-->

<h1 style=""  class="number purple">9</h1><h2 class="event">Baltimore Confronts Police Conduct</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Maybe it was just</strong>  a coincidence that the Baltimore Police Department’s years-long struggle with excessive-force and misconduct cases came to a head when it did &mdash; against the backdrop of the Ferguson, MO, shooting by a white police officer of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old. Or maybe the coverage just heightened public awareness of police-misconduct cases. In any case, after fresh charges of misconduct hit the news in September &mdash; including bystander video of an officer beating a man at a North Avenue bus stop &mdash; Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake and police commissioner Anthony W. Batts asked the U.S. Justice Department to investigate the police department’s history of &mdash; and response to &mdash; use-of-force cases that over the past several years have resulted in millions of dollars in legal settlements. At the same time, such incidents have renewed the call for officers to wear body cameras, an idea both the mayor and city council profess to support, though they differ on the details of implementation. Batts also recommended increasing staff in the Internal Affairs Division, which handles misconduct cases, as well as more training of street officers and increased openness regarding such incidents. </p>

<blockquote>“It’s pretty terrible. People act like it doesn’t happen daily and quite often. It does happen daily and quite often.” 
 &mdash; City Councilman Carl Stokes, who represents the area where the North Avenue incident occurred, to The Baltimore Sun</blockquote>

<!--10-->

<h1 style=""  class="number brown">10</h1><h2 class="event">Amazon and Maryland Make it Official</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Though Amazon’s two new</strong>  Baltimore processing plants are undoubtedly net wins for the area, they do come with one sizable string attached: sales tax. The 1-million-square-foot distribution center scheduled to open in early 2015 at the old General Motors site on Broening Highway will support more than 1,000 jobs and improve delivery times. The smaller (only 345,000-square-feet) “sortation” center on Holabird Avenue in Dundalk is already open, supporting more than 300 part- and full-time staffers. So what’s the catch? Amazon’s physical presence in the state requires the company to begin collecting Maryland sales tax on all purchases, which it did as of October 1. From now on, all Amazon transactions made by Marylanders will be subject to the 6 percent levy, regardless of where a shipment originates, a practice the state expects to add an extra $50 million to its coffers this fiscal year. We suppose it is, quite literally, a small price to pay for getting the electric toothbrush we ordered online that much faster. </p>

<blockquote>“It will have what’s the equivalent of 28 foot-ball fields 
of space.” &mdash; Kelly Cheeseman, Amazon spokeswoman about the new distribution center.</blockquote>

<!--11-->

<h1 style=""  class="number orange">11</h1><h2 class="event">Molly Shattuck Accused of Raping 15-Year-Old Boy</h2>

<p class="event-desc xm"><strong>The rumors began</strong>  circulating, particularly among the families of the prestigious McDonogh School, long before the arrest was made. Then, on November 5, the shocking news became public: Molly Shattuck, the now ex-wife of former Constellation Energy CEO Mayo Shattuck and a former Ravens cheerleader, was indicted in Delaware for two counts of third-degree rape, four counts of unlawful sexual conduct in the second degree, and three counts of providing alcohol to a minor. According to the indictment, Shattuck first contacted the 15-year-old, who attended McDonogh with her eldest son, via messages on Instagram. Then, while on vacation in Bethany Beach, she gave the boy alcohol and performed oral sex on him. Shattuck’s prim mug shot barely resembled the bubbly woman known around town for her philanthropic work, lifestyle ventures (a book, an exercise DVD), and the celebrity she achieved as both the oldest NFL cheerleader and a participant on the reality show <em>Secret Millionaire</em>. Shattuck pleaded not guilty at her November arraignment. If convicted on all charges, she faces up to 28 years in prison.</p>



<!--12-->

<h1 style=""  class="number blue">12</h1><h2 class="event">Maryland Decriminalizes Small Amounts of Pot</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>This year, Maryland joined</strong>  the national trend toward minimizing or eliminating penalties for marijuana usage and possession with the passage of three bills. Two of the bills altered Maryland’s already-existing medicinal marijuana laws, which allowed for prescriptive usage but made obtaining the drug difficult. On June 1, licensed dispensaries became legal and a maximum of 15 growers were allowed to cultivate the crop, though that number could rise if demand warrants. Then, as of October 1, the third bill went into effect, reducing the penalty for a first offense of possession of less than 10 grams of pot to a civil fine of up to $100 and no jail time. Penalties are stiffer for subsequent offenses and for those under 21 years of age, but none involve jail. But don’t spark that joint just yet. Possession of pot paraphernalia, such as bongs and pipes, remains criminalized, though many &mdash; both for and against &mdash; think decriminalization is merely a pit stop on the road to full legalization, regulation, and taxation of the substance. We know, it blows our mind, too. </p>

<blockquote>“Decriminalizing possession of marijuana is a key step on the road to saner drug policy in Maryland.” &mdash; Sara Love, public policy director for the ACLU of Maryland
</blockquote>

<!--13-->

<h1 style=""  class="number green">13</h1><h2 class="event"><em>City Paper</em> Bought by <em>The Sun</em></h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong><em>City Paper</em> was founded</strong>  in 1977 as a brash, editorially adventurous alternative to <em>The Baltimore Sun</em>. Over the course of the next 37 years, it developed into a crucial and critical outlet that didn’t hesitate to question authority or speak truth to power. So when <em>City Paper</em> was put up for sale last summer, its readership worried that new ownership might severely curtail its independence. Those concerns were exacerbated in February when <em>The Sun</em> bought <em>City Paper</em>, a once-unfathomable scenario that sparked all sorts of doomsday speculation about the alt-weekly’s future. “We want the paper to remain a valued alternative, independent voice in Baltimore,” Sun Media Group CEO Tim Ryan said at the time. After a rocky transition, that certainly seems to be the case. In fact, <em>CP</em> staffers noted in its recent “Best of Baltimore” issue that “our worst fears were not realized” and pointed to the fact that the new regime didn’t object to April’s “Guide to the High Life” weed issue. </p>

<blockquote>“A Horseshoe up my Ass” 
 &mdash; <em>City Paper</em> headline to a November story about the new Horshoe Casino, proving they’ve still got it</blockquote>

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<h1 style=""  class="number yellow">14</h1><h2 class="event">Mosby Defeats Bernstein</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>In hindsight, you could</strong>  see the seeds of new Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s campaign in the “Enough is Enough” peace walks that she and her husband, 7th District City Councilman Nick Mosby, organized in the months before she announced her candidacy. Still, despite the increased name recognition, the 34-year-old former prosecutor-turned-insurance litigator remained a significant underdog against well-funded incumbent Gregg Bernstein in the Democratic primary. But Bernstein was vulnerable. Though citywide homicides dropped below 200 for the first time since the 1970s during his first year, killings ticked back up in 2012 and 2013. Mosby, a Tuskegee University graduate, capitalized on this with an energetic campaign, driving home a theme that the status quo wasn’t good enough, while questioning Bernstein’s priorities. She also touted her family’s law-enforcement background and won endorsements from key African-American leaders, including former congressman and former NAACP head Kweisi Mfume and former mayor Kurt Schmoke, putting her over the top in a close race.</p>

<blockquote>“This is about our homes and our communities. And at its root, this is about our peace of mind.” &mdash; City State’s Attorney 
Marilyn Mosby in the <em>Baltimore Afro-American</em></blockquote>

<!--15-->

<h1 style=""  class="number purple">15</h1><h2 class="event">Dolphins Get Their Freedom</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>The National Aquarium made</strong>  waves in May by announcing that its hugely popular dolphin exhibit may close. Aquarium CEO John Racanelli, who halted dolphin shows in 2012 after two newborn calves died at the facility, said the remaining dolphins might be transferred to some sort of sanctuary. Because most of the aquarium’s dolphins were born in captivity, it’s unclear if they would survive in the wild. The proposed move, which was widely hailed by marine mammal experts, reflects Racanelli’s overall goal of focusing less on tourism and more on conservation. It also reflects the public’s unease about keeping such animals in captivity, an awareness that has increased with the popularity of documentaries like The Cove and Blackfish. Though no such sanctuary exists at present, Racanelli continues to explore possibilities for such a site because this dolphin’s tale hasn’t had its happy ending yet. </p>

<blockquote>“There are chimp sanctuaries, orangutan sanctuaries, gorilla sanctuaries, elephant sanctuaries, bird sanctuaries. . . . And there’s not yet a dolphin sanctuary. What’s that about?” 
&mdash; John Racanelli in The New Yorker</blockquote>

<!--16-->

<h1 style=""  class="number brown">16</h1><h2 class="event">Oprah Cracks Crabs at Captain James Landing</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>When Oprah Winfrey last</strong>  spoke with us about her Baltimore days as a WJZ anchor and co-host of <em>People Are Talking</em> in 2011, her favorite Charm City “things” included The Prime Rib and Tio Pepe. These days, she’s added Captain James Landing to her Baltimore hit list. On an August 6 visit, the media magnate and her longtime steady, Stedman Graham, cracked crabs for two hours at the Canton restaurant. According to Captain James’s owner Bill Tserkis (who told <em>The Baltimore Sun</em> that Winfrey “was great to deal with”), the talk-show titan dined on crab cakes, mussels, and boiled crabs seasoned with Old Bay, while seated on an outdoor balcony overlooking the harbor. (Word has it she knows how to crack a crab.) Winfrey proudly posted her adventures on Instagram, with a caption that read: “Crab feast in Baltimore! #CaptainJames,” then hit the town the next day when she was equally enthusiastic about the development of our downtown. It’s always nice to have the Oprah stamp of approval. </p>

<blockquote>“Loving Baltimore today 
OMG has this city grown. 
I hardly recognize downtown. #CharmCity.”
 &mdash; Oprah Winfrey on Twitter</blockquote>

<!--17-->

<h1 style=""  class="number orange">17</h1><h2 class="event">Don Scott Retires After 40 Years at WJZ</h2>

<p class="event-desc xm"><strong>For 40 years, Don Scott’s</strong>  hirsute visage and rumbling baritone were sources of comfort. 
Just 24 years old when he joined the station as a weekend anchor and general assignment reporter in 1974, Scott really found his niche when he and Marty Bass were paired as morning co-anchors in 1984. Over the course of his career, he covered events ranging from Three Mile Island’s partial nuclear meltdown in 1979 to Pope John Paul II’s 1995 Baltimore visit, but it was his early-hours double-act with Bass that really endeared, a fact reflected by their consistent No. 1 market share. So when Scott, surrounded by his family and colleagues, signed off for the last time in July, there was a not a dry eye in the house. Subsequent cameo appearances and voiceover work have eased the sting of separation, but we still miss his unflappable, paternal presence with our morning joe. After all, old habits die hard. </p>

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<h1 style=""  class="number blue">18</h1><h2 class="event">Podcast About 1999 Baltimore Murder Piques Global Interest</h2>

<p class="event-desc xm"><strong>Most Baltimoreans had never</strong>  heard of Hae Min Lee until early October. That’s when <em>Serial</em>, the new podcast from the team behind <em>This American Life</em> debuted. In each weekly installment, host (and former Baltimore Sun reporter) Sarah Keonig leads listeners through a reexamination of the 1999 murder of Lee, a bright, cheerful Woodlawn High School senior. The central question is this: Did Lee’s ex-boyfriend &mdash; another Woodlawn High School senior named Adnan Syed &mdash; murder her? But within that, an almost infinite number of other questions about the nature of truth and identity arise. Who is telling the truth? How do you know? Is the truth even knowable at this point? Listeners are left to judge for themselves &mdash; and they have. From Australia to Canada, fans of the show follow each new episode with an obsessive fervor usually reserved for the best fictive mysteries, such as <em>True Detective</em> or <em>Lost</em>. (Visit the show’s sub-Reddit board and you’ll find JFK-conspiracy-theorist-levels of obsession.) How the podcast will end is uncertain at this point, but one thing is for sure: We’ll be listening.</p>


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<h1 style=""  class="number green">19</h1><h2 class="event">Under Armour Wills What It Wants After Sochi Snafu</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Under Armour had a</strong>  worldwide stage this February at the Sochi Winter Olympics, where it outfitted the U.S. men’s speedskating squad in what one skater promised would prove the “fastest speedskating suit ever made.” But the team didn’t even medal, and some blamed the suits. That the U.S. Speedskating organization later determined the suits weren’t to blame hardly mattered. The damage to Under Armour’s image was done. Or was it? The company rebounded in July with the release of its “I Will What I Want” women’s campaign featuring a commercial with ballerina Misty Copeland. The video, which celebrated female strength and self-empowerment, went viral, garnering over 6 million YouTube views, a full-page spread in <em>The New York Times</em>, and the approval of supermodel Gisele Bündchen, who became a UA ambassador herself. The $15-million campaign was also the first major step in expanding UA’s women’s division, a move that has boosted total revenue by 30 percent in the third quarter. Where there’s a will, there is definitely a way. 
</p>

<blockquote>“Big tough Under Armour decided to launch a 
women’s campaign, with a ballerina, no less.”
 &mdash; Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank to 
The Baltimore Sun</blockquote>

<!--20-->

<h1 style=""  class="number yellow">20</h1><h2 class="event">The So-Called “Baltimore Bull” Stages a Jailbreak</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>“Nothing to see here.</strong>  Just a bull running in the streets of Baltimore” read a sample tweet. “Save the Baltimore bull,” wrote journalist Spencer Ackerman. Yes, on June 13, a 780-pound bull (actually a steer; but forever to be affectionately known as The Baltimore Bull) escaped from a local slaughterhouse. It traveled down North Avenue and onto Eutaw Street and Druid Hill Avenue before it was shot dead by Baltimore police in Mt. Vernon. In response, Baltimore served up a bunch of jokes (“Baltimore goes vegan!”), hashtags (#BaltimoreBull; #Bulltimore), and even a video of the bull trotting past a lake trout joint. But one question lingered: Did the police really have to kill it? A statement issued by the Baltimore Police Department said that the steer grew “increasingly aggressive” and that “officers made numerous attempts to trap it” before they killed it. But the Baltimore Bull got a second life on T-shirts, mugs, and, briefly, a hilarious (fake) chalk outline of the dead steer’s corpse. Only in Baltimore, folks.</p>

<blockquote>“There’s, believe it or not, a bull—B-U-L-L—running east on North Avenue.”
 &mdash; call to 911</blockquote>


<!--END FIRTS 20 MOMENTS-->




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      <!--21-->

<h1 style=""  class="number purple">21</h1><h2 class="event">Future Islands Grabs the Spotlight </h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>On March 3,</strong>  the rest of the country discovered what Baltimore has known for years—Future Islands rocks. That night, the band made its national TV debut with a thrilling version of “Seasons (Waiting on You)” on <em>Late Show with David Letterman</em>, a performance that launched a thousand GIFs of frontman Samuel Herring’s spirited dance moves, garnered millions of YouTube views, and impressed the host. Major buzz ensued, and the band drew huge crowds at South By Southwest, charted on Billboard for the first time, and played major festivals like Coachella and Primavera Sound. Like true locals though, the band seemed unfazed by all the attention. “We’ve been doing this for so long that we just keep our heads down and work at what we do,” Herring told Baltimore, sounding like a certain baseball manager we know. Herring stayed true to his word—Future Islands is still touring, with dates scheduled in Australia and England for early 2015.
</p>

<blockquote class="">“I’ll take all of that you got! That was wonderful!”—David Letterman to Future Islands after the band’s performance</blockquote>

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<h1 style=""  class="number brown">22</h1><h2 class="event">Transgender Student Named Prom Queen at Digital Harbor High School </h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Resplendent in a teal dress, tiara, and sash,</strong>  Destiny Hartis made history on May 15 by becoming Digital Harbor High School’s first transgender prom queen (at least to the knowledge of current faculty). With the unwavering support of her mother and grandmother, and her cousin, Kerstin Jones, on her arm, the then-20-year-old high-school senior became the belle of the ball. “It was my day,” Hartis told <em>The Baltimore Sun</em>. “I was going to win.” Victory was sweet. Despite a few jeers, there were mostly cheers, a sure sign of changing attitudes toward transgender people in a year that also saw <em>Orange is the New Black</em> actress Laverne Cox become the first openly transgender person on the cover of Time magazine. One dream already fulfilled in her young life, Hartis currently is pursing a degree at Anne Arundel Community College. 
 </p>

<blockquote class="">“People are going to have their opinions, but I know who I am. I’m not here for you. I’m here for myself.”—Destiny Hartis to The Baltimore Sun</blockquote>

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<h1 style=""  class="number orange">23</h1><h2 class="event">Shooting of 3-year-old McKenzie Elliott Inspires Outrage, but No Arrest</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>Each year, Baltimore experiences</strong>  no shortage of senseless killings. But even among those, the fatal shooting of 3-year-old McKenzie Elliott this summer seemed particularly tragic. The bubbly tot was sitting on her front porch in Waverly when she was caught in the crossfire of a sudden gunfight. Elliott’s death, part of a spike in violence that saw 36 people shot over the course of 8 days, inspired plenty of media coverage, pleas from Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake for information, and vows of a speedy arrest from the police department. Though police zeroed in on a “person of interest” who turned himself in on an unrelated parole violation in the days following the shooting, they never charged him, and he was released in early October. That move incited more outrage, but police would only say that the investigation had “shifted” and that “substantial leads” remain. 
 </p>

<blockquote class="">“It’s been several months since this incident. The longer it goes on, the harder it is to push the case.”—City Councilman Nick Mosby to WJZ </blockquote>

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<h1 style=""  class="number blue">24</h1><h2 class="event">Simon and O’Malley Convene Beer Summit </h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>The most unlikely selfie</strong>  of the year hit the Internet in July, when David Simon posted a shot of himself and Martin O’Malley sitting side-by-side, smiling for the camera. <em>The Wire</em> creator and the governor had been famously antagonistic ever since O’Malley, when he was mayor, criticized the show for its unflattering portrayal of the city and threatened to hold up its film permits (which Simon recounted in a 2008 essay for Baltimore). But when they found themselves on a southbound Acela and Simon alerted his son, via text, that O’Malley was sitting nearby, his son suggested that his dad buy the governor a beer. Simon listened. Over Coronas, the two men buried the hatchet and bonded over their mutual love of The Pogues. Simon, at one point, even suggested that O’Malley might watch The Wire “some years from now, when there was less at stake,” but that didn’t go over so well. Still, Simon ultimately concluded that “the two of us did okay, too, considering.” 
</p>

<blockquote class="">“Come on, Dave. We’re getting to be old men at this point.  Sit, talk.” —Gov. Martin O’Malley to David Simon on the Acela</blockquote>

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<h1 style=""  class="number green">25</h1><h2 class="event">ALS Ice Bucket Challenge Douses Baltimore</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>A good gimmick</strong> is worth its weight in gold. That’s what the ALS Association learned this summer when the Ice Bucket Challenge went viral. Though the origins of the stunt are disputed, by mid-July the rules had codified and public figures ranging from Justin Beiber to former President George W. Bush had gotten behind the cause. Baltimoreans joined in, including one very fitting participant: former Raven O.J. Brigance who suffers from ALS (aka Lou Gehrig’s disease) and runs his own Brigance Brigade foundation, which supports sufferers of the degenerative physical condition. Many Baltimore sports figures took the plunge in honor of Brigance, including Orioles Adam Jones and Buck Showalter, and Ravens Joe Flacco and Jacoby Jones. Brigance himself accepted the challenge on August 22 with his wife, Chanda, dousing her wheelchair-bound husband. It’s all in good fun, of course, but the $260,000 and $115 million the challenge raised for the Brigance Brigade and ALS Association, respectively, is the real reason to smile. 
</p>

<blockquote class="">“We feel that encouraging people throughout the country to learn more about ALS and create a dialogue around it is a real victory.” —statement from O.J. and Chanda Brigance </blockquote>

<!--26-->

<h1 style=""  class="number yellow">26</h1><h2 class="event">Baltimore Welcomes New Faces in High Places </h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>The face of higher education in Baltimore</strong>  underwent a major transformation in 2014, as no less than four major institutions changed leadership. Maryland Institute College of Art chose Samuel Hoi, president of Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles, to succeed Fred Lazarus; Peabody Institute tapped St. Louis Symphony CEO Fred Bronstein to replace outgoing dean Jeff Sharkey; former mayor Kurt Schmoke took over as University of Baltimore president after Robert Bogomolny retired; and José Antonio Bowen, dean of Southern Methodist University’s arts school, took over for Sanford Ungar at Goucher College. Though it remains to be seen what impact the new hires will have on their schools and the city at large, they all face formidable challenges, including rising tuition, adapting to new technology, and competing with free Internet courses. But there is already evidence that at least one of them is not afraid to shake things up: In September, Bowen garnered national attention for implementing a new policy in which Goucher will accept video applications in lieu of traditional transcripts and achievement test results. 
</p>

<blockquote class="">“We’re doing this because higher education should be about potential and not about privilege. We’re also doing this to demonstrate to students what’s different about Goucher.” —José Antonio Bowen</blockquote>

<!--27-->

<h1 style=""  class="number purple">27</h1><h2 class="event">Towson Comes of Age</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>When Baltimore County historians</strong>  look back generations from now, they’ll most likely view 2014 as the year of The Great Towson Revival. This summer, Towson Square, an $85-million, 15-screen Cinemark Theatre entertainment-and-restaurant complex, got its ribbon-cutting, but it’s not the only project remaking the skyline of the county seat. There is the upcoming $300-million mixed-use Towson Row project in the heart of downtown. And, already completed and going great guns is the $27-million renovation of the once-vacant 12-story City Center Building, just above Towson Circle and now fully leased, serving as home to both Cunningham’s, a brand new foodie-favorite Bagby Group restaurant, and WTMD’s new studios. (La Cakerie’s famous cupcakes can be had across the street, too.) New townhome and apartment complexes remain in various stages of completion and plans also call for a new $60-million student-housing-and-retail project closer to Towson University, adding up to $770 million in recent private investments. Not bad for a sleepy Beltway bedroom community. 
</p>

<blockquote class="">“Towson has always ranked very high in demographics—its income and education levels—it just did not have a great, corresponding ‘quality of life,’” Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz to <em>Baltimore</em> in June 2014</blockquote>

<!--28-->

<h1 style=""  class="number brown">28</h1><h2 class="event">From Superfund Site to Swank HQ with a View</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>After years of sitting empty</strong>  to remediate a century’s worth of industrial chemical contamination, a prime harbor-front peninsula got a new life in May when Harbor Point developer Beatty Development Company broke ground on Exelon Corp.’s 648,000-square-foot regional headquarters tower. However, environmental monitoring of the 27-acre site by the Environmental Protection Agency will continue to make sure it doesn’t spew dangerous levels of carcinogenic hexavalent chromium dust into the air as construction workers drive building-support pilings through a protective cap laid years ago. When fully built out, the project may cover 6 million-square-feet, consisting of nine buildings and 9.5 acres of parks, but Job One for the developers is completing the headquarters, which Exelon hopes to occupy by fall 2016. The project faced opposition both on environmental grounds and from some city officials, who opposed the $107 million in tax breaks requested. But after a contentious approval process, the first phase of the $1.8-billion project got the go-ahead from the city and environmental agencies in March, clearing the way for construction of the tower that will contain Exelon’s headquarters, a 103-unit apartment building, and 40,000 square feet of street-level retail.

</p>

<blockquote class="">“I don’t think everyone can be happy. Time will show this will be a fantastic project for the city, and I think there were a lot of people who were against the Inner Harbor and thought it was a disaster but it turned out to be good for the city.” — Michael Beatty, president of Beatty Development to the <em>Baltimore Business Journal</em>. </blockquote>

<!--29-->

<h1 style=""  class="number orange">29</h1><h2 class="event">You Know We’re All ’Bout That BUS</h2>

<p class="event-desc"><strong>In August,</strong>  we heralded it as “the coolest bus stop ever” and months later we stand by that assessment. That’s because the Creative Alliance B-U-S sculpture at the corner of S. East and Eastern avenues is a perfect marriage of form and function. Each 14-by-7-foot, wood-and-steel letter was built to be used—sat upon, laid on, stood next to, sheltered beneath, what have you—and that’s the best kind of design. To be fair, we’re not the only ones who noticed the ingenuity of the piece created by Spanish artist collective “mmmm…” in collaboration with local and international organizations. <em>Slate</em>, <em>The Los Angeles Times</em>, and numerous design and urban lifestyle blogs admired the sculpture, too, but only we get the privilege of actually using it.  </p>

<blockquote class="">“The world’s most obvious bus stop is pure design genius.”—<em>Slate</em></blockquote>


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<h2 style="display:block;margin-top:40px;" class="uppers triangle unit">Related Content</h2>


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	95%{
		-webkit-transform: translateX(2%);
	}			
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: translateX(0%);
	}
}

/*
==============================================
slideRight
==============================================
*/


.slideRight{
	animation-name: slideRight;
	-webkit-animation-name: slideRight;	

	animation-duration: 1s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;		

	visibility: visible !important;	
}

@keyframes slideRight {
	0% {
		transform: translateX(-150%);
	}
	50%{
		transform: translateX(8%);
	}
	65%{
		transform: translateX(-4%);
	}
	80%{
		transform: translateX(4%);
	}
	95%{
		transform: translateX(-2%);
	}			
	100% {
		transform: translateX(0%);
	}	
}

@-webkit-keyframes slideRight {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: translateX(-150%);
	}
	50%{
		-webkit-transform: translateX(8%);
	}
	65%{
		-webkit-transform: translateX(-4%);
	}
	80%{
		-webkit-transform: translateX(4%);
	}
	95%{
		-webkit-transform: translateX(-2%);
	}			
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: translateX(0%);
	}
}

/*
==============================================
slideExpandUp
==============================================
*/


.slideExpandUp{
	animation-name: slideExpandUp;
	-webkit-animation-name: slideExpandUp;	

	animation-duration: 1.6s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.6s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease -out;

	visibility: visible !important;	
}

@keyframes slideExpandUp {
	0% {
		transform: translateY(100%) scaleX(0.5);
	}
	30%{
		transform: translateY(-8%) scaleX(0.5);
	}	
	40%{
		transform: translateY(2%) scaleX(0.5);
	}
	50%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.1);
	}
	60%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(0.9);		
	}
	70% {
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.05);
	}			
	80%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(0.95);		
	}
	90% {
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.02);
	}	
	100%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1);		
	}
}

@-webkit-keyframes slideExpandUp {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(100%) scaleX(0.5);
	}
	30%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(-8%) scaleX(0.5);
	}	
	40%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(2%) scaleX(0.5);
	}
	50%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.1);
	}
	60%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(0.9);		
	}
	70% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.05);
	}			
	80%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(0.95);		
	}
	90% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1.02);
	}	
	100%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleX(1);		
	}
}

/*
==============================================
expandUp
==============================================
*/


.expandUp{
	animation-name: expandUp;
	-webkit-animation-name: expandUp;	

	animation-duration: 0.7s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 0.7s;

	animation-timing-function: ease;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease;		

	visibility: visible !important;	
}

@keyframes expandUp {
	0% {
		transform: translateY(100%) scale(0.6) scaleY(0.5);
	}
	60%{
		transform: translateY(-7%) scaleY(1.12);
	}
	75%{
		transform: translateY(3%);
	}	
	100% {
		transform: translateY(0%) scale(1) scaleY(1);
	}	
}

@-webkit-keyframes expandUp {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(100%) scale(0.6) scaleY(0.5);
	}
	60%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(-7%) scaleY(1.12);
	}
	75%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(3%);
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scale(1) scaleY(1);
	}	
}

/*
==============================================
fadeIn
==============================================
*/

.fadeIn{
	animation-name: fadeIn;
	-webkit-animation-name: fadeIn;	

	animation-duration: 1.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.5s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;		

	visibility: visible !important;	
}

@keyframes fadeIn {
	0% {
		transform: scale(0);
		opacity: 0.0;		
	}
	60% {
		transform: scale(1.1);	
	}
	80% {
		transform: scale(0.9);
		opacity: 1;	
	}	
	100% {
		transform: scale(1);
		opacity: 1;	
	}		
}

@-webkit-keyframes fadeIn {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0);
		opacity: 0.0;		
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.1);
	}
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.9);
		opacity: 1;	
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1);
		opacity: 1;	
	}		
}

/*
==============================================
expandOpen
==============================================
*/


.expandOpen{
	animation-name: expandOpen;
	-webkit-animation-name: expandOpen;	

	animation-duration: 1.2s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.2s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	visibility: visible !important;	
}

@keyframes expandOpen {
	0% {
		transform: scale(1.8);		
	}
	50% {
		transform: scale(0.95);
	}	
	80% {
		transform: scale(1.05);
	}
	90% {
		transform: scale(0.98);
	}	
	100% {
		transform: scale(1);
	}			
}

@-webkit-keyframes expandOpen {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.8);		
	}
	50% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.95);
	}	
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.05);
	}
	90% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.98);
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1);
	}					
}

/*
==============================================
bigEntrance
==============================================
*/


.bigEntrance{
	animation-name: bigEntrance;
	-webkit-animation-name: bigEntrance;	

	animation-duration: 1.6s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.6s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	visibility: visible !important;			
}

@keyframes bigEntrance {
	0% {
		transform: scale(0.3) rotate(6deg) translateX(-30%) translateY(30%);
		opacity: 0.2;
	}
	30% {
		transform: scale(1.03) rotate(-2deg) translateX(2%) translateY(-2%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}
	45% {
		transform: scale(0.98) rotate(1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}
	60% {
		transform: scale(1.01) rotate(-1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}	
	75% {
		transform: scale(0.99) rotate(1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}
	90% {
		transform: scale(1.01) rotate(0deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}	
	100% {
		transform: scale(1) rotate(0deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}		
}

@-webkit-keyframes bigEntrance {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.3) rotate(6deg) translateX(-30%) translateY(30%);
		opacity: 0.2;
	}
	30% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.03) rotate(-2deg) translateX(2%) translateY(-2%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}
	45% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.98) rotate(1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.01) rotate(-1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}	
	75% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.99) rotate(1deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}
	90% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1.01) rotate(0deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);		
		opacity: 1;
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1) rotate(0deg) translateX(0%) translateY(0%);
		opacity: 1;
	}				
}

/*
==============================================
hatch
==============================================
*/

.hatch{
	animation-name: hatch;
	-webkit-animation-name: hatch;	

	animation-duration: 2s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 2s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-in-out;

	transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 50% 100%; 

	visibility: visible !important;		
}

@keyframes hatch {
	0% {
		transform: rotate(0deg) scaleY(0.6);
	}
	20% {
		transform: rotate(-2deg) scaleY(1.05);
	}
	35% {
		transform: rotate(2deg) scaleY(1);
	}
	50% {
		transform: rotate(-2deg);
	}	
	65% {
		transform: rotate(1deg);
	}	
	80% {
		transform: rotate(-1deg);
	}		
	100% {
		transform: rotate(0deg);
	}									
}

@-webkit-keyframes hatch {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(0deg) scaleY(0.6);
	}
	20% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(-2deg) scaleY(1.05);
	}
	35% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(2deg) scaleY(1);
	}
	50% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(-2deg);
	}	
	65% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(1deg);
	}	
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(-1deg);
	}		
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(0deg);
	}		
}


/*
==============================================
bounce
==============================================
*/


.bounce{
	animation-name: bounce;
	-webkit-animation-name: bounce;	

	animation-duration: 1.6s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.6s;

	animation-timing-function: ease;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease;	
	
	transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 50% 100%; 	
}

@keyframes bounce {
	0% {
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.6);
	}
	60%{
		transform: translateY(-100%) scaleY(1.1);
	}
	70%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.95) scaleX(1.05);
	}
	80%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(1.05) scaleX(1);
	}	
	90%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.95) scaleX(1);
	}				
	100%{
		transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(1) scaleX(1);
	}	
}

@-webkit-keyframes bounce {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.6);
	}
	60%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(-100%) scaleY(1.1);
	}
	70%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.95) scaleX(1.05);
	}
	80%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(1.05) scaleX(1);
	}	
	90%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(0.95) scaleX(1);
	}				
	100%{
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%) scaleY(1) scaleX(1);
	}		
}


/*
==============================================
pulse
==============================================
*/

.pulse{
	animation-name: pulse;
	-webkit-animation-name: pulse;	

	animation-duration: 1.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.5s;

	animation-iteration-count: infinite;
	-webkit-animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}

@keyframes pulse {
	0% {
		transform: scale(0.9);
		opacity: 0.7;		
	}
	50% {
		transform: scale(1);
		opacity: 1;	
	}	
	100% {
		transform: scale(0.9);
		opacity: 0.7;	
	}			
}

@-webkit-keyframes pulse {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.95);
		opacity: 0.7;		
	}
	50% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(1);
		opacity: 1;	
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scale(0.95);
		opacity: 0.7;	
	}			
}

/*
==============================================
floating
==============================================
*/

.floating{
	animation-name: floating;
	-webkit-animation-name: floating;

	animation-duration: 1.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.5s;

	animation-iteration-count: infinite;
	-webkit-animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}

@keyframes floating {
	0% {
		transform: translateY(0%);	
	}
	50% {
		transform: translateY(8%);	
	}	
	100% {
		transform: translateY(0%);
	}			
}

@-webkit-keyframes floating {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%);	
	}
	50% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(8%);	
	}	
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: translateY(0%);
	}			
}

/*
==============================================
tossing
==============================================
*/

.tossing{
	animation-name: tossing;
	-webkit-animation-name: tossing;	

	animation-duration: 2.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 2.5s;

	animation-iteration-count: infinite;
	-webkit-animation-iteration-count: infinite;
}

@keyframes tossing {
	0% {
		transform: rotate(-4deg);	
	}
	50% {
		transform: rotate(4deg);
	}
	100% {
		transform: rotate(-4deg);	
	}						
}

@-webkit-keyframes tossing {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(-4deg);	
	}
	50% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(4deg);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: rotate(-4deg);	
	}				
}

/*
==============================================
pullUp
==============================================
*/

.pullUp{
	animation-name: pullUp;
	-webkit-animation-name: pullUp;	

	animation-duration: 1.1s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.1s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 50% 100%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 50% 100%; 		
}

@keyframes pullUp {
	0% {
		transform: scaleY(0.1);
	}
	40% {
		transform: scaleY(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleY(1);
	}							
}

@-webkit-keyframes pullUp {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.1);
	}
	40% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1);
	}		
}

/*
==============================================
pullDown
==============================================
*/

.pullDown{
	animation-name: pullDown;
	-webkit-animation-name: pullDown;	

	animation-duration: 1.1s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.1s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	transform-origin: 50% 0%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 50% 0%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 50% 0%; 		
}

@keyframes pullDown {
	0% {
		transform: scaleY(0.1);
	}
	40% {
		transform: scaleY(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleY(1);
	}							
}

@-webkit-keyframes pullDown {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.1);
	}
	40% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleY(1);
	}		
}

/*
==============================================
stretchLeft
==============================================
*/

.stretchLeft{
	animation-name: stretchLeft;
	-webkit-animation-name: stretchLeft;	

	animation-duration: 1.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.5s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	transform-origin: 100% 0%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 100% 0%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 100% 0%; 
}

@keyframes stretchLeft {
	0% {
		transform: scaleX(0.3);
	}
	40% {
		transform: scaleX(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleX(1);
	}							
}

@-webkit-keyframes stretchLeft {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.3);
	}
	40% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1);
	}		
}

/*
==============================================
stretchRight
==============================================
*/

.stretchRight{
	animation-name: stretchRight;
	-webkit-animation-name: stretchRight;	

	animation-duration: 1.5s;	
	-webkit-animation-duration: 1.5s;

	animation-timing-function: ease-out;	
	-webkit-animation-timing-function: ease-out;	

	transform-origin: 0% 0%;
	-ms-transform-origin: 0% 0%;
	-webkit-transform-origin: 0% 0%; 		
}

@keyframes stretchRight {
	0% {
		transform: scaleX(0.3);
	}
	40% {
		transform: scaleX(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		transform: scaleX(1);
	}							
}

@-webkit-keyframes stretchRight {
	0% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.3);
	}
	40% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.02);
	}
	60% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(0.98);
	}				
	80% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1.01);
	}
	100% {
		-webkit-transform: scaleX(1);
	}		
}</style>
		</div>
	</div>
</div></div></div></div>
</div>
<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/top-moments-that-defined-baltimore-in-2014/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Your Best Star-Spangled Photos</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/your-best-star-spangled-photos/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Meredith Herzing]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Sep 2014 16:28:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blue Angels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled Banner]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=67346</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Visitors from far and wide took in the&#160;splendor of Baltimore and celebrated the 200th anniversary of the National Anthem.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Visitors from far and wide took in the&nbsp;splendor of Baltimore and celebrated the 200th anniversary of the National Anthem.</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/your-best-star-spangled-photos/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Star-Spangled Spectacular Wrap-Up</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/star-spangled-celebration-photo-wrap-up/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Sep 2014 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fort McHenry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inner Harbor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pier Six Pavilion]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=7930</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="wpb-content-wrapper"><div class="vc_row wpb_row vc_row-fluid"><div class="wpb_column vc_column_container vc_col-sm-12"><div class="vc_column-inner"><div class="wpb_wrapper">
	<div class="wpb_text_column wpb_content_element" >
		<div class="wpb_wrapper">
			<p>This past weekend, more than one million visitors graced the Inner Harbor, Fort McHenry, Pier Six Pavilion, and practically anywhere with a waterfront view for Star-Spangled Spectacular, or the bicentennial of our National Anthem.</p>
<p>Whether it was touring the tall ships docked in our harbor, seeing Living History reenactments at Fort McHenry, watching hundreds of soldiers recreate a marching path, or gazing in awe at the U.S. Navy Blue Angels soaring overhead, there were eye-catching spectacles all around town.</p>
<p>We present a photo gallery of some of the people and places that made this weekend something tourism officials called the biggest event Baltimore has ever seen.</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/star-spangled-celebration-photo-wrap-up/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Star Spangled Farm to Galley Cook-Off</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-farm-to-galley-cook-off/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2014 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[navy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=67459</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Temperatures may have dropped into the 70s at the Inner Harbor Friday, but in the&#160;Star Spangled Spectacular’s Chesapeake Bay Demo Kitchen and Brew Garden, things were definitely heating up. Chefs who travel around the world on eight visiting Navy vessels were challenged to create both a main dish and a side dish using a bushel &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-farm-to-galley-cook-off/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Temperatures may have dropped into the 70s at the Inner Harbor Friday, but in the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.starspangled200.com/">Star Spangled Spectacular’s</a> Chesapeake Bay Demo Kitchen and Brew Garden, things were definitely heating up.</p>
<p>Chefs who travel around the world on eight visiting Navy vessels were challenged to create both a main dish and a side dish using a bushel of local produce in only one hour.</p>
<p>The required ingredients&mdash;provided by local businesses like A&#038;R Seafood and Martin Family Farms&mdash;included Maryland crab, fresh rockfish, goat sausage, chorizo, bangers, and bratwurst.</p>
<p>As time went on, the growing crowds started making their predictions.</p>
<p>“My team’s gonna win,” said Lt. Cmdr. Andrew Goggin of the Royal Canadian Navy, as he cheered on the chefs representing Canada’s HMCS Athabaskan making a grilled corn salsa gremolata with infused crab oil. “Canada loves Baltimore. I’ve been to a lot of fleet weeks and Baltimore has fantastic hospitality; we’re having a lot of fun.”</p>
<p>Smells of pan-seared rockfish and crab ceviche permeated as the individual ingredients began to transform into gourmet dishes, and,&nbsp;before long, time was up.</p>
<p>The six judges, including WBAL’s Megan Pringle and Mix 106.5’s Reagan Warfield, sat down to examine the taste and presentation of each team’s dish. The votes were tallied and, ultimately, the victory went to the chef’s representing Turkey’s TGS Kemalreis, who fused the local ingredients into their dish comprised of rockfish, lamb kabobs, stuffed peppers, a vegetable medley, and baklava.</p>
<p>“They made this vegetable medley that was to die for,” Warfield said. “You could tell that they wanted to win.”</p>
<p>Turkey’s team, who was rumored to have been egging on other teams at a reception the night before the cook-off, was ecstatic about their win.</p>
<p>“We’re very happy,” said Emre Gursoy, a translator for the TGS Kemalreis. “They took the competition very seriously and now we will enjoy our success.”&nbsp;</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-farm-to-galley-cook-off/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Our Guide to the Star-Spangled Spectacular</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/guide-star-spangled-celebration-200/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Sep 2014 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=8005</guid>

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<p><strong>From September 9 through 16, this epic commemoration of the bicentennial of the Battle of Baltimore will offer scores of exciting (mostly free!) events to mark the occasion. </strong></p></div><div>
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<p><span class="SSS_pick">Ships Ahoy!</span><br/>The arrival of more than 30 tall ships on the morning of September 10 will kick off festivities. Ships from around the world will welcome aboard visitors for deck tours, meet-and-greets, and happy hours throughout the week.</p></div>
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<p><span class="SSS_pick">Air America</span><br/>
On September 13 and 14 at 2 p.m., the Blue Angels will perform their daredevil air demonstration above the Inner Harbor. If you’re looking to beat the crowds, there will be a full dress rehearsal on Friday afternoon and a more limited practice run on Thursday. For those looking for a different perspective&mdash;watching the pilots take off and land&mdash;there are viewing locations at Martin State Airport in Middle River.</p></div>
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<p><span class="SSS_pick">Rockets Red Glare</span><br/>
The festivities culminate on Saturday, September 13, in two celebratory 
events&mdash;one at Pier Six Pavilion and another at Fort McHenry.</p>
<p>Pier Six is hosting a two-hour concert emceed by actor John Lithgow. Performing on stage are Broadway star Kristin Chenoweth, mezzo-soprano (and Peabody instructor) Denyce Graves-Montgomery, music legend Smokey Robinson, country group Little Big Town, and the BSO. Tickets start at $79 and are available at piersixpavilion.com.</p>

<p></p> 

<p>The Fort McHenry event will feature music by The United States Marine Band 
and Morgan State University Choir while the Fort McHenry Guard raises the 30-foot-by-42-foot flag. The evening will then close with a massive fireworks display.</p></div>
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<p style="font-style:italic; text-align:center;">Visit <a href="http://www.starspangled200.com/star-spangled-spectacular/" target="_blank">starspangled200.com</a> for full details.</p><hr/>

<h2 class="uppers triangle unit">More Star-Spangled Spectacular</h2>

<div class="row">
<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/party-for-the-patriots">
<img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p1.png"/></a><h5 class="unit">Let's Party for the Patriots</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">Baltimore’s giant 1814 bicentennial bash promises to break all the records.</p>
</div>

<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/the-men-who-saved-baltimore">
<img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p2.png"/></a><h5 class="unit">The Men Who Saved Baltimore</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">The beginning of the end for the redcoats was two teenagers with muskets.</p>
</div>

<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/stars-stripes-and-guitars"><img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p3.png"/></a><h5 class="unit">Stars, Stripes, and Guitars</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">An 1814 rock opera cleverly mixes U.S. history and heavy metal. </p>
</div>
</div>

<div class="row">
<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/cameo-nate-barton">
<img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p4.png"/></a><h5 class="unit">Cameo: Nate Barton
</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">Our interview with a Blue Angels pilot.
</p>
</div>

<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/2/star-spangled-spectacular-specials">
<img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p5.png"/></a>
<h5 class="unit">Star-Spangled Spectacular Specials</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">Our picks for the best food and drink specials during the bicentennial bash.
</p>
</div>

<div class="medium-4 small-6 columns">
<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/9/more-star-spangled-spectacular-events"><img decoding="async" src="http://98329bfccf2a7356f7c4-b113946b17b55222ad1df26d6703a42e.r50.cf2.rackcdn.com/p6.5.png"/></a><h5 class="unit">More Star-Spangled Spectacular Events</h5><p class="clan fakeit2">A selection of events happening in celebration of the big 2-0-0.</p>
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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/guide-star-spangled-celebration-200/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Star-Spangled Spectacular Specials</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-spectacular-specials/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Sep 2014 15:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Food & Drink]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[happy hour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?p=67414</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Whether you’re looking to celebrate with fine dining or unwind with All-American happy hour specials, don’t miss all of these patriotic happenings in Baltimore during the&#160;Star Spangled Spectacular Sept. 10-16. Lord Baltimore HotelThe&#160;Renaissance-inspired hotspot will feature a three-course pre-fixe menu during lunch and dinner services from Sept. 9-13. The Battle of Baltimore themed-menu will be &#8230; <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-spectacular-specials/">Continued</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Whether you’re looking to celebrate with fine dining or unwind with All-American happy hour specials, don’t miss all of these patriotic happenings in Baltimore during the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.starspangled200.com/">Star Spangled Spectacular</a> Sept. 10-16.</p>
<p><strong>Lord Baltimore Hotel<br /></strong>The&nbsp;<a href="http://lordbaltimorehotel-px.trvlclick.com/">Renaissance-inspired hotspot</a> will feature a three-course pre-fixe menu during lunch and dinner services from Sept. 9-13. The Battle of Baltimore themed-menu will be offered at both of the hotel’s restaurants, The French Kitchen and LB Tavern, for $20.14. The two restaurants will additionally be offering three signature hand crafted cocktails created to accompany the elegant menu featuring pork belly, short ribs, and a fancy chicken pot pie.</p>
<p><strong>Wit &#038; Wisdom Presents a Star Spangled Celebration<br /></strong>The fireworks presentation on Sept. 13 is expected to be one of the best we’ve ever seen. If you’re looking to celebrate at a patriotic party with a guaranteed excellent view, this event is the place to be.&nbsp;<a href="http://www.witandwisdombaltimore.com/promotions/#wit_wisdom_presents_a_star_spangled_celebration">Wit &#038; Wisdom: A Tavern by Michael Mina</a>, located at the Four Seasons Hotel, will be hosting a celebration featuring unlimited food options including fried chicken, pit beef sandwiches, and an oyster shucking station. Guests can play a game of corn hole while sipping a local beer, or enjoy the live music to gear up for the fireworks that begin blasting at 9:30 p.m.</p>
<p><strong>Apropoes<br /></strong>The&nbsp;<a href="http://www.marriott.com/hotel-restaurants/bwiwf-baltimore-marriott-waterfront/apropoe's/5626681/home-page.mi">Marriott Waterfront’s</a> modern restaurant is joining the party with happy hour food and drink specials and live music from 4-7 p.m. on Sept 11 and 12. Indulge in drink specials like red, white, and blue Jell-O shots and Ciroc cocktails, a bucket of Natty Boh for $18.12, and “Star Spangled Sams” featuring Sam Adams Lager and Sam Adams Rebel IPA, Sept 11-14.</p>
<p><strong>Sailabration Spectacular at Waterfront Kitchen<br /></strong>This upscale harbor-front restaurant will be hosting two events on Sept. 13, the night of the fireworks festivities, as part of the celebration.<a href="http://www.eventbrite.com/e/sailabration-spectacular-all-american-wine-dinner-tickets-12755196135?aff=eorg">The All American Wine Dinner</a>, held from 6:30-10:30 p.m., will feature signature wine pairings amidst a pre-fixe dinner menu. If you’d rather grab a local brew than sip a glass of wine, enjoy the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.eventbrite.com/e/sailabration-spectacular-cocktail-party-tickets-12754788917">Sailabration Spectacular Cocktail Party</a> where attendees will be served sophisticated hors d’oeuvres and tasty grilled fare from 7:30-10:30 p.m.</p>
<p><strong>Star-Spangled Banner Gala Event<br /></strong>Raise your glass and toast the flag in style at the&nbsp;<a href="http://raiseaglass.smithsonianchannel.com/gala-event/">Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History</a> in Washington D.C. on Sept 12. Join Baltimore’s own Brendan Dorr,&nbsp;<a href="http://www.baltimoremagazine.net/2014/7/7/local-bartender-part-of-national-celebration" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">who was hand picked amongst 13 other mixologists from across the country</a> to feature their Star-Spangled-Banner-inspired cocktails at the event. Dorr, the beverage director at B&#038;O American Brasserie, created a cocktail called the Line State Punch that fuses ingredients like Pikesville Rye whiskey, apple brandy, and yellow Chartreuse. Attendees will be able to taste the Line State Punch and the other 13 signature cocktails while enjoying music by the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Quartet and participating in mixology demonstrations.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Nickel Taphouse Specialty Cocktails</strong><br />The Mt. Washington bar/restaurant will be featuring specialty patriotic-themed cocktails, including a red concoction called the Cardinal Rule (Cardinal barrel-aged gin, muddled oranges and cherries, sage simple syrup, and Bittermen&#8217;s Hellfire Habanero shrub).&nbsp;<a href="http://m.mainstreethub.com/nickeltaphouse" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Nickel Taphouse</a> will also feature a white drink called a Saratoga Sour (Turning Point white rye whiskey, lemon juice, simple syrup,&nbsp;maraschino liqueur, and Bittermen&#8217;s Hopped Grapefruit bitters&mdash;garnished with a lemon twist a sour cherries).</p>
<p><strong>Ten Ten&nbsp;</strong><br />The Harbor East&nbsp;<a href="http://www.bagbys1010.com/">American bistro</a> will be featuring a pre-fixe menu showcasing their unique farm-to-table cuisine on Sept. 12. The three-course special includes offerings like macaroni&nbsp;and cheese prepared with spinach and sun-dried tomatoes, corn chowder, shrimp and grits, and a farmer’s market seasonal fruit tart.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Boathouse Canton</strong><br />The waterfront bar is a great place to catch fireworks or watch the Blue Angels air show. (They flew right overhead two years ago when it was still Bay Cafe).&nbsp;<a href="http://boathousecanton.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Boathouse</a> must realize its potential as a great Star Spangled spot because its featuring $4 Anthem cans, $38 Chandon bottles, and it created a Rockets Red Glare Crush (Absolut Citron vodka, strawberry puree, simple syrup, topped with Prosecco).</p>
<p><strong>The Gathering&nbsp;<br /></strong>The migrating&nbsp;<a href="http://www.thegatheringbaltimore.com/">food truck event</a> is joining the fun&nbsp;at&nbsp;McHenry Row in Locust Point&nbsp;on Sept 12. from 5-10 p.m. at the Star Spangled Food Truck Festival. Enjoy the incredible food truck lineup while listening to live music from Bosely and Swingin&#8217; Swamis. Admission will only cost you $3 and The Gathering&#8217;s all you care to drink option is available for $17 in advance.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/fooddrink/star-spangled-spectacular-specials/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Let&#8217;s Party For The Patriots</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/party-for-the-patriots/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2014 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=8014</guid>

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<p>
	<strong>What has 36 ships, a formation of Navy F-18s, seven fireworks barges, 98,000 fireworks effects, and 1.5 million spectators?</strong>
</p>
<p>
	If all goes according to plan and the weather cooperates, the answer will be this month’s massive Star-Spangled Spectacular, an encore of the party extraordinaire held two years ago to mark the start of the War of 1812 and which proved one of Charm City’s most successful events on record. After it brought in $166 million in direct spending, it got city officials thinking, “Hey, wait, we could do this again, <em>right?</em>”
</p>
<p>
	So, okay, sure, but what are we celebrating now? That would be the 200th anniversary of the actual Battle of Baltimore (and the writing of what became our national anthem), a defining moment in the war in which British forces, after routing American militia at Bladensburg and burning Washington, D.C., tried to take Baltimore from two sides, by sea and by land.
</p>
<p>
	Barred from the harbor by the tenacious garrison at Fort McHenry and stopped after their march up North Point Road by a ragtag force of 15,000 American militiamen, seamen, and assorted other volunteers (including aged Revolutionary War vets), the redcoats unwittingly gave troublesome Baltimore an excuse for yet another grand party this month.
</p>
<p>
	It’s a bash that promises to outdo even the nearly flawless celebration in 2012, so the only questions now are: What? When? And where? Lucky for you, we’ve got the answers.
</p>
<h2>How it All Came Together</h2>
<p>
	<strong>The 1812 celebration two years ago</strong> holds the title of the largest free public event in Maryland ever, but it could very well be topped by this month’s massive Star-Spangled Spectacular.
</p>
<p>
	When it rolls out, though, most onlookers will have little concept of what goes into a bash this big: It’s an event that has given a whole new meaning to the phrase “party planning.”
</p>
<p>
	For more than a year, 80-plus agencies, guided by Ann Beegle, executive director of the nonprofit Star-Spangled 200 agency, and Bill Pencek, executive director of the state’s 1812 bicentennial commission, have been painstakingly making the preparations.
</p>
<p>
	A climax to a series of historical events that have been going on all year in towns up and down the bay that were touched by the war&mdash;from Bladensburg and Benedict to Leonardtown and Havre de Grace&mdash;the event requires collaboration by city, state, county, federal, and military officials, as well as scores of nonprofits and contractors, from film producers to fireworks experts.
</p>
<p>
	And how much does this thing cost? When all is said and done, the tab for the party will be about $17 million, but some of that is covered by corporate sponsorships from companies that have a little something to gain from the exposure. (Think your AT&T, Constellation Energy, or Papa John’s logo being picked up by TV cameras all over town, to name just three of them.)
</p>
<p>
	To understand the complexity of crafting all these elements into a successful and perfectly timed event (if anybody’s counting, it will have taken 182 planning meetings to make this happen), you would have to have been a fly on the wall at one of several regular meetings held by the dozens of agencies involved, such as the six-hour one held in May in the spacious and well-appointed headquarters of the Maryland Pilots Association (the skippers-for-a-day who guide merchant ships up the Chesapeake).
</p>
<p>
	Picture 50 people from nearly as many agencies and governments seated in rows, plus a handful more on speakerphone. (On the line during the entire meeting are representatives from the U.S. Navy, the Maryland National Guard, the mayor’s office, and the Baltimore County executive’s office.) Presiding over the whole thing at the front of the room are Beegle and Pencek, who play schoolmarms, checking with each pupil to make sure they did their homework from the last class.
</p>
<p>
	First called on is Mike McGeady, president of Sail Baltimore and co-chair of the Waterways Planning Group, who reports on his “barge-sourcing,” a search up and down the East Coast for seven fireworks barges that can be towed to different spots around the harbor and the Patapsco River so that the over-the-top pyrotechnics display will be visible from virtually any vantage point from the Inner Harbor to Fort McHenry. And you can’t just randomly drop 14 barge anchors onto the bay floor over buried utility lines or the casing of the harbor tunnel, which means working with the U.S. Coast Guard, the U.S. Army Corps&nbsp;of Engineers, and Maryland environmental regulators. McGeady’s also in charge of working with the Baltimore City Marine Police and the Coast Guard to control private boats that are sure to show up in droves.
</p>

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<p>
	And who is to look after the 2,500 randy sailors from the visiting tall ships and naval vessels, including U.S., British, and German warships that have been invited to the party? That would be Sail Baltimore vice president Nan Nawrocki, who has organized soccer, softball, and rugby matches for them, secured restaurant and event discounts, and is lining up a fleet of crew buses to shuttle them around town, from the piers at Locust Point to the downtown to Fort McHenry.
</p>
<p>
	Mike Harrington from Baltimore City’s government reports on tourist parking locations and plans for shuttle buses to Fort McHenry (private cars won’t be able to drive there), while Pencek and the Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts are charged with securing hundreds of Port-a-Potties for all of the parking lots.
</p>
<p>
	Then, there are status reports on the concurrent Fort McHenry air show originating at Martin State Airport, which will require EMS tents, hospitals on standby, FAA okays for the air show over the fort, security protocols imposed by the Navy for their Blue Angels crews and aircraft, and specific police, fire, and EMS units assigned to the event.
</p>
<p>
	Also on the to-do list is organizing a living flag of more than 7,000 kids from every county in Maryland, finding 200 more buses to get them there, and recruiting 500 volunteers to organize them. Not to mention coordinating radio communications between all the players, from the Coast Guard and the National Park Service to the fire department and the city police.
</p>
<p>
	So what if we threw a party and nobody came? That’s where Star-Spangled marketing maven Jill Feinberg comes in, rattling off recent national media exposure ranging from<em> USA Today</em> and travel magazines to inflight and Amtrak publications.
</p>
<p>
	Oh, and you’re going to be on national TV, too, Baltimore, so let’s make sure we have the Old Bay wiped off our face and our fly is zipped up. Choreographing the event for television requires another subgroup meeting later in the day, with representatives from Showcall, a national event planner, Fireworks by Grucci, Dick Clark Productions, Maryland Public Television, PBS, and park rangers from the fort.
</p>
<p>
	They must script every detail for the multiple cameras (including one mounted atop the Domino Sugar factory) and the several Jumbotrons that will be placed all around the harbor from Pier 6 and Harborplace to the fort. The split-second timing details (let’s not have any TV dead time, please) include the arrival&mdash;presumably by helicopter&mdash; of the governor and the President, the flag ceremony, the usual speechmaking, the singing of the national anthem, and exactly when the Grucci pyromaniacs on the barges will put the match to the largest fireworks display Baltimore has ever seen. (Some will also be launched from the tops of buildings.)
</p>
<p>
	Despite the mind-boggling number of details to work out, though, Beegle isn’t worried.
</p>
<p>
	“All the players had a major dress rehearsal in 2012, and we work together well, so that’s a real benefit,” she says.
</p>
<p>
	“Some people might ask, ‘Why bother?’” says Pencek. “The answer is, ‘Because it’s our most important national heritage story.’ All we have to do is figure out how to roll all that up so that when the event is over, we’ve educated Baltimoreans and told the nation where these icons came from.”&nbsp;
</p>
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		<title>The Men Who Saved Baltimore</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/historypolitics/the-men-who-saved-baltimore/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2014 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History & Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Battle of Baltimore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[War of 1812]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://server2.local/BIT-SPRING/baltimoremagazine.com/html/?post_type=article&#038;p=8017</guid>

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			<p>
	<strong>Baltimore has had many nicknames over the years,</strong> including Monument City, but one of those monuments is unfamiliar to most natives: It stands at East Monument and Aisquith streets, honoring two teenage apprentice saddle-makers, Daniel Wells and Henry McComas, who are among those legend credits with saving Charm City from being sacked and burned by the British. (To the Brits, Baltimore and its shipyards were a hornet’s nest of privateers who were pillaging British shipping.)
</p>
<p>
	Frustrated when Fort McHenry refused to surrender after being pummeled by cannon and rockets from his majesty’s fleet, other British  ships tried a Hail Mary play, landing a large force at North Point near the mouth of the Back River and marching up North Point Road&mdash;which runs up a four-mile-long, narrow peninsula&mdash;to come in through the back door in East Baltimore.
</p>
<p>
	Word had spread to neighboring counties and states of the attack, and thousands of Americans put down their plows and carried their muskets to Baltimore to build a line of defense in what is now Patterson Park, at the center of which is a hill that offers an impressive vantage point. But as was the case at the Battle of Bladensburg, where American militiamen broke ranks and ran in the face of concentrated enemy fire, they were a motley crew, lacking military training, and most were no match for a highly disciplined British army fresh from years of war in Europe.
</p>
<p>
	The first responders dispatched to counter the amphibious landing were 5,000 American militiamen, led by Brigadier General John Stricker, who planned a stalling action on North Point Road. Would the American citizens-soldiers stand and fight the crack redcoats or retreat in disarray <em>a la</em> Bladensburg? The British expected the latter, but suffered a crushing blow from a single musket ball.
</p>
<p>
	Wells and McComas were serving with Captain Edward Aisquith’s militia rifle company, which was among the units trying to slow the British advance up the road.
</p>
<p>
	In command of the British land forces was General Robert Ross, a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars with a military background spanning 25 years. Gen. Ross, noticing that Capt. Aisquith’s company had positioned itself on the North Point peninsula, decided to wait at the local farm of Robert Gorsuch, having breakfast cooked for him while waiting for the rest of his army, which totaled 4,700 soldiers and marines.
</p>
<p>
	Learning of this from civilians who fled the farm, American Brig. Gen. Stricker ordered a group of 230 men, including Wells, 18, and McComas, 19, to flush Gen. Ross out of the Gorsuch farm.
</p>
<p>
	The 200-year-old tale goes like this (sorry, there was no ballistics testing then): Riding on a white horse, Gen. Ross was shot and mortally wounded, with credit going to both Wells and McComas. British troops saw where the shots came from, rushed their position, and killed them both, as well as a third soldier, 24-year-old Aquilla Randall.
</p>
<p>
	A more junior officer, Colonel Arthur Brooke, took over Gen. Ross’s command, but, when he went north to Patterson Park, he balked at the sight of 15,000 dug-in defenders with hundreds of cannons, stretching a mile north of Canton. After trying to outflank the defenders, but being thwarted by Brig. Gen. Stricker’s men, and knowing fresh American volunteers were pouring into the city every day from surrounding states, he beat it back to the ships at the bottom of North Point Road, and the British fleet sailed away empty-handed&mdash;and short one general.
</p>


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	<p>There’s nothing like the smell of cordite in the afternoon to clear your sinuses, and the best place to take in some gunpowder-smoke therapy is the Battle of North Point re-enactment being put on by history-loving volunteers at Fort Howard at the bottom of the North Point peninsula in Baltimore County (near where British land forces came ashore in September 1814). Using about 90 re-enactors in period uniforms, the event&mdash;held <strong>Saturday, September 6, and Sunday, September 7</strong>, with additional historical events and fireworks at Sparrows Point High School (just up North Point Road) on Monday, September 8 &mdash;includes a flag ceremony, a fife and drum corps, music, craft displays, and activities for children. The three-day schedule, sponsored by the Dundalk-Patapsco Neck Historical Society  &nbsp;Museum in partnership with the Baltimore County Department of Tourism and Star-Spangled 200, includes two battle re-enactments each on Saturday and Sunday.

</p>
<p>
	<em>For details and directions, go to the Dundalk-Patapsco Neck Historical Society & Museum website at <a href="http://www.dundalkhistory.org/" target=_blank">dundalkhistory.org</a> or call 410-284-2331.</em>
</p>
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		<title>Stars, Stripes, and Guitars</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/stars-stripes-and-guitars/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2014 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1814! The War of 1812 Rock Opera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
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	<strong>The warehouses along Whittington Avenue</strong> in Morrell Park appear to be deserted on a summer’s night. The only sign of life at Mid-Atlantic Rubber is a black cat drinking from a puddle. But across the street, what looks like a sprawling storage facility hums with activity.
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<p>
	A few dozen cars and trucks occupy the parking lot, and the curious sound of music floats through the air. Country rock wafts through the open door of a loading dock, and muffled heavy metal pulsates from within the building, which houses dozens of band rehearsal spaces.
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<p>
	In a cramped room behind a nondescript gray door, practice for <em>1814! The War of 1812 Rock Opera</em> begins with a round of warm greetings and cold beers. Some cast members haven’t seen each other since last performing the show&mdash;a sassy musical-theater piece that weds historical events, including the British burning of Washington, D.C., and the Battle of Baltimore, to an arena rock score&mdash;in 2013. They’re gearing up for a September 14 performance at Patterson Park.
</p>
<p>
	As bottles of Miller High Life and cans of Natty Boh are opened, Laura Schneider (who plays Dolley Madison), Derek Vaughan Brown (General Robert Ross), and Tim Olewnik (General Sam Smith) exchange war stories from last July’s run of sold-out shows at D.C.’s Capital Fringe Festival. “It was amazing,” recalls Schneider. “Everyone was sweating, losing their minds, and dancing in the aisles, just rocking out.”
</p>
<p>
	Brown notes that it was especially satisfying doing this particular show in the nation’s capital. “The story is basically, Washington got burned down, and us Baltimoreans saved the entire country,” he says, laughing. “You gotta love that.”
</p>
<p>
	“And it was awesome to see people at a rock show, getting some history,” says Olewnik. “We love making historical figures into rock stars. Why not make Dolley Madison sound like Pat Benatar or Joan Jett if it pulls more people into the story?”
</p>
<p>
	<em>The Washington Post</em> lauded that approach and praised the production’s “music, moves, and impressive voices.”
</p>
<p>
	Historian Stephen Vogel, author of <em>Through the Perilous Fight</em>, which deals with roughly the same events, was similarly impressed. “I loved it both as a piece of historical storytelling and as an absolute rock spectacle,” says Vogel, who saw the show twice. “I was relieved to find that it is overall quite faithful to the facts. Plus, I couldn’t stop laughing. I bought the CD and play it to get psyched up when I’m driving to speaking engagements about the book.”
</p>
<p>
	The unlikely project began in the early 1990s, when co-creators Dave Dudley and Dave Israel shared a house on Fort Avenue, not far from Fort McHenry. The Daves (as they’ve come to be known by their rock-opera cohorts) hosted an annual party on Defender’s Day, the holiday celebrating the defense of the city, and at one point, their Defender Bender included a puppet show about the events of 1814. Inspired, the Daves, who played together in the local band Dr. Tasty, started envisioning a Battle of Baltimore rock opera.
</p>
<p>
	Israel says they wrote most of the songs at that time, with much of the music inspired by the hard rock of their youth. The results reveal a sly appreciation for their source material, as the character of British Admiral George Cockburn, for instance, evokes English metal gods Iron Maiden and Judas Priest, while singing “Burning Down the White House.” American General Samuel Smith’s “Black Powder” conjures U.S. rockers Ted Nugent and Kiss.
</p>
<p>
	“It’s perhaps the most derivative of all the songs,” Dudley says of the latter tune.
</p>
<p>
	“I don’t know if it’s the <em>most</em>,” adds Israel, before noting that he and Dudley often joked about completing the rock opera in time for the 2012 bicentennial.
</p>
<p>
	As 2012 approached, the Daves still hadn’t finished. Jobs, marriages, and children had taken priority, but, in a furious burst of activity, they completed the music (exchanging e-mails with subject lines like, “What would Ozzy do?”), assembled a core band (that includes drummer Jim Schaffer, bassist Erik Sunday, and guitarist Carl Weigel), and recruited vocalists from the Baltimore Rock Opera Society. “The singers gave the whole thing a life of its own and really made it a theatrical spectacle,” says Israel.
</p>
<p>
	“The show definitely has a certain insane exuberance,” says Dudley. “Its greatest asset is its relentlessness and a kind of goofy Broadway energy that builds to a crescendo.”
</p>
<p>
	Considering the many musical references (including some country and synth-pop in the mix) and historical figures populating the show, there seems to be one glaring omission in <em>1814!</em>&mdash;no Francis Scott Key.
</p>
<p>
	The reason for that, says Dudley, is simple: “He’s already got his song.”
</p>
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		<title>More Star-Spangled Spectacular Events</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/more-star-spangled-spectacular-events/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2014 09:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
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			<h3>Tuesday, September 9</h3>
<p>	<strong>Star-Spangled Banner Living Flag</strong><br />
	10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. | Fort McHenry</p>
<hr>
<h3>Wednesday, September 10</h3>
<p>	<strong>Tall Ships and Navy Ships Arrive</strong><br />
	9 a.m.-5 p.m. | North Locust Point, Fells Point, Inner Harbor</p>
<p>	<strong>Welcome Ceremony</strong><br />
	6-7 p.m. | Inner Harbor&nbsp;Amphitheater</p>
<hr>
<h3>September 11–15</h3>
<p>	<strong>Free Public Ship Tours</strong><br />
	12-5 p.m. | Inner Harbor, Fells Point, North Locust Point</p>
<hr>
<h3>Thursday, September 11</h3>
<p>	<strong>200th March of the Defenders</strong><br />
	10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. | Patterson Park&nbsp;to Battle Acre Park</p>
<p>	<em>Five-hundred uniformed members of the Maryland National Guard will march the six-mile route along the Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>9/11 Commemoration and Flag Ceremony</strong><br />
	11 a.m.-12 p.m. | Fort McHenry</p>
<p>	<strong>Blue Angels Circle Maneuvers</strong><br />
	Afternoon | Inner Harbor skyline and beyond</p>
<hr>
<h3>Friday, September 12</h3>
<p>	<strong>DEFENDERS’ DAY</strong></p>
<p>	<strong>Farm to Galley&mdash;A Navy Chef Cook-Off</strong><br />
	12-2 p.m. | Inner Harbor</p>
<p>	<strong>Blue Angels Practice</strong><br />
	Afternoon | Inner Harbor skyline and beyond</p>
<p>	<strong>Meet the Fleet Happy Hour</strong><br />
	6-8 p.m. | Inner Harbor<br /><em>The public is invited to meet and greet the visiting sailors from ships around the world.</em></p>
<hr>
<h3>September 12-14</h3>
<p>	<strong>Spectacular Festival Villages</strong><br />
	11 a.m.-6 p.m. | Inner Harbor&nbsp;and Fort McHenry</p>
<hr>
<h3>Saturday, September 13</h3>
<p>	<strong>Pets on Parade</strong><br />
	11 a.m.-12 p.m. | Inner Harbor</p>
<p>	<em>Games and prizes for the most patriotic pooch.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>Star-Spangled Spectacular: Bicentennial of our National Anthem and Fireworks</strong><br />
	6-10 p.m. | Fort McHenry and&nbsp;Pier Six Pavilion</p>
<p>	<strong>Fireworks:</strong> 9:30 p.m. | Official viewing locations: Inner Harbor, Fort McHenry.</p>
<hr>
<h3>Saturday, September 13–Sunday, September 14</h3>
<p>	<strong>Star-Spangled Air Show featuring the Blue Angels</strong><br />
	2-4 p.m. | Viewing locations: Fort McHenry, Inner Harbor, MedStar Harbor Hospital, Port Covington, Canton Waterfront Park</p>
<p>	<strong>Star-Spangled Aircraft Display and Festival</strong><br />
	10 a.m.-5 p.m. | Martin State Airport</p>
<hr>
<h3>Sunday, September 14</h3>
<p>	<strong>By Dawn’s Early Light</strong><br />
	9 a.m. | Fort McHenry</p>
<p>	<em>Two hundred years later, experience what Francis Scott Key did when he saw that our flag was still there.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>Creative Alliance presents: Hampstead Hill Festival</strong><br />
	10 a.m.-8:30 p.m. | Patterson Park</p>
<p>	<em>Featuring living history demonstrations and musical entertainment including O’Malley’s March and a performance of 1814! The War of 1812 Rock Opera.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>Crew Sports</strong><br />
	11 a.m.-5 p.m. | Patterson Park</p>
<p>	<em>Cheer on visiting ship crew members as they match skills in soccer and softball games.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>Singing on Key</strong><br />
	5 p.m. | St. Paul’s Episcopal Church</p>
<p>	<em>Concert featuring Colonial music, plus writings and reflections from the Battle of Baltimore.</em></p>
<p>	<strong>Anthem Remixes and Reinterpretations</strong><br />
	5-8 p.m. | Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture</p>
<p>	<em>Renowned beat-boxer Shodekeh and other performers remix and reinterpret “The Star-Spangled Banner.”</em></p>
<hr>
<h3>Tuesday, September 16</h3>
<p>	<strong>Tall Ships and Navy Ships Depart</strong><br />
	9 a.m.-12 p.m. | North Locust Point, Fells Point, Inner Harbor</p>
<p>	Visit<br />
	<a href="http://www.starspangled200.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><em>starspangled200.com</em></a> for a full list of events.</p>

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		<title>Cameo: Nate Barton</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/community/cameo-nate-barton/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Sep 2014 08:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[News & Community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blue Angels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nate Barton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star Spangled Spectacular]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Star-Spangled 200]]></category>
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			<p><strong>What is your title and what do you do in the Blue Angels? </strong>Sure. My name is Nate Barton. My rank is lieutenant commander, and I am Blue Angel number 3. I fly left wing [in the diamond formation] for the team.</p>
<p><strong>Okay, cool, so I heard that you joined the team about two years ago? </strong>I joined in 2012.</p>
<p><strong>So how do you get to be a Blue Angel? </strong>Well, there’s a lot of sort of checks that you have to meet in order to apply. You have to have a requisite amount of experience flying in the Navy&mdash;in the Naval Marine Corps&mdash;prior to joining the team. So all the pilots have between 12 and 20 years of experience, I’d say, flying. Myself, I’ve got about 12 years experience flying, which is what most of the guys have. Then from that point, you know, there is a lot of career timing and stuff that goes into it. You know, all of us on the team are&mdash;we’re all career-oriented naval officers. So we, the team, we in no way want the team to interfere with our careers in the Navy. You know, this is a very brief tribute for all of us, so all of us here on the team, we are looking forward to going back to the, what we call “the fleet,” which is where we’ll fly gray airplanes off of gray aircraft carriers, and go through what the real Navy does. </p>
<p><strong>So, combat missions?</strong> Right, exactly, exactly. And you know that’s something that all 130 members of the team take a lot of pride in. We say, ‘We came from the fleet and we’re going back to the fleet.’ Which means that we came from flying gray airplanes off of gray ships and you know, deploying in harm’s way, in support of our country’s mission. And so, that’s what we are all going to go back to. </p>
<p><strong>So then what is the appeal of the Blue Angels that draws people away from that sort of career track for a period of time? What is it about the Blue Angels that makes people want to sort of take a little sabbatical with them?</strong> Sure, absolutely. I’ve actually never been asked that question before. Uh, it’s actually, uh, you know, like I said, we’re all very proud of what we did before we joined the team, what we’re going to do after we leave the team. I think, a lot of the appeal, or a lot of the allure to the team, is very obvious. You know, the team, in comparison with the rest of the Navy, is very high profile, and we get to do a lot of really cool things that in the Navy you would normally not have the opportunity to do. I think most of the guys on the team, including myself&mdash;guys and girls&mdash;would say that you know, that’s not why we came to join the team. You know, all of us really, really are drawn to the Blue Angels mission, and that’s to showcase the Navy and the Marine Corps, you know, showcase the pride and professionalism of the United States Naval Marine Corps. And we do that through inspiring a culture of excellence and service to country. That’s something that all of us really enjoy doing. We take pride in, our country, in our Navy, the marines, and the guys who are out there doing it right now while we are living this rather cushy life compared to them. So, it’s nice staying in hotels and getting to travel around the country&mdash;it’s great&mdash;absolutely, I would never argue with that. But you know, all of us really enjoy being able to represent those guys and do it to the best of our abilities and to showcase the excellence that they’re displaying on the ground in Afghanistan, or on ships in the Persian Gulf, or wherever they’re deployed.  </p>
<p><strong>What can people expect from the Blue Angels shows (Sept. 13 and 14) during Star-Spangled Spectacular?</strong> First off, you’re going to see a lot of high impact flying done by our C-130, which is affectionately known as Fat Albert. It’s a marine corps C-130 that was built to be a sort of a cargo plane and do a lot of different things, but it wasn’t built to fly air shows, which is what you’ll see it do in Baltimore. And the C-130, you know, there’s narration that goes with it, there’s music that goes with it, and they’ll explain, you know, what the C-130 does. It’s a really neat show. </p>
<p><strong>So it’ll do, like, tricks?&nbsp;</strong>Absolutely. It’ll do maneuvers, you know, there in the Inner Harbor. It’ll precede the jet demonstration, the six F-18s, which is what the team is mostly known for. And that’s, you know, Blue Angels one through six, and you’ll see The Diamond, which is Blue Angels one through four, and that’s where I am. We’ll fly around in a diamond formation and showcase a lot of the precision formation flying that the naval marine corps does, and our solos will demonstrate more of the high-impact flying that the F-18 can do, as far as air speed and G’s and stuff like that. This show is a remote show, so it’s obviously over the water and then we’ll land [elsewhere]. You won’t see, you know, all of the behind the scenes stuff, and you won’t see what we do on the ground, and you won’t see our maintainers, you know, there at six in the morning turning the jets, getting them ready to go. You won’t see our, you know, our crew chiefs shaking our hands and telling us the jets are good to go. And you know, we just jump in as pilots and hit the start button and take off, that’s pretty much it.</p>
<p><strong>Well sure, I’m sure there’s a lot that goes into it before it gets to a performance. The analogy can be made to actors: Before they even hit the stage there’s just a lot of people helping them get ready. So yeah, I would think it’s somewhat similar. </strong>Yeah, but we don’t have makeup artists. We do our own makeup! </p>
<p><strong>Okay, I’ll give you that one. So, okay, what can these F-18s do? Like what is the height of their powers in terms of G’s and speed?&nbsp;</strong>Well, all of the F-18s that we fly, we get them from, these are older F-18s, so we get them from what we call “the fleet.”  I hate to say that because that’s not a popular term. But we get them from the regular Navy, or what people view as the regular Navy. Our F-18s are actually older. They’ve been in combat, they’ve been in Iraq, they’ve been in Afghanistan, these jets. And they’ve just been painted to these shiny blue and yellow colors and kind of converted into air show birds.  But these are the actual F-18s that the Navy flies off aircraft carriers into harm’s way. So you’ll see them fly, you’ll see a lot of the hot, high-speed stuff, you’ll see speeds in excess of 600 miles an hour. You’ll see the jets pulling G’s in excess of seven and a half G’s, which is what we’ll all pull on a daily basis. And you’ll also see some of the slower flying, the solos, the two solo pilots, five and six, will demonstrate some of the slow-speed flying characteristics as well, which is, for a lot of pilots, that’s sometimes more awe-inspiring than some of the fast stuff.</p>
<p><strong>Well right, you need speed to create lift, right, isn’t that generally how airplanes work? </strong>Exactly. Yeah, exactly.</p>
<p><strong>So, I would think going slowly would be tricky. So for you, when you are doing like seven and a half G’s or whatever, what does that feel like for you?  And what do you have to do physically to prepare yourself to be able to sustain that? </strong>Well, it is certainly a physical challenge to pull seven and a half G’s, for instance. So, it takes a lot of physical conditioning, that we all train toward everyday. All the pilots, and I would say most of the team in general, all 130 of us, will typically workout six days a week. The pilots are mandated to workout six days a week, to make sure that we keep our core muscles in our body muscles ready to be able to flex them when needed. The reason we do that is, when you pull G’s, the blood wants to drain out of your head into your lower extremities. So obviously your brain is in your head, so you don’t want the blood to drain out of your head. That’s what causes problems. So, to combat that, we’ll basically tense up everything from our feet to our calves and our thighs, and our hamstrings, our glutes and our abs, and basically try to squeeze really tight to try and force that blood back up into our heads, or to not allow it to drain out. So it is very physically challenging, I’ll tell you, the first time I ever flew in the back seat of a Blue Angel jet I passed out, that was in the backseat, and luckily I’ve never passed out in the front seat. Knock on wood. That would be bad. Typically in flying the F-18s off aircraft carriers we would wear what we call a G-suit, and that’s basically a pair of pants, essentially, inflatable pants really, to dumb it down. It goes over your flight suit.  It connects to the jet, and as you pull G’s, this inflatable G-suit inflates and basically squeezes your legs for you. So it kind of helps out a little bit with the G’s, and we don’t have that, we don’t wear those when we fly. </p>
<p><strong>Right, so you have to kind of do it manually. </strong>Sure, exactly.</p>
<p><strong>Okay, so, have there ever been any dicey moments? </strong>Well, you know, safety is our huge concern. You’re going to see the show and you’re going to think that we are going to hit a bunch of different times, it’s just, that’s just sort of how the show is supposed to go, you’re supposed to think that as a viewer. Everything that we do is completely legal, it’s been practiced thousands of times, literally, and it’s approved by the FAA. That being said, you know, what we do, we definitely take the safety of what we do very, very, very seriously. You know, safety is our number one concern in everything, and we would never do anything to take on an extra safety risk that we don’t have to, or to decrease that safety buffer that we have. So yeah, I mean, have we ever had close calls? Yeah, absolutely. You know there have been times when we’ve tensed up, you know, or you don’t fly the way you want to and sometimes those mistakes can be, you know, they can be potentially very costly. We obviously try to stay away from those by practicing over and over and over again and always aiming for perfection in everything that we do.</p>
<p><strong>Well, so, what does your family think about you flying in these air shows?  Are they at all worried for you, or just proud and excited? </strong>Well, you know I, I think, I would say that they’re mostly proud of me because I, we’re all the kind of guys who like to, who like to do very physical things. We liked to play sports in school. I’d say all 140 members of the team played sports at one time or another. There are a lot of college athletes on the team.  Everyone’s kind of been in a very active lifestyle.  So this is something that we are all used to.  You know, my family knows that, you know, I’ve been in this for 12 years and I’ve been in harm’s way and so have the other guys. I think we’re all kind of just used to, like I said, we certainly don’t take it for granted the safety risks, but uh, you know, we don’t . . . </p>
<p><strong>It just comes with the position. </strong>Right, right.</p>
<p><strong>Well, so is it true that your family is from Pennsylvania? </strong>They are, yeah, they sure are. I’m from Hummelstown, Pennsylvania, which is, it is actually pretty close to Baltimore. So Baltimore is about as close to home as I can get this year, for an air show, which is exciting for us. You know, I’ll have a lot of family and friends from that area, from the Hershey, Harrisburg, area that come down to see us fly&hellip;</p>
<p><strong>Well that’s awesome! That’ll be fun! </strong>Oh yeah, we’re stoked about it. It’s going to be great. We’re really looking forward to it. I mean, Baltimore is a really special place. I came there a lot growing up in Pennsylvania, it’s such an easy drive down there, and you know, spending time in the Inner Harbor and eating good food down there, you know, we love it down there. </p>
<p><strong>Are you, by any chance, an Orioles fan? </strong>Umm, I can be for this show (laughs).</p>
<p><strong>Good answer! </strong>I’ve been to a handful of Orioles games.&nbsp;I love to see them play. I haven’t been there in a while but, um, I haven’t been to many baseball games in a while just because our time restrains are pretty strict right now.  </p>
<p><strong>Right. Well so, will you get an opportunity to enjoy the festivities or will you just be sort of preparing for them? </strong>We do get a little bit of time at night once the day is over to be able to, you know, check out Baltimore and hang out and really experience, you know, that part of the country. We also though, we try to maximize our time in the area doing what we do, so you know, we’ll be busy with doing speaking engagements and this and that to really try to maximize what we’ve been given. And we certainly don’t take that for granted at all. So you know it’s great, it’s really fun, but it’s also really busy. So hopefully yeah we’ll have some time to check out the town, for sure. </p>
<p><strong>So how many shows are you going to be doing over the course of the weekend? </strong>The first time that we’ll fly there is on Thursday. So we’ll fly two flights on Thursday, two practice flights, and then we’ll fly a practice on Friday. And the practice on Friday is really a full-up air&nbsp;show for us, it’s just a practice run through. And then on Saturday and Sunday are going to be the full-up shows. So, yeah, those are the days that we will actually be flying. So Saturday and Sunday are going to be the actual shows, although Friday is pretty much a show as well.</p>

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