July 17, 2000
Creepy crawly cable
It's not just cable anymore, it's all manner of beastly productions and hare-brained schemes coming to cable. The buzz: Who will be the network to have the next South Park?
Before baseball went berserk
HBO examines America's favorite pastime as it was in the 1960s, the last great decade before the game -- and society -- changed forever.
Feet in fashion
Staying cool and looking cooler with summer shoe stylin'.
Being funny makes me feel good
A sense of humor is the key to survival, and I think that I have a good sense of humor. My sense of humor has developed over the past several years to the point that sometimes I find I laugh at myself! Now, you may think that would make me a bit narcissistic, but I want to tell you that is not true. When I am laughing at myself, I don't take myself so seriously, and I find that helps me in many situations.
Today on

TAMPABAY.COM: July 17, 2000
Entertainment News, Reviews from the Times
Seize the day
Tonight's installment of the Movies That Move film series, organized by WMNF disc jockey Margaret Murray, tries something different by bringing in instrumental band Jon Todd from Jacksonville to play a live musical score to the 1919 German expressionist silent horror flick The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari. Jon Todd, a trio, plays experimental rock with no vocals. The flick starts at 8 p.m. at The Globe Coffeehouse, 532 First Ave. N, St. Petersburg. (727) 381-4894. Admission is $5.
For 'brothers' Ween, goof rock is serious music
ST. PETERSBURG -- Gene and Dean Ween didn't let a little rain stop them from providing 776 fans with some sunny moments Saturday at Jannus Landing. After an afternoon of ferocious rainstorms, Ween, the duo's alternative music band, performed for more than two hours its signature brand of goof rock, including Bananas and Blow, a calypso-style Jimmy Buffett parody with synthesized steel drums.