


By Bill Franz



By Dayton937
West Carrollton’s Slap’n Lizard that opened this past June has just introduced a new food menu to compliment their wall of 50 tap beers. The beer hall allows guests to pour their own beer, sampling just a small sip or a full pint glass. All beer is priced by the ounce. Now they have some great munchies to go with the beers, like nacho’s, corn dogs and cheese curds.

The menu aslo features pizza, wings, sandwiches and salads.


Upcoming events:
October 22 2-4:30pm – Barstools to Brushstrokes
Join some friends and paint the perfect trio of pumpkins! Click to register.
October 21 1-4pm, Pet adoption event
Come out to our patio and possible meet you next perfect pet at this adoption event with the Humane Society of Greater Dayton.
October 27 7-11pm Halloween night
Name that Tune Halloween style! Come dressed in your favorite costume! Prizes for best dressed both Adults and Children.

2082 South Alex Road
West Carrollton, Ohio 45449
Hours:
Wednesday 3-10pm
Thursday 3-10pm
Friday 3-11pm
Saturday 11-11pm
Sunday 11-8pm
By Lisa Grigsby
Rum Raid for The Castle is a rum tasting being held this coming Wed, Oct 11th at The Steam Plant as a fundraiser for The Castle, a vital part of the mental health delivery system in Montgomery County. They provide a place for peer support, a place to have fun while learning responsibility, accountability and gaining some empowerment over the leisure time.

Ticket holders will have the choice to taste the rum straight up or mixed in a cocktail.Rum Raid for The Castle is a rum tasting being held this coming Wed, Oct 11th at The Steam Plant!
Some rums are made for mixing into cocktails, others are good enough to sip straight. This event will help you learn the nuances of types of rum on the market. Age, distillation method, and even place of origin all work in tandem to create different varieties of the spirit, each with a distinct use, profile, and history.
Here’s an idea of what you’ll be able to taste at the event:
Spiced Rum– Broadly speaking, this popular variation is defined as any rum that’s infused with myriad herbs and spices. According to the Rum Lab, spiced rum came about as a way to make rum more palatable, since “fresh” rum packed a good amount of potency back in the day.
Gold Rum – Vanilla, coconut, citrus, and caramel are some of the tasting notes that you might find in a gold or amber rum, which hit the sweet spot between light and dark rums in terms of both aging time and taste. These medium-bodied rums get their color from added caramel or being aged in pale oak barrels and lean a touch sweeter to taste, with a subtle buttery richness that makes for a pleasant on-the-rocks sipping experience.
White Rum – If you like piña coladas, you probably like light rum (and maybe, getting caught in the rain). The most common type of rum, white rum is light in body, sweet in flavor, and has a pleasantly mild character. While it’s still made from sugarcane juice or molasses white rum is typically only aged for about a year.
Dark Rum – A well-aged dark rum boasts hints of brown sugar, toffee, and sometimes vanilla and honey, which lend well to enjoying the spirit straight to let each layer of flavor shine. You’ll find them in stalwarts like a Dark ‘N’ Stormy, Hurricane, or Painkiller.
Black Rum – First popularized in the post-Prohibition era as a cocktail mixer (the idea was to make it the base of a punch), black rum was meant to mimic the look of a deeply aged rum at a lower price point, according to Martin Cate, author of “Smuggler’s Cove: Exotic Cocktails, Rum and the Cult of Tiki.” The spirit is aged for three years in white oak and crafted with fermented molasses, so it offers much more body and interest.
Aged Rum – Aged rums get their warm, toasty hue from sitting in barrels for extended periods of time. Despite the labor in making this style of rum, it’s grown quite popular in recent years, taking its cues from the careful, regionally tied distillation methods of Scotch and whiskey, resulting in a nuanced, quaffable spirit. Of course, these rums are relatively rare by nature since they take so long to come to fruition.
Flavored Rum – Quite simply, any rum with flavoring agents added that aren’t natural spices or the infusions you might find in spiced rums. These rums begin with a neutral, sweet base of rum before the flavorings and colorings are added. This is a pretty broad category with options ranging from simple tropical infusions (think pineapple and coconut) to more involved flavor profiles like coffee, chocolate, and cherry vanilla
English Style Rum – Modern-day British rums are characterized by the distilling method (now made using a mix of pot and column distilling) as well as a wild yeast-fermented molasses base rather than cane juice. These sweet, rich expressions are great on the rocks
French Style Rum (Rhum) – Rhums, which hail from the French Caribbean, are all produced in column stills using sugar cane juice fermented for up to five days. The resulting flavor is softly sweet, with fresh grassy undertones and elegant hints of floral notes.

Be sure and bring $ for a chance to dig for a prize in the treasure chest. It will be stuffed with items from Ignite Yoga, TITLE Boxing Club Kettering, Mamma Disalvo’s, McAlister’s Deli, Geez Grill & Pub, 937 Party Bus, Malibu Rum, Meadowlark Restaurant, Agave & Rye Centerville, Manna Uptown, J Alexander’s, Mike’s Carwash, Sweet Treats Festival, Flying Ace Express Car Wash, Black Rock Bar & Grill and more!
By Dayton937

Carson Hinzman

Tegra Tshabol
The Ohio State University’s offensive linemen, Carson Hinzman and Tegra Tshabola, along with tight ends Gee Scott and Joe Royer, are set to go head-to-head on Monday, October 9th at 3:30 pm, but not on the football field. Instead, they will each take on a giant, 2 & 1/2-pound sandwich at Dayton’s newest New York Deli, ‘All the Best’.
This event promises much more than a stomach full of meat and cheese or a big score at Ohio Stadium. All the Best will be giving back to the Dayton community by supporting one of the city’s most cherished foundations, The Gala of Hope. In one delectable day, they’ll be able to bring together football, oversized sandwiches, and community spirit for a memorable occasion.

The beloved buckeyes will be competing against each other for this extraordinary charity and to help the NIL effort at OSU. Each player will receive All the Best’s secret menu item: “The Stupid-Big Sandwich”. This sandwich is, well, stupid-big. It includes salami, turkey, pastrami, cole slaw, Swiss cheese and Russian dressing. There will be a race to the finish to establish the fastest time to beat for All The Best customers who also want to partake after this event ends. Any deli customer that orders and finishes a “Stupid-Big” will get it for free. The pickle and the Tums are optional.
Eleanor Dakota performs at Art Parkd
Art Parkd is a grassroots music festival featuring Gen Z artists, and is one that Dayton music fans should really take note of. It’s located in Grafton Hill, and is happening this Saturday, October 7th and has a fantastic daytime schedule, running 3-9pm. No late nights for those who don’t like to be out late, and for those ragers out there, it’s a great pre-game before evening festivities.
Affordability is another other reason to buy a ticket to this festival. Pre-sale tickets are only $5! Even if you’re unsure if you can make this festival, buy a $5 ticket as a donation. Why? This festival features the next generation of Dayton talent, and they deserve all the support we can give them.
Art Parkd is the brain-child of the uber talented Sophia Munoz Daughtery, who is a local photographer and event organizer. Supported by her friend Jennifer Kash, the festival was launched last October to rave reviews. This year’s event promises to be even better!
If you want to see emerging talent that will delight and surprise you, please check out this event! More info and tickets available at: https://www.artparkd.com/
Musicians and bands performing include:
Frank Calzada
Proxy.Exe
Crabswithoutlegs
Isicle
Grandace
Dos.Gradiose
DJ Don
The Rosies
Jay Hill!
HOW TO GO?
Saturday, October 7, 2023
Time: 3pm – 9pm
Location: 609 W. Riverview, 609 W. Riverview , Dayton, United States
Buy $5 advance ticket here: https://allevents.in/dayton/art-parkd-dayton-music-and-art-festival/80002106649205?ref=smdl
By Bill Franz

The Downtown Dayton Partnership (DDP) and The Contemporary Dayton (The Co) have teamed together to enliven downtown streetscapes with ArtWraps, a project to “wrap” utility boxes with original designs by local artists of all ages.
ArtWraps takes commonplace objects, such as the “ugly” utility boxes on downtown streets, and transforms them into pieces of art by wrapping them with artistic designs printed on vinyl wraps.
The program debuted in 2022 with the first phase of ArtWraps, consisting of 15 utility boxes throughout downtown.

An additional 15 boxes were wrapped during the project’s second phase in 2023. See the map below for locations. The designs were chosen from more than 200 entries submitted by a diverse range of people from the Dayton area.

ArtWraps is an extension of the DDP’s Urban Art Intersections program, which seeks to use public art to enliven downtown and connect artists with the community while engaging downtown Dayton residents, workers and visitors. It is also a project from Place Lab, the DDP’s approach to prioritizing and implementing placemaking projects, making downtown locations more vibrant, inclusive, engaging and connected.

By Dayton937
The Yellow Springs Sunflower Field will be in full bloom for abut the next 10 days. Come out and enjoy the delightful natural beauty of these flowers while you can!

The Sunflower Field is located just north of Yellow Springs at 4627 U.S. Route 68. Parking for this event is located at the Tecumseh Land Trust. There are two grass lots available. We ask that our patrons do not park along the State Route.
HOURS OF OPERATION
Saturday, September 30: 10 am – 7 pm
Sunday, October 1: 10 am – 7 pm
Friday, : 4 pm – 7 pm
Saturday, September 30: 10 am – 7 pm
Sunday, October 1: 10 am – 7 pm
CALLING VOLUNTEERS!
But that’s not all – we need your support! The Yellow Springs Chamber is calling on all nature enthusiasts, volunteers, and kind-hearted souls to lend a helping hand. Your donations and time will make this event truly unforgettable. Let’s come together to make a difference in our community and create wonderful memories amidst the golden sea of sunflowers.
Yellow Springs Sunflower Field
4627 US Route 68,
Yellow Springs, OH, 45387
The Sunflower Field is located just north of Yellow Springs on US Route 68. Parking for this event is located at the Tecumseh Land Trust. There are two grass lots available. We ask that our patrons do not park along the State Route.

By Dayton937
Five Rivers MetroParks will host its annual fall service day, Make a Difference Day, from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, Oct. 28. Register online by Friday, Oct. 27, at metroparks.org/make-a-difference.
People of all ages will work at more than 20 projects across 14 sites throughout the Dayton area and assist with many important projects, from invasive species removal to planting trees. Register your family, friends or work group, and get everyone outside to make a difference.

Make a Difference Day projects help beautify the parks and prepare them for the winter season.
“Our volunteers are so integral in supporting MetroParks to protect the region’s natural heritage,” said human resources and volunteer manager Jenny Hymans. “Make a Difference Day is the perfect opportunity to get together with friends, family or coworkers and give back to your favorite MetroPark. In just a few hours on a beautiful fall morning, you can make a difference.”

Registration is required via MetroParks’ volunteer site, Get Connected. Learn more and sign up at www.metroparks.org/volunteer.
Participants should dress for the weather and the activity in which they will participate. Supplies will be provided depending on the project, but individuals may want to bring gloves and a refillable water bottle.
MetroParks hosts two large annual days of service: Adopt-A-Park in April to celebrate Earth Day and Make a Difference Day in October. This fall, MetroParks hopes to register approximately 200 volunteers for Make a Difference Day.
MetroParks volunteers are needed year-round for a variety of tasks. Learn more about becoming a volunteer for other projects and more at metroparks.org/volunteer.
By Lisa Grigsby
Wings Fly, a family owned eatery that opened last week, specializes in wings, both traditional and boneless. A family-friendly restaurant offering a menu packed with delicious appetizers and entrees. Dine in or carryout available.


Screenshot this post and show it to the cashier and you will receive 15% off your first order,now through September 30th.



Tell them DaytonDining sent you!

Hours
Sun 11am -10pm
Mon – Thurs 11am – 11pm
Fri & Sat 11am – midnight
The inaugural Yellow Springs Film Festival (YSFF) is bringing in the celebrities for their weekend-long festivities. Due to popular demand (sell out) of Fred Armisen’s “In Conversation With…” special event, festival organizer’s have added a special event live music performance “Comedy For Musicians, But Everyone Is Welcome” featuring Armisen.
Armisen has been new touring this new show all over the country, so organizers are thrilled to bring this event to the area. and this will be the area’s debut performance.
The festival also features a kick-off party with Raekwon from Wu-Tang Clan, who is debuting a film he executive produced called “Taking the Groove Back.” There is also a special retrospective of Guided by Voices 40 year career, along with lots of other special film events. Tickets and information for all the festival’s events can be found at YSFilmFest.com.

HOW TO GO?
When: October 6, 2023
Doors open at 4pm
Show starts at 5pm
General Admission $30
Get festival information here: https://www.ysfilmfest.com/
Get tickets for Fred Armisen show here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/fred-armisen-comedy-for-musicians-but-everyone-is-welcome-tickets-72233386904

By Dayton937
Kettering Leadership Academy’s Class of 2023 is proud to introduce Kettering’s first Community Cupboard located at Oakview Elementary School at the corner of Stroop Road and Ackerman Boulevard. The cupboard will be accessible 24/7 stocked with non-perishable food items, hygiene and household supplies and information for a variety of community resources.
Two additional locations have also been approved and details will be shared at a later date. Cupboard maintenance will happen collaboratively between the school and other community groups. The philosophy behind the cupboard is for people to take what they need and give what they can.

This initiative would not be possible without the efforts of KLA ’23 and countless partnerships created to make this concept a reality. Many thanks to Day-Air Credit Union, Bogg Ministries, Lowe’s Centerville on Wilmington Pike, Dor Wood Optimists, Good Shepherd Church, Kettering City Schools – Oakview Elementary, Kettering City Schools Forward Foundation and Kettering Rotary Club.
By Lisa Grigsby

By Dayton937
Get ready for the ride of a lifetime. Young’s Dairy has just announced that they are in the process of creating Cowtherine’s Carousel, a 36′ carousel that will be here in the summer of 2024 and will be located just north of the Dairy Store, where the current Young’s World Headquarters is located. The building will be enclosed and heated for year-round use. The rides on the carousel will be horses, cows, pigs, goats and other farm animals you might see at Young’s.

Today they revealed the first carousel animal- a rooster. Naming rights of the carousel animals are available.

If you want to name one of these horses “Horsey McHorseface” – Youngs is ready to make that happen according to their website. They’ll have 6 cows, a rooster, a pig, a goat + 21 horses all ready for you to ‘Adopt’. For your ‘adoption’, you’ll receive:
• A free engraved brick that will go around Cowtherine’s Carousel
• Two free unlimited passes to ride Cowtherine’s Carousel for the duration of your adoption
• You can be the first to ride your animal on opening night
• A engraved plaque next to your animal with its’ name as well as yours
• A professional photo with you and your animal on opening night
• A sign of recognition in the Cowtherine’s Carousel building with your, and the other inaugural donors
100% of the funds raised for this program will go directly to Rocking Horse Community Health Center. Sponsorships start at $5000 for 5 years. There will also be a chance to buy an engraved bricks for $100 (4×8) or $200 (8×8 will go around the Cowtherine’s Carousel building when it opens in the summer of 2024. All bricks include the following:
• A free engraved replica of your brick
• One free ride on Cowtherine’s Carousel
• An invitation to our grand opening night
Cowtherine’s Carousel will be included in the family value wristband weekends, corporate picnics and Club Cowvin, and Young’s annual membership. So order now and be ready to ride those cows!
Hello Dayton937!
24 hours ago, my schedule for today was slim. I only had a couple potential screenings scheduled (and they were tentative)…then first thing this morning I mapped out 5 movies. And a couple of them were fantastic. It was a very full day!
My first screening of the day was a musical of sorts…all songs/performances are motivated from the radio or a boom box – and characters sing along. CHUCK CHUCK BABY, dir. Janis Pugh (UK). “A film of love, loss, music, and female friendship, set in and around the falling feathers of a chicken processing plant in industrial north Wales.” (TIFF Catalog) This love story is sweet and touching and some of it it is in a rather unlikely setting – a chicken processing plant. Though I found some of the story and motivations a little thin, there’s still a lot to like.

I had only read a little bit about my next film…and nothing had prepared me for it! MOTHER, COUCH, dir. Niclas Larsson (USA). “Three estranged children come together when their mother refuses to move from a couch in a furniture store, in this film boasting all-star talent including Taylor Russell, Ewan McGregor, Ellen Burstyn, F. Murray Abraham, Lara Flynn Boyle, and Rhys Ifans.” (TIFF Catalog) Very shortly after the start, I wondered, “Are we in purgatory? Is this an existential crisis? Is this the love-child of Charlie Kaufman and David Lynch?” With an ominous/0ften thriller-like score, this film is a strange one – set in a furniture store selling furniture from the past with current-day prices…but if you stick with with it until the end, it slowly reveals itself and has and you figure it out. I won’t give it away.

Knowing I was going to potentially screen 5 films today, I almost cancelled this one in order to meet up with some friends…but upon reading a bit more about it, I decided to keep on schedule. The original French title for this film is HLM PUSSY – a codename the young ladies of this film give to themselves – meaning low income housing pussy. I’m so glad I went to see it. SISTERHOOD, dir. Nora El Hourch (France). “Three teenage girls, inseparable friends, struggle with the aftermath of a pivotal incident that brings to light their differences in race, social class, and cultural privilege, threatening their seemingly invincible bond.” (TIFF Catalog). The performances in this film are incredible…the three young leads are all phenomenal – and I didn’t feel like I was watching performances. The story of social media and class, and race and privilege are contemporary and so honest. This is Nora El Hourch’s first feature, and I’m absolutely certain we’ll see more from her – I was shaken and moved and very invested in this great film.

My next film was my third film dealing with WWII…and it’s also based on a real person. IRENA’S VOW, dir. Louise Archambault (Canada, Poland). “In occupied Poland, a former nurse (Sophie Nélisse) risks her own life to shelter a dozen Jewish men and women from the Nazi war machine.” (TIFF Catalog). This is an absolutely fascinating story told with a lot of gloss. There were some big eye roll moments (like the Jews hidden in the basement preparing food for a dinner party so Irena could keep up with the pace)…that said, there were some good moments of tension, too. Overall, it wasn’t gritty enough for me to totally get behind it (I also questioned some of its messaging, t00)…but I think it will find an audience – particularly in the Jewish Film Fest circuit. The historical updates at the end were a treat after seeing the film.

My last film of the day turned out to be a gem….something that really spoke to me. FLIPSIDE, dir. Chris Wilcha (USA). “Chris Wilcha helped adapt This American Life to television. His new documentary embodies the spirit of that show as he tries to save a New Jersey record store, in this comic yet deeply moving reflection on opportunities lost and gained.” (TIFF Catalog). This doc is about so many things…it’s about a filmmaker who has several unfinished projects, it’s about his closets in his parents’ house – full of stuff from his childhood and teenage years, it’s about writing and working, it’s about family, it’s about a dying record store. In the course of making this film, the filmmaker is able to include segments of many unfinished films (which validates the initial work in some regard), and he went back home to talk with his parents about where he came from and what he’s achieved. I related so much to this film, and it even had me in tears. (I have to paraphrase because I can’t read my scrawling handwriting) – at one point in the film, Wilcha talks about being middle-aged and beginning to understand one of life’s great paradoxes…he said you can feel devastating, debilitating heartbreak for not accomplishing certain things you set out to do in life – while also feeling good about where you’re at and the choices you’ve made. This struck a real chord with me, and I hope we can bring this film to town.

Thanks for reading!
Jonathan
By Dayton937
