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PW's Picks For The Week
Marc Vetri, Temple Grandin, Free wine at Du Jour, Eschenbach Returns, What On Earth Is Happening, Part 1. 

Marc Vetri Tues., Jan. 20, 7:30pm. Free. Free Library of Philadelphia, 1901 Vine St.
215.686.5322. www.library.phila.gov
For a table at Marc Vetri’s eponymous restaurant, praised by Mario Batali as
“possibly the best Italian restaurant on the East Coast,” you’ll need a reservation at
least a month in advance. North Broad Street’s Osteria, his second restaurant, is both
easier to get into and less expensive, but that doesn’t mean that a meal won’t leave you
feeling like there’s a hole in your pocket. (The pizzas are worth it, though.) For a way
to get the Vetri experience without holding a reservation or spending an arm or a leg,
head to the Free Library on Tuesday. Vetri, a South Philly native who trained in
Bergamo, Italy, will be talking about his new cookbook, Il Viaggio di
Vetri. Find out about the rigors of running two top restaurants and what he
cooks at home. Just don’t ask him if he can get you into Vetri on a Saturday night.
-Dan Packel
Temple Grandin Thurs., Jan. 15, 7:30pm. Free. Free Library of Philadelphia, 1901 Vine St.
215.686.5322. www.library.phila.gov
Author Temple Grandin may be autistic, but that hasn’t stopped her from earning her
Ph.D. and advocating for animal rights. Her latest book, Animals Make Us
Human, addresses proper care for our furry friends. On Thursday Grandin will
discuss the ethics of animal care. Miss it and you’ll have to wait for her upcoming
biopic. -Becca Trabin
Free Wine at DuJour
7:30pm. Through February. DuJour at the Symphony House, 440 S. Broad St. 215.735.8010.
www.dujourmarket.com
With the economy in the shitter, here’s the silver lining of a recession: free stuff.
For a month and a half, Du Jour at the Symphony House offers a free bottle of wine with
the purchase of two entrees. Choose between cabernet or chardonnay, both from Stone
Cellars by Beringer, a California-based winery. -Erica Palan
Eschenbach Returns Thurs., Jan. 15 and Fri., Jan. 16, 8pm. $36-$115. Kimmel Center for the Performing
Arts, Verizon Hall, 260 S. Broad St. 215.893.1999. www.kimmelcenter.org
Like a prodigal son with a conductor’s baton, German pianist and conductor Christoph
Eschenbach returns to guest conduct the Philadelphia Orchestra with celebrated violinist
Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg to perform Max Bruch’s luminous first concerto. After
Eschenbach’s beleaguered tenure as the orchestra’s music director ended, he moved on to
greener pastures. During his time in Philly, the Maestro’s style had been described as
everything from “cosmopolitan” to “corrosive” and reports of unrest within the company
were commonplace. His return engagement starts with the orchestra’s debut performance of
Osiris by eccentric German composer Matthias Pintscher and is
topped off with Sergei Prokofiev’s energetic Fifth Symphony. Come for
the music but keep a keen eye on the chemistry between Eschenbach and the orchestra.
There may be fireworks. Who doesn’t love a good dramatic musical? -Tim McGinnis
What on Earth Is Happening, Part 1 Thurs., Jan. 15, 7pm. Free. Germ Books and Gallery, 2005 Frankford Ave. 215.423.5002.
www.germbooks.com
Hey, are you worried about “the forces of the Dark Occultism at work in our lives?”
Then get yourself down to “What on Earth Is Happening”—a presentation by Philly guru
Mark Passio, who’s spent 12 years “investigating the nature of our shared reality.” What
exactly is a “shared reality”? Is there an unshared reality or a shared unreality to
which we might compare it? A clue to Passio’s particular shtick might be that he’s
addressed the Philly 9/11 meetup group on “the occult symbolism and esoteric agenda
behind the 9/11 attacks.” And that he puts the word “scientific” in quotation marks. But
why should you care? Because, as his website states, “it is not an accident” that you
are reading this. You are reading it “for a reason.” “All is Love. Fear is Illusion. All
beings are Free. Truth can never be destroyed.” I am the walrus. Peace the fuck out.
-Steven Wells
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