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Caliente Contest
The undisputed king of electric
blues is scheduled to play to a
packed audience Friday night at
Centennial Hall.

BB King is one of the most well-
known living blues musicians in
the world, and certainly the most
famous person to ever come out
of the tiny town of Itta Bena,
Miss.

The 2000 census pegged Itta
Bena's population at about 4,000
residents living within a 1.5
square mile area.

Yet the town still managed to
make it into the 2000 Coen
brothers film, "O Brother, Where
Art Thou?"

In the movie, a notorious
gangster terrorizing the the
Deep South stops George
Clooney's character Everett and
his crew and asks them how to
get to Itta Bena.

Name the gangster and the
actor who played him for a
chance to win a set of three
cookbooks.

Click here to submit your
answer.

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Aznightbuzz Calendar
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Kristen Stewart, left, and Robert Pattinson star in "The Twilight Saga: New Moon." The series is set around Forks, Wash., which has boosted tourism in the small town.
(Kimberley French/MCT)
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'Twilight' phenomenon both blessing, curse for Washington town

By Mark Rahner
The Seattle Times
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 11.03.2009
FORKS, Wash. — For some reason, Randy Lato's "Vampire Voyages" boat trips just haven't brought in the big tourist bucks yet. He hasn't quite worked out a plausible connection between fishing and the fictional "Twilight" series author Stephenie Meyer set in this little Olympic Peninsula town.
Hey, look: "I've only read two books in my entire life," he said. And "Twilight" wasn't one of them. (Although it's his understanding that heroine Bella's dad was a pretty good fisherman.)
So when people ask what fishing has to do with vampires, Lato says, "We're going to float down the damn river looking for vampires climbin' up the trees just like in the movies."
He exemplifies the major blessing and slight curse that "Twilight" has become to this town of 3,000 or so, ambivalent at best toward the source material and the "Twilighters" who've overrun the place in the last year or so, but anxious to partake of the financial boon they bring. The next "Twilight" movie comes out Nov. 20.
Most other businesses haven't been shy about it, no matter how tenuous the connection — one restaurant's "Cullen's Clam Chowder" (named after the series' vampire family), a sandwich board trumpeting a pharmacy as "BELLA'S FIRST AID STATION," an espresso stand's "Twilight Brew."
''It's a huge boon. We couldn't get publicity like this ever, paying for it," said Marcia Bingham, at the Forks Chamber of Commerce — which has a red truck like Bella's parked in front.
With the town's logging industry in a slump, being overrun has been a godsend. For instance, the month of July brought nearly as many visitors — 16,000 — as the entire previous year.
Are there any drawbacks to all of it?
''You can't drive through town sometimes easily because there are fans taking photographs all along the way and they slow the traffic down," Bingham said. "It's a pretty minor price to pay."
Annette Root, owner of "Dazzled by Twilight," a large gift shop devoted entirely to the series, said more than 5,000 people from around the world have taken her $39 Twilight bus tour of the area.
''I think a lot of the ambivalence comes from this being a very small, tight community struggling with the leap from a logging community to a tourist location," she said. "But it's been a very welcome gift."
Sergei Holmquist works at one of the local businesses that "Twilight" has brought from the red into the black — the 3 Rivers Resort & Store that sells the Cullen chowder.
''I do think it's a wonderful thing for our town, but it's definitely changed it, to say the least," he said. "So many people are upset."
Others are simply baffled, such as Andrew Roberts, of Gig Harbor: "I don't really understand why people come up to Forks because of a fictional book," he said.
He read the first two books in the series to try to understand the phenomenon. Did any of it touch him on as deep an emotional level as it has the visitors? Yeah, he said: "The ending, where I realized that I finished the book and got nothing out of it."
''How much do I personally love 'Twilight'?" asked librarian Theresa Tetreau, searching for a diplomatic answer to the question. "I think what I love most about 'Twilight' is that it has introduced so many young people to reading that might not otherwise be picking up a book.
''I think it's a good thing, but there are some days when I think most people would probably tell you that they've they've got a little bit of "Twilight" fatigue, maybe."
What if Forks had been overrun by zombies instead of vampires?
Back at the Chamber of Commerce, Bingham said, "We'd find a way to make that positive, too."

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