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Q&A with Deftones Keyboardist/DJ Frank Delgado

After their friend and bandmate, Chi Cheng, suffered a tragic accident, Sacramento’s Deftones found a way to pour their heartache into an acclaimed new album. Keyboardist/DJ Frank Delgado reminisces about the band’s early days at the Cattle Club and what it was like to win a Grammy, and opens up about the struggle of moving on without “brother” Cheng.

“Pop” Art

Two men hope to pay tribute to their fathers by building what could become an instant architectural icon. But it won’t be a piece of cake.

Scholar Cornel West

Author, educator, actor, rapper—by any title, Dr. Cornel West ranks among the country’s leading intellectuals. And "Hope on a Tightrope," his new book of reflections on everything from leadership to love and faith, should keep him there. But, at heart, he’s still a Sacramento kid, returning here often to visit family, drop by Tower Café and go shopping with his mom. The prolific Princeton prof talks to Sactown about social justice, Barack Obama—and breaking track records at Kennedy High.

Q&A with Vanity Fair ’s International Correspondent William Langewiesche

He’s one of the biggest names—literally and figuratively—in journalism. But whether William Langewiesche is writing at his Davis home or reporting in Kosovo (for an article due out this summer), the globe-trotting Vanity Fair scribe, author and two-time National Magazine Award winner keeps his feet on the ground. Unless, that is, he’s in the cockpit of his two-seat plane in the “aviation paradise” of Northern California, savoring the view of the Sierras and “the golden era” of nonfiction.

Q&A with Rita Moreno

So tell me how you found out you were inducted into the California Hall of Fame. Maria called! She left me a voicemail about eight months ago. She left her home number and her office number, which was really charming.…

Building Anticipation

After seven years of planning, the Crocker Art Museum’s new $85 million expansion is set to break ground on July 26. We talked with Charles Gwathmey, the project’s architect, about the process, the design and why the Capitol will no longer be the only prominent white building in Sacramento.

The Wild Card

With the release of Narc in 2002, Sacramento director Joe Carnahan quickly became Hollywood’s Next Big Thing. Harrison Ford helicoptered him in to his ranch and Tom Cruise signed him up for M:I-3. Then he went MIA. Now, with his new movie Smokin’ Aces on the big screen, and a full deck of A-listers (like Jeremy Piven) lining up to work with him, he’s back with a vengeance. But can he keep his new winning streak alive?

Q&A with Timothy Busfield

Longtime Sacramentan and Studio 60 star Timothy Busfield talks about his new show, B Street Theatre, and laptop shopping writer Aaron Sorkin. 

On Sale Now!

Sactown Fall 2025 Issue Cover

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