Category: Blog

  • The Punk Scholars Network Conference  in Las Vegas

    The Punk Scholars Network Conference in Las Vegas

    I’m beyond thrilled to announce that I’ll be participating in The Punk Scholars Network Conference at the Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas on March 2nd and March 3rd. This event is a one-of-a-kind gathering of academics, musicians, and punk enthusiasts, all coming together to discuss and celebrate the history, culture, and impact of punk rock.

    Punk has always been more than just music—it’s a movement, a mindset, and a way of life. Having spent decades playing, touring, and immersing myself in this world, I’m excited to contribute to these conversations and connect with others who share the same passion. The Punk Rock Museum is the perfect setting for such a meaningful event, bringing together stories, artifacts, and people who have shaped the scene over the years.

    Whether you’re a lifelong punk fan, a student of subcultures, or just curious about the impact punk has had on music and society, this conference is a must-attend. I can’t wait to share insights, hear from incredible speakers, and, of course, soak in all the punk history surrounding us.

    Stay tuned for more details, and if you’ll be in Vegas, come say hi! Let’s keep punk alive—loud, proud, and always questioning.

    More information about The Punk Scholars Network Conference is available via their website, 

    📧 PSN USA: punkscholarsusa@gmail.com
    📷 Instagram: @punkscholarsnetwork.us

    📧 PSN Canada: punkscholarsnetworkcanada@gmail.com
    📷 Instagram: @psn_canada

    The Punk Scholars Network Conference

    PUNK ON DISPLAY

    MARCH 2 & 3, 2025
    THE PUNK ROCK MUSEUM – LAS VEGAS, NEVADA

    Following the success of our second in-person conference in August 2024, we are excited to announce our third in-person conference sponsored by PSN Canada and PSN USA. This year, the conference will be held on March 2 and 3 at The Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Punk is a truly global phenomenon that manifests in myriad ways. The music and culture are created and transformed in different scenes in ways that are both unique but also reflect commonalities. Given the location of this year’s conference, we encourage participants to consider how punk is and has been collected, presented and re-presented, curated, and archived. Punks respond to and engage varying political and cultural contexts. And the culture invites individual participation within networks that foster cooperative action. Punk is many things to many people and seldom remains static over a lifetime. Increased globalization, changes in connectivity and technology, and shifts in both capitalism and populism have impacted punk for better and worse. International and transnational punk scenes reflect these connections but also can highlight ideological and aesthetic differences.

    In keeping with the PSN’s multidisciplinary academic approach, we are seeking contributions from a range of fields of study and methodological approaches including, but not limited to, cultural studies, history, musicology, communication, art and design, humanities, performing arts, and the social sciences. As ever, the PSN also welcomes proposals from independent scholars, artists, journalists, musicians, punk fans, and scene participants working outside of formal academic institutions. Selected papers and panels could cover, but are not limited to, the following themes:

    • Formal and informal punk archives, punk gallery displays, and punk museum collections
    • The history of punk: origins, legacy, impact
    • Punk resistance, longevity, and sustainability
    • Global punk scenes
    • Punk ethics and politics
    • Punk aesthetics, punk style
    • Punk and conflict, crisis, or trauma
    • Ethnographic considerations of a scene, spaces, and borders
    • Music and the performer: creativity, authorship, identity, definition, musical boundaries
    • DIY culture and activism
    • The art of punk: record covers, concert flyers, fanzine design, and associated graphic styles
    • Political issues relating to Canada and the United States analyzed through the lens of punk scholarship, such as abortion rights, systemic racism, gender equality, and disability justice

    Submission Deadline: Thursday, November 7, 2024, though we are happy to accept proposals earlier.

    Decisions will be sent by November 21, 2024.

    Proposals should be 350 words maximum. Please include a presentation title, affiliation information (if any), pronouns, and a brief presenter bio (50-100 words) with your submission. There is no conference fee for presenters.

    Proposals for PSN Canada and PSN USA should be submitted to:
    📧 punkscholarsusa@gmail.com

    🌎 https://www.punkscholarsnetwork.com/

    📧 PSN USA: punkscholarsusa@gmail.com
    📷 Instagram: @punkscholarsnetwork.us

    📧 PSN Canada: punkscholarsnetworkcanada@gmail.com
    📷 Instagram: @psn_canada


  • Jennifer Finch Walks you through the Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas February and March 2025

    Jennifer Finch Walks you through the Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas February and March 2025

    🎸 We NEED TO TALK at the Punk Rock Museum 🎸

    Walk and Talk with Me as Your Trusty (Sometimes Crusty) Tour Guide
    📍 February 28 – March 2, 2025 | Punk Rock Museum | Las Vegas, NV

    The Punk Scholars Network Conference


    What Makes Punk More Than Just Hot Skinny Guys in Vinyl Pants Or Blue Jeans?

    When I’ve led tours in the past, I’ve focused on more than just my own story. Punk wasn’t created by a few hot, skinny guys in vinyl pants and torn shirts sparking a cultural revolution in the ’70s. Punk is an energy—a movement that swept through and changed everything. It didn’t start in the ’70s. I’d argue it began before World War II, gained momentum through post-colonial England (God Save the Queen / New Rose), and drew energy from post-capitalist America during the Vietnam War. From politics to psychology, philosophy to art—and, of course, music—punk rocked the world to its core.

    Who Gets to Tell the Story of Punk Rock?

    But here’s the thing: Punk is about breaking systems, yet whose voices are included in these stories?

    • Who gets to be in the archives?
    • Whose voices are heard, and whose are left out?
      It’s time we ask ourselves these questions when we visit spaces like the Punk Rock Museum. Can we live with the irony of a Punk Museum? Isn’t putting punk in a museum inherently un-punk? Can a museum like this truly capture and portray the raw, rebellious energy of punk through “stuff”?

    Women’s History Month: Do We Still Need It in Punk Rock?

    🎤 This March, in honor of Women’s History Month, I’m diving headfirst into these questions—and I need YOUR HELP. Do we still need to put women’s involvement at the forefront just to stay relevant?
    “Why the Fuck Do We Even Need a Women’s History Month in Punk Rock?”
    Let’s tackle this head-on. I’m not scared—are you?

    Questions We’ll Explore During the Tour

    💥 Here are some of the key questions we’ll dig into together:

    • Who gets written into punk rock history—and who gets left out? And why?
    • Is the museum doing a good job of telling punk’s story and including its diverse voices?
    • What barriers have women broken to make space in the punk scene?
    • How have women’s contributions redefined punk’s rebellious spirit—on stage and behind the scenes?

    What’s Included in Your $100 Ticket

    💥 When you join me, here’s what you’ll get:
    All-day access to the museum, bar, upstairs galleries, and jam room.
    ✅ An intimate 1.5-hour guided tour, packed with raw stories, punk rock history, and a little chaos.
    ✅ A Q&A session to dive deeper into the themes and answer your burning questions.
    ✅ Time for photos and autographs to capture the moment.

    Why Women’s Contributions to Punk Rock Matter

    🎤 Women in punk weren’t just participants—they were creators, instigators, and innovators who reshaped the genre. Let’s challenge the narratives that sideline their contributions and amplify the voices of the women who built punk rock from the fucking ground up. Bring your curiosity, your questions, and maybe a little attitude—we’ll celebrate, question, and rebel together.

    Secure Your Spot Today

    Don’t miss out on this exclusive tour experience during Women’s History Month.
    🎸 Tickets are $100 and include full museum access, guided tours, and more. Let’s make some noise about why women don’t just belong in punk rock—they’ve always been its backbone.

  • Bass Tales: The Ghost/Bastard Bass Guitar

    Bass Tales: The Ghost/Bastard Bass Guitar

    The Birth of a Mystery Bass (Acts like a ghosts, looks like a ghost, it’s a ghost?) 👻 .

    At some point in the distant past—let’s call it the later mid-80s—a black Fender bass, a hybrid Jazz-Precision, came into my possession, just appearing, like a ghost. Far from being considered top-shelf, its low-end quality made it the perfect instrument to experiemnt with as a “canvas.” With each of those early L7 shows, I would add to or subtract from its menacing look. Over the first year, I spray-painted it, masked out stencil designs, and sanded away the sticky, gross finish to expose the raw wood.

    Murder Ink and the Crimson Ghost 💀

    Around 1989, I was working in a screen-printing shop called Murder Ink. We provided silkscreen shirts to many local LA bands as well as touring bands from the UK like The Damned and GBH. Among the designs we created, there was one featuring the emblem of the Crimson Ghost—a figure from a serialized film from 1946. The punk band The Misfits had famously adopted it for a flyer in 1979 and the haunting skull-like image became a logo for the group.

    I liked The Misfits (the band) well enough, but by the late ’80s there time had come and gone and their records were impossible to find…HOWEVER what I really loved was how they had collaged kitschy, iconic images, like the Crimson Ghost from pop culture and repurposed them to create their own aesthetic and mood. This kind of “borrowing, recycling and repurposing is what interested me the most in music, art, life, whatever…

    The Birth of “The Ghost Bass” ☠️

    One evening while screening the Crimson Ghost image in sticky white ink onto black cotton T-shirts, I asked my friend Karl, the owner of Murder Ink, if he thought the screen print could be applied to my Fender bass. He said probably not, but we tried anyway. Slowly, we pushed the ink through the screen, rocking it carefully to lay flat against the bass’s curves. And… it worked, perfectly. “The Ghost Bass” was born.

    The Evolution of The Bastard 👻💀

    That bass went everywhere with L7. However, I quickly grew tired of the design, wanting a flatblack canvas again to apply stickers and paint, but wanted to preserve the ghost image so I tried covering it with a vinyl film. By 1992, not just the images or stickers on the Ghost had become cobbled together, but most of the hardware was now “frankenstiened,” with tuning pegs replaced multiple times of different shapes and colors and a bridge missing critical components.

    That year, L7 had an amazing road crew, including a talented guitar tech who kept our instruments in working order. They respected that I played this Kludged together bass, but couldn’t resist teasing me about it. at one point I told them they could do whatever they wanted to the Ghost, and they took me up on it. They bolted on the craziest pieces of metal for the strap holder and installed tuning pegs that looked straight out of Mad Max. To top it off, they renamed her “The Bastard” and wrote it on the headstock where the Fender logo would normally be.

    “The Bastard” Makes Its Mark 💀

    Now as The Bastard, this bass toured the United States and Europe. It even made an appearance in a memorable moment on French national television, Canal+ show “Nulle Part Ailleurs” (watch the video) where my amplifier broke mid-performance. In frustration and humor, I threw The Bastard off the edge of a cliffside stage into the sand below while I danced. The bass stuck upright like an anchor, and though the moment shocked many, including the show’s producers, it became legendary. Actor Will Smith later told me he’d always remember that moment, laughing at the chaos while others saw it as a disaster. The Bastard was fine, retrieved that same day, and went on to finish the tour.

    A New Chapter for The Ghost/Bastard ☠️

    After leaving L7 in 1996, I turned to singing, playing guitar, and keyboards full-time with Other Star People and put The Ghost Bass in a case under my bed. Eventually, it was moved to my garden shed, where it sat for ten years. When we gals in L7 started talking about a reunion, I was certain I wouldn’t be able to revitalize The Ghost/Bastard. I had left the strings on and a 9-volt battery in the pickups, which I assumed had corroded the insides. When I finally opened the case, I was both surprised and hesitant. As I plugged her in, I discovered not only was the battery still working, but the tuners still moved, the strings weren’t even rusty, the bridge was intact, and—unbelievably—she was still in tune! I took her to our first L7 reunion practice, and no one even suspected.

    The Return of The Ghost Bass at No Values Festival 👻

    During the reunion, I removed the black vinyl covering the Ghost design but re-covered it for the 2024 No Values Festival, where L7 played alongside The Misfits. I didn’t want to come off like a suck-up, so the Ghost remained hidden under the vinyl for that show, although some of the black vinyl had started to peel off.

    The Punk Scholars Network Conference

    The Legacy of The Ghost/Bastard 👻💀☠️

    So, this is the tale of the bass whose origins I cannot recall, that appeared as “The Ghost” and has proudly persisted as “The Bastard”—seen so much and still standing strong.

  • Shit My Rockstar Says & Other Observations

    Shit My Rockstar Says & Other Observations


    Hello friends! I’m thrilled to share an unfiltered take on the world through my Substack, Shit My Rockstar Says. This newsletter isn’t just another platform for updates; it’s where I’ll dive deep into the stories, thoughts, and unforgettable moments you’ve been curious about for years. I created this space to connect with you in a more personal and meaningful way—away from the constant noise and banter of social media. Here, I’ll offer raw glimpses into my rock-and-roll journey, the highs and lows of life, and even the drudgery that comes with being a so-called “rockstar.”

    What can you expect? Think candid reflections that go beyond the surface, exclusive behind-the-scenes stories from my music career and photography adventures, and thought-provoking takes on art, culture, and fame. I’ll share the absurdities I’ve encountered (or avoided) and open up about moments I’ve never shared publicly before. From laugh-out-loud anecdotes to deeply personal essays, this newsletter will deliver a mix of humor, insight, and surprises with each email.

    Whether you’ve followed me since my early days with L7 or you’re just now discovering my world, this newsletter promises to be as unpredictable and electrifying as I am—onstage, backstage, and off the stage entirely. If you’re looking for something real, raw, and just a little wild, you’ve come to the right place.

    Ready to jump in? Joining is simple. Head over to Substack, hit subscribe, and choose the membership option that suits you best. Even better, there’s a free tier to get you started. Don’t miss this chance to experience my world up close and personal. I promise your inbox will never be the same!