tv Watching the Hawks RT January 8, 2020 7:30am-8:01am EST
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i think that this crisis should be they should contribute to the management of the crisis because it's very important as the book both sides have a dog each other now apparently the iranians also a doctor that an american base in iraq so. maybe it's a fortunate that they that we don't have human lives lost which always means that there's a threat of retaliation yes well i think i think now probably the time has come for both sides to to just stop and make out a reassessment of the situation so i think at this point in time today there's already in a position they should be the position to reach out to the 2 sides. and ask them to show prudence. and see and see what can be done next because it's you see an all out war is not in the interest of the region it's not in the interest of the iranians or the americans so i hope that it will be theirs could play their softball or all my. head revenue thank you so much for talking to us i
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was talking to turkey's former ambassador to qatar and do and guys for now back to you will get back to you as soon as the ceremony starts at the ceremony the official opening of the turks republic thanks to you really are we appreciate that that's not easy to put trying to having a stumble. much appreciate things thing without a will but with that amount of stories and often. to. sell the stars inflation and deflation they tend to hint at. the connection between
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the finance economy and the real economy and sometimes the finance economy gets out of hand and you have crashes and sometimes the real economy gets out of hand then you have stagflation because wages are too high but sense 2000 and getting even more pronounced since 2008 we have 2 separate economies there bifurcated there's the privately owned central banks who print money for private the top 110th of one percent of private citizens and then we have the surf class or the neo feudal class and these 2 don't interact i mean. if you want to go to a widow to use d.d. a little siri good tired real good reason which is to analyze who did gave her the product to know if you speak to my old or they like it or not i got tablets of his qualities which if we. could go free to be able to do it on this world with no you
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know it over go. over. to start to push. greetings and salutations you know you can't have music without heart slight revolution without dancing. and if you want to talk heart music revolution you're talking about taylor alexander out of atlanta georgia was watching the hawks strikes a chord. with me larry alexander. was called one. ha. ha ha. ha ha. ha ha.
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working for the man. who makes the money but it don't make sense given an excuse to add all you want to this piece was exactly climbing up the ladder. as like you do with the eyes on. the pond and they came back in the other to get out of the business of the top of the mob and there's really nothing mysterious peoples wakefield's nobody eats pleased to. see it doesn't really seem to. want to shop in peace the whole world. to. one side going to be a stone. should not cut.
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twice as hard to defeat just good as machine made for me if you our viewers good you thought it was about the work. it's not about you know i don't step out into everybody i want to have a good time. is to the top of them up to. it's really good to deceive people it's misleading nobody eats meat immediately. it doesn't really believe. these polls. show. him it's still only. the big lie and the big smile it makes one it might make.
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you think i love the album releases their places but you get to keep the trophy on apollo upon me i'm sure if you can find some people to guess notices. it doesn't really pay. the full. to. overflowing. and absolutely it doesn't really. fit the whole world. to. him. but if he's going to. think you're. taylor alexander. one of the hardest
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working drag queens in atlanta georgia. she is a musician a drac reformer a community organizer a proud parent of 2 cats. and. just really about creating art that people can connect to i know that's very cliche but i think for people who kind of share my background and my various identities finding something that they can connect to is really important i want to ask what is a d.i.y. performance artist as and what is a do it yourself performance artist and what was your journey to become so a performance artist a fancy way of saying that i do i create most of everything that i do so with my music i write i produce a creative director. i'm my own from owner and manager there's no force or label that behind me to push my music i'm the driving force. and really
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that reflects itself in every single aspect of my life you know being a performer in atlanta being a community organizer a lot of what i do is grassroots from the roots from starting with nothing ending up with something and knowing that you know it's all uniquely organic in a way and it's also a way for me to be a control freak so you know everything comes back to me i accept the appraising the applause and i also know like if i mess up i have full accountability for that 0 it's all on you whether the succeed or the failed it all comes down to you with me on me all the. let me one did music 1st touch you want to suddenly you said you know what it's music that's what i really it's one of those i really want to work so when i really feel like i can get who i am inside out through music one of the like feeling by inspiration 1st to you oh well i've always
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been making music i didn't seriously start creating music until 2015 you know back in like elementary school i took piano lessons i was in korea so i did all those things ivan. writing songs since i was 7. but yeah i didn't start seriously you know saying i'm gonna sit down learn how to produce learn how to you know full well rounded musician as well 2015 and i think it's because music allowed me to express myself in certain ways that other parts of my life couldn't even doing drag you know with you know being a drag performer off to sing other people's creations. and there's a certain limitation with that and there were certain things that i couldn't say in my day job i couldn't say at my night job being a drag queen. i mean in music really. kind of like made it known to me and. allowed me to. talk to me
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a little bit about your music what do you want like you know the 1st track to recenter to be able to perform what do you want people to take away from it what would you want to inspire and people would listen to your music i always want to create music where people. i usually say i want people to dance to but also to think so i love dance music as you know a black person as a queer person and dance music has often been the driving force of a lot of different aspects of our cultures. but i want to create music where people can listen to it maybe here in a 2nd time here like a lyric again oh that's that's that's real like i want them to like really and i think that that's what i strive to do with my music and what you mentioned community organizing no a couple times women when did you start getting into community organizing you know the activists who were giving something back and what inspired you to get into that
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part of you know it's a little bit out of something with your problem in your life and work oh yeah i think it all start when i moved to atlanta in 2011 i'm born and raised in georgia but i moved in 2011 to go to georgia state university for college and so i started getting involved with local. organizations i started getting involved with a lot of the differently seen and so my community organizing background arose from wanting to be involved because where i'm originally from griffen georgia is a population of like 3400 people it's really small i was raised on a 400 acre fire and so there was no clear community there was no kind of like community for people who express themselves and experience life like myself so i wanted to do whatever i could when i moved to the big city to give back and so that you know start off as a volunteer ing and then it went into performing and then also just uniquely
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finding how performance are in our in general can create ways to advocate being activists i think sometimes when we say the word activist we think about you know you had to be lobbying you have to be up in the senate you have to be up in all these different forms of government when really. the most radical changes that we can have in our communities day to day grassroots and very d.i.y. and so that's kind of where i found myself being a part of community organizing because change really comes at a local level really i mean the things that we want there are national things that we want there's there's world things that we want to see change politically community wise but really it's starting to starting right at the local level we see a problem in front of you and then doing something about it to try to fix it. you grew up as you say you know in this small town 3500 people what was the love i mean did you know that like you know what this is who i am and i'm proud to be who i am
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but now i'm growing up in the town of like 3500 people you know was there any kind of acceptance through you are like what was that journey like it was maybe it's just me being an aquarius but i just really didn't care it was you know i came out and 8th grade the 1st time i came out because of the ongoing process i came out of 8th grade in high school i was the 1st person ever started a gay straight alliance at my high school even though i hadn't fully come out like my parents you know i come out like friends for years and it just i knew what i needed and i knew what i would want to see happen and whether that has turned repercussions completely 2nd to anything else. you know being in a small town you have a lot of eyes on you you know you go to the local wal-mart or the local grocery store the flea market and people talk about things and so it's a very small fishbowl kind of community. but i think here i
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knew what i need to do and whether that got me in trouble with the principal or my parents didn't really care for all that well for other kids out there like you you know growing up in a small community or at least a close minded community you know what advice would you give them in terms of. you know whether it's coming out or just you know how to make you know how to make their to really better understand what they're going through my how wonderful they are well i think what we talk about. you know people in kind of more vulnerable situations and like smaller communities i think sometimes we forget about safety a lot of the narrative is come out and you know because you'll be more honest in things like that thing that's a terrible framing i think people should mind their safety in a space where you're you're you might be physically or emotionally or mentally you know harmed if you come out mind yourself like take care of yourself 1st. but also . being out sometimes in small spaces in communities like that can really.
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just bring up a whole new community can really show to other people hey there's somebody else like me and we can form some kind of general bond. but i definitely think in terms of like small community sometimes you have to mind your own and take care of yourself and then eventually once you get a proper footing you can develop some kind of like connection to a community and build from there i. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy from day shouldn't let it be an arms race is also
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a spearing dramatic development the only really i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time to sit down and talk. being from the south when you talk about being you know. you always hear about it's amazing in new york it's amazing in california it's amazing in seattle chicago the south it's only talked about queer and transmedia or in the context of you know there's these statistics you know atlanta's rising hiv
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rates or you know queer homeless youth rates or things like that were always. sticks and were never fully human i. south east south region of the united states has the largest population of queer and trans people in america we have so many historical figures and moments and figureheads we have our own stonewall we have so many vibrant communities that are constantly negated under this idea that the south is incredibly conservative and it definitely is in certain pockets but completely erase the existence and be reality of a and entire you know quarter of the nation. is harmful i think and so that's part of why a southern flank where pride. came up because we didn't see ourselves our president in media we didn't see ourselves as you know black and brown trans youth poor people's sex workers. reflect and we needed to build community in that regard and
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so we started in 2014 and it's been 5 amazing years of building community because there wasn't. enough for us. as marginalized people so hard so from the from the outside looking in like you know what do you think is like one of the biggest misconceptions you know of community you must solve what you know for folks never even realize that exists and that it's so strong like what if it was a bigger misconceptions or struggle with even good music oh well i think. i think people have a major misconception that. we're all miserable that we're all just waiting for some kind of like savior to come along and save us from the south we don't need to be safe from the south i think yeah this idea that southern people are just so overly oppressed by republicans and conservatives and whatnot.
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which does play out sometimes in political races and things like that. the idea they were miserable and that we need saving we don't need saving we just need assistance we need respect and we need to be thought of a considered as legitimate communities. and i think in terms of like me when putting my music out there you know obviously a beautiful drag queen and a few i think a lot of people think that drag is very limited and it only exists in one kind of form of live thinking top 40 hits and then performing in bars and clubs and so when you put that on top of being without is just like. you know how it is even work i think people think that you have to make some kind of great. to new york city where you find yourself and love yourself and that's not the case i want to stay at the wall file so that land in my life when you sit down when you sit down to write
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a song you know what you're going to be ok are you what do you look for you know what inspires you just song by song as a conversation you had or is it just thoughts were going around you're like what what does that process when you sit down and said ok i'm going to put pen to paper put in figure out how to make a hit song i it varies you know sometimes i'll get like a melody stuck in my head and i'll take my voice. and be like this is a song you're going create and so i like you know i record that i build upon it sometimes as a phrase so like the song one started off with a phrase that i thought about what does one mean and it was right after i had read invisible man by ralph ellison and so there is a portion of that book that talks about where that coming here to work from like a pain factory and the trying to make the purest form of white and any kind of a little dot of anything which is completely messed up and thought about like you
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know what are some situations where i feel like the one message situation or the one being. whiteness so really it's just like you know it can be anything you know a melody can be a phrase it can be a certain kind of feeling. i get inspiration from anything really. this song is called. and it's. probably you don't know. if. you've got questions. take a 2nd. post. show it. on the screen. it was because. you need to log disconnect take some time so. you need to log off disconnect take time to so.
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this is how you do you. think is trying to shame. because how do you. think you struck out. fake laugh out loud to out you. need to log off this takes time so because how do you. do you need. to take time to go because. you need to log in to face time so because how do you. do you need to. take time so thank you thank you. thank you. log off literally i was like scrolling on and facebook you know as one.
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hours and you don't see anything and it's like reading people statuses i just you know. didn't really say anything and it's like i feel like people sometimes think they can solve all their so problems with social media and that's just not the case so literally i was like you need to log off you need to disconnect and i was like. this could work into something and so at that time when i was writing the songs on my 1st album hologram. a lot of the songs already talking about ways that we kind of communicate to the world outside like we think we know who we are internally that's great but trying to communicate to the world to be like social media technology just like person to person interactions. with logoff it was really about you know. are we actually affectively communicating who we are to the world outside is the algorithm that we're all playing into really like doesn't mean anything if
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they completely delete instagram or facebook where we are like where would your self value be if the person dee dee lake formed self value as a person on the internet or is it like in here within you it was just a lot of questions i had i thought i had the answer is. like a lot of who was me to logoff disconnect and take some time to self reflection it's a great song it's a really great song it's a great message you know it's interesting because it also kind of in that internet world or in the you know online world that we exist in you know i think it's easy to talk about the enemies it's easy to draw a lot of a better word if you talk about those who would stand against us whether it be our you know our religion our gender or sexuality or whatever may be a lot of people can stand against us but them at the same time allies are an interesting kind of mix too because wall a lot of people kind of say amen ally i change my avatar to be this picture or you know i don't know you know thing on line and you know but you know what should
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allies really like how can allies truly help how can they truly make a difference when they're fighting for a cause you know beyond just kind of giving you a verbal hey you're doing great your own believe in you. i think you know this is something the i've always had conversations around because you know there's a lot of people who are really fervent supporters of like any kind of marginalized community you know when you think about. a community you think about how some people think that the last 8 or that you know in the black lives matter movement that it wouldn't be successful without you know the allies and i think you know in even as like a marvelous person within myself obviously i don't get to meet all the i didn't in the world so obviously i'm an ally to other people i think if you're in a situation where you're trying to support a movement or a marginalized community and you constantly hear your words your voice more than
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others you're probably. shouldn't be happening i think sometimes you have to listen and show up and not so much be heard i think sometimes. it's very performative it's very a look at me i'm doing this i use all the pronouns i showed up to the protest i made a sign i'm like agree but like. you know you need to sometimes take a seat back and realize that you know whatever community are cause that you're trying to be an ally to these are very harsh real lived i didn't use the realities and taking up space and talking over people and trying to perform being an ally. honestly i think sometimes i don't even like the word ally i think sometimes that you should just be a decent human being and this should be expected things that we have as people like you shooting it like a trophy for like showing up for like women and you shouldn't get a trophy for showing up for like i don't know where trans people you shouldn't you know just be like natural things that just come from being
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a decent human being but you know i think that's also asking too much you know what they are going to say thank you for saying that because it's one of the things that like i see a lot amongst you know the kind of ally community and things like that and i'm like you guys are you stop performing for yourselves you know stop performing sort of selves actually see how you can truly help people elevate other voices in your own words your popularity does not help. you. you know but. the other question i have because it's fascinating to me and you know it's great talking to someone who is right out there both artistically and personally and making a difference in this world like yourself you're putting out really great music and you put yourself out there that takes a lot of courage and can also take some tonne of creativity and you have both. you know so i want to kind of finish up and ask you this and it's an interesting question that opposed quite a bit to other musicians who sat across from me in these chairs what do you want
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your legacy to be. there's no right or wrong answer central crisis. no i think my legacy. i want to. when i eventually disappear and turn it into like a pile of glitter i want to be remembered as somebody who. really tried to leave things better than when what i have found you know even if the smallest change i'll be completely grateful i want to be remembered as somebody who love the art of you know southern square and trans people who was always trying to create spaces when they when there weren't any and so as long as like that attached to my legacy that's totally you know i think. there is a great quote from dorian corey in paris is burning and i think it's actually the
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quote thing and. she's like a bee shooting arrow and goes are a high rate for you and i think that's really you know i i don't really get caught up and wondering who's going to remember me when i when i die i think i focus more is like what am i who am i actively being right now being the person the people in the you know my being the person that i knew myself to be and as long as i'm very present right now i think the legacy will inform itself and that is our show for you today remember everyone in this world we are not told that we are loved so i tell you all i love you tyrrel but you are watching the hawks have a great day and night everybody.
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look in iraq to american military bases that why doesn't the best strike as the longest homes to the killing of its top general was assassinated in u.s. drone strike last week however this time around says it's no it's nothing for a while but washington. all is well that sounds a little trouble responds to the attacks saying that he will give more details later on people he's threatened to destroy a multiple of reigning in size including cultural if they're around retaliated in any. ukrainian passenger plane has crashed. and ukrainian interior minister.
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