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Mar 1, 2025
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i'm from east harlem, so i'm, you know, i'm, you know, east harlem in the bronx. i have i have strong ties to it. and the community has sat there and watched me throughout this, throughout this experience, throughout these years. and they've always been supportive. so i definitely believe that, um, they see themselves in me. um, this is also, you know, in the case that captivated the america at the time. and so there's a connection there. there's a connection between me and the community. and it has it has been shown, you know, just in the last couple of days, the support has been tremendous. >> i read that you told the new york times that, quote, those who have been closest to the pain should have a seat at the table. last time you were on the show, it was about nine months ago. you were speaking to me from from georgia. are you a resident of the district now in which you hope to to represent. >> yes. i have always been a resident of the district. even while i was in georgia. i've always been, you know, um, i pushed for legislation, you know, to interrogate, um,
i'm from east harlem, so i'm, you know, i'm, you know, east harlem in the bronx. i have i have strong ties to it. and the community has sat there and watched me throughout this, throughout this experience, throughout these years. and they've always been supportive. so i definitely believe that, um, they see themselves in me. um, this is also, you know, in the case that captivated the america at the time. and so there's a connection there. there's a connection between me and the community. and...
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Mar 5, 2025
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[applause] we will also extend the second avenue subway in east harlem, -- into east harlem, eliminating transit desert and creating access to better paying jobs, and the interborough express to connect brooklyn and queens. we are making progress. let's get it done. [applause] and reconnecting communities like syracuse which has been severed by i-81. we are almost getting there. and building a new livingston avenue bridge right here in albany. the entire package to help build of the great city of albany. this year, i'm backing an mta capital plan. and we must end decades of failure, to make the hard but necessary investments in this critical infrastructure. because if we come up short, the future of our transit system and the economic strength of our state could be jeopardized. and we can't talk about the future without talking about education. it is the great equalizer unlocking opportunity for all. [applause] while he worked at the steel plant, my dad's college degree lifted my family out of poverty and opened doors to better paying jobs. and working with the legislature -- again i tha
[applause] we will also extend the second avenue subway in east harlem, -- into east harlem, eliminating transit desert and creating access to better paying jobs, and the interborough express to connect brooklyn and queens. we are making progress. let's get it done. [applause] and reconnecting communities like syracuse which has been severed by i-81. we are almost getting there. and building a new livingston avenue bridge right here in albany. the entire package to help build of the great city...
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found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlem to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your leadership epa administrator lee zeldin baby: liberty! mom: liberty mutual is all she talks about since we saved hundreds by bundling our home and auto insurance. baby: liberty! biberty: hey kid, it's pronounced "biberty." baby: liberty! biberty: biberty! baby: liberty! biberty: biberty! baby: liberty! biberty: bi-be-rty! baby: biberty! biberty: and now she's mocking me. very mature. mom: hey, that's enough you two! biberty: hey, i'm not the one acting like a total baby. mom: she's two. only pay for what you need ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ baby: liberty. business. it's not a nine-to-five proposition. it's
found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlem to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your...
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found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlem when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your leadership epa administrator lee ze my parents worked hard for everything we had. ♪ they taught me the value of a dollar, and how to use it wisely. ♪ those lessons are forever, and today i share them with all our employees. it's why i team up with vanguard for our company's 401k plan, because everyone deserves to have someone look out for their financial well-being. ♪ vanguard. fifty years of helping investors be well on their way. stamps.com gives you a lot of flexibility. (♪) print postage and schedule free carrier pickups on your time. (♪) start your risk-free trial today at stamps.com. your shipping manager
found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlem when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your...
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found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlemt back to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your leadership epa administrator lee zeldin (♪) (♪) what took you so long? i'm sorry, there was a long line at the thai place. you get the sauce i like? of course! you're the man! i wish. the future isn't scary. not investing in it is. nasdaq-100 innovators. one etf. before investing, carefully read and consider fund investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com after careful review of medical guidance and research on pain relief, my recommendation is simple: every home should have salonpas. powerful yet non-addictive. targeted and long-lasting. i recommend salonpas.
found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlemt back to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your...
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found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlement back to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for your leadership epa administrator lee zeldin. i have one important thing you need to know about ahead of next week. that is next. things move a little more smoothly. ♪ deposit checks easily and send money quickly. [coins clinking] ♪ that's convenience from chase. make more of what's yours. ♪ (vo) weight loss. for so long, i felt stuck. i tried, and tried again. lost weight, gained it back. but zepbound means change. zepbound is for adults with obesity, to help lose weight and keep it off. activating 2 naturally occurring hormone receptors in my body, zepbound works differently. it's changing what i believe
found that he had very loyal core constituencies through thick and thin when i was campaigning in harlement back to when his father was governor they were ready to support him that in there for his next run. i think he will be a highly competitive candidate for mayor. maria: you think he can win and beat eric adams? >> right now he is well ahead in the polls, he has the network in the funding. maria: we will leave it there and watch that. we are watching your work thank you so much for...
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so i came to go to boca harlem, is one of the wells most ruthless system is groups is terrorized west africa for decades. focus around terrorizes, northern nigeria. on saturday the crew killed more than a 100 civilians in the northeast. i'd estimate the 36000 nigerians have been killed by foot, caught them over the past 11 years. the surprising they know 11 did for some time. with this most love to see of terrorist groups was sourcing them more than a 1000 things from the phonology erie anatomy has come to the t 55 ahmed tank, and the high tech ahmed personnel carrier or a pc from easily. mr. ripple's in yesterday's back with income due to bonus data. the weaponry used by the terrorist was terrifying and unusual. the locals had never seen anything like it to not being to god. hi, how does that cost so much? because of what, what does that mean has to be independent because of all odd that we can do inside the condenser has can be moved into it gives a bar a summer. so i know that it has to do because you know, to me in 2022 the president of nigeria spoke about the boca hire a militant
so i came to go to boca harlem, is one of the wells most ruthless system is groups is terrorized west africa for decades. focus around terrorizes, northern nigeria. on saturday the crew killed more than a 100 civilians in the northeast. i'd estimate the 36000 nigerians have been killed by foot, caught them over the past 11 years. the surprising they know 11 did for some time. with this most love to see of terrorist groups was sourcing them more than a 1000 things from the phonology erie anatomy...
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sort of you and from the saw really come up on the normal from a, from a little ammonia harbor from harlem, and the few i'm stuff of the move from los a method to all of the lectures when folks i'm using them. claudia, why are weapons from ukraine spreading over the world? to turn this country into a major arms hub. john, so these questions. we need to go back in time to 1991 the on december, the 26. 1991 sylvia news. broad costs reported. that's what you were hideous to santa bushing yet. there's probably people she didn't have these question him grozis done bulky because he wants which easy to set this thing is every single go . so that's the whole issue or going to say we have to go out of the semester. he's taking the class, but he just needs it. and will that, that's going to be me going through. does that? yeah. is it a new photos? any me? immediately step through the photos on the 2nd. i mean it's a basically need to do that. it's out there as a company. yeah, that's the of the she's teaching easy to let me ask you at the time. so cold coldwell smells were held in ukraine. the world
sort of you and from the saw really come up on the normal from a, from a little ammonia harbor from harlem, and the few i'm stuff of the move from los a method to all of the lectures when folks i'm using them. claudia, why are weapons from ukraine spreading over the world? to turn this country into a major arms hub. john, so these questions. we need to go back in time to 1991 the on december, the 26. 1991 sylvia news. broad costs reported. that's what you were hideous to santa bushing yet....
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Mar 8, 2025
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kind of like what a harlem globetrotter does with a basketball. we do with the pizza.you have so many books. i mean, can really can people really even learn how to make pizza like you? i mean, seriously sure. yeah. you can make restaurant style pizza at home for sure. you know, i wrote the pizza bible. that's a pizza book that people remember me for. tony and the pizza champions was a book that i wrote for a children's book that i wrote for kids. pizza was the original book with diane morgan. but the new book, the pursuit of pizza world pizza champions team, my team, we got together 40 pizza makers. but what's cool is schaar it. if you want to learn how to, like, cut a roman or push out a sicilian in a pan, you can cure it and watch the video. so it's unlike any book that you've seen. but there's also 40, you know, recipes from world champions. all right. well, you show me how to make some of these then actually show me how to eat some of these. that'd be even better. oh, definitely. well, there are nearly 100 different styles of pizza. and what? you only have a few he
kind of like what a harlem globetrotter does with a basketball. we do with the pizza.you have so many books. i mean, can really can people really even learn how to make pizza like you? i mean, seriously sure. yeah. you can make restaurant style pizza at home for sure. you know, i wrote the pizza bible. that's a pizza book that people remember me for. tony and the pizza champions was a book that i wrote for a children's book that i wrote for kids. pizza was the original book with diane morgan....
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Mar 9, 2025
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after trump address to congress calling it a sad cell phone unhinged petulant becoming a metaphorical harlemdy pays attention to. it is amazing how he stopped liking the democrats once his brain injury healed. [laughter] wouldn't have said that two years ago the democrats clearly need a leader but according to tim walz it's not kamala harris. >> you think the leader of the democratic party is right now? >> i think the voting public is what i would say. [laughter] >> anytime somebody asked you yes or no and you pause for ten seconds, is not only no, that is a [bleep] no. [laughter] can anyone save the democrats? >> let's pritzker, he's back, right? [laughter] that could be an advantage because everybody is on ozempic but he's just going one 100% f fat. [laughter] and he's going big like christie was a little fast but he's round like a planet. [laughter] is like the girl in willy wonka after she ate the blueberry. the blue most to rule him out. [laughter] so he's there, who else? pete buttigieg but he's boring. i know he is gay but he's boring like it seems like he should be more exciting. who
after trump address to congress calling it a sad cell phone unhinged petulant becoming a metaphorical harlemdy pays attention to. it is amazing how he stopped liking the democrats once his brain injury healed. [laughter] wouldn't have said that two years ago the democrats clearly need a leader but according to tim walz it's not kamala harris. >> you think the leader of the democratic party is right now? >> i think the voting public is what i would say. [laughter] >> anytime...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 5, 2025
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there is a book the harlem of the west, and that book depicts what the harlem of the west was which is the fillmore and people really from all over the world would come here. it was a huge-just everything, this was the place to be to experience black culture and just to live. i definitely want to give honor to that. culture to my generation, new businesses. we have something really special and unique, which is in the black. sits on the corner of geary and fillmore. it is a home to i believe 30 entrepreneurs. it is like a marketplace. super cool. a lot of the things are either custom or just really unique. jazzy hair slaun. saloon and believe they are applying for a legacy business ownership because they have been in business over 25 years. there are lots of cottage and home bases. >> brother mar key mohammed in the fillmore since 1999, been established here since 1999. my products, oils and cosmetic items, clothing. how is it going? >> going good. >> good to see you. i still have my old customers that come in. this is a sense of community. we have little remanence of the old vibe here.
there is a book the harlem of the west, and that book depicts what the harlem of the west was which is the fillmore and people really from all over the world would come here. it was a huge-just everything, this was the place to be to experience black culture and just to live. i definitely want to give honor to that. culture to my generation, new businesses. we have something really special and unique, which is in the black. sits on the corner of geary and fillmore. it is a home to i believe 30...
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Mar 9, 2025
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he came to for a time, spent some in harlem. he was greatly inspired by the the black clergy there and the he was a brilliant pianist, by the way. and he felt he needed to go back to germany, essentially risk his life to fight for what he believed in. but he was here in america. i wondered if could have possibly have met miss perkins and because he was fighting a similar cause, they might have communicated in. so in her correspondence, i have not his name, but it sounds they might have known each other or known the same. she was very well-connected in, new york. and it sounds like they were on the same page. and as for the molaison this poem when people wrote to her, they referenced it almost constantly. and it really shaped how idealists viewed what they thought, the u.s. government could do for a german-jewish refugees. i would just about a side note. sure. that if you look at the statue liberty, which was, of course, an iphone project, and i believe it was somebody, a mother, that it was supposed to be modeled after. but if y
he came to for a time, spent some in harlem. he was greatly inspired by the the black clergy there and the he was a brilliant pianist, by the way. and he felt he needed to go back to germany, essentially risk his life to fight for what he believed in. but he was here in america. i wondered if could have possibly have met miss perkins and because he was fighting a similar cause, they might have communicated in. so in her correspondence, i have not his name, but it sounds they might have known...
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Mar 9, 2025
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there is a book the harlem of the west, and that book depicts what the harlem of the west was which is the fillmore and people really from all over the world would come here. it was a huge-just everything, this was the place to be to experience black culture and just to live. i definitely want to give honor to that. culture to my generation, new businesses. we have something really special and unique, which is in the black. sits on the corner of geary and fillmore. it is a home to i believe 30 entrepreneurs. it is like a marketplace. super cool. a lot of the things are either custom or just really unique. jazzy hair slaun. saloon and believe they are applying for a legacy business ownership because they have been in business over 25 years. there are lots of cottage and home bases. >> brother mar key mohammed in the fillmore since 1999, been established here since 1999. my products, oils and cosmetic items, clothing. how is it going? >> going good. >> good to see you. i still have my old customers that come in. this is a sense of community. we have little remanence of the old vibe here.
there is a book the harlem of the west, and that book depicts what the harlem of the west was which is the fillmore and people really from all over the world would come here. it was a huge-just everything, this was the place to be to experience black culture and just to live. i definitely want to give honor to that. culture to my generation, new businesses. we have something really special and unique, which is in the black. sits on the corner of geary and fillmore. it is a home to i believe 30...
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Mar 1, 2025
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he chaired as the northern manhattan arts alliance, viva broadway, the amber charter school, east harlem. and he's on the board of the public theater as well for louis cuny is a familiar base as well because he is the former chair of the center for latin american, caribbean and latino studies at the graduate center. and in his spare time, he has served in several mayoral administrations and consult on the political campaigns of such luminaries as clinton. chuck schumer, kirsten gillibrand, ferrer, tish and others. all this, and he is also a founding of the consulting firm, the miramar group and subject and hero of a document called siempre luis, which screened at sundance and aired on hbo. he's also the grandparent two hunter elementary school students is worth noting. somehow, he also found time to write relentless my story of the latino spirit that is transforming. the book. we're here to tonight, nancy pelosi no less, has hailed it as a deeply personal reflection on identity, resilience and the pursuit of justice. part memoir and part call to arms. relentless invites us to experience
he chaired as the northern manhattan arts alliance, viva broadway, the amber charter school, east harlem. and he's on the board of the public theater as well for louis cuny is a familiar base as well because he is the former chair of the center for latin american, caribbean and latino studies at the graduate center. and in his spare time, he has served in several mayoral administrations and consult on the political campaigns of such luminaries as clinton. chuck schumer, kirsten gillibrand,...
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Mar 9, 2025
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former iof soldiers thousands of dollars after assaulting protesters, surveilling and shutting out the harlem. was it worth it? the institution will never keep us safe. these cuts won't be hurting armstrong's pockets. instead, our most marginalized communities will face the brunt of its impact. it's up to keep us safe. it's like, it's such a -- what else do you say but warped? charlie: yeah. brian: i don't know what else to say is. how do you even confront that bubble and get into it? because there's no premise of their argument that leads me to the conclusion they get to. and most of the premises are wrong too. all of it just seems like they're in a, living in a a different world. they've created their own reality, and now they're living out what that they think justice is in this warped reality they've created. lara: and, you know, if you go back two years or so ago before it got to this level, you could have tamped this down to a certain ec extent. but -- texts. but the last administration did absolutely nothing. they allowed this hatred to foment and bubble up on these college campuses. i
former iof soldiers thousands of dollars after assaulting protesters, surveilling and shutting out the harlem. was it worth it? the institution will never keep us safe. these cuts won't be hurting armstrong's pockets. instead, our most marginalized communities will face the brunt of its impact. it's up to keep us safe. it's like, it's such a -- what else do you say but warped? charlie: yeah. brian: i don't know what else to say is. how do you even confront that bubble and get into it? because...
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Mar 6, 2025
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my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s and 50s. his siblings they were also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that you get then you know one thing i have to be high on everything right now that you get then how? >> so she had a very good career in l.a. and so i was just saturated with all this music. >> i got taken under the wings of these musicians that knew my father back in the 50s and he was having perspective in the neighborhood in the fillmore. we had a mentor is lee hester. he was 20 years older than me. of a good saxophone player man. he could just play and he really loved up in the haight here. we had our school up in the upper haight. we had at least going for 1015 years. >> what my father's peers who
my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s and 50s. his siblings they were also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that...
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Mar 8, 2025
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event at empire studios, the industry summit on friday, the the happy hour event monday night at harlem records and then artists development day at music city, san francisco where they sort of flagship public facing offerings that were all really great in their own respective ways. it was great to have the mayor speak at the summit and then also attend the happy hour. a lot of great, great conversations throughout the week. the kickoff event you can see that conversation about the history of hip hop in the bay area with gazi and dan the automator. it's entirely on youtube and it's really stellar as it both a conversation about sort of the history of hip hop in the bay area but also about what motivates the independent spirit and why people do creative work music work here and why it's important to them in addition to those events was really fortunate to facilitate a meeting that the san francisco venue coalition held in city hall on monday afternoon. the commissioner davis thank you for being a part of that conversation of venue owners really trying to take the temperature of where the
event at empire studios, the industry summit on friday, the the happy hour event monday night at harlem records and then artists development day at music city, san francisco where they sort of flagship public facing offerings that were all really great in their own respective ways. it was great to have the mayor speak at the summit and then also attend the happy hour. a lot of great, great conversations throughout the week. the kickoff event you can see that conversation about the history of...
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Mar 2, 2025
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10th of march, when we have the funeral services for roberta flack at abyssinian baptist church in harlemever left the movement as much as she was successful in her artistry. i met her when i was 13 years old at an operation breadbasket rally in brooklyn with jesse jackson. those artists should not be shut down because people in the front office don't understand what they are saying is good for all of us. that does it for me. thanks for watching. i'll see you back here next weekend at 5 p.m. eastern. but you can catch me tomorrow morning on morning joe right here on msnbc. i'll be on at 9 a.m. the sunday show with jonathan capehart starts at the jonathan capehart starts at the top of the hour. pronamel clinical enamel strength can help us to keep our enamel for a lifetime. it's backed by science it is clinically proven to strengthen our teeth. i would recommend this toothpaste to everybody. it's really an amazing product. (♪♪) my mom used to tell me if you want to be a champion you got to be a champion at life. i got to watch her play at her highest from when i was born. from one generati
10th of march, when we have the funeral services for roberta flack at abyssinian baptist church in harlemever left the movement as much as she was successful in her artistry. i met her when i was 13 years old at an operation breadbasket rally in brooklyn with jesse jackson. those artists should not be shut down because people in the front office don't understand what they are saying is good for all of us. that does it for me. thanks for watching. i'll see you back here next weekend at 5 p.m....
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Mar 3, 2025
03/25
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down every song that was being sung at every church, and his papers were at the schomburg center in harlem. the boxes had never been opened, so that's the kind of stuff that we we go crazy. yeah. you know, it's weird. when i was at the miami herald, they had me cover the police department at nighttime for a time, and i hated every day of it. but it sort of taught me how to do two things. one is to deal with people when. they're at a really tough point in their life. you know, they're making a really strange, strong decision about whether or not they're going let a person's name image go or whether they're going to with you. and also, it really me how to question what's in a police record, you know you'd go to record and they would say the murder happened at 155th street and then you'd go to 155th street and then you'd go to 154th and realize they actually meant 123rd street. you. so all of that helped in sort of being a tuning tone me to thinking about how to tackle some of the stickier of his life. but we also needed to know what we were looking for and what we did not want to do was supp
down every song that was being sung at every church, and his papers were at the schomburg center in harlem. the boxes had never been opened, so that's the kind of stuff that we we go crazy. yeah. you know, it's weird. when i was at the miami herald, they had me cover the police department at nighttime for a time, and i hated every day of it. but it sort of taught me how to do two things. one is to deal with people when. they're at a really tough point in their life. you know, they're making a...
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Mar 4, 2025
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my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s and 50s. his siblings they were also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that you get then you know one thing i have to be high on everything right now that you get then how? >> so she had a very good career in l.a. and so i was just saturated with all this music. >> i got taken under the wings of these musicians that knew my father back in the 50s and he was having perspective in the neighborhood in the fillmore. we had a mentor is lee hester. he was 20 years older than me. of a good saxophone player man. he could just play and he really loved up in the haight here. we had our school up in the upper haight. we had at least going for 1015 years. >> what my father's peers who
my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s and 50s. his siblings they were also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that...
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moca among others and their work is included in the collection of the studio the studio museum in harlem. >> about the curators as i mentioned, this exhibition is co-curated elena grose is an independent writer, curator and cultural critic living in oakland, california. she specializes in interpretations of identity in fine arts photography and popular media. her research has been centered around conceptual and material abstractions of the body in the work of black, modern and contemporary artists and most recently in, artistic and literalist histories of the late 20th century. >> lila weaver is an artist, writer and curator based in oakland through film and architecture. they examined the performative elements connected to systems of belonging present in black gender by variant to embodiment. >> their research across disciplines exposed explores religion, black ecology symbols and colloquial language a transnational of blackness and practices of collectivity. we for has worked at princeton's university louis center for the arts, the warriors institute of contemporary arts mcevoy foundat
moca among others and their work is included in the collection of the studio the studio museum in harlem. >> about the curators as i mentioned, this exhibition is co-curated elena grose is an independent writer, curator and cultural critic living in oakland, california. she specializes in interpretations of identity in fine arts photography and popular media. her research has been centered around conceptual and material abstractions of the body in the work of black, modern and...
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side and another $43 million will be invested on building a grade separation along 65th street and harlem avenue, across the street from my district. together this funding will help relieve congestion along chicago's rail network, improve supply chain efficiency, and make communities safer as well. this is made possible through the collaboration between public sector and class-1 railroads. can you speak about how important programs like create are for our national rail and freight network? mr. jefferies: thank you for that question. it was great to see you at the event in december on the south side of chicago. it's critically important and create is the model program for the rest of the country and we often get approached from other communities of, hey, we want to do a create and we explain the commitment from not only the freight railroads but the commuter railroads, amtrak, the city, the county, the state. the usdot. and how we've all worked together to identify a discrete set of very large projects that different parties benefit from at different times, but everyone has skin in the gam
side and another $43 million will be invested on building a grade separation along 65th street and harlem avenue, across the street from my district. together this funding will help relieve congestion along chicago's rail network, improve supply chain efficiency, and make communities safer as well. this is made possible through the collaboration between public sector and class-1 railroads. can you speak about how important programs like create are for our national rail and freight network? mr....
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my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s andwere also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that you get then you know one thing i have to be high on everything right now that you get then how? >> so she had a very good career in l.a. and so i was just saturated with all this music. >> i got taken under the wings of these musicians that knew my father back in the 50s and he was having perspective in the neighborhood in the fillmore. we had a mentor is lee hester. he was 20 years older than me. of a good saxophone player man. he could just play and he really loved up in the haight here. we had our school up in the upper haight. we had at least going for 1015 years. >> what my father's peers who took me under his wings
my father played saxophone and he was one of the stars during the harlem of the west during the 40s andwere also musicians too and their heyday was during the 30. here in san francisco i always was around music and piano because it was like my family's instrument with the piano except for my father but his his sister who raised me she played piano. she went on to make live black movies with lena horne, louis armstrong, duke ellington. it was a whole series of them that you get then you know one...