ng The Best Bang for Your Buck Events in Portland This Weekend: Nov 8–10, 2024 By everout.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 10:05:00 -0800 Frybread Fest, Gobble Up, and More Cheap & Easy Events Under $15 by EverOut Staff Well Portland, it's been a hard week and there are difficult days yet ahead. Take care of yourselves and each other this weekend. If you're looking for something to do to take your mind off things, we're recommending events from Frybread Fest to John's Marketplace 25th Anniversary Celebration and from Gobble Up to Northwest Animal Companions' Cat Adoption Fair. For more ideas, check out our guide to the top events of the week. FRIDAY COMEDY Small Fruits - Queer ComedyI am a strong believer in a cute little night out, and this, dear reader, fits the bill. Hosted by "dynamic duo" No Sex and the City, whose lackluster love lives must give them a lot of time to practice their improv skills, Small Fruits invites attendees who are "navigating perpetual singlehood or basking in newfound love." It promises to be fun, gay, and "leave you smitten," which seems ideal. Plus, Small Fruits features a roster of local, "delightfully humble queer improvisers." Humility isn't a trait I typically look for in comedians, but sure, why not? LINDSAY COSTELLO (Kickstand Comedy, Ladd's Addition, $10-$15) Full Article EverOut
ng Screaming With Meaning: The Definitive Blood Brothers Lyrics Q & A By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 11:00:00 -0800 Ahead of the hardcore band's sold out show at Revolution Hall, Johnny Whitney and Jordan Blilie tell us what the group's intense, abstract song lyrics really mean. by Suzette Smith Like any fan of Seattle hardcore band the Blood Brothers, I have found myself at a show, pressed up against a wall of people, shouting the wrong lyrics to their songs. For instance, on their hit "USA NAILS" there's a hook where you think you're singing a cheer-style "one, one, and two!" but the lyrics are actually: "These pigs locked me up to see what color I'd rot into!" The energetic screamo group was active from 1997-2007, during which time they released five critically-acclaimed albums, completed several European tours, and even played a set on Jimmy Kimmel Live, overcoming the reservations of the show's freaked-out producers. Perhaps the best indicator of their success is the fact that their US reunion tour—which hits Portland on November 12—is completely sold out. Ever ones to cut the bullshit, Blood Brothers don't have a new record; they're playing the fucking hits. Still, the tour is timed with Epitaph's anniversary reissue of one of their biggest albums Crimes (2004) on vinyl. When we sat down to talk to Johnny Whitney, who fronts the band with fellow singer/screamer/guttural whisperer Jordan Blilie, he noted that plenty of lyrics websites list incorrect verses for Blood Brothers songs. "It's hilarious how wrong some of them are," Whitney said. "The lyrics on Spotify are not even close to what I'm actually saying. Just buy the fucking CD, and look it up. Come on, people." We spoke with Whitney and Blilie separately, over sprawling phone calls that we have organized into this piece. For clarity, we're listing their responses together, as we seek to get into the nitty gritty of this group's danceable, screaming-nightmare material. Blood Brothers in San Francisco, on the first night of their reunion tour. They were incredible. Photo by Suzette Smith Jordan Blilie (left) and Morgan Henderson (right) Suzette Smith Foremost, Whitney and Blilie both began by gushing about the other three members of their band: frenetic drummer Mark Gajadhar, vigorous guitarist Cody Votolato, and ultra-versatile bassist Morgan Henderson, who is currently best known as a member of Fleet Foxes. Related: Multi-instrumentalist/Ultramarathoner Morgan Henderson Is Busier Than You "I cannot fucking believe that I got to work with these guys," Whitney says. "I just took all those things for granted at the time. Everybody was, and still is, coming from totally different places [musically], but there was always something really special about all of us together that was there from the moment that we started." PORTLAND MERCURY: Johnny, I've always gotten the impression that you're the major force behind the lyrics. JOHNNY WHITNEY: I came up with the majority of the lyrics, but it certainly was collaborative between Jordan and I. I would freewrite as much as I could, to have material to draw from, and going back to those notebooks kept things as free and fresh and not contrived as possible. The drawback of that approach is the lyrics are very abstract and hard to parse direct meaning from, but that's also kind of the point. I found myself writing about the absence of answers, or the absence of concrete truths that you can hold onto. A lot of times, my process would center around coming up with a cool idea: a song name or some common refrain that we would want to work into a song, like "Burn Piano Island, Burn." Something that has a hook or conveys an image or feeling. Then we would reverse engineer the lyrics from that. JORDAN BLILIE: I would absolutely say that I felt like Johnny was the driver, and for good reason. He's really good. When you see someone who is in a flow state, you do your best to accentuate and collaborate, to help mold and shape and add your pieces. It was always stuff that I was really excited to dig into. It was just that rich and that vibrant. The challenge for me was what can I add to it, you know? It always pushed me to try and come up with the most creatively-inspired stuff that I could. You two have such an engaging stage style. People would call it sassy, but that has always felt like a description from people who have never been to a play and can't recognize theater. Do either of you have a background in theater arts? WHITNEY: I wanted to be a child actor—I actually auditioned for that movie Blank Check (1994). Actually, a year after Jordan and I met, we were both in a Jr. High production of Alice in Wonderland. He was the Mad Hatter, and I was the Mock Turtle. BLILIE: Why would you say that? [Laughs] Jordan Blilie (left) and Johnny Whitney (right) Suzette Smith Jordan Blilie screams on the tour's first night in San Francisco. Suzette Smith "USA NAILS" was such a hit, and it involved a phone number everyone could scream. How did that come to be? WHITNEY: The name and the "1-900-USA-NAILS" comes from the chain nail salon, but we reverse-engineered it into a song about somebody using their one phone call from the county jail to call a phone sex line. It's the idea of loneliness, disaffection, and parasocial relationships with things that exist solely for their own profit or gain. And yet it's also danceable. There are these moments live where you have an audience of people shaking their asses and shouting "to see what color I'd rot into!" Did you start with that idea and work backwards, or just jam it into that moment of the song? WHITNEY: At that time, the band would all sit together in a room and have a kind of song tribunal about how each part should go. Then, at some point, we'd have a semi -finished version and [Jordan and I] would just try to fit lyrics to the songs. Especially on Burn, Piano Island, Burn. Some of those songs needed an editor so bad, right? I wouldn't change a thing about it, but looking back, there are parts where it sounds like everybody's playing a different song at the same time, but it kind of works, right? And for the lyrics, sometimes we just had to make it work. That wasn't the first time Jordan whispered his lyrics in a guttural tone, but it's one of the more emblematic, right? How did that start? BLILIE: By necessity—I don't have much of a range, you know? I have this weird baritone. Very early on we were drawing from crust punk, where you just have two voices screaming. And we didn't put a whole lot of thought into even what the other person was doing. But then, as we continued to develop, the stuff became more complex, and there was more room for different sorts of shadings of what we could do vocally. So it was just finding out: What is it I can do other than scream at the top of my lungs? WHITNEY: Jordan's part at the end just works right? He was very inspired by Jarvis Cocker. BLILIE: Yeah, you can trace that right back to Pulp. If you listen to any Pulp song, there's gonna be some whispery storytelling, with the compression cranked up so you can kind of hear every lick of the lips. <a href="https://thebloodbrothersofficial.bandcamp.com/album/burn-piano-island-burn">Burn, Piano Island, Burn by The Blood Brothers</a> BLILIE: Some of my favorite moments of writing with Johnny are the ones that we would where we would crack each other up. Can you give an example? BLILIE: Every lyric of "Guitarmy." We really got a kick out of the idea of opening our major label debut with the words, "do you remember us?" Because of the audacity, the absurdity of it. So you guys all started this band when you were in your teens. BLILIE: Yeah, we started when we were like, 15-16. Are there any lyrics that have not aged well, in your opinion? BLILIE: I'm sure they're the ones that we're not playing. [Laughs.] This question reminds me of something one of my professors said. It was my first class at UCLA, Queer Lit from Walt Whitman to Stonewall. In class discussions my fellow classmates would critique writing from the 1800s for not satisfying certain criteria, and our professor would say: You cannot look at the text backwards. You have to look at it forwards. You can't apply current day criteria to something that was written when that criteria didn't even exist. You have to engage with it in the context of when it was written. I don't think anything we wrote is in a canon warranting that level of examination, but it's useful nonetheless. It's a way for me to remind myself that I was 20, and I had the tools of a 20-year-old. It helps me to not beat myself up too much about it. WHITNEY: There's a story behind this. When we were doing the song "Camouflage, Camouflage" on Young Machetes, Jordan and I were going back and forth on the lyrics. He was like, "Yeah, I'm great with all this." But he put a line through one verse, where I say: "All the girls in Montreal are smashing skateboards in the street." And I was just like: Fuck you, dude. I'm gonna keep this in. But he was right, because it sounds stupid, and it's like, really horny and makes me want to light my skin on fire. So I'm changing it to something else, probably something different every night. Johnny Whitney (left) holds a crowd member's hand for support. Suzette Smith The crowd supports Johnny Whitney while he sings. Suzette Smith I wonder about imagery in Blood Brothers' songs that seems to be responding to beauty standards at the time. Like, in "Ambulance, Ambulance" you've got this blistering segue to the chorus: "What is love? / What is scam? / What is sun? / What is tan?" WHITNEY: That's a double meaning. Because it's like tan—like suntan—but also tan is a blah color, right? It's like the color of a dentist's office wall. If you think of the idea of love being something that could feel on-fire, passionate, the color of a dentist's office wall is the opposite. Although, tanning does come into play in a lot of our lyrics. I've noticed as well. Or on "Beautiful Horses" the lyrics are "gallop into your romance novels / dance atop heavy pectorals." BLILIE: I think we were seeing an increasingly vapid culture, and we were trying to dig into that—dig into: What does it do to someone when they're bombarded by these sorts of images and messages? There was a lot of that in that writing; I can't say specifically with "Beautiful Horses," but I think "Trash Flavored Trash," would probably fit under that umbrella. <a href="https://thebloodbrothersofficial.bandcamp.com/album/crimes-bonus-track-version">Crimes (Bonus Track Version) by The Blood Brothers</a> In "Rats and Rats and Rats for Candy" there's an ongoing narrative of rats living inside a woman. It's like a play. There are characters. And the rats eventually chew out of her and try to find a new body to live in. I wondered if that was also about beauty standards or body dysmorphia? WHITNEY: That song, it's about that, but it's also about manipulation, right? Not to get too personal, but I grew up with somebody who weaponized being sick—faked being sick—for their entire life in order to manipulate people and extract something they needed out of them. The character in that song is kind of a victim, but like a siren at the same time. They're trying to lure somebody in. Is that person the rats, or are they Candy? WHITNEY: The rats are in Candy. I mean, it's both. What about "The Shame?" Your group resonates so much with "everything is gonna be just awful / when we're around" that you're putting it on t-shirts 20 years later. What does it mean? WHITNEY: The whole premise of that song is having to sell yourself—how to commoditize yourself. It's about how you function in a capitalist society. You sink or swim by your ability to market yourself, make yourself desirable—whether it be in relationships, job market, blah blah blah. I've always been repulsed by that and was especially at the time we wrote it, which was in Venice Beach, while we were recording Burn, Piano Island, Burn. It was the longest time I'd ever been in LA, and that's the epicenter of being a self-salesman. That line encapsulates the feeling of being sold something. And you're in a position where, in order to survive, you have to be your own salesman. Salesmen show up in other songs, like "The Salesman, Denver Max." That's another one that almost feels like a short story. WHITNEY: I initially cribbed the idea for that song's lyrics from the Joyce Carol Oates short story, "Where Are You Going? Where Have You Been?" It follows a narrative of a very dangerous, predatory man in the process of stalking and kidnapping somebody. “Denver Max” was a huge, uncomfortable gamble for me, because I wrote the entire song on my acoustic guitar, recorded it to a 4-track, and then played it for the guys—totally expecting them to hate it. It was really daunting to try to contribute as a songwriter; Cody, Morgan, and Mark are such talented musicians. I think they may have hated it; I don't really remember how we ended up recording it. It was nobody's favorite thing, but we just tracked it, and it sounded great and worked. Have you read anything by playwright Caryl Churchill? WHITNEY: Never heard of her. "Live at the Apocalypse Cabaret" has a lyric in it that reminds me of her play Far Away, which has a scene of milliners making hats for people to wear at a public execution, so I always felt a symmetry there, because of the lyrics "the cross-eyed map of the afterlife is knitting tiny neck ties." WHITNEY: I'm going to be super honest, the songs that I'm the most familiar with the lyrics of, at this very moment, are songs that were going to be playing, because I've been rehearsing them. But I do remember, with that song, we were trying to be funny without being silly. Like, a cross-eyed map is a map that makes no sense, where you don't know where you're going. Knitting tiny neckties are noose ties. It's like dressing yourself up for death, right? It's trying to dress up something that's really heinous and horrible and incomprehensible, and also trying to navigate that, through a map that makes no sense. At this moment you have cracked my understanding of a play you haven't even read. But I digress, I've read that "Celebrator" was a direct response to Toby Keith's "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue." BLILIE: That pumped up patriotism felt gross when taken in context with the images and much of the information that we were seeing come out of Iraq and Afghanistan. Is that why there are so many mentions of amputated limbs on Crimes? BLILIE: The bulk of Crimes was trying to engage with war so that's where you get a lot of that grizzly imagery. Related: The Blood Brothers Set Expectations Ablaze at Last Night’s Surprise Black Lodge Show Well, personally, it's so nice that you're touring right now. Blood Brothers are great for when you need to scream, but you can't. You can scream along to the Blood Brothers in your head, or out loud at a show. BLILIE: I'm glad that we could be of service, in that regard. It's hard for me not to go into a really bleak mindset when I look at our current political landscape. I find myself equal parts enraged and terrified. And there are times when I have to just close all news down. I guess it is a good time to get up and scream. The Blood Brothers play Revolution Hall, 1300 SE Stark, Tues Nov 12, 8 pm, SOLD OUT, all ages. Full Article Music Culture
ng YOUR SUNDAY READING LIST: Election Highs 'n' Lows, Rose City Rolls On, and City Council Steps On a Rake (Again) By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 07:13:00 -0800 by Wm. Steven Humphrey GOOD MORNING, SUNDAY! It's the perfect time to catch up on some of the great reporting and stories the Mercury churned out this week! (PRO TIP: If you despise being "the last to know," then be one of the first to know by signing up for Mercury newsletters! All the latest stories shipped directly to your email's in-box... and then... YOUR HEAD.) • Keith Wilson is Portland’s Next Mayor Wilson will be Portland's next mayor. Did your fave city council candidates make the cut? Check out our reporting and find out! We've got the latest updates. Taylor Griggs • It's the Mercury's 2024 General Election Night Live Blog! Relive election night (in an entertaining fashion) with the Mercury's election live blog, featuring up-to-the-minute results and stern critiques of the candidate parties and snack tables. Michelle Mruk • How Portland’s Rose City Rollers Became Roller Derby Champions Again Last Sunday, the Rose City Rollers' all-star team Wheels of Justice won derby's highest honor at the Women's Flat Track Derby Association Global Championship. Corbin Smith recounts: It was sports. Major sports. Corbin Smith • City Commissioners Abandon Plans to Terminate Joint Homeless Response Agreement With Multnomah County A day after an election showing City Commissioners Rene Gonzalez and Mingus Mapps losing their bid for mayor, a proposal to end Portland's homeless services agreement with Multnomah County was suddenly pulled from this week's City Council agenda. Courtney Vaughn • Ticket Alert Sting adds a second Bend date to his tour, post-hardcore band Chiodos is coming to Portland next year, and hard rock outfit Catch Your Breath has dropped dates for their Broken Souls tour. Get those tix quick with help from TICKET ALERT. Courtesy of the artist • THE TRASH REPORT! This week: The Avengers love Kamala, Nazis love Trump, and Ted Danson is back in love with Kelsey Grammer. (So much love!) Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images • Film Review: Allee Willis: Creative Force, 'Dangerous Woman,' Songwriter Behind Friends Theme A new documentary, The World According to Allee Willis, reveals your favorite artists’ favorite artist. Courtesy of Magnolia Pictures • Free Ticket Time! Like free stuff? Then enter to WIN FREE TICKETS to see Reverend Horton Heat, Des Demonas, Mason Jennings, and MORE! • The Best Things To Do in Portland This Month As we do every month, we've compiled the biggest events you need to know about in every genre, from Sabrina Carpenter to Cyndi Lauper and from World Vegan Month to PLUS PLUS: PAM CUT's New Annual Festival. It's our top picks for November! Courtesy Lilla • SAVAGE LOVE Straight women in gay bars, post-sex ghosting, and return of the sexy fling—all this and much, much more in this edition of SAVAGE LOVE quickies! Joe Newton WOW, THAT IS A LOT OF GOOD READIN'. I hope you didn't have any other plans this weekend! Dig in, and remember: Producing all this hard work costs moolah—so please consider contributing to the Mercury to keep it all coming! Thanks! Full Article Newsblast!
ng Name the thing, but don't speak it By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 15:16:00 -0800 by Anonymous If there was a thing that took human form, that spoke in a garbled mimicry of human speech, that masked it's strange pallor and foul odor, that was human-like, but devoid of human love and compassion, that made the desperate and weak it's minions, that was a black hole for attention of any sort, that destroyed everything it came near and turned neighbor against neighbor and family against family... What would its name be? Full Article I Anonymous
ng Good Morning, News: Mayor-Elect Wilson Pressures Current Council, the Latest Election Results, and a Weekend of BAAAAD Political Takes By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 08:43:00 -0800 by Wm. Steven Humphrey If you’re reading this, you probably know the value of the Mercury’s news reporting, arts and culture coverage, event calendar, and the bevy of events we host throughout the year. The work we do helps our city shine, but we can’t do it without your support. If you believe Portland benefits from smart, local journalism and arts coverage, please consider making a small monthly contribution, because without you, there is no us. Thanks for your support! GOOD MORNING, PORTLAND! ???? Who's had a busy weekend of actively IGNORING all the spectacularly bad takes following last week's election? Wow, these so-called Democrats are the only people I know who, instead of blaming the actual people involved, love kicking each other in the scrabble bag when they're disappointed. Even worse, a few of these bad actors are saying we should have capitulated to the white supremacists and the hateful half of the country that voted for Trump... as if that would have somehow changed the outcome? LOL! Make a note, friends... despite the fact that a sizable part of the nation is in thrall of a convicted felon/cult leader, we should NEVER water down our ethics or sense of justice to appease people who want the rest of us (and especially marginalized communities) to stop existing. If you absolutely must blame someone, try focusing your ire on those who refuse to properly educate themselves and have lost their moral compass. Our pathway is UP—the rest of 'em can either keep up or get the fuck out of the way. And that's your Monday Morning Mini-Rant™—now, let's look at some NEWS! IN LOCAL NEWS: • Local election update! Now that only a very few votes (4,000 as of Saturday) are left to be counted, I think it's safe to say "OH, HELLO THERE!" to our newest incoming mayor, Keith Wilson, and our new city council, which is as follows: District 1: Candace Avalos, Loretta Smith, and (probably) Jamie Dunphy (waiting for the final count to clarify that one); District 2: Elana Pirtle-Guiney, Sameer Kanal, and current City Commissioner Dan Ryan ????; District 3: Steve Novick, Tiffany Koyama Lane, and Angelita Morillo; and District 4: Olivia Clark, Mitch Green, and most likely Eric Zimmerman... or possibly cop Eli Arnold (neither are great). In any case, that right there is a majority progressive council, with a few Portland Business Alliance puppets thrown in—which in theory should make the ever-conniving big business/realtor community happy, but rest assured they'll be pulling some anti-democratic shenanigans before you know it. Keep an eye on 'em! ???? Portland: Our new mayor Keith Wilson shows encouraging signs on transportation, above all his obsession with observation and data. Good profile by Jonathan Maus at Bike Portland. bikeportland.org/2024/11/07/p...[image or embed] — Jarrett Walker (@humantransit.bsky.social) November 10, 2024 at 12:56 PM • In other good election news, in the hotly contested (and way too close) Oregon's 5th Congressional District race, Democrat Janelle Bynum scored a win over Republican incumbent Lori Chavez DeRemer, flipping the US House seat from red to blue! While there is currently a narrow path to victory for House Democrats, it's still very tight—so at this moment, every Democrat win counts. (And in case you missed it, in Washington state, Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez is the presumptive winner in the 3rd Congressional District, beating out dipshit MAGA candidate Joe Kent.) • In the first baller move of his administration, mayor-elect Keith Wilson allegedly pressured current city commissioners Rene Gonzalez, Mingus Mapps, and Dan Ryan into dropping their theatrical stunt to end Portland's homelessness services agreement with Multnomah County. As our Courtney Vaughn reported, the three crybaby candidates were threatening to end the deal with the county, even though it would cost the city $40 million to do so. But according to Ryan—who is now furiously backpedaling on his bonehead decision—Wilson called the trio, and "made it clear that he would like us to take that off the table.... So out of respect for the new mayor, it just was good manners." HAAAAAAAAA! Right. Or maybe it was that Gonzalez and Mapps' run for mayor just blew up in their faces, and Ryan was left alone in the wilderness holding this particular bag of shit. In any case, an absolutely embarrassing way to end their obstructive, but mostly useless term—and I am here for it! ???? • The Portland Trail Blazers suffered an absolutely crushing defeat to the Memphis Grizzlies last night... 134-89? OUCH. Terrible shooting, poor defense, and a harsh 23 turnovers reportedly had the normally stoic coach Chauncey Billups reportedly issuing this post-game message to the players: “Anybody that sleeps well tonight, you’re a loser. It’s just that simple." Once again, with feeling: OUCH. • Today in death: Pioneering climate scientist Warren Washington—who grew up in Portland—has died at the age of 88. Washington is credited with developing early models of global warming. Also, longtime Blazer radio announcer Brian "Wheels" Wheeler has died after an extensive illness; he was 62. Ahead of the Blood Brothers' sold out show at Revolution Hall next week, we spoke with the band's two frontmen about the group's intense, abstract song lyrics. We did not expect: Their shared theater history. The influence of Pulp's Jarvis Cocker.[image or embed] — Portland Mercury (@portlandmercury.bsky.social) November 8, 2024 at 12:26 PM IN NATIONAL/WORLD NEWS: • Despite exciting Democratic wins in Oregon and Washington, Republicans are getting closer to keeping control of the House, which after capturing the senate would mean that many of Trump's evil schemes could become a reality. Currently the GOP is four congresspeople away from securing the necessary 218 seats; the Dems are at 203. ???? • Trump has chosen former ICE director Tom Homan to serve as his “border czar,” as the incoming president ramps up his plan to launch "the largest deportation operation in the nation’s history" (without presenting a plan on how it can be done or the billions it will cost us now and in the future). The recently elected convicted felon has also picked longtime loyalist/minion Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York to become the next US ambassador to the United Nations. Stefanik is a staunch supporter of Israel and their genocide, and has pushed for ending relief to war-torn Palestinians. The only potential good news here: Taking Stefanik out of her current job could lead Republicans into losing the House. This is not great[image or embed] — Molly Jong-Fast (@mollyjongfast.bsky.social) November 11, 2024 at 7:49 AM • In escaped monkey news: Twenty-four out of 43 monkeys who escaped a South Carolina research lab last week have been recovered—and staff has eyes on another "sizable" group. Locals are being advised to avoid touching the monkeys, and instead call 911. (Take it from someone who briefly lived there, South Carolina hates it when you touch your monkey.) Your body, my choice[image or embed] — Berit Glanz (@beritmiriam.bsky.social) November 11, 2024 at 2:23 AM • Toymaker Mattel has apologized for accidentally including a porn website address on packaging for dolls from the upcoming movie Wicked. The company is advising parents to either throw away the packaging or obscure the web address before kids accidentally stumble on to any "Two Witches, One Cup" videos. (On a scale of one-to-ten, how mad are you at me right now? I'm at, like, a seven.) • And finally... a visual representation of what will happen to the economy five minutes after Trump takes office: @vehiculeracing -caniparkhere? #boat ♬ original sound - VÉHICULE Full Article Good Morning News!
ng Good Morning, News: Portland's Arctic Fox, Harriet Tubman's New Military Rank, and Pushback Over a Lucrative Contract For a Powerful Local Business Lobby By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 08:25:00 -0800 by Courtney Vaughn The Mercury provides news and fun every single day—but your help is essential. If you believe Portland benefits from smart, local journalism and arts coverage, please consider making a small monthly contribution, because without you, there is no us. Thanks for your support! Good morning, Portland! Take a deep breath. Hold for six seconds. Exhale. We might be treated to some fleeting morning sunshine, but for the most part, expect more rain with a high of 54 degrees and a low of 50. Let's catch up on what's happening in our city and around the world. In Local News: Important fox update! The young arctic white fox spotted in Portland a few weeks ago is now in the care of the Bird Alliance of Oregon. Last Friday, the Bird Alliance posted an update, noting the fox was likely illegally kept in captivity in Oregon. And while the fox sniffed out and found several mice hidden for her around her enclosure, it’s unlikely she’d survive in the wilderness. The organization reports the fox is in good health and they’re looking for a permanent home for her with a wildlife agency. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Bird Alliance of Oregon (@birdallianceoforegon) • The body of a missing hiker was found in Mt. Hood National Forest last Friday. Police say 33-year-old James Robert MacDonald was found by search and rescue crews after his family reported he didn’t return from a hike Wednesday, Nov. 6. KATU reports MacDonald had four children, including 1-year-old twins, and was finishing a radiology residency at OHSU. This is the second major search conducted for a missing hiker in Mt. Hood National Forest in less than two weeks. Last Tuesday, the Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office found a missing mushroom hunter in densely forested terrain as he exited the Eagle Creek Trail. He was found “cold and wet” but otherwise in good health. • Dozens of Portlanders and local organizations have signed on to a letter urging the Portland City Council to postpone a vote on a contract that would funnel more money into the Portland Metro Chamber. This Wednesday, City Council is likely to approve the expansion of one of the city’s Enhanced Service Districts, Downtown Clean & Safe. The expansion also accompanies a $58 million contract renewal for Clean & Safe. Enhanced Service Districts are special districts where property owners pay a tax to fund extra security services and cleanups around the district. If it were any other organization or even any other ESD, few would bat an eye at the contract renewal, but Downtown Clean & Safe is essentially operated by the Portland Metro Chamber (formerly the Portland Business Alliance). The city funnels millions of district tax dollars into this no-bid contract, to give ESD ratepayers–most of which are downtown businesses–an added layer of private security, as well as trash and graffiti removal. While plenty of folks are supportive of the extra services, quite a few Portlanders, including condo owners in the district, say the contract arrangement is barely ethical, and serves primarily to funnel taxpayer money into the Metro Chamber, which is one of the most powerful lobbying groups in the city. There are few, if any, checks and balances on the contract. Aside from ethical concerns, condo owners in the Downtown Clean & Safe ESD say they are being charged for services they already pay for through their Homeowners Associations and city taxes. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Tom Toro (@tbtoro) • Oregon has repeatedly failed to protect or keep data about the kids in its foster care system who wind up being sex trafficked. If you have an Oregonian subscription, this heartbreaking story is worth a read. The series shines a light on a disjointed foster care system in Oregon that failed to protect more than two dozen foster care children from being sold for sex or "anything of value," including one woman, who's now 21 but ran away with men multiple times and was forced to perform sex acts when she was 16. Multiple teens in foster care are at risk of being sold into prostitution, but for years, the state has been slow to respond and/or failed to identify those at risk, despite federal requirements to keep data on the high-risk teens in state custody. • It’s World Vegan Month, and Veganizer is partnering with local restaurants to offer fun menu items with a portion of the proceeds from those items going toward local nonprofits. Pssst…going vegan is a great excuse to skip Thanksgiving dinner with any family members you don’t like, or those you’re just not ready to stomach after the election. • And if you need other things to distract yourself or just need a reason to get out of the house, check the Everout weekly rundown for the best in dining, live music, film, and miscellaneous outings. Looking for a show tonight? Consider watching Salami Rose Joe Louis deliver an experimental fusion of electro-jazz rock (if that's not a thing, it is now) at the Jack London Revue. In National/World News: • Yesterday was Veterans Day, and perhaps the most notable event of the day was the posthumous military rank awarded to Civil War-era activist and abolitionist Harriet Tubman. Tubman escaped slavery and went on to help rescue an estimated 70 other people from slavery via the Underground Railroad. Aside from her activism and liberation of others, she's also regarded as the first woman to lead an armed combat regimen for the Union during the Civil War. In 1863, Tubman led 150 African American Union soldiers in a raid that ultimately rescued an estimated 700 slaves. For her efforts, Tubman was named a one-star brigadier general in the Maryland National Guard. •In a move that feels like the Trump agenda is already setting in, the Intercept lays out a bill scheduled to be voted on next week with bipartisan support that would essentially allow the government to revoke tax exemption from any nonprofit organizations it deems to have a connection to terrorism or support terrorism. HR 9495, the Stop Terror-Financing and Tax Penalties on American Hostages Act, would give the US Treasury secretary the power to notify any organization that its tax-exempt status will be revoked. The nonprofit will have 90 days to appeal. The ACLU is sounding the alarm, noting a bill of that magnitude would only serve to chill free speech and other activities of orgs that don’t align with Trump’s political allies or agenda. The fact that this bill was introduced is a likely indicator that members of Congress and US government officials already have a few nonprofits in mind. I want to be absolutely clear. Having reviewed the text of the law, it is, quite possibly, the most unconstitutional bill I have ever encountered during my time as a legal professional. It makes the Patriot Act look like an appropriations bill. It’s the modern equivalent of the Sedition Act of 1798. — ????️⚧️ June Licinio ✡️ (@jwlicinio.bsky.social) November 11, 2024 at 2:15 PM • With just over three months left in President Biden's term, chatter among Democratic senators suggests US Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor should step down so Biden can make a SCOTUS appointment before he leaves office. Sotomayor, 70, hasn't indicated her intention to retire from the court, but with a current Democratic majority in the Senate, some say the time is now for her to step aside and allow for another justice to be appointed by a Democrat president. At least one senator is pushing back on that suggestion. On a recent episode of Meet the Press, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont told NBC's Kristen Welker he doesn't think it's a good idea. Dems are trying to avoid a repeat of what happened in 2020, when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg ignored calls for her to step down, then died while still serving. Trump was president, and replaced Ginsberg—often revered as a feminist icon—with conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett. @postpuunkonline • US transportation safety officials are investigating whether certain models of Hondas and Acuras are prone to engine failure. The AP reports the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is looking into rod bearing failures that can cause the engines on several makes and models to fail. Honda last year issued a recall to fix the engine problem, but the NHTSA says nearly 175 complaints from vehicle owners who experienced the same engine failure issues, but whose vehicles weren’t included in Honda’s 2023 recall. The issue covers the Honda Pilot and Acura MDX (2016-2020 model years); the Honda Odyssey and Acura TLX (2018 through 2020), and the Honda Ridgeline (2017-2019). @livviathepig the gift that keeps on giving ♬ original sound - liv Full Article Good Morning News!
ng SAVAGE LOVE: Mourning in America By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:12:00 -0800 Advice for those who feel like democracy has abandoned them. by Dan Savage Dear Readers: Well, fuck. Reading a sex-advice column at a time like this — to say nothing of writing a sex-advice column at a time like this — might seem a little pointless. But I’ve lived long enough to know that seemingly pointless distractions, small comforts, and guilty pleasures have the power to sustain us in bad times. Taking a moment to read (or write or illustrate) a sex-advice column — or listen to or make some music or watch or make some porn — doesn’t mean you’re complacent or complicit. (Unless you voted for him, of course, in which case you can fuck the fuck off.) Because it’s the little things — the small pleasures — that keep us sane, keep us connected, and keep us going. Anyway, sitting down to write a column this week lifted my spirits a bit. I hope reading this week’s column lifts yours.… [ Read more ] Full Article Savage Love
ng Playing 'Crazy Eyes' Taught Actress 'It's OK To Be Just You' By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Jul 2014 12:53:00 -0400 Uzo Aduba has won over critics and fans for her portrayal as "Crazy Eyes" on Netflix's Orange Is the New Black. Aduba speaks to NPR's Michel Martin about her success and how she got there. Full Article
ng Mexican Journalist Hopes His Reporting Can 'Bridge The Gap' By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Jul 2014 12:53:32 -0400 Tell Me More has regularly turned to Alfredo Corchado for insight on Mexico. He gives host Michel Martin one last look into his reporter's notebook. Full Article
ng Despite Progress Of LGBT Rights In U.S., Challenges Remain Abroad By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Jul 2014 12:53:32 -0400 Around the world, it can still be very hard to live as an openly gay man. Host Michel Martin learns more from two LGBT activists: Jamaican Maurice Tomlinson and Nigerian Bisi Alimi. Full Article
ng 'Africa Is Champion': Reporting From A Changing Continent By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Jul 2014 12:53:32 -0400 Tell Me More has been dedicated to covering stories from Africa. Host Michel Martin speaks to NPR's Africa correspondent Ofeibea Quist-Arcton about reporting on the changing continent. Full Article
ng Is The Current Gridlock In Congress As Bad As It Looks? By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 01 Aug 2014 12:45:00 -0400 For the final program, host Michel Martin speaks with Neil Minkoff and Maria Cardona about the biggest political stories of the week. Full Article
ng Rabbi: During Transition, Look Back On Accomplishments By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 01 Aug 2014 12:46:00 -0400 Host Michel Martin speaks with Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld for a final Faith Matters conversation. Full Article
ng Before Final Sign Off, Michel Martin Challenges Listeners To 'Tell Me More' By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 01 Aug 2014 12:46:00 -0400 The host shares some final thoughts before the close of the show. Full Article
ng Opinion: Remembering James Earl Jones By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 14 Sep 2024 07:52:44 -0400 NPR's Scott Simon remembers actor James Earl Jones, whose deep, resonant voice animated some of cinema's most iconic characters. Full Article
ng Bangladesh defies stereotypes when it comes to health care. Let's keep it that way By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 27 Sep 2024 14:59:43 -0400 Bangladesh defies the stereotypes. It was born in poverty but has risen up the income ladder and is a model of health progress. Will the current political upheaval take a toll on its impressive achievements? Full Article
ng Opinion: Remembering the marvel, Maggie Smith By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 28 Sep 2024 08:00:00 -0400 Jean Brodie, Minerva McGonagall, Violet Crawley: Maggie Smith embodied these memorable roles on stage and screen. NPR's Scott Simon has a remembrance of the actor, who died yesterday at the age of 89. Full Article
ng Opinion: Political texts are pinging off the rails By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 05 Oct 2024 08:00:00 -0400 NPR's Scott Simon wishes we could text them back when politicians message us asking for campaign donations. Full Article
ng Opinion: Remembering Ethel Kennedy By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 12 Oct 2024 08:00:00 -0400 NPR's Scott Simon remarks on the legacy of Ethel Kennedy, widow of Robert F. Kennedy. She died Oct. 10 at the age of 96. Full Article
ng Opinion: Don't get 'river-crabbed!' How China is cracking down on punny dissent By www.npr.org Published On :: Sat, 02 Nov 2024 08:00:00 -0400 China's government is censoring puns and wordplay on-line. NPR's Scott Simon explains why double meanings are a problem for Beijing. Full Article
ng A new book explores a hundred years of busking history By www.npr.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 04:06:28 -0500 NPR's A Martinez talks with Cary Baker, author of "Down on the Corner: Adventures in Busking and Street Music." Full Article
ng Morning news brief By www.npr.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 04:09:02 -0500 Trump makes unconventional picks for top administration positions, a jury awards $42 million to three Iraqi men imprisoned in Abu Ghraib and world leaders are meeting to fight climate change at COP29. Full Article
ng Judge blocks Louisiana law requiring display of Ten Commandments in classrooms By www.npr.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 04:17:49 -0500 A federal judge has ruled that a Louisiana law requiring the display of the Ten Commandments in public school classrooms is unconstitutional. Full Article
ng How the Senate confirmation process works and how Trump wants to change it By www.npr.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 04:18:13 -0500 NPR's Michel Martin talks with Edward Whelan of the Ethics and Public Policy Center about President-elect Trump's influence on Senate Republicans' selection of a new majority leader. Full Article
ng A 'Wicked' mistake: Mattel apologizes for printing a porn site on its doll packaging By www.npr.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 12:46:03 -0500 Mattel is pulling its Wicked dolls from some store shelves because of a misprint directing shoppers to a pornographic site. Meanwhile, resellers are listing the products on eBay for up to $500. Full Article
ng Israel's EL Al Airlines Turns Profits by Continuing to Fly By www.npr.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 20:06:13 -0500 Israel's airlines are generating a windfall as international carriers cancel or limit flights due to security concerns. Flying in or out of Israel has become a logistical challenge since the war in Gaza erupted. Full Article
ng Why major automakers embrace Tesla's previously proprietary charging tech By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:05:00 -0500 For a long time Tesla used its own kind of charger plug and had its own supercharger network. That once-exclusive network is opening up to other EV manufacturers. Full Article
ng Why this former banking regulator is writing kids books By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:00:59 -0500 In a first-best world, we'd all save enough money and there'd be no scammers. In a second-best world, we'd all know how to protect ourselves. That's what Sheila Bair thought, too. As former chair of the FDIC, she noticed many kids and adults weren't quite getting the education they needed. So, she decided to do something about it.Today on the show: What Sheila Bair has learned about American capitalism as one of its top regulators and how she's trying — one book at a time — to help new generations from falling into its traps.We learned about Sheila Bair's kids books from listener Erin Vetter. If you've come across anything that makes finance fun, email us! We're at indicator@npr.org. Related Episodes: Mailbag: Children EditionBeach reads with a side of economics For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter. Full Article
ng Spring St Night Market By www.fontanaca.gov Published On :: Thu, 22 Aug 2024 08:33:16 -0800 Event date: November 15, 2024 Event Time: 06:00 PM - 10:00 PMLocation: 16822 Spring StFontana, CA 92335 Full Article
ng Regular Planning Commission Meeting By www.fontanaca.gov Published On :: Thu, 14 Dec 2023 18:08:48 -0800 Event date: November 19, 2024 Event Time: 06:00 PM - 10:00 PMLocation: 8353 Sierra Ave.Fontana, CA 92335 Full Article
ng Basic Black Live Looking at Headlines from Trayvon Martin to Three-Strikes Legislation By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Fri, 23 Mar 2012 00:00:00 EST Originally broadcast March 23, 2012 Basic Black takes a look at national and local headlines including the outrage ignited by the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin in Florida, the debate over Massachusetts; "three strikes" legislation, and Charles Street AME Church vs. One United Bank. Our panel this week: - Callie Crossley, host and executive editor, The Callie Crossley Show - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, 89.7 WGBH radio - Charles Yancey, Boston City Councillor - State Rep. Russell Holmes, (D-MA) - Alejandra St. Guillen, executive director, Oiste Full Article
ng Basic Black Live: Looking Ahead to Election 2012 By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 07 Jul 2012 00:00:00 EST Originally broadcast on July 6, 2012 July 6 marks four months to the day that the country will elect the president of the United States. We close this season of Basic Black with an exploration of questions going into the 2012 presidential election including: Has African American support diminished for President Obama? How strongly has opposition to an Obama second term grown in light of the Supreme Court decision upholding the Affordable Care Act? What will be the impact of recent decisions (President Obama and Supreme Court) concerning immigration? Is Michelle Obama a secret weapon in the president’s re-election campaign arsenal? Will there be any surprises from the upcoming conventions? Our panel: - Callie Crossley, host and executive editor, The Callie Crossley Show, 89.7 WGBH Radio - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, WGBH Radio - Kim McLarin, cultural commentator and assistant professor of creative writing, Emerson College - Peniel Joseph, professor of history and founder of the Center for the Study of Race and Democracy, Tufts University Full Article
ng Basic Black: The Battle for the Redistricting of Boston By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 27 Oct 2012 00:00:00 EST Originally broadcast on October 26, 2012: The deadline is fast approaching on a federal mandate for the Boston City Council to pass a plan that reorganizes the city’s voting districts. But there seems to be no clear consensus among council members, nor among many in Boston’s communities of color, on how to do it. The mayor has already vetoed two maps. A coalition representing African American, Asian, and Latino voters has vowed to sue if they are unsatisfied with the council's solution. Emotions are running high, and only ten days remain. Our panelists: - Latoyia Edwards, anchor, New England Cable News - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, 89.7 WGBH Radio - Kevin C. Peterson, executive director, New Democracy Coalition - Alejandra St. Guillen, executive director, Oiste - Sean Daughtry, political action chair, Boston branch, NAACP Relevant links: As deadline looms, state of play in redistricting Gintautas Dumcius, Dorchester Reporter, October 26, 2012 Group pitches alternative voting maps to city council Jeremy Fox, Boston Globe, September 29, 2012 More city council redistricting maps with Consalvo and Yancey verbal sparring David Ertischek, Roslindale Patch, October 4, 2012 Redistricting map passes despite objections form Communities of Color Coalition and councilors of color Mark Liu, Chinese Progressive Association, MySouthEnd.com, August 29, 2012 Boston City Council Census and Redistricting Committee (Image source: FreeFoto.com) Full Article
ng Basic Black: Polls and Predictions Going Into November 6 By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Fri, 02 Nov 2012 00:00:00 EST Originally broadcast on November 2, 2012. As the nation heads into election day on November 6, Basic Black considers the relevance of polls and the persistence of predictions. And what does it say about the candidates and this country that the race is so close? In conversation: - Latoyia Edwards, anchor, New England Cable News - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, 89.7 WGBH Radio - Peniel Joseph, professor of history Tufts University; Du Bois Fellow, Harvard University - Robert Fortes, Republican strategist (Photo: Early voting, Ohio 2012. Source: Associated Press.) Full Article
ng Basic Black Live: Looking Ahead to the Second Obama Administration By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 26 Jan 2013 00:00:00 EST January 25, 2013 President Obama officially began his second term of office on January 20th. In his inaugural address to the nation the following day, his focus was on the strengths and promises of America. In this Basic Black conversation, we explore the challenges, the goals, and the demands for the second Obama administration. Our panel this week: - Callie Crossley, host and moderator, Boston Public Radio, WGBH - Kim McLarin, assistant professor of writing, literature and publishing, Emerson College - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, 89.7 WGBH Radio - Peniel Joseph, professor of history, Tufts University - Robert Fortes, Republican strategist and political consultant Photo: Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts administers the oath of office to President Barack Obama during the inaugural swearing-in ceremony at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., Jan. 21, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Sonya N. Hebert) Full Article
ng Basic Black Live: Shifting Racial Fault Lines By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 08 Jun 2013 00:00:00 EST June 7, 2013 The folks who make Cheerios thought their commercial highlighted the heart health benefits of their product. All anyone sees is the interracial family consuming the cereal; the virulent racist reaction moves YouTube to shut down the comments section... Michelle Obama confronts a heckler who interrupted her remarks at a private fundraiser…Twitter erupts on all sides of the issue... And a challenge to the appointment of a white person to lead the board of Roxbury Community College sparks a debate….? Panel:? - Callie Crossley, host, Under The Radar, 89.7 WGBH Radio? - Kim McLarin, author, Divorce Dog: Men, Motherhood, and Midlife? - Peniel Joseph, professor of history, Tufts University? - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, 89.7 WGBH Radio Full Article
ng The Dharma According to Shakespeare By feeds.playshakespeare.com Published On :: Sat, 26 Aug 2017 12:05:16 -0400 Shakespeare has been my frequent companion for almost fifty years, during which time I have studied his works in school, read them for pleasure, attended hundreds of performances, watched dozens of film versions of the plays, and spent many hours listening to audio productions during morning and afternoon commutes. And for the past twenty yea... Full Article General
ng Rainbow Midsummer from Hedgerow and Mauckingbird By feeds.playshakespeare.com Published On :: Fri, 02 Aug 2024 10:13:14 +0000 The Hedgerow Theatre teams up with Mauckingbird Theatre Company, auteurs of “innovative, affordable, gay-themed theater,” for their production of... Full Article Theatre Reviews
ng 'Much Ado' Celebrates Creativity at the Philly Fringe By feeds.playshakespeare.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 18:22:29 +0000 In 1703, only a century and change after Shakespeare wrote Much Ado About Nothing, the first houses were built... Full Article Theatre Reviews
ng A Fanciful and Dangerous Forest of Athen: Great Lakes’ Dream By feeds.playshakespeare.com Published On :: Mon, 14 Oct 2024 07:35:29 +0000 A Midsummer Night’s Dream, produced by the Great Lakes Theater in repertoire with the musical Into the Woods, is... Full Article Theatre Reviews
ng 1.15.16: Midnight Voting Rivalries, Fringe Candidate 101 By audioboom.com Published On :: Sat, 16 Jan 2016 03:53:14 +0000 In this week's episode we get into the primary free-for-all, from three towns that all want to be the first to vote first in the nation; to the dozens of lesser-known names on the primary ballot and what exactly they're doing there. #Politics #2016 Full Article
ng 1.22.16: Polls Polls Polls; Queen City Campaigning; Trump's Town Captain By audioboom.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Jan 2016 22:55:05 +0000 Brady runs down this week's smack talk from the trail, seeks help for his addiction to polls, and finds out why candidates flipped pancakes in Manchester. Plus, why is one of Donald Trump's Town Captains voting for Rand Paul? #FITN #NHPrimary #2016 Full Article
ng 2.10.16: GOP Primary Special – Wrapping Up New Hampshire By audioboom.com Published On :: Wed, 10 Feb 2016 21:21:48 +0000 Brady didn’t get much sleep, but he’s all over dissecting the action that unfolded in Tuesday’s New Hampshire Republican Primary. A rundown of the three words that defined the day, a deeper look at the politics that ran the race, a glimpse into the future, and favorite reporter moments from the 2016 trail. Stay tuned for the Democratic edition wrap-up episode! Full Article
ng 2.11.2016: Democratic Primary Special - Wrapping Up New Hampshire By audioboom.com Published On :: Thu, 11 Feb 2016 19:34:53 +0000 Brady still hasn't gotten any sleep, but he’s all over dissecting the action that unfolded in Tuesday’s New Hampshire Democratic Primary. A rundown of the three words that defined the day, a deeper look at the politics that ran the race, and favorite reporter moments from the 2016 trail. If you missed it, check out our Republican edition wrap-up episode! Full Article
ng The Bookshelf: Joe Hill on Collaboration: 'Story is Our Family's Private Language' By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2019 12:18:38 -0400 When Joe Hill launched his career as a writer, he didn't want anyone to know about his famous writer parents, Stephen and Tabitha King. Rather than ride their coattails, he wanted to find success on his own—thus the pen name, Joe Hill. Full Article
ng The Bookshelf: Author Alex Myers Challenges Gender Norms in New Novel By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2019 15:17:16 -0500 Novelist Alex Myers came out as transgender in the mid-90s, when society's understanding of what it means to be transgender was less clear than it is today. Full Article
ng The Bookshelf: Keene Author Recalls 'Cub' Reporting Days in Graphic Memoir By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Fri, 03 Jan 2020 14:31:01 -0500 When Cindy Copeland was in seventh grade in the early 1970s, an English teacher encouraged her to become a writer. Shortly after that, the Keene resident landed an internship as a “cub reporter” with a local journalist, following her to public meetings and learning how question people powerful people—most of them men. And Cindy did all this while navigating the tricky minefield of fraught friendships, cliques, and bullying that so often characterize life in junior high. Full Article
ng The Bookshelf: The Little-Known History Of Violence At New England's African American Schools By www.nhpr.org Published On :: Tue, 16 Jun 2020 11:22:04 -0400 The history of school desegregation in America has long been centered around the southern United States. Full Article
ng Introducing Patient Zero By beta.prx.org Published On :: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 13:39:26 -0000 A first look at Patient Zero, a series we'll be putting out next month! Hosted by Outside/In's Taylor Quimby. Sweet new theme by Ty Gibbons. First episode drops mid-August! Find more at patientzeropodcast.com. Full Article
ng Patient Zero: The Triangle By beta.prx.org Published On :: Thu, 15 Aug 2019 10:00:00 -0000 When you're fighting off a cold or flu, it's easy to imagine the battle is being waged solely inside the confines of your body. But in order to spread, pathogens rely on nearly every aspect of our shared societies. Food and drink, social customs, our proximity to animals, urban design, income inequality: The science of epidemiology connects them all. Patient Zero investigates the spaces where people and pathogens collide. It is a story about Lyme disease, but it is also a story about uncertainty, and what to do in the face of it. Full Article