Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Keep Calm and Listen to Brian Lehrer – The New York Times

Brian Lehrer was having difficulty. He was doing his daily radio show from home because of the COVID-19 outbreak. There was a little dead air, and he disconnected a congressman just as he was about to make a point.

Whoops, he said gently.

But even under the circumstances a pandemic in a city on the verge of lockdown he was the calming presence hes always been. Remember that most of us, and most of our loved ones, are going to be fine, he started the show on the day the city closed the schools. But the Russian roulette aspect of this, the randomness of this, is very real. So lets look it in the eye, and move on together.

Among his fans, he can do no wrong. He is a cross between Tom Brokaw and Mister Rogers. He is the high school social studies teacher we all wish we had. He is, in the words of the City Council speaker of New York, your super smart, approachable uncle who you respect and admire, and who always knows way more on every single issue than you would possibly expect.

Aidy Bryant, the Saturday Night Live actress who introduced him at a public radio gala in Manhattan last year, admits to being star-struck only twice in her career: once when she met Prince, and once when she met Brian Lehrer.

Lots of large cities have local news radio figures, like Michael Krasny on KQED in the Bay Area, or Larry Mantle on KPCC in Los Angeles. But to the thousands of New Yorkers who listen to The Brian Lehrer Show five days a week at 10 a.m., our local news radio host is equal parts civic treasure and municipal therapist.

And hes been at it for some time: Listeners have tuned in to the Lehrer show on WNYC for local and national politics, current events and social issues for the past three decades through the Central Park Five trial, the Sept. 11 attacks, the 2008 financial crisis, the rise of Black Lives Matter, Hurricane Sandy, the 2016 election and now the coronavirus pandemic.

Mr. Lehrer begins each show focusing on a topic in the news (Brexit, gentrification, the presidential primary), providing accessible interviews with authors, politicians, actors, journalists, or the occasional Sesame Street character (Elmo once explained Hurricane Sandy to children).

But its after the interview that the show really begins, when Mr. Lehrer opens the phone lines to listeners, allowing them to hold forth on a bevy of issues, from the hyperlocal (rezoning in their neighborhood, tension in the school district, a late-arriving Access-a-Ride) to the national (why people should stop buying single-use plastics). Topics flow from the wonky (an explainer on early voting) to the whimsical (Does the New York accent still exist?).

For the past few weeks, he has been covering the coronavirus pandemic closely, dedicating segments to discussions with doctors, politicians, teachers and a very informed audience. It has been something of a challenge for Mr. Lehrer.

After 9/11, at least people could come together and support each other in their fears and in their grief, he said. I dont think Ive ever experienced a situation where theres a need to support each other and isolate each other at the same time.

Unable to move around freely, people are spending more time on their devices, getting news and misinformation from social media, which doesnt help Mr. Lehrers cause: trying to keep his community calm, and together.

Brian Lehrer was born in 1952, and grew up in Bayside, Queens, which he calls a relatively homogeneous place: most people were white, Jewish and middle class. But the calm of the neighborhood was shattered by the tumult of the late 1960s.

People around him were in turmoil over whether they were going to go to Vietnam. I had a high draft number, said Mr. Lehrer, 67, by way of explaining his ability to look at the issue dispassionately.

If you grow up in that kind of environment, where the global issue of the time connects to your personal sense of safety and commitment people in my circles basically didnt think the war was right thats probably how a lot of people got interested in the news at that time.

A radio devotee even in childhood his first radio experience was as a summer camp D.J. Mr. Lehrer graduated from SUNY Albany with degrees in music and mass communications, the latter designed around his D.J. shifts at the college radio station. After graduating in 1973, he got an offer at a rock n roll station in Albany; Lehrer accepted the job as long as he could open the phone lines on Sundays between midnight and 3 a.m. to host a talk show.

He replicated this practice at stations in Columbus, Ohio, and Norfolk, Va., and managed to get two masters degrees one in journalism, from Ohio State University, and one in public health, from Columbia, eventually ending up as a freelance journalist. Then, in the late 80s, WNYC asked him to audition for a news program they were putting together.

At the time, the bedrock of public radio was newsmagazine shows like Morning Edition and All Things Considered, which were filled with authoritative, expert voices.

At his audition, Lehrer made it clear that he wanted to engage listeners more, taking questions from real people, instead of just listening to pundits spout responses to a host, to democratize the dialogue. He had become interested in this exchange, which often produced better policies, he said, while studying for his masters of public health.

It was an eye opener to me, he said, how often politics got in the way of the best possible environment policy, because one group or another had to be appeased for whatever reason, and that helped me add another level of sophistication to the show that I wouldnt have had otherwise.

So that was that: The sophistication of his show, as well as the accessibility, would involve the very people who listened to him.

When he started at WNYC, the Fairness Doctrine had just been abolished. Gone was the requirement that broadcast stations balance controversial topics with various points of view. Talk radio exploded, with angry conservative men popping up all over the dial.

Mr. Lehrer wanted his show, which premiered in 1989, to be an antidote to what radio hosts like Rush Limbaugh were doing. The original title of Lehrers show was On the Line, a play on its welcoming interview format.

He now speaks with easily over a thousand people a year, roughly four people every show including, once, me. (I was on to discuss The 1619 Project.) And tens of thousands more call and tune in, some names more recognizable than others. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo is known to call in. The actress and activist Rosie Perez has, too. And in the middle of a conversation about the crisis for small business owners in New York City, the actor Tony Danza got on the line to talk about his mozzarella shop.

Lehrers most useful trait may be his most nebulous one: in a city of eight million mean or rude or cold New Yorkers, everybody seems to like Brian Lehrer, almost to a startling effect. Its in no small part that hes the rare non-lawmaker who fully understands how congestion pricing might work.

Mr. Lehrers magic is bipartisan: hes made New York City with all its internecine drama between the state and the metropolitan area, multiple elections in a year, City Council charter revisions feel like one big neighborhood. Mr. Lehrer is also a self-proclaimed Welcome Wagon for newcomers to the city giving them a direct line to the mayor, explaining whats going on with the buses on 14th Street. (In German, his name translates to teacher.) He seems to feel a personal responsibility to provide this service.

Were always told how divided we are as a nation, said Julia Genatossio, who has continued listening online after she left New York for Southern California, but the broad range of listeners to Brians show clearly tells us another version of ourselves.

So how has a wonky radio figure with a lightly nasal delivery become a universally beloved icon of a city that thrives on cynicism? It might have to do with the fact that Lehrer has kept his personal life private. He has virtually no social media presence outside of the show, which paradoxically lends his program even more intimacy.

For a radio guy, he gets recognized pretty frequently: in the supermarket, on the subway, in the bodega. New Yorkers who run into him might want to do a version of calling in to the show, responding to a topic from earlier that week or telling him what he should be talking about.

Fans traded drips of his personal life with me he lives in Inwood, he has sons, he loves to run. The stories bandied about reveal a man who seems, alternately, like a family member and a celebrity, a real mensch.

What makes him such a great host is that he is one of the only people with a long-running show on radio or TV who I would not consider to be a personality, said Mike Bernstein, whos been listening for over 20 years. Despite being on the radio every day with a show that bears his name, its never about him.

Every Friday morning for the past four years, the program hosts Ask the Mayor, a segment inspired by radio spots mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg had with other stations. The show approached the administration when Mayor Bill de Blasio took office, but they were initially rebuffed. After some time and some bad press City Hall accepted. Corey Johnson, the City Council speaker and a self-described huge, huge fan, requested a segment as well: He sits in for the monthly Speak to the Speaker.

To regular listeners, those Friday mornings are a time of community updates, mayoral decree and occasional sparring between mayor and host.

But even Mr. de Blasio wont say anything bad about Brian Lehrer. In a show earlier this month, the mayor bristled at Mr. Lehrer asking if he had seen recent video footage of a young black man in Canarsie being detained by six police officers without a clear reason.

Mr. de Blasio chided Mr. Lehrer and his staff for not tuning in to the previous days news conference, where he spoke about the footage at length. Mr. Lehrer responded that he had indeed tuned in, but was asking for the many listeners who werent able to watch the conference; Mr. de Blasio contended that the news conference shouldve answered Mr. Lehrers question about whether or not hed reviewed the footage.

And yet he didnt hesitate to describe him as the Walter Cronkite of the age.

I will tussle with him if I think he has his facts wrong, or I think hes missing something, the mayor said, but I dont for a moment think he has a bias.

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Keep Calm and Listen to Brian Lehrer - The New York Times

3 indicted on murder charges in unrelated Birmingham slayings – AL.com

Three people have been indicted on murder charges in unrelated incidents, including a Birmingham activist who was initially charged with a lesser crime.

A Jefferson County grand jury on March 6 issued the murder indictments against Mercutio Southall, Micayla Sloan and Terrence Watkins, according to court records made public Wednesday.

The 35-year-old Southall, one of the initial leaders in the citys Black Lives Matter movement, is indicted on intentional murder in the 2019 slaying of 54-year-old Arthur Douglas Hudson. He was originally charged with manslaughter.

The shooting happened about 10:30 p.m. in June 2019 Hudsons home in the 6600 block of First Avenue South. East Precinct officers were just finishing up a nearby traffic stop when a red Ford F-150 flew past them driving erratically and then came to a screeching halt. The driver - later identified as Southall - jumped out of the truck and ran behind a home.

One of the officers began to follow him, and saw a woman sitting in the pickup truck with her head in her hands. Just then, multiple shots rang out behind the home. Police heard a man - later identified as Hudson - yell that he had been shot and found him climbing over a fence to get away from the shooter. Officers tried to tend to his injuries - two gunshot wounds - but he was pronounced dead on the scene.

Southall - with a gun holstered on his side - was taken into custody at the scene. Southalls sister was taken by Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service to UAB Hospital for treatment for lacerations. It wasnt immediately clear how she was injured. Southall remains on bond.

Sloan, a 23-year-old Walker County woman, has been indicted on a felony murder charge in connection with the 2018 deadly shooting of a young Birmingham man. She is charged with murder in the Oct. 11, 2018 killing of 24-year-old Skyler Lewis.

West Precinct officers were dispatched just before 3:30 a.m. that day to a home at 1839 18th Street in Ensley. Once on the scene, police found Lewis lying unresponsive inside the home. Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service medics pronounced him dead on the scene.

A second male victim was also found wounded inside the house. He was taken to UAB Hospital with critical injuries. Additional officers then responded to the 1500 block of Bessemer Road where a woman was founded with a gunshot wound. Authorities quickly determined she had been injured in the 18th Street shooting.

The two-count indictment against Sloan states she did commit or attempt to commit a felony clearly dangerous to human life, burglary, and in the course of that crime she, or another participant, caused the death of Lewis by shooting him with a pistol.

Court records show Sloan had previously written a letter to the judge asking she be released so that she could take care of her children and go back to work, but she remains in the Jefferson County Jail with bond set at $60,000.

Watkins, 37, is charged in the Sept. 23 shooting death of Tiyesha Carson, also 37.

Birmingham police and firefighters responded at 4:20 a.m. that Monday after getting a ShotSpotter call to the 1300 block of Avenue V. Once on the scene. They found Carson suffering from a gunshot wound.

The woman was found in the rear of a residence, but she did not live there. Authorities said it appears she went to the home searching for help after she was shot.

Carson was taken to UAB Hospitals Trauma Center, where she was pronounced dead at 5:45 a.m.

Authorities have not said what led to the deadly shooting. Watkins is out of jail on $100,000 bond.

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3 indicted on murder charges in unrelated Birmingham slayings - AL.com

What I Buy & Why: Collectors Carlos and Rosa de la Cruz on Why They Dont Actually Have Any Art Hanging Above the Sofa – artnet News

A version of this story first appeared in the spring 2020Artnet Intelligence Report.

What was your first acquisition?

Star Gazer (1956) by Rufino Tamayo, in 1988. Our collection changed direction in 1992 when we acquired the work of Flix Gonzlez-Torres. From then on, weve collected contemporary art.

What was your most recent acquisition?

Four large-scale paintings by Glenn Ligon and a neon from his series inspired by the poems and unfinished films of Pier Paolo Pasolini. We also acquired work by Jennifer Guidi and Picture 4 (2018), by Nate Lowman, from a series of paintings based on crime scene photos of the October 1, 2017, mass shooting in Las Vegas. Another recent acquisition: two paintings by Haiti-born, Miami-based artist Tomm El-Saieh.

Glenn Ligon, Notes for a Poem on the Third World (chapter two) (2019). Photo Courtesy of the de la Cruz Collection.

Which artists are you hoping to add to your collection this year?

We are looking at a younger generation of figurative artists whose work engages with contemporary social realities and movements such as Black Lives Matter and womens empowerment.

What is the most expensive work of art that you own?

The value of art is subjective.

Where do you buy art most frequently?

We have always built strong relationships with the artists we collect and the galleries who represent them. Additionally, we have been supporters of Art Basel and Frieze.

What work do you have hanging above your sofa?

We do not place furniture against our walls. Carlos and I have always lived with art in a way that for some may seem unconventional and do not consider artworks decorative objects.

What artwork, if any, do you have in your bathroom?

We dont place art in the bathroom.

Tomm El-Saieh, Fruiting Body (2019). Photo Courtesy of the de la Cruz Collection.

What is the most impractical work of art you own? What makes it so challenging?

Flix Gonzlez-Torress (Untitled) Portrait of Dad (1991) is a pile of candy placed on the floor. We have to make sure that the candy is always fresh!

What work do you wish you had bought when you had the chance?

One of Flix Gonzlez-Torress curtains.

If you could steal one work of art without getting caught, what would it be?

One of Flix Gonzlez-Torress curtains!

A version of this story first appeared in the spring 2020Artnet Intelligence Report. To download the full report, which has juicy details on the best-selling artists of 2019, how A.I. could transform the art industry, and how titans of the finance industry are infiltrating the auction houses,click here.

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What I Buy & Why: Collectors Carlos and Rosa de la Cruz on Why They Dont Actually Have Any Art Hanging Above the Sofa - artnet News

Woman to stand trial following incident with cop at McDonald’s drive-thru – Yahoo Lifestyle

A former McDonalds worker in California is being ordered to stand trial after an incident in November 2019 where the employee was accused of tampering with a customers food.

According to court documents, Tatyana Hargrove reportedly rubbed a hamburger bun on the floor before spitting on it, as she prepared an order for a Bakersfield police officer.

A testimony said that Hargrove knew the burger was going to be served to an officer in the drive-thru and shouted Black lives matter, (expletive) the pigs!

While the Black Lives Matter group has not formally addressed Hargrove's statement, their mission states, "We embody and practice justice, liberation, and peace in our engagements with one another."

Hargroves attorney, Deputy Public Defender Lexi Blythe, says that there was not enough evidence for a full felony charge against Hargrove. For the case to have been deemed appropriate for a felony charge, Hargrove would have had to willfully try to use harmful substances to poison the food.

But, Blythe argues, because its unknown when the last time cleaning products were used on the floors, it cannot be argued that Hargrove was intentionally trying to hurt the officer.

However, another McDonalds employee told the prosecutor of the case that they heard Hargrove force herself to hack up saliva as she prepared the order.

The officer reportedly said he did not feel sick from eating the burger nor did he go to a hospital after.

Hargrove is due in court on March 23.

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Woman to stand trial following incident with cop at McDonald's drive-thru - Yahoo Lifestyle

Joe Biden is not an honorary black man, and that’s fine… – Gulf Today

Joe Biden, Cory Booker.

Andrea K. McDaniels, Tribune News Service

Presidential candidate Joe Biden is an honorary black man, according to House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn.

Former presidential candidate Sen. Cory Booker recalled during a recent fundraiser for Biden in Detroit how Clyburn used the phrase during a recent Congressional Black Caucus meeting. Bloomberg reporter Jennifer Epstein tweeted about Bookers recollection of the comment.

A couple of weeks prior to that, former NFL safety Jack Brewer, who is African American, called President Donald Trump the first black president during a roundtable at the White House to discuss Black History Month. Mr. President, I dont mean to interrupt, but Ive got to say this because its Black History Month: man, you are the first black president, he said.

Both descriptions are problematic and trivialize the trials and tribulations an African American man or woman will face that a white person never will because of race. The fact that both Biden and Trump, men with starkly different ideologies, can both be embraced as embracive of the black race, shows how ridiculous the practice of assigning blackness to white politicians has become.

White people have not suffered high rates of mass incarceration that have torn their families apart and made them highly unemployable. They are not stereotyped as a unit as being less smart and less capable. They are not denied loans at higher rates like African Americans. Biden and Trump, or any other white person for that matter, cannot live the black experience and should not get honorary status to the race.

Instead, they should just be themselves. I dont need my elected officials to prove they have even an ounce of so-called blackness. Listening to soul music or dancing with the crowd at a campaign stop to prove that they can relate means nothing to me. I can personally attest that not all black folks have rhythm.

I am fine with my politicians being white. What matters is where they stand on the issues that will impact black lives. What are they doing to combat redlining, employment discrimination and health disparities that mean African Americans dont live as long as their white neighbours? What is their plan for the income disparities that exist in cities like Baltimore? Did their arm have to be twisted to declare lynching a national hate crime?

I am pretty sure that African American voters who have helped. Biden surge past Bernie Sanders and the other presidential candidates didnt check his name because they felt some sort of black kinship with the former vice president. (Although he did benefit from the connection some felt to Bidens former boss, the actual first black president Barack Obama).

The late novelist Toni Morrison started the fascination with assigning blackness to white elected officials when she described former President Bill Clinton in a New Yorker article as the first black president, although her words were misinterpreted and it wasnt her intention. She was describing the way Clinton was being dragged through the mud because of his affair with the intern Monica Lewinsky.

But some would argue his policies, including welfare reform and tough on crime laws that lead to mass incarceration, werent necessarily in the best interest of African Americans.

Id rather have a white representative with basic black cultural competency, but with the fortitude and insight to come up with legislation that benefits African Americans.

So, sorry Clyburn, Biden is not an honorary black man. Hes a white man with a working class background who grew up in Scranton, Pa. And thats OK.

It will be up to him to prove if he has policies in mind that benefit black communities. And up to voters to judge him on that and not some trivial connection to blackness.

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Joe Biden is not an honorary black man, and that's fine... - Gulf Today