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10 FREE things to do in NYC in 2023 Things to do in New York
10 FREE things to do in NYC in 2023 #NewYork Things to do in New York #thingstodoinNewYork #travel #NewYork Watch the 10 FREE things to do in NYC in 2023 video till the end. 2506 Views – 157 Likes. You also like and comment. This video will give you an idea about the subject you are wondering about. 10 of my favorite (and unexpected) free things to do in New York City! don’t forget to like and…
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piece-of-the-pie-if · 8 months
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woah... can we have some information on all the ROs parents/families? if i read that right it means J and Kinsley are cousins?????
sure! +yes, Kinsley and J are cousins, but only technically!
Dylan Quinn──
Reece Quinn, Dylan's father. 37 years old. He's an art restorationist painter! Reece and Dylan share a love of art, and Reece is very supportive that Dyl wants to take their art all the way. He's a bit clumsy in his concerns about Dylan's education that it gets them in a few arguments but Dylan knows that at the end of the day their father just wants the best for them!
Laurel Benson, previously Quinn, born Carter, Dylan's mother. 43 years old. She lives in Austria now. They haven't spoken in almost five years. She's an art museum curator. She might have a newborn but that's just speculation on Dylan's part.
Shayne Walker──
Andrew Walker, Shay's father. 48 years old. Recently promoted to a high ranking manager in a heavy duty vehicle manufacturing business─he looks over the presentations of new models and keeps track of their quality. He used to fly all over the world to make sure their machines were working properly in overseas countries but now has a more permanent spot. Shay gets his humour from his father and they have a very good relationship.
Deirdre Walker, Shay's mother. 47 years old. DeDe has a chronic illness that makes it hard for her to move for extended periods of time and as such has stopped working to take over full time at home. Shay and his mother bond over their love of food. She is very kind and full of heart to hearts──DeDe gives the best hugs in the world!
Danielle Walker, soon to be Peterson, Shay's older sister. 23 years old. Her fiance is Ryan Peterson (24). Owns her own flower shop! Danielle and Shay get along quite well, but they're not exactly talk every day close.
Ingrid Walker, Shay's younger sister. 8 years old. She likes to pla pranks on and with Shay, and is becoming quite the jokester like her brother!.
Kinsley Grace-Cameron──
Emilia Grace, Kinsley's mother. Emilia is Kinsley's birth mother, from her egg─she carried Kinsley to full term pregnancy (Kinsley was almost a week late.) She died two years ago, aged 36. She was a criminal defence lawyer. Kinsley and Emilia were extremely close.
Lavender Cameron, Kinsley's mother. 39 years old. Works as a corporate business lawyer, is currently the sole owner of Grace and Cameron, the law firm. Never got on the best with Kinsley and their relationship has only gotten colder since her wife's death. Lavender has very high expectations for her daughter, but deep down she just wants Kinsley to do her best and be happy.
Jared Montgomery, Kinsley's father. 32 years old. Works as an auditor for New York's state government. Doesn't take part in Kinsley's life as a father, but he does have a... amicable relationship with her.
The Grace Aunts/Cousins. Emilia's sisters, Elizabeth (40), Emberly (38) and Elise (28). Elizabeth's son Karden (21) and Emberley's twins Georgina and Gabriella (19).
The Cameron Aunts/Uncles/Cousins. Lavender's brothers, Malachite (46) and Flint (38) and sister Lilac (27). Malachite's sons Sterling (24) and Roland (23), Flint's daughter Jade (21) and Lilac's son Oliver (4).
bar Oliver, Kinsley is the youngest of the cousins and is now under the most scrutiny from her family to live up to their legacy. Kinsley doesn'y get along with most of her extended family, but used to be closer to her cousins Georgina and Gabriella before her mother died.
Jaxon/Jasmin Montomery──
Archibald Montgomery, J's father. 53 years old. CEO of a business company... something to do with stocks... oil or gold or something. Declared J disowned a few months ago.
Hannah Montgomery, previously Morgenstern, born Hastings, J's mother. 51 years old. Current Mayor for New York. Trying very hard to keep contact with J... trying very hard to keep control of J.
Arabella Montgomery, J's little sister. Newly turned 11 years old. Loves J so very much, it's caused tension between Bella and her parents... who are on the verge of a divorce!
Jared Montgomery, J's paternal uncle. 32 years old. Works for Hannah in their municipal government, he is an auditor.
Peter Hastings, J's maternal uncle. 44 years old. Working as an engineer for a train line company. Very protective of J and Arabella, currently letting J stay in his apartment.
Theodore/Theodora/Theo Wesley──
Miles Wesley, Theo's father. 42 years old. Neurosurgeon.
Paulina Wesley, born Prescott, Theo's mother. 43 years old. Pediatric Surgeon.
both of Theo's parents are very loving but they're also very busy... Theo tends to stay out of their way when they're at home because they don't want to bother their parents when they're so tired/supposed to be resting.
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marjaystuff · 8 months
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Interview with Darci Hannah
Murder at the Pumpkin Pageant
Beacon Bakeshop Book 4
Kensington Pub
July 25th, 2023
Murder at the Pumpkin Pageant by Darci Hannah is a good book for the Halloween season since many are already decorating their houses. This Halloween atmosphere has ghosts, goblins, pranksters, costumes, pirates, clowns, and dogs in costume along with professional ghost hunters. 
The plot has the main character, Lindsey, renovating an old lighthouse, for her home and bakery. In the story the Halloween festivities include Lindsey having in her bakery a lot of pumpkin-flavored treats. Lindsey has also reluctantly agreed to let her best friend, Kennedy, do her live podcast from the lighthouse with professional ghost hunters. But things go sideways after they all stumble upon a fresh corpse in Lindsey's yard. First, they thought it was teens doing a prank, a clown as a dummy, but it’s a corpse. With the help of her friends and her resident ghost they strive to find the murderer. 
The mystery has many tricks and treats that include twists and turns. The action leaps from the pages. One of the treats the author gives her readers is the delicious seasonal recipes included at the back of the book.
Elise Cooper:  How did you get the idea for the series?
Darci Hannah:  This is the fourth book I have written in the series. I have the setting in Michigan.  I love to bake, and my youngest brother bought a bakery, so I incorporated a bakery and lighthouse into the series. I wanted to be a paranormal writer, so I slip some of this into my writing.  When I started this series, I thought of a haunted lighthouse tale within a cozy mystery.  I always visit a lot of lighthouses. I came to realize a lot of lighthouses have a history and a story about lingering lightkeepers. In this series the lighthouse has a history and a ghost story. Lindsey, the protagonist lives in the haunted lighthouse and has developed a working relationship with this lighthouse ghost.
EC:  Was any of this real?
DH:  A lot of the techniques of the ghosts I use are from real lighthouses here in Michigan. People see eerie green lights which I incorporated in this story. There are a lot of shipwrecks here. Because I did dive on shipwrecks, I included it in the story.
EC:  What is the role of Halloween?
DH: It was great fun to write a Halloween theme. The idea came from my publisher. There are pirates, the Wizard of Oz comes into it with the costume of a straw headed person. The “Pumpkin Pageant” had people dressed in costume along with their pets. Everyone in the bakery owned by the protagonist dressed in a theme costume. There is also a pumpkin carving contest.
EC:  Was Wellington, Lindsey’s dog based on a real dog?
DH:  Yes, I love dogs so there are a lot of dogs in my story. Wellington is Lindsey’s dog. He is a Newfoundland because I had a dog of that breed. He is the perfect dog for a lighthouse because they are big water dogs. He has freedom and space now. He also loves to fish.
EC:  How would you describe Lindsey?
DH:  She has a financial background. She is practical, wants to make people happy, is pretty, and caring. She is from New York City and has moved to a Michigan small town. She has her mother’s looks and her father’s brain. She is not a social media person, more private.
EC:  How would you describe her boyfriend, Rory?
DH: He is an ex-Navy SEAL who is a conglomerate of some of my friends.  He is a woodsy outdoorsman. The whole state shuts down in November during deer season. I wanted to put this cultural piece of Michigan into Rory’s character. He is very protective, kind, funny, intense, and a good diver.   Together they are an item and are attracted to each other. She sees him as intriguing. They respect each other a lot.
EC:  The next book?
DH: The next book in the series continues the holiday theme.  It is titled Murder at the Blarney Bash, a St. Patrick’s Day book, but coming out in January. The plot has a new Irish import store being opened by Rory’s uncle and cousin. There will be a Leprechaun in the story.
THANK YOU!!
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rarealdcresults · 1 year
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Onstage New York, Nationals in NYC (July 28th - 31st, 2007) [INCOMPLETE]:
Primary Mini Duet / Trio:
Paige Hyland, Josh Hyland & Chloé Lukasiak - “Mr Touchdown” (Musical Theater) - 1st Place / 283.5 Points
Primary Mini Musical Theater Solo:
Sarah Restano - “No One Tells The President What To Do” (Musical Theater) - 1st Place / 283 Points
Primary Teen Group:
“Voodoo And The Dolls” (Tap) [Elise Deming, John Fiumara, Natalee Bailey, Nina Linhart, Stephanie Pittman] - Did Not Place / Critics Choice Award
Primary Teen Line:
“Falling Waters” (Lyrical) - 1st Place / 278 Points
Advanced Mini Solo:
Jessica Restano - “Dance” (Acrobatic) - Did Not Place
Advanced Junior Acrobatic Solo:
Vikki Robb - “Beautiful Energy” (Acrobatic) - 1st Place / 283.3 Points
Advanced Junior Vocal Solo:
Brandon Pent - “I Just Can’t Wait To Be King” (Vocal) - 1st Place / 282 Points
Overall Advanced Junior Solo:
Stephanie Pittman - “Kali” (Ballet) - 10th Place / 291 Points
Nina Linhart - “Show Off” (Musical Theater) - Did Not Place
Brittany Pent - “I’m More Than What I Seem” (Lyrical) - Did Not Place
Advanced Teen Acrobatic Solo:
Savanna Carrozzi - “Peel Me A Grape” (Acrobatic) - 1st Place / 285.3 Points
Advanced Teen Lyrical Solo:
Miranda Maleski - “Falling” (Lyrical) - 1st Place / 295.5 (98.5) Points
Advanced Teen Musical Theater Solo:
Jessica Ice - “Mein Herr” (Musical Theater) - 1st Place / 285.5 Points
Advanced Teen Specialty Solo:
Jesse Johnson - “Amazing Grace” (Specialty) - 1st Place / 292.2 Points
Overall Advanced Teen Solo:
Miranda Maleski - “Falling” (Lyrical) - 1st Place / 295.5 (98.5) Points
Kaitlyn Reiser - “Bang Bang” (Lyrical) - 2nd Place / 295.5 (97.8) Points
Chelsea Shott - “Do What You Have To Do” (Lyrical) - 6th Place / 292.9 Points
Jesse Johnson - “Amazing Grace” (Specialty) - 9th Place / 292.2 Points
Natalee Bailey - “Bad Bad Thing” (Tap) - Did Not Place
Chelsea Zimmer - “Wicked Kate” (Acrobatic) - Did Not Place
Lisa Hulker - “Here” (Lyrical) - Did Not Place
Emily Burkhart - “Black Horse & A Cherry Tree” (Musical Theater) - Did Not Place
Alexandra McGee - “Don Juan” (Tap) - Did Not Place
Micha McGee - “Sailor” (Acrobatic) - Did Not Place
Cydney Miller - “?” (?) - Did Not Place
Advanced Teen Duet/Trio:
Hannah Opalko & Stephanie Pittman - “Lullaby In The Storm” (Acrobatic) - 3rd Place / 291.6 Points
Marissa Mchling & Jesse Johnson - “Color Blind” (Contemporary) - 7th Place / 286.7 Points
Chelsea Zimmer & Lisa Hulker - "Side By Side" (Jazz) - 8th Place / 285.6 Points
Brittany Pent, Emily Burkhart & Vikki Robb - "What Is This Feeling" (Musical Theatre) - 9th Place / 285 (94) Points
Jessica Ice, Leah Pivirotto & Miranda Maleski - "Cold-Hearted Snake" (Jazz) - 10th Place / 285 (93) Points
Advanced Senior Acrobatic Solo:
Hannah Opalko - "The Stage Is Bare" (Acrobatic) - 1st Place / 295 (97.4) Points
Advanced Senior Lyrical Solo:
Amanda Stelluto - "Ain't No Sunshine" (Lyrical) - 2nd Place / 295 (97) Points
Overall Advanced Senior Solo:
Hannah Opalko - "The Stage Is Bare" (Acrobatic) - 1st Place / 295 (97.4) Points
Amanda Stelluto - "Ain't No Sunshine" (Lyrical) - 2nd Place / 295 (97) Points
Alivia Shoop - "Boy's Night Out" (Jazz) - 9th Place / 290 Points
Leah Pivirotto - "I Don't Need No Man" (Jazz) - 10th Place / 289.9 Points
Marissa Mchling - “?” (?) - Did Not Place
Gianna Martello - “Pour Some Sugar On Me” (Lyrical) - Did Not Place
Alexandra Salerno - “Inch” (Contemporary) - Did Not Place
Gabi Flora - “?” (Lyrical) - Did Not Place
Sydney Shoff - “Simply” (Ballet) - Did Not Place
Advanced Senior Duet/Trio:
Amanda Stelluto & Gianna Martello - "Foolish Games" (Lyrical) - 6th Place / 289.7 Points
Advanced Senior Contemporary Group:
"P.S. Take Care Of My Baby" (Contemporary) [Amanda Stelluto, Crystal Jennings, Gianna Martello, Kaitlyn Reiser, Leah Pivirotto, Miranda Maleski] - 1st Place / ‘Senior Critics' Choice' Award / 296.3 Points
Advanced Senior Specialty Lines:
"Simply Irresistible" (Specialty) [Alexandra McGee, Alexandra Salerno, Alivia Shoop, Amanda Stelluto, Brittany Tague, Chelsea Shott, Crystal Jennings, Cydney Miller, Gabi Flora, Gianna Martello, Hannah Opalko, Jessica Ice, Kaitlyn Reiser, Leah Pivirotto, Marissa Mechling, Miranda Maleski, & Sydney Shoff] - 1st Place / 289 Points
Overall Advanced Senior Group:
“P.S Take Care Of My Baby” (Contemporary) - 1st Place
Overall Advanced Senior Line:
“Godzilla” (Contemporary) [Alexandra Salerno, Alivia Shoop, Alyssa Giugliano, Amanda Stelluto, Brittany Tague, Crystal Jennings, Cydney Miller, Emily ?, Hannah Opalko, Kaitlyn Reiser, Kasey ?, Marissa Mechling, Megan Germ, Miranda Maleski] - 2nd Place
National Junior Mr. Onstage New York:
Brandon Pent - "I'm Still Here" (Jazz) - 1st Place (Title Winner)
National Teen Mr. Onstage New York:
John Fiumara - "Got My Own Thing Now" (Tap) - 1st Place (Title Winner)
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blueboats42 · 2 years
Text
friends of friends are people now 
people who are listed on the new york times bestseller lists
people who my favorite musicians mention in interviews
-   
i am jealous
i am the definition of it
-
i have wanted to be something since the moment I could think
a something that was important 
a something that gave something to others
that helped others
-
but i cant write anything that matters
or sing softly enough
or paint what lies inside
-
i cant seem to make myself sit down to do it
and if i do what i make 
communicates these thoughts with the bluntness of 
a child’s made up language of scribbles
-
i know that statues crumble
and words that were praised become unread
but i still yearn to be loved for what i have made
even though 
I know 
it will bow to time’s will
i know 
i can not fight the nothingness that will become the mass i inhabit
-
but still fear i will not make anything 
that know one will hold my name in praise
that i will never fill this narcissistic desire
i can not live outside of it
- Hannah Elise
0 notes
foreverlogical · 3 years
Link
The process of certifying Joe Biden as the 46th president of the United States occurred in the early morning hours of Jan. 7, after being disrupted by rioters and delayed by Republicans who repeated false and misleading claims about the election results.
Six Republican senators and more than 100 GOP House members objected to the election results in Arizona and Pennsylvania in a failed final attempt to keep President Donald Trump in office.
Here we review some of the claims they made during the debate:
Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona falsely claimed that “a court found 3% error rate against President Trump” in Arizona’s results. Actually, a state trial court found an error rate of 0.55% in the state’s largest county, which the state Supreme Court said was not enough to question the results.
Gosar also baselessly claimed that “over 400,000 mail-in ballots” in Arizona were “switched” from Trump to Biden “or completely erased from President Trump’s totals.” But there is no evidence to support such a wild claim.
Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York claimed Pennsylvania’s state Supreme Court and secretary of commonwealth “rewrote election law, eliminating signature matching requirements.” Actually, the court unanimously ruled that state law doesn’t require local election officials to determine the authenticity of signatures on absentee or mail-in ballots.
Stefanik also said, “In Wisconsin, officials issued illegal rules to circumvent a state law … that required absentee voters to provide photo identification before obtaining a ballot.” She’s referring to rescinded guidance that some Wisconsin county clerks issued ahead of the state’s April primary election — not the November general election.
Rep. Lee Zeldin took issue with a “Democracy in the Park event” in Wisconsin that he said resulted in “over 17,000 ballots transferred that shouldn’t have been.” The Wisconsin Supreme Court said the event, which allowed voters to bring completed absentee ballots to parks to be collected by sworn city election inspectors, met the letter of state election laws.
Republican Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania wrongly said the state Supreme Court had “absolutely no right” to allow the use of unmanned drop boxes where voters could drop off mail-in votes. A federal judge appointed by Trump and the state Supreme Court both ruled in favor of the use of drop boxes.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene falsely claimed that “all of the cases that have been thrown out have been thrown out on standing, not the evidence of voter fraud.” Most didn’t allege actual fraud, and several have been dismissed due to lack of evidence.
Sen. Josh Hawley claimed a law passed in 2019 by the Pennsylvania Legislature violated the state Constitution and said a case challenging it was “dismissed on grounds of … timeliness.” He neglected to mention that case sought to overturn the results of the 2020 election and was filed more than a year after the law passed.
False Claims About Arizona Ballot Reviews
During the floor debate on whether to accept Arizona’s Electoral College votes,Gosar misleadingly said “we have been told over and over” by the Arizona secretary of state that “the public today has no ability to simply double check the veracity of these results.”
In fact, Arizona law requires “a hand count of a sample of ballots to test the accuracy of the vote tabulation equipment, if there is participation from the county political parties,” according to the Arizona secretary of state’s office. Of the state’s 15 counties, 10 performed hand counts; six found no discrepancies and four found errors within the acceptable margin. That included hand recounts in the four largest counties (Maricopa, Pima, Pinal and Yavapai) that represent 85% of the state’s population.
Gosar later said “in the only audit done in Arizona” a court found a “3% error rate against President Trump. Vice President Biden’s margin of error was one tenth of that, at .03%.” He claimed that if that 3% error rate were applied statewide it would have been 90,000 ballots, but “the court stopped the audit and refused to go further.”
His claim of a 3% error rate is false, and his assumption of 90,000 additional Trump ballots is grossly exaggerated.
Besides the hand recounts, the only “audit” conducted in Arizona was prompted by a lawsuit filed by state Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward’s lawsuit, and in that case the court found an error rate of 0.55% — not 3% — in Maricopa County.
In her lawsuit, Ward challenged mail-in ballots that had been duplicated in the county because voters’ first ballots “were too damaged or illegible for the tabulation machines to read, or were otherwise rejected by the machines.”
Her lawsuit led to a review of 100 duplicated ballots, followed by a second inspection of 1,526 duplicated ballots.
“Of the 1,626 total, there were nine errors, (1617 correct duplicate ballots) that if correct would have given the Trump Electors an additional seven votes and the Biden Electors an additional two votes,” the state Supreme Court said in its Dec. 8 ruling denying Ward’s request for an expanded audit. “The trial court concluded the results were ‘99.45% accurate.’”
In filing an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, Ward noted that there was a 2% error rate against Trump in the first review of 100 ballots. The suit said one vote was “erroneously ‘flipped’ from Trump to Biden, and the other [was] simply uncounted.” That may be what Gosar meant when he spoke of a 3% error rate, but his office did not respond to our request for information.
Even so, the error rate dropped to 0.55% when the county agreed to review more duplicated ballots.
In its opinion, the state Supreme Court said that extrapolating the 0.55% error rate to all 27,869 duplicated ballots in the county would result in a net increase of only 153 votes, which is not sufficient “to call the election results into question.”
C. Murphy Hebert, a spokeswoman for the Arizona secretary of state, said she is “not aware of other ‘audits’” in Arizona.
Baseless Claim of ‘Altered, Switched’ or ‘Erased’ Trump Ballots
Gosar also baselessly said that “over 400,000 mail-in ballots [in Arizona] were altered, switched from President Trump to Vice President Biden or completely erased from President Trump’s totals.” But there is no evidence to support such a wild claim.
As we mentioned earlier, the state conducted hand counts of sample ballots to make sure the machines are tabulating the ballots correctly. Under state law, representatives of both parties “randomly pick either 2% or at least two vote centers or precinct, whichever is greater, to compare a manual count of ballots done by volunteers to the count completed by tabulation machines,” as explained in a story by ABC15 in Phoenix.
In a Dec. 21 ruling, state Superior Court Judge John Hannah dismissed a state GOP lawsuit demanding that the state’s largest county redo its hand count, noting that the “hand counts verified that the machines had counted the votes flawlessly” in Maricopa County, where about 61% of the state’s population lives. Hannah called the lawsuit “meritless,” saying it “offered only suspicion of wrongdoing.”
And, as we noted earlier, a review of duplicated ballots in the county found an error rate of just 0.55% — which the state Supreme Court opinion said was not enough to affect the results. Biden won the state by less than 11,000 votes.
Hebert, the spokesperson for the Arizona secretary of state, said she wasn’t sure how Gosar arrived at his figure of 400,000 missing Trump votes.
It’s worth noting, though, that Gosar has made a similar claim with an even higher number. In a Dec. 17 tweet, Gosar claimed: “Over 700,000 votes stolen from @realDonaldTrump and given to Biden.” Twitter labeled that tweet “disputed.” Gosar linked to a video that baselessly claimed it provided evidence of “790,175 laundered votes.”
But, as Arizona Republic columnist Laurie Roberts noted, “If Trump really got another 790,175 votes, that would mean he won a whopping 72% of Arizona’s vote while Biden got a piddling 26%.”
Signature Matching in Pennsylvania
Stefanik said, “In Pennsylvania, the state Supreme Court and secretary of state unilaterally and unconstitutionally rewrote election law, eliminating signature matching requirements.”
That’s not so; the court unanimously ruled that the Pennsylvania Election Code never required signature matching for absentee or mail-in ballots in the first place.
In an Oct. 23 opinion, the court upheld September guidance, issued by Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Kathy Boockvar, saying that local election officials couldn’t disqualify such ballots based solely on a signature analysis.
“We conclude that the Election Code does not authorize or require county election boards to reject absentee or mail-in ballots during the canvassing process based on an analysis of a voter’s signature,” Justice Debra Todd wrote in the opinion, which was cosigned by five of the other six justices. The other justice, Sallie Updyke Mundy, one of two Republicans on the court, concurred in the ruling.
It was the second time a court had rejected the Trump campaign’s claims that, to prevent fraud, state law required efforts to check that signatures on returned ballots matched signatures on voter rolls.
In its analysis, the state Supreme Court noted that state election law “enumerates only three duties of the county boards of elections during the pre-canvassing and canvassing process,” none of which included a stipulation permitting or mandating signature matching.
“Intervenors would have us interpret the Election Code, which now does not provide for time-of-canvassing ballot challenges, and which never allowed for signature challenges, as both requiring signature comparisons at canvassing, and allowing for challenges on that basis. We reject this invitation,” the court said.
Absentee Ballot Rules in Wisconsin
Stefanik also claimed, “In Wisconsin, officials issued illegal rules to circumvent a state law – passed by the Legislature as the Constitution requires – that required absentee voters to provide photo identification before obtaining a ballot.”
That’s misleading. The guidance was issued during the primary election — not the general — and it was quickly overruled by a state court. Wisconsin state law already says absentee voters don’t have to provide a photo ID when requesting a ballot if the individual affirms that he or she is “indefinitely confined because of age, physical illness or infirmity or is disabled for an indefinite period.”
It’s true that on March 25, Dane County Clerk Scott McDonell and Milwaukee County Clerk George Christenson advised eligible Wisconsin voters that, for the April 7 primary elections, they could claim to be indefinitely confined because of state-issued stay-at-home orders due to the coronavirus pandemic. Doing so, the clerks said, would allow those people — stuck at home and unable to provide a photo ID — to skip that step in the ballot application process.
But on March 29, the Wisconsin Elections Commission issued its own guidance, clarifying that, “Indefinitely confined status shall not be used by electors simply as a means to avoid the photo ID requirement without regard to whether they are indefinitely confined because of age, physical illness, infirmity or disability.”
Then, in a March 31 decision, the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that McDonell had given “legally incorrect” information to voters and ordered McDonell to “refrain from posting advice” that was “inconsistent” with the Wisconsin Elections Commission’s own guidance.
That also led to Christenson issuing revised guidance that month that said, “It is very important to note that ‘indefinite confinement’ based only upon the Governor’s Safer at Home Emergency Order cannot be used to legally avoid the photo ID requirement.”
‘Democracy in the Park’
Presenting what he said were facts and evidence that courts circumvented state election laws, Zeldin cited this as one example: “The Democracy in the Park event in Wisconsin had over 17,000 ballots transferred that shouldn’t have been.”
Zeldin added: “These are all facts.”
That’s actually an opinion, and one not shared by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
Zeldin is referring to two events held in Madison, Wisconsin, one in September and one in October, called “Democracy in the Park” in which people were allowed to bring completed absentee ballots to parks to be collected by sworn city election inspectors. The inspectors also could serve as witnesses if a voter brought an unsealed, blank ballot.
In a lawsuit, the Trump campaign contended the 17,271 absentee ballots collected at these events amounted to illegal early in-person voting.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court disagreed. Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Brian Hagedorn, a conservative, sided with three liberal justices in a 4-3 decisionopposing the Trump campaign’s efforts to strike those votes.
In his written opinion for the majority, Hagedorn wrote that given the park events were all publicly announced, the time to contest them was before the election. The court stated it was “patently unreasonable” for the campaign to file the lawsuit after the election, and for those votes to be thrown out given that “thousands of voters relied on the representations of their election officials that these events complied with the law.”
Furthermore, Hagedorn stated, the events complied with Wisconsin election law, which requires voters to return absentee ballots by mail or “in person, to the municipal clerk issuing the ballot or ballots.”
“A sworn city election inspector sent by the clerk to collect ballots would seem to be an authorized representative as provided in the definition” of the statute, Hagedorn wrote.
People who brought completed absentee ballots to the parks had to have previously requested them. No absentee ballots or ballot applications were distributed at the events.
Pennsylvania Drop Boxes
Perry wrongly said the state Supreme Court had “absolutely no right” to allow the use of unmanned drop boxes where voters could drop off mail-in votes. A federal judge appointed by Trump rejected a lawsuit from the Trump campaign that sought to prevent the use of drop boxes.
Perry, Jan. 6: The Supreme Court authorized the use of drop boxes, where ballot harvesting could occur. The legislature never authorized that form of voting, and the court had absolutely no right to do so.
In September, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that the state’s election code permitted the use of drop boxes for submission of mail-in ballots. The court ruled that the competing interpretations of whether the state’s election code allowed drop boxes were both reasonable, rendering the code “ambiguous.” It ultimately determined that the law “favors the fundamental right to vote and enfranchises, rather than disenfranchises, the electorate” and that “the Election Code should be interpreted to allow county boards of election to accept hand–delivered mail–in ballots at locations other than their office addresses including drop–boxes.”
The following month a federal judge knocked down the Trump campaign’s effort to bar the use of drop boxes.
The opinion was written by U.S. District Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan, a Trump appointee.
The Trump campaign argued that drop boxes would lead to the potential for the counting of “fraudulent or otherwise ineligible ballots” in the presidential election.
But Ranjan said the Trump campaign had not presented enough evidence that potential voter fraud was a likely problem. “While Plaintiffs may not need to prove actual voter fraud, they must at least prove that such fraud is ‘certainly impending,'” Ranjan wrote. “They haven’t met that burden.”
In his comments on the House floor, Perry raised the specter of “ballot harvesting” which refers to third parties collecting and delivering ballots, and which is not permitted in Pennsylvania. But no evidence has emerged to date that that was a problem at any drop boxes in the state.
Trump Cases Lacked Evidence, or Even Claims, of Fraud
In objecting to Pennsylvania’s electoral votes, Greene falsely claimed: “I’d like to point out that all of the cases that have been thrown out have been thrown out on standing, not the evidence of voter fraud.” Several of the Trump campaign’s legal challenges have been dismissed by judges for a lack of any evidence of voter fraud.
For example, in one case seeking to nullifying about 2,000 absentee ballots in Pennsylvania, Bucks County Court of Common Pleas Judge Robert Baldi, a Republican, wrote in his order: “It must be noted that the parties specifically stipulated in their comprehensive stipulation of facts that there exists no evidence of any fraud, misconduct, or any impropriety with respect to the challenged ballots. There is nothing in the record and nothing alleged that would lead to the conclusion that any of the challenged ballots were submitted by someone not qualified or entitled to vote in this election.”
In five other cases in Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge James Crumish denied the suits, writing in each of the five orders that the campaign made “meritless” arguments and “concedes that all ballots by a qualified elector in this category were timely received.”
In yet another Pennsylvania case, Judge Stephanos Bibas, a Trump appointee on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, wrote: “Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy. Charges of unfairness are serious. But calling an election unfair does not make it so. Charges require specific allegations and then proof. We have neither here.” The court had unanimously upheld a lower court’s dismissal of the case.
In late December, the New York Times analyzed 59 court losses the Trump campaign suffered among 60 lawsuits and found that most — two-thirds — didn’t actually claim there had been voter fraud. About 12 cases that did allege fraud had “their days in court,” the Times wrote, “and consistently collapsed under scrutiny.”
In dismissing a Nevada case, District Court Judge James T. Russell wrote in a lengthy dissection of the lawsuit’s claims that the campaign “did not prove under any standard of proof that illegal votes were cast and counted.”
Some courts have dismissed cases because the plaintiffs lacked standing, meaning a right to sue. For instance, the U.S. Supreme Court cited standing in rejecting the state of Texas’ attempt to sue four swing states Biden had won. But Greene is wrong to claim “all of the cases … have been thrown out on standing.”
Pennsylvania Objection: No Claim of Fraud
Hawley prefaced an objection about a Pennsylvania voting law by saying it was “quite apart from allegations of any fraud.” Instead, Hawley misleadingly described an expansion of mail-in voting in the state, passed with Republican support in 2019.
Hawley, Jan. 6: Last year, Pennsylvania elected officials passed a whole new law that allows universal mail-in balloting and did it irregardless of what the Pennsylvania Constitution said. … And then when Pennsylvania citizens tried to go and be heard on this subject before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, they were dismissed on grounds of procedure, timeliness, in violation of that Supreme Court’s own precedent.
The state law in question, Act 77, was passed with bipartisan support and signed into law by Gov. Tom Wolf on Oct. 31, 2019. The law, which went into effect for the primary elections in 2020, expanded mail-in voting in the state, allowing for the first time no-excuse mail-in voting, which means registered voters can request a mail-in ballot without providing a reason for wanting or needing one. A total of 34 states plus Washington, D.C., allow no-excuse mail-in or absentee voting.
Hawley is right that the state Supreme Court dismissed a case challenging the constitutionality of the law because the Republican plaintiffs, including U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly, had waited too long to bring the suit — but he neglected to mention they waited more than a year and only filed the suit after Trump had lost the election. In the suit, the plaintiffs had asked for the invalidation of mail-in ballots cast under the statute. In dismissing the case in late November, the court wrotethat the plaintiffs showed a “complete failure to act with due diligence in commencing their facial constitutional challenge, which was ascertainable upon Act 77’s enactment.”
In a concurring statement, Justice David N. Wecht wrote: “It is not our role to lend legitimacy to such transparent and untimely efforts to subvert the will of Pennsylvania voters. Courts should not decide elections when the will of the voters is clear.”
The U.S. Supreme Court declined a request to intervene in the case.
As for the Pennsylvania Constitution, it says: “All elections by the citizens shall be by ballot or by such other method as may be prescribed by law.” Kelly’s case argued that expanding mail-in voting in the state could only be done through a constitutional amendment, not legislation. It cited another section in the state Constitution on absentee voting, which says the Legislature “shall, by general law, provide a manner” for absentee voting for qualified voters who may be “absent from the municipality of their residence” or who have other reasons they can’t vote at their polling place, such as illness, disability or religious observances.
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Star, November 30
You can buy a copy of this issue for your very own at my eBay store: https://www.ebay.com/str/bradentonbooks
Cover: Kelly Clarkson getting married again 
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Page 1: As Britons marked Remembrance Day Prince Harry and Meghan Markle arrived at Los Angeles National Cemetery to pay their respects and lay flowers from the garden at their new $14.6 million spread in Montecito but the controversial couple almost immediately came under fire for yet another misstep -- their biggest gaffe was hiring celebrity fashion photographer Lee Morgan to snap their supposedly private visit -- the visit comes on the heels of a report that Harry requested and was refused that a wreath in his name be laid at London’s Cenotaph during a royal ceremony that day so while the visit to the cemetery in L.A. was meant to show respect it was also Harry’s way of telling his family that if they’re going to be petty and exclude him then he’ll do it his way 
Page 2: Contents, Miranda Lambert 
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Page 4: Larsa Pippen spills the tea -- Larsa says Kanye West kept her from BFF Kim Kardashian 
Page 5: Julianne Hough came out as sexually fluid while married to Brooks Laich and now that the two have split Julianne is exploring lady love
* Speculation has been ongoing about who will take over hosting Jeopardy! after Alex Trebek passed away and one frontrunner is former champ Ken Jennings and other names in the mix include hockey announcer Alex Faust and Laura Coates of CNN
Page 6: The Bachelorette OG Trista Sutter recently revealed that producers of her televised 2003 wedding to Ryan Sutter planned to up the drama for better ratings -- admitting that a pal discovered a crew member’s notebook during the three-day festivities and showrunners had compiled dossiers on her guests in hopes of pitting them against each other
* Bodyguard Mark “Billy” Billingham has opened up about his 18 months protecting one of the most famous broods in Hollywood much to Angelina Jolie’s dismay -- he was hired by Angie and then-husband Brad Pitt to keep an eye on their six kids Maddox and Pax and Zahara and Shiloh and Knox and Vivienne and their biggest concern was the kidnapping of the kids and for Angie that fear bordered on obsession so her home is like a fortress -- she wants her kids to have a normal life but she’s also aware of the dangers out there 
* Star Spots the Stars -- Martha Stewart, Clare Crawley, Alec Baldwin, Jessica Alba, Bella Hadid, Viola Davis, Debbie Matenopoulos
Page 7: Jason Momoa shocked fans with his recent revelation that his breakout role in Game of Thrones gave him plenty of fame but no fortune -- after his character Khal Drogo was killed of in 2011 before the first season even aired he said he couldn’t get work and it’s very challenging when you have babies and you’re completely in debt; we were starving -- now of course Jason who shares two kids with wife Lisa Bonet has more than made up for those lean times but he’s not one to throw cash around
* After a single day of work Johnny Depp was axed from the third installment of the Fantastic Beasts films and he got to keep his eight-figure salary -- he was let go following a nasty defamation trial against a U.K. tabloid that called him a wife-beater -- now Mads Mikkelsen is going to be Johnny’s replacement as Grindelwald -- for his part Johnny will take the money and run and he’s panicked that this will lead to a permanent blacklist and his name is now mud in movie circles 
Page 8: Star Shots -- overjoyed by Joe Biden’s victory Chrissy Teigen and John Legend took to the streets of West Hollywood to celebrate, Duchess Camilla paid her respects to veterans during the 92nd Field of Remembrance event at Westminster Abbey which is a duty formerly fulfilled by her stepson Prince Harry
Page 9: Steve Martin cruising through Central Park on a CitiBike wearing gloves and a protective face mask, Miya Cech and Ben Daon and Keith L. Williams and Kayden Grace Swan flanked creator Daniel Knauf at the premiere of The Astronauts 
Page 10: Renee Elise Goldsberry and Sara Bareilles and Paula Pell and Busy Philipps shared a laugh shooting Girls5Eva, Offset caught up with some young fans while handing out free food from the Slutty Vegan Food Truck on Election Day in Atlanta, Caitlyn Jenner fueling up for a car-camping expedition with daughter Kendall
Page 11: Queen Latifah showed off a fresh new ‘do on the set of The Equalizer reboot in NYC, weeks after undergoing heart surgery Arnold Schwarzenegger was already behind the wheel again in L.A. 
Page 12: Bachelor alum Hannah Ann Sluss running errands in L.A., Joey Fatone nearly stole the spotlight from actress Kate Katzman on the red carpet at the screening of her new film The Comeback Trail, Francesca Farago carried a pup while posing for photos for her swimsuit line 
Page 14: MTV EMAs -- Alicia Keys, David Guetta, DJ Khaled, Zara Larsson 
Page 16: Zooey Deutch having lunch with a friend in L.A., Tracy Morgan returned to his old stomping grounds to cut the ribbon at the $30 million Marcy Houses Community Center in Brooklyn, Olivia Culpo rushed to a meeting after a coffee run in L.A. 
Page 18: Normal or Not? Ariel Winter carrying an enormous roll of bubble wrap -- not normal, Joel Michaely jumped for joy at the screening of his new film The Comeback Trail in Ft. Lauderdale -- not normal, Wanda De Jesus and Jimmy Smits enjoyed a stroll around Brentwood -- normal 
Page 19: Gretta Monahan before filming a segment on The View -- normal, Bridget Moynahan and Steve Schirippa made a grisly discovery on the set of Blue Bloods -- not normal 
Page 20: Fashion -- stars stun in silver -- Angelina Jolie, Thandie Newton
Page 21: Becky G, Elsa Hosk 
Page 24: Phil Collins and Orianne Bates are slinging mud as their split gets even nastier
Page 25: Dallas alum Patrick Duffy and Happy Days actress Linda Purl are dating
* Ben Affleck plans to spend Christmas away from his three kids in Cuba with girlfriend Ana de Armas who hasn’t seen her family in months and is desperately homesick and Ben will do anything to make her happy -- the couple then plan to celebrate the new year touring South America -- Ben’s ex-wife Jennifer Garner is not happy about his plans because she’s at full capacity after tending their kids solo while Ben was filming The Last Duel in Ireland but Ben has made up his mind 
Page 26: Cover Story -- Kelly Clarkson’s rush to the altar -- the star is healing from heartache with a hot new romance but as she tells pals she’s ready to wed again some are worried she’s moving way too fast -- pals are wondering if her mystery man could be country singer Brett Eldredge but Kelly is keeping her new guy’s identity under wraps for now
Page 29: Inside Kelly Clarkson’s ugly lawsuit -- the star is fighting in court with her former father-in-law Narvel Blackstock 
Page 38: Entertainment 
Page 48: Parting Shot -- pregnant Hilary Duff on the set of Younger in New York City 
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Guía de series: Estrenos y regresos de mayo 2021
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No creemos que os haya dado tiempo a ver todo lo que queríais ver en abril. Pero, lo sentimos mucho, se os van a acumular muchas más series con los estrenos de este mes. Aunque esta vez no son tantas.
¡Feliz mayo!
Leyenda:
Verde: series nuevas.
Negro: regresos de otras series.
Naranja: miniseries o series documentales.
Amarillo: tv movies, documentales, especiales o pilotos.
Morado: season finales.
Púrpura: midseason finales.
*
Calendario de series
2 de mayo:
Pose (3T y última) en FX
Legends of Tomorrow (6T) en The CW
The Girlfriend Experience (3T) en Starz
Ghostwriter (1bT) en Apple TV+
Line of Duty (6T finale) en BBC One
4 de mayo:
Selena: The Series (2T y última completa) en Netflix
Star Wars: The Bad Batch (1T) en Disney+
Young Rock (1T finale) en NBC
5 de mayo:
Bloods (1T) en Sky One
The Sons of Sam: A Descent into Darkness en Netflix
6 de mayo: 
Girls5eva (1T completa) en Peacock
Mom (series finale) en CBS
7 de mayo:
Jupiter's Legacy (1T completa), Girl From Nowhere (2T completa) y Monster en Netflix
Dynasty (4T) en The CW
Mythic Quest (2T) en Apple TV+
Shrill (3T y última completa) en Hulu
El niño de Medellín en Prime Video
Magnum P.I. (3T finale) en CBS
8 de mayo: Murder, They Hope en Gold
9 de mayo:
The Pursuit of Love en BBC One
When Calls the Heart (8T finale) en Hallmark
10 de mayo: The Crime of the Century en HBO
11 de mayo: Mayans MC (3T finale) en FX
12 de mayo:
The Upshaws (1T completa), El baile de los 41 y Oxygen en Netflix
The Hills: New Beginnings (2T) en MTV
13 de mayo:
Castlevania (4T y última completa) en Netflix
Hacks (1T) en HBO Max
Young Sheldon (4T finale), Mom (series finale) y B Positive (1T finale) en CBS
14 de mayo:
Halston, Love, Death + Robots (2T completa), Haunted (3T completa), The Woman in the Window y I Am All Girls en Netflix
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (2T) en Disney+
The Underground Railroad (1T completa) y LOL: Si te ríes, pierdes (1T completa) en Prime Video
Trying (2T) en Apple TV+
Domina (1T completa) en Sky Atlantic
Reyes de la noche (1T completa) en Movistar+
Pride en FX
Blue Bloods (11T finale) en CBS
16 de mayo:
Run The World (1T) en Starz
Good Witch (7T) en Hallmark
NCIS: New Orleans (series finale) en CBS
Family Guy (19T finale) y The Great North (1T finale) en FOX
The Nevers (1T finale) en HBO
City on a Hill (2T finale) en Showtime
Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist (2T finale) en NBC
The Rookie (3T finale) en ABC
17 de mayo:
The Neighborhood (3T finale), Bob Hearts Abishola (2T finale) y Bull (5T finale) en CBS
Breeders (2T finale) en FX
18 de mayo:
Superman & Lois (vuelve) en The CW
The Resident (4T finale) y Prodigal Son (2T finale) en FOX
Kenan (1T finale) en NBC
Black-ish (7T finale), Mixed-ish (2T finale) y Big Sky (1T finale) en ABC
19 de mayo:
¿Quién mató a Sara? (2T completa) en Netflix
SEAL Team (4T finale) y SWAT (4T finale) en CBS
The Goldbergs (8T finale), Home Economics (1T finale), The Conners (3T finale) y Call Your Mother (1T finale) en ABC
20 de mayo:
Special (2T y última completa) en Netflix
Last Man Standing (series finale) en FOX
21 de mayo:
Jurassic Park: Camp Cretaceous (3T completa), El vecino (2T y última completa) y Army of the Dead en Netflix
M.O.D.O.K. (1T) en Hulu
Solos (1T completa) y P!NK: All I Know So Far en Prime Video
Pride en FX
23 de mayo:
In Treatment (4T) en HBO
Master of None: Moments in Love (3T completa) en Netflix
The Chi (4T), Black Monday (3T) y Flatbush Misdemeanors (1T) en Showtime
Duncanville (2T) en FOX
The Equalizer (1T finale), NCIS: LA (12T finale) y NCIS: New Orleans (series finale) en CBS
The Simpsons (32T finale) y Bob's Burgers (11T finale) en FOX
24 de mayo:
All Rise (2T finale) en CBS
Debris (1T finale) en NBC
9-1-1 (4T finale) y 9-1-1: Lone Star (2T finale) en FOX
Black Lightning (series finale) en The CW
25 de mayo:
Mr. Inbetween (3T y última) en FX
NCIS (18T finale), FBI (3T finale) y FBI: Most Wanted (2T finale) en CBS
This Is Us (5T finale) en NBC
26 de mayo:
Il Divin Codino y Ghost Lab en Netflix
The Bold Type (5T y última) en Freeform
Chicago Fire (9T finale), Chicago Med (6T finale) y Chicago PD (8T finale) en NBC
SEAL Team (4T finale) y SWAT (4T finale) en CBS
27 de mayo:
Eden (1T completa) y Blue Miracle en Netflix
The Beast Must Die (1T) en BritBox
28 de mayo:
The Kominsky Method (3T y última completa) y Lucifer (5bT completa) en Netflix
Panic (1T completa) y Parot (1T completa) en Prime Video
The Mighty Ducks: Game Changers (1T finale) en Disney+
Cruella en Disney+
29 de mayo: Oslo en HBO
30 de mayo: Mare of Easttown (1T finale) en HBO
31 de mayo: Housebroken (1T) y Duncanville (cambio de día) en FOX
*
Estrenos de series
Bloods (Sky One)
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Comedia sobre dos paramédicos del servicio de ambulancias del sur de Londres que tendrán que lidiar con las llamadas y los momentos incómodos pero también con su propio compañero. Protagonizada por Samson Kayo (Timewasters, Truth Seekers) y Jane Harrocks (Absolutely Fabulous) junto a Julian Barratt (Truth Seekers, Flowers), Adrian Scarborough (Miranda, Gavin & Stacey), Aasiya Shah (Raised by Wolves, Unforgotten), Sam Campbell, Lucy Punch (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Motherland) y Kevin Garry (Famalam).
Creada por Kayo (Famalam, Sliced). Seis episodios.
Estreno: 10 de marzo
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Girls5eva (Peacock)
Comedia sobre un grupo musical femenino de los 90 con un solo éxito que se reúne para intentarlo de nuevo después de que la estrella joven del momento versione su canción. Protagonizada por Sara Bareilles (Little Voice), Renée Elise Goldsberry (Hamilton, Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist), Busy Philipps (Cougar Town, Dawson's Creek), Paula Pell (A.P. Bio, Love) y Ashley Park (Tales of the City, Emily in Paris).
Escrita por Meredith Scardino (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Saturday Night Live) y producida por Tina Fey (30 Rock, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 6 de mayo
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Jupiter's Legacy (Netflix)
La primera generación de superhéroes recibió sus poderes en los años 30, y ha protegido al mundo durante casi un siglo. Ahora son ancianos guardianes, y sus hijos intentan estar a la altura de las expectativas. Protagonizada por Josh Duhamel (Las Vegas, 11.22.63), Leslie Bibb (Popular, American Housewife), Ben Daniels (The Exorcist, Flesh and Bone), Matt Lanter (Timeless, Heroes), Andrew Horton (How to Talk to Girls at Parties), Elena Kampouris (Sacred Lies, American Odyssey), Ian Quinlan (Gotham, The Long Road Home), Mike Wade (SEAL Team) y Tenika Davis (Incorporated).
Adaptación del cómic de Mark Millar. Escrita y dirigida por Steven S. DeKnight (Daredevil, Buffy the Vampire Slayer). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 7 de mayo
Estreno en España: 7 de mayo en Netflix España
youtube
The Pursuit of Love (BBC One)
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Sigue las aventuras y desventuras de la carismática y valiente Linda Radlett (Lily James; Downton Abbey, Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again) y su prima y mejor amiga Fanny Logan (Emily Beecham; Into the Badlands, The Village) entre la Primera y la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Consumidas por su deseo de encontrar el amor y casarse, las dos chicas buscan al esposo ideal poniendo su amistad a prueba. Completan el cast Dominic West (The Wire, The Affair), Dolly Wells (Doll & Em, Blunt Talk), Andrew Scott (Fleabag, Sherlock), Emily Mortimer (Doll & Em, The Newsroom), Beattie Edmondson (Josh), Assaad Bouab (Call my agent, Messiah), Shazad Latif (Penny Dreadful, Star Trek: Discovery) y Freddie Fox (The Crown, Cucumber).
Adaptación de la novela de Nancy Mitford (1945). Escrita y dirigida por Emily Mortimer (Doll & Em). Tres episodios.
Estreno: 9 de mayo
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The Upshaws (Netflix)
Comedia multicámara centrada en una familia afroamericana de clase trabajadora de Indianapolis. El padre de familia, Bennie Upshaw (Mike Epps; Survivor's Remorse, The Hangover), es un mecánico encantador y bienintencionado que intenta mantener y cuidar a su familia y también tolerar a su sarcástica cuñada (Wanda Sykes; Black-ish, The New Adventures of Old Christine), todo ello sin el necesario manual del éxito. Con Kim Fields (Living Single, Facts of Life), Page Kennedy (Backstrom, Desperate Housewives), Diamond Lyons, Khali Spraggins, Jermelle Simon, Gabrielle Dennis (Rosewood, Luke Cage) y Journey Christine.
Creada, escrita y producida por Sykes (Last Comic Standing, The Wanda Sykes Show) y Regina Hicks (Insecure, The Mayor). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 12 de mayo
Estreno en España: 12 de mayo en Netflix España
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Hacks (HBO Max)
Comedia en la que Deborah Vance (Jean Smart; Watchmen, Samantha Who?), una diva de la comedia de Las Vegas, se ve obligada a contratar y convertirse en la mentora de Ava (Hannah Einbinder), una guionista marginada de veinticinco años que se cree con derecho a todo. Con Carl Clemons-Hopkins (Chicago Med, The Chi), Kaitlin Olson (It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Mick), Christopher McDonald (Thelma & Louise), Paul W. Downs (Broad City, Rough Night), Mark Indelicato (Ugly Betty), Poppy Liu (Better Call Saul), Johnny Sibilly (Pose), Rose Abdoo (Gilmore Girls, Parenthood) y Meg Stalter.
Creada y escrita por Paul W. Downs, Lucia Aniello y Jen Statsky, guionistas de Broad City. Producida por Michael Schur (Parks and Recreation, The Good Place). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 13 de mayo
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Halston (Netflix)
Limited series sobre el legendario diseñador de moda Roy Halston Frowick (Ewan McGregor; Moulin Rouge, Trainspotting), que construyó un imperio en los años 70 y 80 en Nueva York hasta que tuvo que luchar por controlar su propio nombre. Con Krysta Rodriguez (Smash, Trial & Error), Rebecca Dayan, Bill Pullman (The Sinner, Casper), Gian Franco Rodriguez, David Pittu (Damages, The Plot Against America), Sullivan Jones (The Looming Tower, The Gilded Age), Rory Culkin (Castle Rock, City on a Hill), Kelly Bishop (Gilmore Girls, Bunheads) y Vera Farmiga (Bates Motel, Up in the Air) dando vida a la actriz Liza Minnelli, la diseñadora de joyas y modelo Elsa Peretti, el filántropo David Mahoney, el modelo Victor Hugo, el ilustrador de moda Joe Eula, el asistente de ventas Ed Austin, el director Joel Schumacher, la publicista de moda Eleanor Lambert y la diseñadora Adele Simpson.
Creada, dirigida y producida por Daniel Minahan (True Blood, Game of Thrones) y escrita  y producida por Sharr White (The Affair, Genera+ion). Producen Ryan Murphy (Feud, American Crime Story), Ian Brennan (Hollywood, Glee) y Ewan McGregor. Cinco episodios.
Estreno: 14 de mayo
Estreno en España: 14 de mayo en Netflix España
youtube
The Underground Railroad (Prime Video)
Antes de la Guerra de Secesión, Cora (Thuso Mbedu, Shuga), una esclava de una plantación de algodón de Georgia, decide huir con su nuevo compañero (Aaron Piere; Krypton, Britannia) en un mítico tren subterráneo del que él le ha hablado. Según los rumores, este tren transportaría esclavos por el país. Mientras la persigue un cazarrecompensas (Joel Edgerton; The Great Gatsby, Zero Dark Thirty), Cora descubrirá que el tren no es una leyenda ni una metáfora, sino que existe y viaja por una gran red viaria secreta en una realidad alternativa, y luchará por el legado de su madre. Con Chase W. Dillon (The First Wives Club), Amber Gray (Escape at Dannemora), Jim Klock (Cloak & Dagger, Green Book), Fred Hechinger (Eighth Grade, Alex Strangelove), William Jackson Harper (The Good Place, Midsommar), Sheila Atim (Harlots, The Feed), Peter De Jersey (Broadchurch, Warrior Nun), Chukwudi Iwuji (The Split, Designated Survivor), Damon Herriman (Mr. Inbetween, Justified), Lily Rabe (American Horror Story, Tell Me Your Secrets), Irone Singleton (The Walking Dead), Kraig Dane, Mychal-Bella Bowman, Marcus Gladney, Jr. (City on a Hill), Will Poulter (The Maze Runner, Midsommar) y Peter Mullan (Mum, Top of the Lake).
Adaptación de la novela de Colson Whitehead (2016). Escrita y dirigida por Barry Jenkins (Moonlight, If Beale Street Could Talk). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 14 de mayo
Estreno en España: 14 de mayo en Prime Video España
youtube
Domina (Sky Atlantic)
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Drama que mostrará las luchas de poder de la Antigua Roma desde otro punto de vista, siguiendo la vida de Livia Drusila (Kasia Smutniak; Loro, Dolce Fine Giornata), la tercera esposa del primer emperador César Augusto y la madre del futuro emperador Tiberio. Completan el reparto Liam Cunningham (Game of Thrones, The Hot Zone), Isabella Rossellini (Blue Velvet, Death Becomes Her), Matthew McNulty (Misfits, The Terror), Christine Bottomley (The End of the F***ing World, Back to Life), Colette Tchantcho (The Witcher), Ben Batt (Scott & Bailey, Jamestown), Enzo Cilenti (Game of Thrones, Luther), Claire Forlani (Meet Joe Black, The Shadow Dancer), Alex Lanipekun (Homeland, Riviera), Tom Glynn-Carney (The Last Post, Dunkirk) y Nadia Parkes (The Spanish Princess).
Creada y escrita por Simon Burke (Fortitude, Strike Back) y dirigida por Claire McCarthy (Ophelia, The Luminaries). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 14 de mayo
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Run The World (Starz)
Comedia que sigue a un grupo de amigas negras que viven y trabajan en Harlem y luchan por dominar el mundo. Protagonizada por Amber Stevens West (The Carmichael Show, Greek), Andrea Bordeaux (NCIS: LA), Bresha Webb (Marlon, Grey's Anatomy), Corbin Reid (How to Get Away with Murder, Valor), Stephen Bishop (Imposters, Being Mary Jane), Tosin Morohunfola (Black Lightning, The Chi), Erika Alexander (Black Lightning, Bosch), Nick Sagar (Queen of the South, Shadowhunters) y Jay Walker.
Creada y escrita por Leigh Davenport (Boomerang) y Yvette Lee Bowser (Dear White People). Ocho episodios.
Estreno: 16 de mayo
Estreno en España: 16 de mayo en Starzplay España
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Solos (Prime Video)
Antología que recorre el pasado y el presente y explora qué significa ser humano centrándose en cada episodio en un personaje en un entorno distinto. Con Morgan Freeman (Million Dollar Baby, The Shawshank Redemption), Anne Hathaway (Les Misérables, Brokeback Mountain), Helen Mirren (The Queen, Gosford Park), Uzo Aduba (Orange Is the New Black, Mrs. America), Nicole Beharie (Sleepy Hollow, Little Fires Everywhere), Anthony Mackie (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Altered Carbon), Dan Stevens (Downton Abbey, Legion) y Constance Wu (Fresh Off the Boat, Crazy Rich Asians).
Creada y producida por David Weil (Hunters). Siete episodios.
Estreno: 21 de mayo
Flatbush Misdemeanors (Showtime)
Comedia que sigue a Kevin (Kevin Iso) y Dan (Dan Perlman), dos amigos de toda la vida que luchan por prosperar, adaptarse, abrirse y conectar con otras personas en Flatbush, Brooklyn. Con Hassan Johnson (The Wire, For Life), Kareem Green (It's Showtime at the Apollo) y Kristin Dodson.
Creada, escrita, producida y protagonizada por Kevin Iso y Dan Perlman y basada en su webserie homónima de 2017.
Estreno: 23 de mayo
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The Beast Must Die (BritBox)
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Frances Cairnes (Cush Jumbo; The Good Fight, The Good Wife), una madre que perdió a su hijo de seis años, busca venganza. Quiere matar al hombre al que cree responsable del atropello y posterior fuga (Jared Harris; Chernobyl, Mad Men), y para ello se infiltra en su vida y en su casa. El conflictivo pero brillante detective Strangeways (Billy Howle; Glue, MotherFatherSon) deberá descoser esta red de tragedia y encontrar el camino hacia la justicia. Completan el reparto Geraldine James (Utopia, Back to Life), Nathaniel Parker (Merlin, La templanza), Maeve Dermody (Marcella, Carnival Row), Mia Tomlinson (The Lost Pirate Kingdom) y Barney Sayburn.
Basada en la novela de Nicholas Blake (1938) y dirigida por Dome Karukoski (Tolkien, Tom of Finland).
Estreno: 27 de mayo
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Panic (Prime Video)
Cada verano, varios estudiantes graduados de un pequeño pueblo de Texas compiten en una serie de retos de un juego no autorizado para ganar mucho dinero y poder escapar de allí. Pero este año las reglas han cambiado, la cantidad de dinero es mucho mayor y el juego es mucho más peligroso. Con Olivia Welch (Unbelievable, Modern Family), Mike Faist (West Side Story), Ray Nicholson (Mayans MC), Enrique Murciano (Bloodline, Without a Trace), Camron Jones (The Purge, Elephant Department), Jessica Sula (Skins, Scream), Kerri Medders (Alexa & Katie, SEAL Team), Bonnie Bedelia (Parenthood, Designated Survivor), Moira Kelly (One Tree Hill, The West Wing), Nancy McKeon (The Facts of Life, The Division), Rachel Bay Jones (Dear Evan Hansen, God Friended Me) y Bryce Cass (13 Reasons Why).
Creada, escrita y producida por Lauren Oliver, es una adaptación de su propia novela (2014). Diez episodios.
Estreno: 28 de mayo
Estreno en España: 28 de mayo en Prime Video España
Housebroken (FOX)
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Comedia de animación protagonizada por un grupo de animales de un vecindario que explora la disfunción y la neurosis humana. Con las voces de Lisa Kudrow (Friends, Web Therapy), Clea DuVall (Veep, Carnivàle), Nat Faxon (Blaze and the Monster Machines, Friends From College), Tony Hale (Veep, Arrested Development), Sharon Horgan (Catastrophe, Disenchantment), Will Forte (The Last Man on Earth, Saturday Night Live), Jason Mantzoukas (Big Mouth, The League), Sam Richardson (Veep, The Office), Bresha Webb (Marlon, Grey's Anatomy) y Greta Lee (Russian Doll, Inside Amy Schumer).
Escrita por DuVall (The Intervention), Jennifer Crittenden (Seinfeld, Veep) y Gabrielle Allan (Scrubs, Veep) y producida por Horgan (Catastrophe, Divorce).
Estreno: 31 de mayo
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6 things to do in NYC this summer when you can't think of anything to do *free + nonfree* Things to do in New York
6 things to do in NYC this summer when you can’t think of anything to do *free + nonfree* Things to do in New York
6 things to do in NYC this summer when you can’t think of anything to do *free + nonfree* #NewYork Things to do in New York #thingstodoinnewyork #travel #newyork Watch the 6 things to do in NYC this summer when you can’t think of anything to do *free + nonfree* video till the end. 3783 Views – 194 Likes. You also like and comment. This video will give you an idea about the subject you are…
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architectnews · 4 years
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Steven Holl shapes Winter Visual Arts Building around 200-year-old trees
Curving glass walls enclose the Winter Visual Arts Building, which Steven Holl Architects has completed in the arboretum of Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
The sculptural three-storey arts centre, first revealed by Steven Holl Architects in 2016, forms part of the US college's new Arts Quad and contains studios, classrooms, and offices.
Winter Visual Arts Building is distinguished by its asymmetric facade
Winter Visual Arts Building is distinguished by its translucent, undulating upper storeys, intended to resemble a lightweight pavilion nestled amongst the campus' 200-year-old trees.
This distinctive geometry was developed by Steven Holl Architects in response to the roots and driplines of these trees, which are one of the oldest elements of the campus.
It is shaped around existing trees on the site
"Winter Visual Arts Building is the center of creative life on campus," said the New York studio. "The universal language of art enabled by the building's spaces brings together students from diverse cultures to collaborate on arts projects."
"The large diameter trees, the oldest elements of the Franklin & Marshall's 52-acre arboretum campus, were the conceptual generator of the building's geometry," it continued.
"As a lightweight building, its main floor is lifted into the trees on a porous ground level open to the campus."
A nearby pool is designed to reflect the building
Winter Visual Arts Building's form was achieved with a two-story 'box-kite' steel frame, which is elevated and cantilevered from its white-painted concrete base.
Now complete, it replaces the campus' 1970s Herman Arts Center, which was designed by Maryland-based firm RCG.
Translucent glass provides optimal lighting in the studios
The facade's translucent glazing was chosen by the studio to provide optimal lighting conditions for the studio spaces inside, and is combined with operable viewing windows and skylights to provide fresh air.
This glazing is also intended to contrast with the "heavy exemplary brick architecture" of the adjacent Old Main – an original 1850s campus building to which it is connected to via a ramp.
A mezzanine level overlooks the studios
Inside, the Winter Visual Arts Building has been designed with generous circulation spaces, with two entrances on different levels.
The ground floor contains studios for heavy sculpture work alongside a series of galleries that make the facility and student's work accessible to the local community.
There is an auditorium on the first floor
Above, the first floor contains more private, double-height studios for drawing, design, printmaking, painting, woodworking and an auditorium for cinematography students, which are arranged around an informal presentation space.
A mezzanine-style second floor overlooks the teaching studios and hosts Art History seminar rooms, while a hidden basement level contains all of the digital labs and service areas that require minimal lighting.
The Winter Visual Arts Building is complete with a large reflecting pool outside, which has been placed to reflect the translucent glass facade at night.
The building has generous circulation spaces
Steven Holl Architects is the eponymous firm of American architect Steven Holl, founded in 1976. Today it has offices in New York and Beijing and is headed up by Holl with partners Chris McVoy, Roberto Bannura and Noah Yaffe.
The Winter Visual Arts Building is one of many education facilities by Steven Holl Architects, with others including the Visual Arts Building at the University of Iowa and the Glassell School of Art in Houston, which has a sloped rooftop garden.
It also recently won a competition to revamp Ireland's largest university with a proposal featuring buildings that evoke the Giant's Causeway.
Photography is by Paul Warchol.
Project credits
Architect: Steven Holl Architects Client: Franklin & Marshall College Principal design architect: Steven Holl 
Partner in charge: Chris McVoy 
Project architect and senior associate: Garrick Ambrose Assistant project architect: Carolina Cohen Freue Project team: Dominik Sigg, Marcus Carter, Elise Riley, Michael Haddy and Hannah LaSota Project manager: Thomas Murray of Casali Group and Sheldon Wenger of Franklin and Marshall College Structural engineers: Silman Associates MEP engineers: ICOR Associates Civil engineers: David Miller Associates Climate engineer: Transsolar Landscape architects: Hollander Design
Facade consultants: Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering Lighting consultants: L'Observatoire International Acoustical consultants: Harvey Marshall Berling Associates Pool consultants: Aqua Design International
The post Steven Holl shapes Winter Visual Arts Building around 200-year-old trees appeared first on Dezeen.
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lorajackson · 4 years
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Politics Podcasts
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Download and watch full episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher including his New Rules and Overtime segments with his guest panelists. New episodes of Real Time with Bill Maher air Fridays at 10, only on HBO.
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Every weekday, NPR’s best political reporters are there to explain the big news coming out of Washington and the campaign trail. They don’t just tell you what happened. They tell you why it matters. Every afternoon.
Four former aides to President Obama—Jon Favreau, Jon Lovett, Dan Pfeiffer and Tommy Vietor—are joined by journalists, politicians, activists, and more for a no-b******t conversation about politics. They cut through the noise to break down the week’s news, and help people figure out what matters and how they can help. Text us questions and comments: (323) 405-9944. New episodes Mondays and Thursdays. New series on the VP selection process: That’s The Ticket!—hosted by Dan Pfeiffer and Alyssa …
Nate Silver and the FiveThirtyEight team cover the latest in politics, tracking the issues and “game-changers” every week.
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In politics, you’re often told not to get lost in the weeds. But we love the weeds! That’s where politics becomes policy – the stuff that shapes our lives. Every Tuesday and Friday, Matthew Yglesias is joined by Ezra Klein, Dara Lind, Jane Coaston and other Vox voices to dig into the weeds on important national issues, including healthcare, immigration, housing, and everything else that matters. Produced by Vox and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
Podcast by Chapo Trap House
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Voted “Favorite Political Podcast” by Apple Podcasts listeners. Stephen Colbert says “Everybody should listen to the Slate Political Gabfest.” The Gabfest, featuring Emily Bazelon, John Dickerson, and David Plotz, is the kind of informal and irreverent discussion Washington journalists have after hours over drinks.
Loud, fast-talking and deceptively funny, this politically-independent “forward-thinking pragmatist” looks at the events shaping our world through a uniquely American lens. It’s smarter than you think, and faster than you expect.
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The election is over. But the story has just begun. Michael Barbaro, who has covered the last two presidential races for the Times, hosts our twice-weekly conversation about the biggest stories and surprises coming out of the campaign. The show features Times political reporters, Opinion columnists and data analysts. You’ll also hear interviews with key players on the political scene. It’s the access and authority The New York Times does best.
Since 2006, bringing historical context to the politics of today. TV pundits discuss politics in a vacuum. Cable news tells you everything is ‘breaking news’ but in most cases, events have long roots in history. In this podcast, we smash and bash the politics of today with a healthy dose of history
Coronavirus! Climate! Brexit! Trump! Politics has never been more unpredictable, more alarming or more interesting: Talking Politics is the podcast that tries to make sense of it all. Every week David Runciman and Helen Thompson talk to the most interesting people around about the ideas and events that shape our world: from history to economics, from philosophy to fiction. What does the future hold? Can democracy survive? How crazy will it get? This is the political conversation that matters …
Each week, we focus on one of the major international stories making headlines, drawing upon the Financial Times’s team of foreign correspondents and analysts to make sense of world events. Presented by Gideon Rachman and produced by Hannah Murphy.
Discussion and analysis of UK politics from the Financial Times’ political commentators and correspondents. Presented by Sebastian Payne.
Hosted by CNN’s Jake Tapper, State of the Union features interviews with top newsmakers on politics and policy – covering Washington, the country and the world.
Journalist Mehdi Hasan is known around the world for his televised takedowns of presidents and prime ministers. In this new podcast from The Intercept, Mehdi unpacks a game-changing news event of the week while challenging the conventional wisdom. As a Brit, a Muslim and an immigrant based in Donald Trump’s Washington D.C., Mehdi offers a provocative perspective on the ups and downs of American—and global—politics.
Light, humorous roundtable discussion of news and politics by real people across the political spectrum. Real debate without the hate!
CNN’s chief Washington correspondent, Jake Tapper, hosts this hourlong weekday afternoon program, which mixes Tapper’s interests with headlines from around the country and the world, headlines that span politics, money, sports and popular culture. “The Lead” also concentrates on bringing stories that aren’t found on front pages — buried leads — to the forefront.
The biggest news and political stories of the day with a commitment to in-depth reporting that consistently seeks to hold our leaders accountable.
Drawing upon his experience as a former chief of staff on the Senate Finance Committee and as an Emmy-winning executive producer and writer of ‘The West Wing,’ Lawrence O’Donnell examines the compelling and impactful political stories of the day. Join him every weeknight.
Each week here at Foreign Policy, we interview one person for an intimate, narrative-driven conversation about something timely and important in the world. Our guests are people who have participated directly in events, either as protagonists or eyewitnesses. We get them to tell a story about their experience, not just offer their analysis. That approach is driven by the feeling here at Foreign Policy that to understand our world—to grasp the complexities and nuances of our time—we need to g …
Chuck Todd at his best – unscripted, informed and focused on what really matters in the 2020 presidential race. Join Chuck each Wednesday as he talks with top reporters from the nation’s capital, plus exclusive sit-down interviews and on-the-ground dispatches from across the campaign trail.
The Hagmann Report provides news and information based on a combination of exclusive investigative work, proprietary sources and contacts and qualified guests open source material. The Hagmann Report will never be encumbered by political correctness or held hostage to an agenda of revisionist history. The Hagmann Report broadcasts live weekdays 7-10pm et.
New Season: “With Friends Like These: Converts”. Humans tend not to change their minds, so we’re going to see what we can learn from looking at people that have changed their minds about really big things: religion, politics and also psychic healing, criminal justice and more. We’ll examine historical accounts of converts, the ways we change our brain when we change our mind, and we’ll tell the stories of people who’ve been through it all. New episodes every Friday.
An inside-the-beltway show that’s truly for beltway outsiders. Each week the HuffPost Politics team offers an entertaining alternative to the Sunday shows you’ve stopped watching. Along with their outside the beltway guests, join Arthur Delaney and Elise Foley as they analyze the news of the week and explain why it should matter to you.
The United States of Anxiety: The United States of Anxiety is a show about the unfinished business of our history and its grip on our future. Many of the political and social arguments we’re having now started in the aftermath of the Civil War, when Americans set out to do something no one had tried before: build the world’s first multiracial democracy. The podcast gives voters the context to understand what’s at stake in this election. WNYC Studios is a listener-supported producer of other …
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Ken Rudin, an expert in American politics and campaign history, joins MPR News host Kerri Miller every week for a conversation about the latest on President Trump, Congress, and the American political scene.
Join Brian Williams as he delivers the latest updates on evolving news stories and places the major political events of the day into context.
In Washington, DC, the story often ends when Congress passes a law. For us, that’s where the story begins. We examine the consequences of what happens when powerful people act — or fail to act. This season, Jillian Weinberger explores the big ideas from the 2020 presidential candidates: how their ideas worked, or didn’t work, in other places or at other times. Produced by Vox and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
CNN’s Political Director David Chalian lives, breathes, and sleeps politics, so who better to help make sense of the ever-shifting political landscape? Join David and his colleagues as they ask tough questions, provide insight and analysis, and help you separate the political signal from the noise. Every weekday.
Engaging smart thinkers on issues of the day. Subscribe for newsletter & show notes at chrisriback.com (podcast formerly “Political Wire Conversations”)
Listen to Mark Shields and David Brooks analyze the political news of the week. Posted each Friday by 9 p.m., the Shields and Brooks podcast includes the full audio of every on-air segment. Is this not what you’re looking for? Don’t miss our other podcasts for our full shows, individual segments, Politics Monday, Brief but Spectacular, and more. Find them in iTunes or in your favorite podcasting app. PBS NewsHour is supported by – https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
No one knows Capitol Hill and the corridors of Washington power like National Journal, and now NJ brings you Quorum Call—a weekly podcast on Congress, policy, and politics. Hosted by National Journal’s veteran reporting team, new episodes of Quorum Call will be available every Monday.
2020 isn’t going to be fun for anybody, left, right, or center. What many call the Most Important Election of Our Lifetime is going to be exhausting, ugly, angry, and probably at least a little racist. Listen as Robert Evans, Katy Stoll, and Cody Johnston try to keep level heads covering the election while traveling the country, from the Iowa Caucus to gun shows and anti-vaccine conventions, finding out what Real America really wants and thinks during the, “Worst Year Ever.”
The Ticket: A Presidential Podcast from The Texas Tribune and KUT News. Each Week KUT’s Ben Philpott and the Tribune’s Jay Root provide a rundown of the week’s campaign actions and bring you interviews with people who make a living working on, covering or commenting on the campaigns.
Letters & Politics seeks to explore the history behind today’s major global and national news stories. Hosted by Mitch Jeserich.
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News & political commentary airing live Monday and Thursday 11am – 2pm eastern!
Cuomo Prime Time with Chris Cuomo gets after it with newsmakers in Washington and around the world through in-depth, one-on-one interviews and analysis of the latest breaking news.
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In this edition of Model Talk, Nate and Galen discuss FiveThirtyEight’s newly published presidential election polling averages.By FiveThirtyEight, 538, ESPN, Nate Silver
For episode descriptions, etc., please go to (and bookmark) http://www.hagmannreportlive.com Help us fight censorship by accessing our show on our own site. WATCH LIVE – Monday-Friday 7-9:00 PM ET HERE: https://www.HagmannReportLive.com Please help us keep the lights on – Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/hagmannreport Hagmann Report W…
In a 5-to-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that President Trump may not shut down Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, the program that shields immigrants brought to the United States as children from deportation. But is this the end of challenges to DACA? “The Latest,” from the team behind “The Daily,” brings you the mos…
June 18, 2020 / Rabia and Susan discuss the two big Trump tell all books about to drop. Episode scoring music by Broke for Free. Today’s episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. www.BetterHelp.com/45th #the45th #45thpodBy AudioBoom
Virginia Heffernan talks to author Jared Yates Sexton about evangelical mythology, Bill Barr, rural understandings of globalism, the Confederacy, the coming Trump rally in Tulsa, how some Christian Trumpists may view COVID, and the “cult of the shining city.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices…
Virginia Heffernan talks to author Jared Yates Sexton about evangelical mythology, Bill Barr, rural understandings of globalism, the Confederacy, the coming Trump rally in Tulsa, how some Christian Trumpists may view COVID, and the “cult of the shining city.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices…
Nicolle Wallace discusses the new book from John Bolton making explosive claims about Donald Trump. Plus a former Secretary of Defense weighs in on Bolton’s allegations against the president, the Supreme Court says the Trump administration cannot carry out its plan to shutdown DACA, and aides worry over Trump’s self-sabotage. Joined by: Washington …
Nicolle Wallace discusses the new book from John Bolton making explosive claims about Donald Trump. Plus a former Secretary of Defense weighs in on Bolton’s allegations against the president, the Supreme Court says the Trump administration cannot carry out its plan to shutdown DACA, and aides worry over Trump’s self-sabotage. Joined by: Washington …
Atlanta ex-cop turns himself in, charged with killing Rayshard Brooks; Officer charged with assault in Brooks case released from custody; Sources: More officers calling out sick in Atlanta today; Some Atl officers not responding to calls in protest of charges; Brooks’ family atty: Murder charge is “first step towards justice”; Dr. Fauci calls “anti…
After weeks of rising tensions along India’s northwest border with China, 20 Indian soldiers were killed in a clash with Chinese forces, the most significant skirmish between the two countries since 1967. Brookings Senior Fellow Tanvi Madan lays out potential motivations for China’s escalation, and how it may affect India’s internal priorities and …
Emily, John and David discuss Trump’s Tulsa rally, Bolton’s book, and this week’s historic Supreme Court ruling on LGBTQ rights–with attorney Chase Strangio. Episode Notes Here are some notes and references from this week’s show: Kathryn Dunn Tenpas for Brookings: “Tracking Turnover in the Trump Administration” Anne Applebaum for the Atlantic: “Hi…
The Supreme Court has extended a life-support line to some 650,000 so-called “Dreamers” on Thursday, allowing them to remain safe from deportation. In the majority opinion, Chief Justice John Roberts said the decision was not about the Trump administration’s authority to end the program, but rather about its “arbitrary” justification. This episode:…
Today I just wanted to let you guys know how I came to be a libertarian and the kind of libertarian I am today. I’ve noticed a lot of people coming to the Libertarian movement through Joe or Joe Jorgensen’s campaign and I just wanted to share my journey of libertarianism because each of us have our own story. This is your libertarian look at the 20…
Color of Change Chair Heather McGhee joins as a guest host to talk about Trump’s speech on police reform, the Senate Republican bill, where Joe Biden and the Democrats stand, and how we can ensure that this moment becomes a durable political movement to fight systemic racism. Then Reverend William Barber talks to Dan about the Poor People’s Campaig…
A blow to the Trump admin’s immigration policyBy CNN
Jami Floyd, WNYC’s legal editor and host of All Things Considered and Beth Fertig, WNYC reporter covering court and immigration talk about the Supreme Court’s decision that found the Trump administration can’t end DACA — and preview the cases that are still awaiting decisions.By WNYC
John Bolton, former national security adviser to President Trump, wrote a book,“The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir.” The book offers a portrait of President Trump as an erratic and ignorant leader who often places his own personal whims above the national interest. But whether Americans will get to read the book is the subject of an e…
Jami Floyd, WNYC’s legal editor and host of All Things Considered and Beth Fertig, WNYC reporter covering court and immigration talk about the latest Supreme Court rulings and previews the cases that are still awaiting decisions.
A vexing part of our democracy is that even overwhelmingly popular policies are sometimes not enacted into law because of political stalemates. This not only threatens the stability of our democracy, but also creates disillusionment among voters. This week, Julian Zelizer and Sam Wang discuss important questions about the health and future of our d…
My new book LOSERTHINK, available now on Amazon https://tinyurl.com/rqmjc2a Find my “extra” content on Locals: https://ScottAdams.Locals.com Content: What is “systemic racism”? John Bolton’s book Matt Gaetz is linguistically gifted Blue flu in Atlanta Coronavirus death rate If you would like to enjoy this same content plus bonus content from Scott …
Trump tried to rescind an Obama policy granting legal status for those who illegally immigrated as children. The Supreme Court said the reversal was “arbitrary and capricious.” On today’s show, Jami Floyd, WNYC’s legal editor and host of All Things Considered, and Beth Fertig, senior reporter at WNYC covering immigration and courts, talks about the…
Trump tried to rescind an Obama policy granting legal status for those who illegally immigrated as children. The Supreme Court said the reversal was “arbitrary and capricious.” On today’s show, Jami Floyd, WNYC’s legal editor and host of All Things Considered, and Beth Fertig, senior reporter at WNYC covering immigration and courts, talks about the…
After months of fear and mourning amid a global pandemic, we’re now in the streets. This week, we talk about catharsis and the ways we gather to fight, to grieve and to show up for each other. We hear from Shanika Hart, First Lady of The Gathering Harlem, on being a Black mom, fighting for Black lives. And we learn about the life of beloved Brookly…
The Cummins Unit, a penitentiary in southeastern Arkansas, opened in 1902. Designed as a prison for black men, its rigid hierarchy and system of unpaid labor have been likened to slavery. The population at Cummins, still overwhelmingly black, has been devastated by the coronavirus—the prison has the tenth-largest outbreak of COVID-19 in the country…
Early and absentee voting is underway in the New York primary and one of the most hotly contested races is the Democratic primary to fill the House seat left open by Rep. Nita Lowey’s retirement in New York’s 17th Congressional District (Rockland/Westchester Counties). Mark Lungariello, government and politics reporter for the Journal News/Lohud, p…
Early and absentee voting is underway in the New York primary and one of the most hotly contested races is the Democratic primary to fill the House seat left open by Rep. Nita Lowey’s retirement in New York’s 17th Congressional District (Rockland/Westchester Counties). Mark Lungariello, government and politics reporter for the Journal News/Lohud, p…
On this episode of Fault Lines, hosts Jamarl Thomas & Shane Stranahan were joined by guests to talk about the upcoming elections in the USA, the course of the country’s ongoing protests, and how America’s industrial policy and outsourcing affected the black community in America. Guests: Ted Rall – Political Cartoonist & Syndicated Columnist | What …
Tatyana Fazlalizadeh, artist and creator of the art exhibition Stop Telling Women to Smile, talks about the street art popping up around the city and how art and activism go hand-in-hand. Tatyana also recently installed a series of murals at The Greene Space, WNYC’s event space, which you can view by clicking here.…
Tatyana Fazlalizadeh, artist and creator of the art exhibition Stop Telling Women to Smile, talks about the street art popping up around the city and how art and activism go hand-in-hand. Tatyana also recently installed a series of murals at The Greene Space, WNYC’s event space, which you can view by clicking here.…
*Stimulating Political Talk*By SecularTalkRadio
Yesterday, Current Affairs published an article on the recent failure of two Michigan dams. In conjunction with this article, we thought we would release this bonus episode, originally aired in August 2019, in which Sparky and Vanessa interview the author, Varsha Venkatasubramanian (a.k.a. @varsha_venkat_). This episode was edited by Dan Thorn of P…
As New York City prepares to enter phase two of re-opening — which could be as soon as Monday — Dr. Angela Rasmussen, virologist at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in the Center for Infection and Immunity and a writer for Forbes magazine, talks about the latest COVID news on staying safe while re-opening, why there doesn’t see…
As New York City prepares to enter phase two of re-opening — which could be as soon as Monday — Dr. Angela Rasmussen, virologist at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in the Center for Infection and Immunity and a writer for Forbes magazine, talks about the latest COVID news on staying safe while re-opening, why there doesn’t see…
Munira Mirza is to lead the government’s racism review. Are the Tories trolling anti-racism campaigners? Plus, Joshua Virasami on the police crackdown on BLM protestors, Laura Pidcock on shielding, and Matt Hancock claims Marcus Rashford’s victory as his own.By Novara Media
The Morning Joe panel discusses revelations from ‘The Room Where It Happened,’ the new book by former National Security Adviser John Bolton.
The Morning Joe panel discusses revelations from ‘The Room Where It Happened,’ the new book by former National Security Adviser John Bolton.
The Morning Joe panel discusses revelations from ‘The Room Where It Happened,’ the new book by former National Security Adviser John Bolton.
Plus, a deal to start the baseball season appears within reach after a secret meeting in Arizona. And the former Atlanta police officer who shot Rayshard Brooks was charged with murder.By The Washington Post
Running through John Bolton’s astonishing claims, new House GOP spending numbers and more in today’s Audio Briefing.By Playbook Audio Briefing
The United States has by far the world’s largest military budget, accounting for 15% of all federal spending, and nearly half of all discretionary spending. Presidents of both parties have repeatedly failed to bring the Pentagon budget under control. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has been one of the loudest voices in congress arguing for substa…
The United States has by far the world’s largest military budget, accounting for 15% of all federal spending, and nearly half of all discretionary spending. Presidents of both parties have repeatedly failed to bring the Pentagon budget under control. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has been one of the loudest voices in congress arguing for substa…
The United States has by far the world’s largest military budget, accounting for 15% of all federal spending, and nearly half of all discretionary spending. Presidents of both parties have repeatedly failed to bring the Pentagon budget under control. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has been one of the loudest voices in congress arguing for substa…
Guest: Tim Madigan [1] is veteran journalist an award-winning writer. For many years he covered the history of the Greenwood Massacre for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He is the author of The Burning: Massacre, Destruction, and the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. To find more about Tim Madigan’s writings visit his website: timmadigan.net [2] Photo Source:…
Robert Barnes of the Washington Post talks about the landmark Supreme Court decision that ended job discrimination against gays and transgender people. Not lost in all the excitement was the fact that the majority opinion was written by Neil Gorsuch, appointed to the Court by President Trump. Several Democratic members of Congress are facing tough …
Charlie Sykes is a longtime conservative commentator and the founder and editor-at-large of The Bulwark. He joins David to talk about his father’s roots in Democratic politics, the growing politicization of the media over the course of his career, why he no longer considers himself a member of the Republican Party, and his assessment of the state o…
In this installment, Chris is joined by Jess Morgan, who offers her Seattle-based takes on the autonomous zone known as C.H.O.P. & then they discuss Dave Rubin’s offering to the literary world, “Don’t Burn This Book.” Chris live-reacts to reading from the book & gives his thoughts on Rubin, Sam Harris, and Candace Owens. Episode 462 By the way, if …
Fmr. Trump aide John Bolton accuses the president of asking for help from China to win re-election, being unaware that the UK has nuclear weapons, and much more. Plus, the fire police officer in Atlanta who shot and killed Rayshard Brooks is now facing multiple charges including felony murder. Philip Rucker, A.B. Stoddard, Jeremy Bash, Michael Oste…
Fmr. Trump aide John Bolton accuses the president of asking for help from China to win re-election, being unaware that the UK has nuclear weapons, and much more. Plus, the fire police officer in Atlanta who shot and killed Rayshard Brooks is now facing multiple charges including felony murder. Philip Rucker, A.B. Stoddard, Jeremy Bash, Michael Oste…
Tonight on the Last Word: The officer who shot Rayshard Brooks faces 11 charges, including felony murder. Also, John Bolton reveals a long list of Trump misconduct months after requests for testimony during the impeachment inquiry. Plus, Joe Biden slams Trump’s coronavirus response. New national polls show a double-digit lead for Biden. And George …
Tonight on the Last Word: The officer who shot Rayshard Brooks faces 11 charges, including felony murder. Also, John Bolton reveals a long list of Trump misconduct months after requests for testimony during the impeachment inquiry. Plus, Joe Biden slams Trump’s coronavirus response. New national polls show a double-digit lead for Biden. And George …
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rarealdcresults · 1 year
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New York City Dance Alliance, in Pittsburgh (February 17th - 18th, 2007):
Teen High Score Solo:
Kaitlyn Reiser - "Bang Bang" (Lyrical) - Did Not Place / Outstanding Costume' Award / Outstanding Lyrical' Award / Platinum
Miranda Maleski - "Falling" (Lyrical) - Did Not Place / Outstanding Lyrical' Award / Outstanding Precision' Award / Outstanding Showmanship' Award / Platinum
Teen High Score Duo/Trio
Kaitlyn Reiser, Miranda Maleski & Nina Linhart - "The Passage" (Lyrical) - 1st Place / Outstanding Lyrical' Award / Platinum
Teen High Score Group
"Voo Doo And The Dolls" (Tap) [Elise Deming, John Fiumara, Natalee Bailey, Nina Linhart, Stephanie Pittman] - 1st Place / Outstanding Tap' Award / Platinum
"The Wiz" (Specialty) [Brandon Pent, Izumi Presberry, Jesse Johnson, John Fiumara, Romana Henson] - Did Not Place / Teen Critics' Choice' Award / Outstanding Concept' Award / Outstanding Costume' Award / Outstanding Showmanship' Award / Outstanding Specialty Number' Award / Platinum
Teen High Score Line:
"Summertime" (Jazz) [Alexandra Salerno, Alivia Shoop, Amanda Stelluto, Crystal Jennings, Cydney Miller, Gabi Flora, Gianna Martello, Hannah Opalko, Jessica Ice, Kaitlyn Reiser, Leah Pivirotto, Marissa Mechling, Miranda Maleski, Romana Henson, Sydney Shoff] - 1st Place / Outstanding Costume' Award / Outstanding Jazz' Award / Platinum
Teen High Score Specialty:
"The Wiz" (Specialty) - 1st Place
Teen High Score Tap:
"Voo Doo And The Dolls" (Tap) - 1st / Place
Teen High Score Jazz:
"Summertime" (Jazz) - 1st Place
Senior High Score Solo:
Amanda Stelluto - "Ain't No Sunshine" (Lyrical) - Did Not Place / Outstanding Lyrical' Award / 'Outstanding Showmanship' Award / Platinum
Senior High Score Duo/Trio:
Crystal Jennings & Romana Henson - "Redeemed" (Contemporary) - 1st Place / Platinum
Senior High Score Group:
"Baby In A Box" (Lyrical) [Amanda Stelluto, Crystal Jennings, Gianna Martello, Kaitlyn Reiser, Leah Pivirotto, Miranda Maleski] - 1st Place / Senior Critics' Choice' Award / Outstanding Lyrical' Award / Platinum
Senior High Score Lyrical:
"Baby In A Box" (Lyrical) - 1st Place
Senior Overall High Score:
"Baby In A Box" (Lyrical) - 1st Place
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graphicsmetropolis · 7 years
Video
vimeo
At a time when Planned Parenthood is under attack, there are many things you can do to support them and the communities they serve. Visit ppnyc.org to learn how you can support Planned Parenthood of New York City, and plannedparenthood.org to take action on behalf of Planned Parenthood nationwide.
Featuring Aida Blue, Amber Valletta, Chris Vargas, Cleo Cwiek, Elise Gallant, Francisco Ramirez, Grimes, Hailey Benton Gates, Hana Pestle, Hannah Simon, Hanne Gabby Odiele, Hari Nef, Jemima Kirke, Jojo, Jordan Legessa, Karen Ortiz, Lily Newmark, Maia Ruth Lee, Paloma Elsesser, Sage Adams, Sahar Ghaheri, Selena Forrest, Shirley Fromer and Stella Tennant
Director: Harley Weir Creative Director: Jen Brill Stylist: Camilla Nickerson Makeup: Thomas de Kluyver Hair: Tina Outen Set Designer: Matt Jackson Manicure: Alicia Torello, Sonya Belakhlef Casting: Greg Krelenstein, Lisa Duckworth, Amrit Sidh Art Director: Raine Trainor
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esterhqs · 5 years
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we hope you have the time of your life here at camp ester, ellie, sumi, and gaile! the cabin is all ready for you! get ready to start unpacking in 6 hours! katya elise, seo soojin and kim jisoo are now taken!
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. ✫ *゚( katya elise henry, female, she/her ) welcome to camp ester, ellie castillo! you’re the twenty four year old here to take a break and find who she is as a person, right? the moment i saw you, i already noticed that you are outgoing & dramatic. apparently there’s a hidden past here and you think it’s true. i also heard that you keep a diary with you at all times. anyway, get your things ready to unpack on the top bunk in room 1 of daisy cabin, as you’ve come a long way from miami. we all hope it’s worth it! ( jordyn. 18+. she/her ) 
. ✫ *゚( seo soojin, cisfem, she/her ) welcome to camp ester, sumi kang! you’re the twenty one year old here to make new friends, right? the moment i saw you, i already noticed that you are compassionate & guillible. apparently there’s a hidden past here but you think it’s just for publicity. i also heard that you know every hannah montana song word for word. anyway, get your things ready to unpack on the top bunk in room 2 of daisy cabin, as you’ve come a long way from new york city. we all hope it’s worth it! ( a. 18+. she/her ) 
. ✫ *゚( kim jisoo, cisfemale , she/her ) welcome to camp ester, gaile choi! you’re the twenty year old here to take a break from school, right? the moment i saw you, i already noticed that you are outgoing & judgmental. apparently there’s a hidden past here but you think it’s just for publicity. i also heard that you can fit your whole fist in your mouth . anyway, get your things ready to unpack on the bottom bunk in room 1 of daisy cabin, as you’ve come a long way from michigan . we all hope it’s worth it! ( y. 18+. she her ) 
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nyfacurrent · 6 years
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Introducing | NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program Recipients and Finalists
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NYFA has awarded $623,000 to 89 New York State artists.
The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) has announced the recipients and finalists of the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship program, which it has administered for the past 32 years with leadership support from the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA). The organization has awarded a total of $623,000 to 89 artists throughout New York State in the following disciplines: Fiction, Folk/Traditional Arts, Interdisciplinary Work, Painting, and Video/Film. This year’s recipients range in age between 26 and 77. Fifteen finalists, who do not receive a cash award, but benefit from a range of other NYFA services, were also announced. A complete list of the Fellows and Finalists follows.
The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program makes unrestricted cash grants of $7,000 to artists working in 15 disciplines, awarding five per year on a triennial basis. The program is highly competitive and this year’s recipients and finalists were selected by discipline-specific peer panels from an applicant pool of 3,071. Since it was launched in 1985, the program has awarded over $31 million to more than 4,500 artists.
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“Artists deepen humanity and help us to understand the world and each other through their work,” said Michael L. Royce, Executive Director, NYFA. “We’re proud to collaborate with NYSCA to offer unrestricted grants to artists of all disciplines across New York State to support their artistic visions,” he added.
“We recognize that at the heart of the arts is the individual artist,” said Mara Manus, Executive Director of the New York State Council on the Arts. “These grants provide artists in a multitude of disciplines with financial support so they can take risks and flourish in their work, fueling the creative capital of New York.”
Sejal Shah, a Fellow in Fiction from Rochester, NY, reflected on the award saying: “Receiving the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship means it is possible for me to teach less, worry (a little) less, and write more. It is allowing me to focus on the big picture and helps me to believe that what I am doing has value to someone other than me. As an artist, I feel freer to take risks with my work, to experiment, and to continue to write about gender, race, silence, and speech.”
Kim Brandt, a Fellow in Interdisciplinary Work from Queens, NY, shared the following about her fellowship: “Receiving a NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship is a real gift—both a vote of confidence and a sigh of relief. On a practical level, it supports a continued commitment to my work by easing the financial burdens of its costs. For a contained stretch of time, I can pay for studio space and materials, take time away from my jobs, and travel for a residency with less worry and reduced stress. Yet to have my work recognized and acknowledged by NYFA and their panelist of arts professionals, peers, and colleagues, to be included in a roster of previous awardees whose work I’ve long admired and respected—this is the deeply meaningful support that doesn't run out once the last penny is spent. This kind of support feeds and fuels long past the fellowship period, and its value is immeasurable and unlimited.”
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Fellowship Recipients and Finalists by Discipline and County of Residence:
Fiction Fellows
Caitlin Cass (Erie) Diane Chang (Queens) Martin Cloutier (Kings) Dana Czapnik (New York) Nicole Dennis-Benn (Kings) Eric Gansworth (Niagara) Susanna Horng (New York) Naomi Jackson (Kings) Swati Khurana (New York) Lisa Ko (Kings) Marie Myung-Ok Lee (New York) Haifa Lakshmi Koleilat (Rockland) Lissette J. Norman (Richmond)** Bino A. Realuyo (Queens) Mike Scalise (Kings) Jennifer Sears (Kings) Sejal Shah (Monroe) Kelli Trapnell (Kings)
Fiction Finalists    
YZ Chin (New York) Adalena Kavanagh (Kings) Yahaira Lawrence (Westchester)       
Fiction Panelists  
Roohi Choudhry (Kings) Janet McNally (Erie) Anne Panning (Monroe) Edward Schwarzschild (Albany) Cathie Wright-Lewis (Kings)       
Folk/Traditional Arts Fellows
Douglas Barr (Richmond) Danielle Brown (Kings) Moris J Cañate (Queens) Helen Taylor Condon (St. Lawrence) William Crouse Sr. (Cattaraugus) Wafa Ghnaim (Kings) Zhong-hua Lu (Rensselaer) Potri Ranka Manis (Queens) Tashi D Sharzur (Techung) (Essex) Jake Shulman-Ment (Kings) Salieu Suso (Bronx)**
Folk/Traditional Finalists
Martin Macica (Saratoga) Halyna Shepko (Ulster) Alicia Svigals (New York)  
Folk/Traditional Panelists  
Mary Tooley Parker (Westchester) Blanka Amezkua (Bronx) Naomi Sturm (Richmond) Elinor Levy (Dutchess) Carrie Hill (Franklin)
Interdisciplinary Work Fellows
Noel W Anderson (Queens) Kim Brandt (Queens) A.K. Burns (Kings) Tyler Coburn (Kings) Ayana Evans (New York) Allison Janae Hamilton (New York) Kathy High (Rensselaer) Sue Jeong Ka (New York) Baseera Khan (New York) Mary Mattingly (Kings) Christie Neptune (Kings) Ernesto Pujol (Columbia) Elise Rasmussen (Kings) Aki Sasamoto (Kings) Kuldeep Singh (Kings) Tiffany Smith (Kings) Tattfoo Tan (Richmond)
Interdisciplinary Work Finalists  
Keren Benbenisty (New York) Kameelah Janan Rasheed (Kings) Aida Šehović (New York)    
Interdisciplinary Work Panelists
Matt Bua (Greene) David Court (Ulster) Glendalys Medina (New York) Rachel Fein-Smolinski (Onondaga) Jaimie Warren (Kings)       
Painting Fellows
Samira Abbassy (New York) Maria Berrio (Kings) Gabe Brown (Ulster) Tom Burckhardt (New York) Ginny Casey (Kings) Elizabeth Colomba (New York) Lisa Corinne Davis (Kings) Lydia Dona (New York) Donise English (Dutchess) Derek Fordjour (New York)* Clarity Haynes (Kings) Vera Iliatova (Kings) Julian Kreimer (Kings) Joel Longenecker (Dutchess) Kathryn Lynch (Kings) Sangram Majumdar (Kings) Tracy Miller (Kings) Patrick Neal (New York) David Opdyke (Queens) Paul Pagk (New York) Luisa Rabbia (Kings) Gretchen Scherer (Kings) Emily Mae Smith (Kings) Michael Stamm (Kings) Amy Talluto (Ulster) Leslie Wayne (New York) Deborah Zlotsky (Albany)
Painting Finalists
Jordan Casteel (New York) Clayton Schiff (Queens) Don Voisine (Kings)
Painting Panelists
Julia Whitney Barnes (Dutchess) Franklin Evans (New York) Elliot Green (Columbia) Sarah McCoubrey (Onondaga) Mie Yim (Kings)    
Video/Film Fellows
Abbesi Akhamie (Kings) Jessica Beshir (New York) Ira Eduardovna (Kings) Fernando Frias de la Parra (Kings) Brent Green (Ulster) Devin Horan (Kings) Haisi Hu (Kings) Hannah Jayanti (Kings) Steffani Jemison (Kings) Ekwa Msangi (Kings) Shayok Mukhopadhyay (Westchester) Iva Radivojevic (Kings) Jessie Jeffrey Dunn Rovinelli (Kings) Lynne Sachs (Kings) Fern Silva (Kings) Sasha Wortzel (Kings)      
Video/Film Finalists
Melanie Crean (Kings) Case Jernigan (Kings) Nikyatu Jusu (Kings)   
Video/Film Panelists
Justin Ambrosino (Richmond) Zia Anger (Columbia) Shirley Bruno (Kings) Megan Roberts (Tompkins) Bhawin Suchak (Albany)
*Deutsche Bank Fellow **Gregory Millard Fellows made with the support of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs
Click here for more information about the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program.
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Funding Support
NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowships are administered with leadership support from New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Additional funding is also provided by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA), Deutsche Bank, the Milton & Sally Avery Arts Foundation, and individual donors.
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Images, from above: Maria Berrio (Fellow in Painting ‘18); In a Time of Drought, 2016, collage with Japanese papers and watercolor paint, 60”x72”; Haisi Hu (Fellow in Video/Film ‘18), New York After Rain, 2017, claymation and cel animation (still); Kim Brandt (Fellow in Interdisciplinary Work ‘18), Untitled, 2014, Performance, Presented at The Kitchen, NYC, Photo Credit: Paula Court; Tashi D Sharzur (Techung) (Fellow in Folk/Traditional Arts ‘18), Semshae, Heart Songs, Performance for Tibetan children, Tibet House, NYC, 2013, Photo Credit: Kurt Smith
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artwalktv · 7 years
Video
vimeo
At a time when Planned Parenthood is under attack, there are many things you can do to support them and the communities they serve. Visit www.ppnyc.org to learn how you can support Planned Parenthood of New York City, and http://bit.ly/2uTBZBC to take action on behalf of Planned Parenthood nationwide. Featuring Aida Blue, Amber Valletta, Chris Vargas, Cleo Cwiek, Elise Gallant, Francisco Ramirez, Grimes, Hailey Benton Gates, Hana Pestle, Hannah Simon, Hanne Gabby Odiele, Hari Nef, Jemima Kirke, Jojo, Jordan Legessa, Karen Ortiz, Lily Newmark, Maia Ruth Lee, Paloma Elsesser, Sage Adams, Sahar Ghaheri, Selena Forrest, Shirley Fromer and Stella Tennant Director: Harley Weir Creative Director: Jen Brill Stylist: Camilla Nickerson Makeup: Thomas de Kluyver Hair: Tina Outen Set Designer: Matt Jackson Manicure: Alicia Torello, Sonya Belakhlef Casting: Greg Krelenstein, Lisa Duckworth, Amrit Sidh Art Director: Raine Trainor
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