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    roxbury

    Explore " roxbury" with insightful episodes like "PRP (Poets Read Poetry)", "Polly Sumner: Witness to the Boston Tea Party", "Politics and Fashion in the Revolution with Kimberly Alexander", "William Eustis, Doctor, Diplomat & Politician" and "S2:E16 Brad Johnson I A Lifetime Reading Rooms" from podcasts like ""Planet Poet - Words in Space", "Revolution 250 Podcast", "Revolution 250 Podcast", "Revolution 250 Podcast" and "Corner Table Talk"" and more!

    Episodes (14)

    PRP (Poets Read Poetry)

    PRP (Poets Read Poetry)

    Planet Poet-Words in Space – NEW PODCAST!  If you missed yesterday’s broadcast (September 12th), LISTEN to my WIOX show featuring the founding members of PRP (Poets Read Poetry) who have gathered together to read and discuss the poetry of Carl Sandburg.

     Pamela Manché Pearce, Planet Poet’s own Poet-At-Large, began PRP in her Garrison, New York living room in 2010 with a simple idea: to have poets   gather and discuss the poems of other poets based on a pre-determined theme followed by a shop talk discussion of the members’ own writing lives. Poets Jo Pitkin, Andrew Acciaro and Frank Ortega joined Pamela to form the original group which disbanded in 2014, and was revived on Zoom in the summer of 2021, when I was invited to become the fifth member.

     
    Here's a bit about the members of PRP:

     
    Andrew Acciaro
     Li Po sailed the Yangzi
    Shelley had his Spezia
    Blake his Felpham
    Cyrano the Moon
    Andrew supine
    On the supple banks of the river that flows both ways…
    Has his poet’s panache and Blarney kissed plume…
    Andrew lives in Peekskill, N.Y.


    Sharon Israel's chapbook Voice Lesson was published in 2017 by Post Traumatic Press. She won Brooklyn College’s Leonard B. Hecht Poetry Explication Award, was nominated for “Best of the Net” 2016 and won Four Lines’ 2020 winter poetry challenge. Sharon hosts Planet Poet-Words in Space and lives in the Catskills with her husband Robert Cucinotta.  For more information: https://linktr.ee/sharonisraelpoet.


    Frank Ortega
    “As a seeker of wisdom and peace, following those paths in life and art,my work is often about race, poverty and oppression--until we have erased them.What I take in becomes my work, those messages we send to each other, always trying to make this a better world”.   Frank now resides near Boulder, Colorado.  https://artlitlab.org/artists/frank-ortega


     Pamela Manché Pearce
    Pushcart Prize nominee, Pamela Manché Pearce is the author of the poetry chapbook, WIDOWLAND (Green Bottle Press, London) and the co-author of THE CHARLES STREET TRIO: A Novel in Three Voices (Daisy H Productions) both of which are available on Amazon. The Poet-at-Large on WIOX’s Planet Poet-Words in Space is on Instagram at #pamelamanchepearceNYC.  Pamela lives in Manhattan.


     Jo Pitkin
    A Hudson Valley native, Jo Pitkin is the author of a chapbook and four full-length poetry collections. She works as a freelance educational writer creating English language arts materials for K through 12 students and is a teaching artist with The Poetry Barn.  Jo lives in Cold Spring N.Y. www.jopitkin.com

    Polly Sumner: Witness to the Boston Tea Party

    Polly Sumner: Witness to the Boston Tea Party

    Can a fashion doll from England find happiness and friendship in Colonial America?  Among the cargo carried to Boston on ships bringing "the detested tea," was a doll that has become known as the "Polly Sumner Doll" named for its original owner.   She was purchased by a young woman in Boston, Polly Sumner, and her younger sister named the doll for the purchaser.  For five generations children in this family played with the doll, and took her to see some historic events--the Battle of Bunker Hill and Lafayette's visit in 1824.  Since 1886, Polly Sumner has been part of the collection of the Old South Meeting House or the Bostonian Society, and visiting children would write to her.  Now Richard C. Wiggin has told Polly's story in a children's book, Polly Sumner:  Witness to the Boston Tea Party.

    Politics and Fashion in the Revolution with Kimberly Alexander

    Politics and Fashion in the Revolution with Kimberly Alexander

    Protests against British policy involved more than angry speeches--Amricans changed what they wore and how they bought their clothes.  Kimberly Alexander from the University of New Hampshire tells us about how Americans began fashioning their own clothing.  In addition to two books on fashion:  Treasures Afoot:  Shoe Stories from the Georgian Era, and Fashioning the New England Family, which grew out of an exhibit at the Massachusetts Historical Society, Professor Alexander and her students have created the Flax Project,  growing flax and producing linen, as a way to experience  the fabric of 18th-century life. 

    William Eustis, Doctor, Diplomat & Politician

    William Eustis, Doctor, Diplomat & Politician

    Governor William Shirley  built an elegant estate in Roxbury while serving as Royal Governor of Massachusetts.  The fortunes of Shirley Place, now known as the Shirley-Eustis House, became tied up in the political upheaval of the Revolution, and ultimately the House became the home of William Eustis, a Revolutionary War surgeon who served as a member of Congress, Secretary of War, & as Ambassador to Netherlands before becoming Governor of Massachusetts.  We talk with Tamsen George former Executive Director of the Shirley-Eustis House, and author of a new biography of William Eustis, Allegiance:  The Life and Times of William Eustis.

    S2:E16 Brad Johnson I A Lifetime Reading Rooms

    S2:E16 Brad Johnson I A Lifetime Reading Rooms

    In this episode, Brad Johnson turns over his hosting duties to guest host, James Beard nominated reporter for Eater Los Angeles, Mona Holmes, who turns the proverbial table on Brad Johnson to find out more about this career restaurateur and entrepreneur, along with his recent endeavor as podcast host of Corner Table Talk.

    His career started in the mid-seventies at his father, Howard's legendary NYC Upper West Side restaurant called The Cellar and spots like the Twenty Twenty restaurant and cabaret, where he partnered with superstar songwriter, producers, Valerie Simpson, and the late Nick Ashford. Johnson also opened the New Orleans style hotspot Memphis in New York, before moving to Los Angeles in the late eighties.

    Johnson made his Los Angeles debut opening the famed Roxbury in 1989 that had such an impact on club and nightlife culture, and was immortalized in the 1998 cult classic film starring Will Ferrell, A Night at the Roxbury. Following Roxbury, Brad opened Georgia in 1993 with a diverse group of partners including former Laker, Norm Nixon, Denzel Washington, Eddie Murphy, Lou Adler, Connie Stevens and model turned restaurateur, Alvin Clayton. In 2012, Brad opened Post & Beam  in a historic black neighborhood in South LA that has evolved into a LA Times Gold Award-winning (2020), James Beard-nominated national finalist for Restaurant of the Year (2022).

    During the pandemic, Brad launched a podcast after feeling the need to record diverse voices and their stories in an authentic way. The podcast, Corner Table Talk, is focused on Food + Drink + Culture and has featured an amazing range of guests including Ta-Nehisi Coates, Chef Marcus Samuelsson, Fab Five Freddy, and Regina King.

    Johnson’s writing has been published in various publications including Oxford American (Spring Food Issue 2021: Peasant Food)James Beard Foundation, and Eater LA.

    Having bussed tables, pulled out chairs for countless guests over the years, shaken many hands, struggled through slow nights, and co-hosted Oscar parties, learn about Brad and his journey into the restaurant business following in his father's footsteps, opening his first restaurant borrowing "street money" and his experience creating culturally significant and diverse restaurants.

    Photo Credit: Frank Louis Photography for Ambassador Digital Magazine

    Please follow @CornerTableTalk

    For more information on host Brad Johnson or to join our mailing list, please visit: https://postandbeamhospitality.com/

    For questions or comments, please e.mail: brad@postandbeamhospitality.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Episode 7: 1000 Year Grief

    Episode 7: 1000 Year Grief

    In this episode we listen to 1000 Year Grief from Kleo, a rapper and performing artist from Roxbury. Other topics discussed include: Ungrateful Youth, Adulthood vs. Adolescence, and Our Plans Moving Forward. 

    • We're Baaaaack (0:00)
    • What We've Been Up To (12:39)
    • Are The Youth Ungrateful? (31:28)
    • Adulthood vs. Adolescence (36:43)
    • Plans Moving Forward (52:09)
    • 1000 Year Grief (54:41)
      • EP Analysis (64:28)
    • Final Scores (76:31)

    Hometown Candidate: John Barros on coming home and playing the long game

    Hometown Candidate: John Barros on coming home and playing the long game

    Guest John Barros journeyed to college from the Roxbury neighborhood of Boston and tried to become the best version of himself by participating in numerous activities and leadership roles. He went into the business world at an insurance company right after graduation, thinking that law school could help him further hone his worldview and the best way to be of service. Service came looking for him, though, in the form of a call from home.

    The Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative, a community development organization for which John had volunteered since before school, was in need of an interim executive director and he was asked to apply. They asked him to stay and, in his thirteen years at the helm, organization built affordable housing and small business space, designed new schools to reengage the community around them, and ended up creating the largest urban land trust in America. When the city’s mayor decided not to run again, he heard another call: this time to run. Though that campaign did not lead to the position he sought, he was asked to be the city’s chief of economic development and now seeks the mayoral position once more.

    In this episode, find out from John how returning to what you know and being comfortable with playing the long game can set you up to make true impact, just when home seems ready for you…on ROADS TAKEN...with Leslie Jennings Rowley.

     

    About This Episode's Guest

    John Barros, a lifelong resident of Boston’s Roxbury and Dorchester neighborhoods, previously served as the Executive Director of the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative for more than a dozen years and the Chief of Economic Development for the city until recently when he made the announcement that he is running to be the next mayor of Boston in November 2021.

     

    EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

     

    Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

    Music: Brian Burrows

     

    Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

    Email the show at RoadsTakenShow@gmail.com

    Find more episodes at https://roadstakenshow.com

     

    Executive Producer/Host: Leslie Jennings Rowley

    Music: Brian Burrows

    Email the show at RoadsTakenShow@gmail.com

     

    Fall in Love with the Process with Chris Murch

    Fall in Love with the Process with Chris Murch
    Like, rate, and leave a review on Apple Podcasts! (https://apple.co/2Nq9und) Follow Unfit on Instagram (https://bit.ly/3hxTUnD). Happy Unfit Friday and happy Hanukkah to our Jewish listeners! This week we sat down with Chris Murch, a friend of ours pursuing music under the stage name Nigel Roxbury. Chris shares how he got into rap music and got over the fear of putting himself out there (17:10). This year was tough for all of us, and Chris explains how the pandemic and being quarantined pushed him mentally and creatively (28:17). You know you’re doing something you love if you can fall in love with the process instead of the results. Rap has been that process for Chris, and the work he’s put into his music has not only enriched his day-to-day life, but has also led to more fulfilling work opportunities (37:32). According to the Psychology of Wellbeing class Ali is taking (it’s a Yale class & you can enroll on Coursera: https://bit.ly/3qNfCZ8), studies show that having more time makes you happier than having more money (44:25). Our passions outside of work help us maintain and improve our mental health, so make sure you’re finding the time to do what makes you happy! Listen to Nigel Roxbury’s new song “Haha,” featured at the end of this episode on iTunes (https://apple.co/39Zudek) and Spotify (https://spoti.fi/373qAlt), then slide into his DMs to show him some love (https://bit.ly/343d4wn).

    "Reflections From a Token Black Friend" - A Perspective on Race in America From A Naval Academy Graduate

    "Reflections From a Token Black Friend" - A Perspective on Race in America From A Naval Academy Graduate

    Hosted by Lucy Bostwick. 

    Articles mentioned:

    Spotlight on Racism in Boston: https://apps.bostonglobe.com/spotlight/boston-racism-image-reality/series/image/

    The Case for Reparations: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/the-case-for-reparations/361631/  , https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcCnQ3iRkys

    Reflections from a Token Black Friend: https://humanparts.medium.com/reflections-from-a-token-black-friend-2f1ea522d42d

    METCO: https://metcoinc.org/ , https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2019/04/boston-metco-program-school-desegregation/584224/

     

    The HOPE Podcast is brought to you by NYC Nature, HOPE. A community with the mission of spreading hope by highlighting inspiring stories and spreading empathy for the struggles we all face. 

    You can watch this episode Joe Rogan style at nycnature.com/podcasts

    Visit our website nycnature.com

    Follow us on social media @nycnaturehope

    Do you know someone with an inspiring story or perspective? Let's Talk.

    nycnature.com/lets-talk

     

    Episode 4: Weekly Track Roundup

    Episode 4: Weekly Track Roundup

    In this episode we listen to a roundup of recent tracks from local artists such as Treva Holmes, Amber Ais, and KO6AIN. Other topics discussed include: The Grammys, Red Shaydez' mystery event, and a story about AJ finding a wallet. Time stamps: 

    Couch Classics#273-Gefaehrlich-Leben

    Couch Classics#273-Gefaehrlich-Leben

    Gefährlich Leben - Mayweather/McGregor Fight - Mentalist - Seal who killed Bin Laden - Wahlomat - Pirate Bay - Bio Kost - Schnickschnack - Hawaii 5.0 - Festplatten Verschmutzung UND: Superfood
    -----------------------------
    Alben: https://www.amazon.de/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?__mk_de_DE=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=thorsten+passek

    -------------------------------
    Navy Seal Clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zv9AUFpRGyc&list=PLVd0OI83NBHiTbUp-OXdrPsJwrx68is7t&index=24  

    Orig. VÖ 4.5.2017

    EP 354 - Boston Ballers #4 - Launching Entrepreneurs through Roxbury Innovation Center with Herb Lozano and Lanita Mccormick

    EP 354 - Boston Ballers #4 - Launching Entrepreneurs through Roxbury Innovation Center with Herb Lozano and Lanita Mccormick
    How much would you benefit from a coworking space that provided resources for your business AND gives you access to a 3D printer?

    The Roxbury Innovation Center (RIC) is a place where entrepreneurs can get the resources they need to be successful in their business. Herb Lozano and Lanita Mccormick share their meaning of success and why they are passionate about the mission at RIC.

    A few highlights from this interview include:
    - What is the Roxbury Innovation Center and what is their mission?
    - Lanita and Herb shares why they are passionate about working at the Roxbury Innovation Center.
    - Herb and Lanita share their tips on to find your own success.
    - What does success mean to Herb and Lanita?

    The Callie Crossley Show 6/8/12

    The Callie Crossley Show 6/8/12
    Week in Review
    Today we go over the local headlines. Election reform legislation and Roxbury's artistic approach to economic stimulus are among the stories we'll be discussing.Callie Crossley

    GUESTS:
    Howard Manly, executive editor of the Bay State Banner
    Marcela Garcia, journalist, media analyst

    Ragtime
    During our weekly roundup of pop culture news, we remember a literary giant and a king among game show hosts.

    GUESTS:
    Thomas Connolly, professor of English at Suffolk University
    Rachel Rubin, Chair of the Department of American Studies at UMass Boston
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