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“When we start to step back to see this larger ecology, I think we see a picture of exclusion,” said Smith. “And it doesn’t match the norms of the population of the United States.”
Dungey is the first black person to lead a major broadcast network. […] “Channing is a gifted leader and a proven magnet for top creative talent, with an impressive record of developing compelling, breakthrough programming that resonates with viewers,” Disney-ABC Television Group chairman Ben Sherwood said in a statement.
“If a channel like All Nations Network succeeds, it would be a way for American Indians to do something as simple but crucial as making their own stories rather than waiting for mainstream TV to catch up.”
When organizations connect people through passion there’s no limit to what they can do. Simply throwing a party with hopes to snag a few board members down the road is not a long-term solution for staying relevant.
Plus, it wouldn’t be an authentic stint in Brooklyn if you didn’t have a bohemian neighbor. Even better if you get to share a kitchen with one! It’s just like living in a warehouse loft, except someone else cleans for you.
For many Millennials of color, these sorts of trade-offs aren’t an anomaly. […] Their financial future is a rocky one, and much of it comes down to how much — or how little — assistance they receive.
“But for the Met, which is the country’s largest and most influential opera company, their unrivaled popularity can present a challenge: How can it expand its repertoire while being dependent on the top tier’s popularity?”
“It is difficult for people to maintain a healthy sense of self when they are consistently told their labour and skills are worth, quite literally, nothing.”
Documentary filmmakers like Gordon, who could not do their jobs without breaking digital locks to access copyrighted works and legally incorporate them into their films, have to devote valuable time and resources to filing for this exemption every three years — and make their case from scratch each time.
“[This] so-called ‘Fish Ball Revolution” really isn’t about fishballs at all,” Jason Y. Ng, a Hong-Kong based activist, writes in the Hong Kong Free Press. “[It] is about citizens fed up with the daily abuse by an unelected and unaccountable government led by an unelected and unaccountable chief executive.”