"I Write What I Like"

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 Full Disclosure: I’m a campaign volunteer.

P.O. Box 7423
Silver Spring, MD 20907

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For Further Information, Contact:

Todd Steven Burroughs
301-405-6653
toddpanther@hotmail.com


GREEN PARTY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE LAUNCHES BLACK PRESS COLUMN
 

Op-Ed Essays Will Target Issues Of Concern To Black And Brown People

WASHINGTON—Jared Ball, a candidate for the Presidential nomination of the Green Party, announced this week he was launching a column in the nation’s Black newspapers.

The column is called “I Write What I Like.” The title is a tribute to slain South African Black activist Stephen Biko, who had his essay collection published in book form under that title. Biko was killed by white South African authorities 30 years ago this September.

“The column is not only my continuing tribute to Stephen Biko, but to all Black and Brown progressive and revolutionary journalistic writings,” explained Ball, a Washington, D.C.-based independent journalist and radio host. “I’m glad to join the historic tradition of Black press columnists that extend from Samuel E. Cornish and John Brown Russwurm, the publishers of Freedom’s Journal, the first Black newspaper, all the way to Drs. Manning Marable, Ron Walters and Ron Daniels today.”

“I Write What I Like” will be distributed periodically from the “Jared Ball For President” campaign. The campaign’s website is http://www.voxunion.com/jaredball/ .

About Dr. Jared Ball

Dr. Jared Ball is a candidate for the Green Party’s Presidential nomination. He is an assistant professor of Communication Studies at Morgan State University. He is also an independent journalist. He is the producer and host of “Jazz & Justice” on WPFW 89.3 FM, the Pacifica Network radio station in Washington, D.C., and the founder and creator of “FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show,” a rap music mixtape committed to the practice of underground emancipatory journalism. He and his work can be found online at voxunion.com.

About The Green Party

The Green Party of the United States is a federation of state Green Parties.  Committed to environmentalism, non-violence, social justice and grassroots organizing, Greens are renewing democracy without the support of corporate donors.  Greens provide real solutions for real problems.  Whether the issue is universal health care, corporate globalization, alternative energy, election reform or decent, living wages for workers, Greens have the courage and independence necessary to take on the powerful corporate interests.

My Friend Lydia And Stevie Wonder

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After about a week, my friend Lydia has FINALLY stopped thanking me for helping her start her freelance career by helping her see Stevie Wonder in concert.  🙂

Here’s her review.

Witnessing The Wonder of a Legend

By Lydia Nylander

An endless assortment of lawn chairs, the lilting sound of steel bands and anxious anticipation seemed a fitting prelude to the long-awaited performance of musical icon Stevie Wonder. An all-capacity crowd braved the chill of a late-summer Sunday night Sept. 16 at Baltimore’s Pier Six Pavilion for a glimpse of the peoples’ music master. The 5,000 strong crowd—a cornucopia of families, couples and friends spanning the generations—was unable to contain their excitement as a near minute-long standing ovation ushered Wonder’s arrival to the small, intimate stage.

Resplendent in a baby-blue suit and trademark hair adornments, and his breathtaking daughter and background vocalist Aisha Morris at his side, Wonder explained why he is touring for the first time in more than a decade. His mother died last year, and he shared his longing for her peach cobbler. It was her voice, he said, that aroused the 57-year-old from his self-appointed exile, her voice that made him want to share his own with the world again.

So he did, with typically spectacular results. Opening with the apt “Love’s In Need Of Love Today,” Wonder commanded a two-and-a-half-hour show with the poise and panache of the seasoned music veteran he is. The lack of pyrotechnics or trap-door antics left a rare chance to experience the unadulterated bliss of feel-good music delivered with a passion and tenacity rarely seen among contemporary performers. With a nod to his early body of work, the consummate showman teased the electric crowd with his signature harmonica solo during “Too High” and—with a nod to the now-infamous Amy Winehouse “Rehab” hit—used the politically conscious “Visions” as a timely anti-war rallying cry. An extended version of the 1980s classic “Ribbon In The Sky” was made all the richer with some lighthearted sexually nuanced crowd participation. A flawless acappella of “If It’s Magic” simply was just that, making time and space yield. Then a Country-Western call and response during a remix of “Signed, Sealed and Delivered,” left the crowd in disbelief that they were in this moment, singing with Mr. Wonder.

His unequalled ability to connect with his audience was on full display. He blended emotive ballad duets with Aisha (“Isn’t She Lovely” and “How Will I Know?”) with a Go-Go-like percussion battle executed by his flawless live band for crowd favorite “Superstition.” A six-song medley crammed many of the classics of Wonder’s prolific body of musical magic. Ever the dynamic showman, Wonder mounted his piano, assisted by his vocalists, during a thrilling rendition of the 1980s classic “Do I Do” before closing with “As.”

Wonder’s performance—the nakedness of his feelings, both spoken and sung, about life, love, respect and harmony—reflected his expert power to entrance, leaving those present spellbound and thankful that his voice had returned to the Universe without needing his myth to strengthen it. The crowd were glad that their—and his—wait had ended, a sought-after musical and spiritual nourishment reaching all.