"Let's Do The Time Warp Againnnn….."

 

Lemee get this straight……..

Black Southern teens get railroaded by an all-white jury after a fight with whites over a Jim Crowed tree(!)? Nooses hanging from that same tree later? A century in jail without parole?

I watched it, and only the fact that it was live and in color made me tackle my sense of denial and pin it to the ground, because I knewhad to be watching some leftover “Eyes On The Prize” footage…..

Meanwhile, the National NAACP takes significant time, ink and electrons having a funeral for the “N” word. *SIGH* 😦

Nope, I Can't/Couldn't Wait! LOL! (Before And After Seeing "Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix")

JUST GOT BACK FROM THE MOVIE, and WOW!!!………

OFF. THE. CHAIN.

Which is kind of funny, because it’s an epic film in which “nothing” happens. “Phoenix” is essentially a war flick, with a little bit of the psychological thriller genre (complete with a couple of very subtle torture scenes!) thrown in. It’s really the beginning of a NEW, tragic HP trilogy. The cute stuff is gone with Cedric and none of it is ever coming back; from now on, leave the kids at home or put them in “Ratatouille” or whatever.   🙂  It’s the Beginning Of The End now, and the End is going to be very scary and bloody.

FROM JULY 10: I really can’t believe how important the Harry Potter film series has become to me over the years. And the reviews, of course, are overwhelmingly positive.

Only two more left………..*SIGH* 😦   It’ll be a hard wait until November 2008.

I haven’t read any of the books yet, but now I’m thinking of getting the last one.

What an amazing contribution to world fantasy! I look forward to other groups of people coming from their own cultural centers and making equal or better text and picture contributions.

The Newark Rebellion Turns 40……..

………….so please be on the lookout for “Revolution ’67” on your local PBS station this week.

Then, these books will help fill in the cultural and historical gaps. This series might also help.

Here’s the press release for “Rebellion ’67”:

For Immediate Release

P.O.V. Communications: 212-989-7425

Cynthia López, clopez@pov.org; Cathy Fisher, cfisher@pov.org;

Neyda Martinez, neyda@pov.org

P.O.V. online pressroom: http://www.pbs.org/pov/pressroom

P.O.V.’s “Revolution ’67” Is Riveting Account of ‘Black Urban Rebellion’ In Newark, N.J., Airing Tuesday, July 10 on PBS

Activists Amiri Baraka, Tom Hayden, George Richardson and Carol Glassman, Former Governor Brendan T. Byrne, Former Mayor Sharpe James, Journalist Bob Herbert Recall Pivotal 1967 Uprising on 40th Anniversary

A Co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS) and American Documentary | P.O.V. in association with WSKG.

“‘Revolution ’67’ accurately and effectively captures the mood, the pain, the loss, the ambiguity, the fear and the continuing impact of the violent unrest of the summer of 1967.” – Lonnie G. Bunch, founding director, Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture

The 1960s were in full heat. The Vietnam War, campus unrest, political assas-sinations and a defiant counter-culture were remaking the country. For African Americans, nonviolent protest was giving way to “black power” as the traditional Civil Rights Movement was seen as failing the aspirations of poor blacks in decaying urban centers.

There had been deadly “race riots” in Jersey City (1964), Harlem (1964) and Watts (1965). So when black Newark, N.J., taxi driver John Smith was stopped for a traffic violation on July 12, 1967, the rumor that he had been not only beaten, but had died, spread like a force of nature through Newark’s impoverished black neighborhoods.

As meticulously reconstructed in Revolution ’67, a new documentary on public television’s P.O.V. series, the response of Newark’s black citizens to Smith’s beating and purported death was a long time in the making. And the heavy-handed response of the police and city leaders — also long in the making — turned a spontaneous protest against police actions into a full-scale revolt. After six days, 26 people lay dead, 725 people were injured, and close to 1,500 people had been arrested.

Revolution ’67 marshals chilling archival footage and the vivid memories of a remarkable number of key players on the scene — citizens, community activists, police, National Guardsmen and the state’s future governor — to render an insider’s account of racial and economic division in an American city.

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of the Newark rebellion, Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno’s Revolution ’67 has its national broadcast premiere on Tuesday, July 10, 2007 at 10 p.m. on PBS, as part of the 20th anniversary season of public television’s groundbreaking P.O.V. series. (Check local listings.)

American television’s longest-running independent documentary series, P.O.V. is public television’s premier showcase for point-of-view, nonfiction films.

To tell its tale, Revolution ’67 makes use of archival news footage from an era when portable cameras and television were making such footage more plentiful and more candid, punctuated by filmmaker Jerome Bongiorno’s bold animation to illustrate the film’s events and statistics. A musical score comprised of more than 60 jazz pieces by international artists sets the mood for Newark in the late ’60s. Most dramatically, Revolution ’67 offers an unprecedented array of eyewitness accounts of an emblematic American tragedy. The passion over events that summer in Newark remains strong among those who were on the scene.

Activist George Richardson recounts the challenges faced by black community activists in Newark prior to the riots. Controversial poet and Newark native Amiri Baraka (then known as LeRoi Jones) recalls the temper of the community and recounts being arrested for no more reason than venturing outside. Journalist Bob Herbert, now of The New York Times, remembers the shooting death of his friend Billy Furr on July 15 — for taking beer from an already-looted store to give to thirsty newsmen.

Other witnesses include then-Essex County Prosecutor Brendan T. Byrne, who later became New Jersey governor; then-UCC Area Board President Sharpe James, later Newark’s mayor; then-National Guardsman Paul Zigo; photographer Bud Lee; activists Carol Glassman and Richard Cammarieri; then-Police Officer Armando B. Fontoura, later Essex County Sheriff; journalist Ronald Smothers; and Harold Lucas, former head of the Newark Housing Authority. Historical commentary is provided by preeminent historians Kenneth T. Jackson, Clement A. Price, Nell Irvin Painter and Charles F. Cummings. Well-known ’60s activist Tom Hayden and other community organizers living in Newark were some people’s candidates for “outside agitators” behind the disturbances, but the activists were experiencing quite a different reality. In Newark in 1967, Hayden says he realized that the day of the white Civil Rights worker was over. In fact powerless to influence the black community, Hayden gave a frustrated Governor Richard Hughes the key to ending the tumult — remove the troops. When the governor did so, the disorder subsided. Historians agree that, contrary to news reports of the day, the reaction by city, state and national forces caused most, if not all, of the deaths.

The Newark riots were among the deadliest racial disturbances per capita, in recent U.S. history. The outbreak, as told by Revolution ’67, offers a “textbook” case of how endemic conditions — poverty, racial injustice, police reaction and a corrupt power structure alienated the neediest citizens and fed a cycle of resistance and destruction in poor black neighborhoods. The film is also a disturbing demonstration of how neither facts nor cool heads can stand in the way of explosive social forces once they have been set in motion.

The Newark rebellion, as many observers prefer to call it, could be seen as both predictable and predicted — despite what had happened to Smith. In fact, the taxi driver, alleged to have sideswiped a double-parked police car, had been beaten by white police and taken to the Fourth Precinct, across the street from a large public-housing project. An angry crowd gathered, believing Smith was still being abused. But Smith, accompanied by black community leaders, had left via a side door for the hospital, even as word spread out front that he had died. Community leaders could not persuade the angry crowd that Smith was alive. Nor could the crowd be stopped from assaulting the police with empty bottles and at least one Molotov cocktail — provoking an “overwhelming” response from the police.

Soon unverified alarms over black “snipers” had first police, then state troopers and National Guard troops firing into the upper stories of tenements at any real or imagined activity on rooftops. It was this type of indiscriminate gunfire that accounted for many, if not all, of the riot’s most tragic fatalities — people sitting in their own homes.

Revolution ’67 makes use of news footage, juxtaposed with the recollections of those who still argue for the existence of snipers, to discredit those arguments. Later investigation found that out of some 13,000 rounds of ammunition fired, only 100 of them were even alleged to have come from rioters rather than law enforcement, and not one of those cases was proved. Of all those arrested, not one was charged with being a sniper.

Revolution ’67 documents the social forces at work — a city government and police force that didn’t sufficiently analyze the demographic change that had made Newark a black city, and the fears of suburban and rural State Police and National Guardsmen sent into an urban civil war for which they were ill-prepared. Revolution ’67 also captures the anger and desperation of a community bitterly disappointed in continued police actions and economic injustice after years of civil rights progress.

Revolution ’67 is an illuminating account of important events too often relegated to footnotes in U.S. history and not explored in-depth in school textbooks — the black urban rebellions of the 1960s.  The days of the Newark rebellion formed a fateful milestone in America’s continuing struggles over race, economic justice and corruption, and recall lessons as hard-earned then as they are dangerous to forget
today. 

“I’m a native daughter and resident of Newark,” says director Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno, “and for as long as I can remember, Newark has been stigmatized by the riots of 1967. The questions remain: What really happened, who’s to blame, and why hasn’t the city recovered? Are the problems Newark faced in the ’60s the same that plague it today?  That’s why my husband and I made this film — to get those answers.”
 

Musical Soundtrack

In place of a traditional musical score, Revolution ’67 features more than 60 contemporary jazz tunes by 20 artists from the United States, Japan, Israel and the former Soviet Union.

Jerome Bongiorno, the film’s editor, says, “Because of Newark’s preeminent place in jazz history, one of the first decisions we made when we began editing was to use jazz music.” With recommendations from industry professionals and New York’s famed Blue Note jazz club and Berklee College of Music, Bongiorno collected material from an impressive group of talented musicians he describes as “fearless in their craft.”  “In many parts of the film, the compositions dictated the pacing of the edit,” he explains. “If I was stuck for an idea, I turned to the music as a source of inspiration.” The filmmakers anticipate Newark reclaiming its rightful spot as a jazz capital.

Revolution ’67 is a co-production of the Independent Television Service (ITVS) and American Documentary | P.O.V. in association with WSKG.
About the filmmakers:

Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno, Producer/Director, Jerome Bongiorno,
Cinematographer/Editor/Animator

Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno and Jerome Bongiorno are award-winning husband-and-wife filmmakers who formed their own production company, Bongiorno Productions, in Newark, N.J. Marylou is a producer and director; Jerome is a cinematographer, editor and animator. Marylou is a graduate of New York University’s Graduate Film Program, where she received the $75,000 Richard Vague Film Production Fund award for the feature film “Little Kings,” based on her multi-award winning short.

The Bongiornos’ documentary “Mother-Tongue: Italian American Sons & Mothers,” featuring Martin Scorsese, earned an Emmy nomination and screened at the 2006 Venice Film Festival. Their global warming-themed screenplay, “Watermark,” was featured at Sundance’s Investing in Media That Matters, the Tribeca Film Festival/Sloan Summit, and was the centerpiece of a Johnson Foundation Wingspread Conference on Global Warming and Film in 2005.

Marylou and Jerome are in preproduction for the fictional version of Revolution ’67, executive produced by Spike Lee. They are currently completing a series of short films on post-Katrina New Orleans and flood-plagued Venice, Italy, screening on PBS’ Natural Heroes series and at film festivals. The Bongiornos are the recipients of a Film Fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. They are long-time residents of Newark, N.J., where Marylou has lived all her life.

Credits:

Producer/director:                    Marylou Tibaldo-Bongiorno

Cinematographer/editor/animator: Jerome Bongiorno

Executive Producer for P.O.V.:        Cara Mertes

Executive Producer for ITVS:         Sally Jo Fifer

Executive Producer for WSKG        Brian Frey

Running Time:                               86:46

Awards & Festivals: Newark Black Film Festival, 2006; screened as a
work-in-progress – Paul Robeson Award, Best Documentary FilmFlorida
Film Festival, 2006; screened as a work-in-progressWorld Premiere,
2007 Full Frame Documentary Film FestivalSarasota Film Festival,
2007Atlanta Film Festival, 2007

ITVS funds and presents award-winning documentaries and dramas on public television, innovative new media projects on the Web, and the PBS series Independent Lens. ITVS was established by a historic mandate of Congress to champion independently produced programs that take creative risks, spark public dialogue and serve underserved audiences. Since its inception in 1991, ITVS programs have revitalized the relationship between the public and public television. ITVS is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American people. For more information, please visit http://www.itvs.org.

Produced by American Documentary, Inc. and celebrating its 20th season on PBS in 2007, the award-winning P.O.V. series is the longest-running showcase on television to feature the work of America’s best contemporary-issue independent filmmakers. Airing Tuesdays at 10 p.m., June through September, with primetime specials during the year, P.O.V. has brought more than 250 documentaries to millions nationwide, and has a Webby Award-winning online series, P.O.V.’s Borders. Since 1988, P.O.V. has pioneered the art of presentation and outreach using independent nonfiction media to build new communities in conversation about today’s most pressing social issues. More information is available at http://www.pbs.org/pov.

P.O.V. Interactive (http://www.pbs.org/pov)

P.O.V.’s award-winning Web department produces special features for every P.O.V. presentation, extending the life of P.O.V. films through filmmaker interviews, story updates, podcasts, streaming video, and community-based and educational content that involves viewers in activities and feedback. P.O.V. Interactive produces our Web-only showcase for interactive storytelling, P.O.V.’s Borders. In addition, http://www.pbs.org/pov houses Talking Back, where viewers can comment on P.O.V. programs, engage in dialogue and link to further resources.

P.O.V. Community Engagement and Education

P.O.V. provides Discussion Guides for all films as well as curriculum-based P.O.V. Lesson Plans for select films to promote the use of independent media among varied constituencies. Available free online, these original materials ensure the ongoing use of P.O.V.’s documentaries with educators, community workers, opinion leaders and general audiences. P.O.V. works closely with local PBS stations to partner with museums, libraries, schools and community-based organizations to raise awareness of the issues in P.O.V.’s films. P.O.V.’s Youth Views expands these efforts by working with youth-service organizations.

Major funding for P.O.V. is provided by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Ford Foundation, the Educational Foundation of America, PBS and public television viewers. Funding for P.O.V.’s Diverse Voices Project is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. P.O.V. is presented by a consortium of public television stations, including KCET Los Angeles, WGBH Boston, and Thirteen/WNET New York.

TAPE REQUESTS: Please note that a broadcast version of this film is available upon request, as the film may be edited to comply with new FCC regulations.

Good Show, Tavis!

At Howard University for last night's Democratic debate are, from left, Hillary Clinton, Joseph Biden, Bill Richardson, John Edwards, Barack Obama, Dennis Kucinich, Mike Gravel and Christopher Dodd.

I was pleasantly surprised to see that Tavis kept his “product” consistent. Compared to C-SPAN, CNN, et. al., last night’s forum seemed like it occurred in an alternate Black (albeit “mainstream”) universe.

The questioners showed why journalism experience still matters. I learned a lot about the condition of Black and Brown people in America from those questions. And I loved Cornel West’s quip about the journos in today’s “Journal-isms.” 🙂

The format left a lot to be desired, but it worked for those who knew how to make it work.

I get annoyed with Tavis sometimes, but not today. Lead on, homie, and let’s see what happens at Morgan this fall.

JULY 1 UPDATE: Tavis did well on “Meet The Press” today.  Being invited to be on that political roundtable is proof that the nation’s elite has now officially recognized you.

JULY 5 UPDATE: This criticism of the event is well-thought out and needs to be read and debated. It echoes many of my own problems with Tavis’ events. I think the difference is I’ve accepted what Tavis’ self-defined role as an agent of “Black hegemony.” Until Black leaders decide to put some real money behind the creation of a Black mass media structure, there we are, then. The folks I saw in the Howard crowd—a large number of them nationally known African-American notables, leaders, etc.—were happy with Tavis’ show. And I have learned the hard way not to be angrier than my people, particularly my “leaders.”

re: Tonight's Dems Presidential Candidate Forum: Enjoyed That Tavis Said On "Democracy Now!" This Morning…….

 

………………that there has been more diversity in the Presidential candidate pool than in the pool of panel journos. 🙂 Until tonight. The panel of journalists is comprised of two African-Americans and a Latino.

Let’s see how tonight’s forum goes.

An Anniversary Worth Noting

It’s been 21 years since this song and this artist took over my mind, body and soul.

I remember telling people at the time that my goal was to bear HER child! LOL!

What made me think about her today? I was joking with a friend of mine about Spike Lee’s cameo in this video:

While watching it, I see today how well Spike blended social and cultural history, parody and even time travel.

Wow. The Power of Black Art. Food for thought.

Congrats To American Journalism Review!

I’m biased, but AJRthe winner of an Mirror Award for Overall Excellence from Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications—can be a very good magazine when it wants to be. It’s a solid resource for its targeted audience—the small group of white men (and some white women) who guide American mainstream journalism. It’s important to point out, however, that the percentage of white females who write for it, and/or help manage it, has traditionally been VERY strong.

"Right To Return": Tavis Gives A Week Of Tee Vee Time To Katrina

 

Congrats to Tavis Smiley and Jonathan Demme for doing the right thing. Necessary viewing this week.

KQED/Channel 9
CHANNEL 9 -San Francisco, San Jose (Bay Area) 1:00 am PBS
May 10, 2007
CONTACT: Joel Brokaw (310) 273-2060, Laurel Lambert (323) 953-5246

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

“TAVIS SMILEY” ON PBS DEVOTES ONE WEEK OF PROGRAMMING TO JONATHAN DEMME’S STIRRING DOCUMENTARY FOOTAGE ON POST-KATRINA NEW ORLEANS, AIRING NATIONWIDE ON PBS

Academy Award-winning director Jonathan Demme is joining forces with PBS’s Tavis Smiley to present a unique week-long series on post-Katrina New Orleans called “Right to Return: New Home Movies from the Lower 9th Ward.”

The series consists of “portrait” documentaries filmed in New Orleans over the course of 2006, leading into January of this year. The five short films chart the efforts of a disparate group of New Orleanians who braved unimaginable adversity after the floods of 2005 in an attempt to reclaim their homes, their neighborhoods – primarily in the Lower 9th Ward – and their shattered lives and livelihoods. The residents presented in the unfolding seasonal format include teachers, ministers, a retired chef, volunteer workers, the owner of the legendary “Mother-In-Law Lounge,” librarians, and workers from all walks of life.

“Right to Return” will air nightly for a week, beginning Monday, May 28th on the “Tavis Smiley” late-night PBS program – seen on over 200 PBS affiliates nationwide.

“This American story of lives lost, souls shattered and uncommon courage must be told, even though the waters have subsided,” stated Tavis Smiley. “I’m pleased and honored to have the opportunity alongside an iconic director and producer like Jonathan Demme to tell that story.”

“This is an extremely personal project for me,” stated Jonathan Demme. “We started filming four months after the floods. I felt drawn, as an American filmmaker, to contribute somehow to the audio-visual record of what these people were going through in their heroic efforts to jump start their lives in the face of this epic, tragic event. I wanted to be a part of getting these stories out, and I am so thrilled and proud to be doing so with Tavis Smiley.”

Demme added, “It’s really wonderful that Tavis Smiley is providing a window into the lives of these amazing people – the spirituality, courage, imagination, tenacity, and humor that fuels their commitment to restore their homes is truly inspiring and moving to me.”

Each night, Demme will join Smiley on location to set up the portraits and introduce the people featured in each episode. The main individuals profiled will have the opportunity at the end of each program to give an update on how their lives have changed since the floods that devastated their homes in the fall of 2005.

Norman Lear, who is a major sponsor of the Demme films, said of the PBS broadcast of “Tavis Smiley,” “The New Orleanians presented on the shows represent the best we as human beings are capable of.”

The segments feature original music scores by Barry Eastmond, Donald Harrison Jr., James McBride and Steve Elson. Additional music is provided by Algerian violinist Djamel Ben Yelles, Ernie K-Doe, and others.

Jonathan Demme won an Oscar as best director in the 1991 film “Silence of the Lambs,” and a Gotham award for his documentary “The Agronomist” in 2005. He has previously made several documentaries on Haiti as well as portrait films on Nelson Mandela and Robert Castle.

The full-length film version of “Right to Return,” produced by Demme with Daniel Wolff and Abdul Franklin, is expected to be released theatrically later this year.

“Tavis Smiley” on PBS is produced by the The Smiley Group Inc./TS Media Inc. in association with KCET/Hollywood. Underwriting for “Tavis Smiley” on PBS is provided by Toyota, Wal-Mart and PBS. Additional funding for “Right to Return” is provided by the Lear Family Foundation. For more information, visit http://www.pbs.org/tavissmiley .
http://www.tavistalks.com .

Directed by Jonathan Demme
Produced by Jonathan Demme, Daniel Wolff, and Abdul Franklin
Executive Producers
Neda Armian and Lisa Hepner
Tavis Smiley and Neal Kendall (for “Tavis Smiley” on PBS)
Original music by Barry Eastmond, Donald Harrison Jr., Steve Elson and James McBride
Additional music by Djamel Ben Yelles, Ernie K-Doe, Christian Scott, and The Young Guardians of the Flame
A Clinica Estetico Production

So Here's What We Know (I Think) About "Smallville"'s Next Season……..

1) Lana’s not dead. She pulled a David Copperfield, and got into that vehicle that was passing by her car.

(Aside: Folks on the Web LOVE to hate Lana. But she’s too beautiful to hate. 🙂 )

2) Chloe will either be dead, alive or dead-but-a-permanent-part-of-Lois. And wouldn’t the third be crazy??? From the very beginning, some rabid “Smallville” fans have been theorizing that somehow Chloe would morph into Lois. Erica Durance joining the show killed that idea……until now. Hmmm……..  🙂 I love Chloe, but her essence transfer would be a “solution” to the problem of her on this show—taking up Lois’ historic space. And it would give this Lois a boost in the attributes and characteristics she needs to be a proper part of the Superman mythos.

3) Lionel’s not dead. Just knocked out.

4) Clark will find a way to kick Bizarro‘s ass, and he won’t put on a costume to do it.

 5) This was a strong ending to a weak season.

May 18th UPDATE: Understand that Chloe’s alive and will be on next season.

Says Al Gough, “Smallville”‘s executive producer, in this interview (which I didn’t read carefully enough yesterday): 

The idea that Chloe had a power was always something in the back of our minds, but we didn’t want it to be a cheap trick, we wanted the audience to be invested in the character and her relationship with Clark, and if we were going to do it, it was to deepen the character, which we think it does, and will allow us to keep exploring Chloe in season 7. You’ll see her power first manifest in the season finale.

 

Okay, there goes the theory. For now. 🙂

P.S. I guess it means NOBODY died after all. Oh, well, I would cry “gyp,” but it was an entertaining hour, so…….

A Few Words From Studs Terkel

Enjoyed Studs Terkel being interviewed today on “Democracy Now!” I’ve wanted to be the next coming of Studs for at least 15 years now. Happy 95th Birthday, Studs!

Wanted to post some excerpts I particularly enjoyed. So here they are.

I’m known as a poet of the tape recorder, right? The fact is I have no idea how the hell it works. I’m terrible, I’m a nut, mechanically. I can’t drive a car. I can’t ride a bike. I don’t know what “internet” means, or “website.” Google is an old-time comic strip — “Barney Google” — with his goo-goo-googly eyes.

 

And so, you see, I’m not up on all the current stuff. And people say, “Boy, on that tape recorder, you capture those people.” No, they capture themselves, because I am inept. That comes out quite clearly.

Sometimes I turn the wrong button down. And that person in the housing project, she sees it doesn’t work, and she reminds me of it. And as I say, “Oh, I goofed,” at that moment, she is my equal or better than my equal. In other words, I am not, whoever it is, [inaudible], “Today” or “60 Minutes” or Kathy, whoever she is. It’s me, a guy who’s in trouble, and she helps me out. And so, I’m playing this tape recorder for this woman, very poor, very pretty. I don’t know whether she’s white or black. In those days, the early public housing projects were all mixed. And these little kids running around want to hear their mama’s voice on this new machine. And so, I’m playing it back, and she’s hearing her voice for the first time in her life, and suddenly she says, “Oh, my god!” And I say, “What is it?” She said, “I never thought I felt that way before.” Well, that’s an astonishing moment for her and for me, one you might say are fellow travelers together. So that’s the exciting stuff. She discovers that she does have a voice, that she counts.

The key word, by the way, in all of these people is they must feel they “count.” Nick von Hoffman, the columnist, used to work for the organizer Saul Alinsky, and he said once people get in a group and that group thinks as they do, he feels he counts or she counts more than alone. And so, that’s what it’s about.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you want them to think of when someone says “Studs Terkel”?

STUDS TERKEL: I want them to think of somebody who remembers them, to be remembered, whether it be me or anyone else. They want Studs Terkel, maybe as somebody — I’m romanticizing myself now — somebody who gave me hope. One of my books is Hope Dies Last. Without hope, forget it. It’s hope and thought, and that can counting. That’s what it’s about. That’s what I hope I’m about.