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In 1992 Bill Duke teamed up with Laurence Fishburne and Jeff Goldblum to create one of the best film noirs ever made and a masterpiece of Black cinema. Walter Greason and Tim Fielder join in to talk about it, the rise of hip hop, and the early 90s. About our guests:A native of Mississippi, Tim Fielder is an illustrator, cartoonist, animator and OG Afrofuturist. He is the founder of Dieselfunk Studios, an intermedia storytelling company, and is an educator for institutions such as the New York Film Academy and Howard University. Tim has served clients such as Marvel, Tri-Star Pictures, Ubisoft Entertainment, and the Village Voice, and is known for his TEDx Talk on Afrofuturism. He won the prestigious 2018 Glyph Award, and his work has been showcased in the Hammonds House Museum, Exit Art and NYU Gallatin Gallery. He attended Jackson State University, School of Visual Arts, and New York University. He lives in New York City.Walter Greason teaches American and world history, using media ecology, economics, and African diaspora studies. His areas of research include urban planning, Afrofuturism, and multimedia user experience design. He is an author, editor, and contributor to more than twenty books, mostly notably the award-winning books Suburban Erasure and The Black Reparations Project. His work on the Timothy Thomas Fortune Cultural Center has garnered international acclaim for the innovative use of digital technology, leading to multiple urban revitalization projects in Minnesota, Florida, New Jersey, and Louisiana. He has written for or appeared as the feature guest on media outlets ranging from the Washington Post, USA Today, the Canadian Broadcast Channel, the Philadelphia Daily News, the Huffington Post, National Public Radio, Historians at the Movies, the New York Times Read Along, WURD Philadelphia, and Today with Dr. Kaye (WEEA, Baltimore). He was a Future Faculty Fellow at Temple University where he completed his Ph.D. in History and a Presidential Scholar at Villanova University where he studied History, English, Philosophy, Peace and Justice Studies, and Africana Studies. His most recent project, The Graphic History of Hip Hop, with Afrofuturist illustrator Tim Fielder, has been featured at the United Nations, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum for African American History and Culture, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Schomburg Center in the New York Public Library system, and San Diego Comic-Con in 2024.
Some of the greatest players ever were kept out of Major League Baseball for nearly 70 years - due to the collusion of the racist team owners. We visit with Bill Greason, 100, the oldest surviving Negro Leagues player, and baseball historian Larry Lester, to make the case for long-overdue reparations by MLB. We crunch some numbers and calculate the tab to right this historic wrong. It's time to play ball!SHOW NOTESGuests: Bill Greason and Larry Lester Bill Greason, 100, is one of two surviving players from the Negro Leagues. He was a star pitcher for the Birmingham Black Barons and mentor to the great Willie Mays, before becoming the first Black pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals in 1954. He was also one of the first Black U.S. Marines. Rev. Greason has served as a pastor at a Birmingham, AL church for over 50 years.Larry Lester is the leading Negro Leagues historian. His epic research spanned over 40 years and filled 25 file cabinets in his home. Lester played a pivotal role in the integration of Negro Leagues statistics into the Major League Baseball records in 2024. He also co-founded the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, MO.More on Bill Greason:Bill Greason's biographyBill Greason Takes Another Trip Around the Bases at 100 by Joseph KingMore on Larry Lester:Larry's websiteLarry's all-time greatest baseball player: "Bullet" Joe RoganWith Deliberate Speed by Larry Lester (article about 1950s baseball integration)More on baseball integration and reparations:Wendell Smith's Vision Helped Clear Jackie Robinson's Path to Majors by Isabelle MinasianThe Rippling Manifesto by Ernest DiStefanoView From Third Base (Willie Mays 1960 All-Star Game) by Gary RhoadesVisit: Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (Kansas City, MO)HIGHLIGHTS OF EPISODE:[13:45] Bill Greason describes his navigating the Ku Klux Klan in Birmingham[17:02] Greason compares the quality of play in Black and white baseball[18:21] Greason on his mentoring the great Willie Mays[19:57] Greason speaks on the prospect of reparations to Negro Leagues players[24:22] Larry Lester on the role of the Black press in integrating baseball[25:38] Lester on his role in helping to integrate the baseball record books[30:34] Lester compares the quality of play in Black and white baseball[35:10] Lester on Negro Leagues innovations[43:38] Adam calculates the $800 million owed by MLB to Negro Leaguers Contact Tony & AdamSubscribe
Last Friday, the nation's youngest HBCU president was formally installed – and it happened right here in Louisiana. That's right, Dr. Martin Lemelle, Jr. became the president of Grambling State University. Dr. Lemelle previously served as executive vice president and CFO at the Maryland Institute of Art, Executive Vice President and COO at Grambling, and holds multiple degrees that demonstrate his commitment to innovation and leadership. He joined us to discuss his journey to this historic appointment.The City of New Orleans recently released its findings from the 2024 Music Census. The goal of the study was to gain insight into the city's music ecosystem to bring about meaningful change that will support the city's music economy. Julie Heath, the policy & outreach manager with the New Orleans Office of Nighttime Economy, breaks down the study and its findings. Back in June,we brought you our four-part series, Road to Rickwood, that looked at the intersection of baseball and civil rights at America's oldest ballpark, Rickwood Field in Birmingham, Alabama. One of the main guests on the podcast was former Negro Leaguer Reverend Bill Greason. And while he is best remembered as a teammate of Willie Mays on the Birmingham Black Barons – and being the first Black pitcher signed to the Cardinals – that's only a small part of his story. Greason recently celebrated his 100th birthday at a party at Rickwood Field. The Gulf States Newsroom's Joseph King brings us this report.___Today's episode of Louisiana Considered was hosted by Karen Henderson. Our managing producer is Alana Schrieber. Matt Bloom and Aubry Procell are assistant producers. Our engineer is Garrett Pittman.You can listen to Louisiana Considered Monday through Friday at noon and 7 p.m. It's available on Spotify, Google Play and wherever you get your podcasts. Louisiana Considered wants to hear from you! Please fill out our pitch line to let us know what kinds of story ideas you have for our show. And while you're at it, fill out our listener survey! We want to keep bringing you the kinds of conversations you'd like to listen to.Louisiana Considered is made possible with support from our listeners. Thank you!
What if the key to reshaping our future isn't paved with algorithms, but with the power of human imagination and rediscovering our humanity? For our 61st episode, Creativity Squared has partnered with the Twin Cities Innovation Alliance (TCIA) for a special three-part data justice series. The intention of these conversations is to invite the audience to reimagine our relationship with the future. TCIA is a coalition of cross sector stakeholders building and developing problem-solving ecosystems in collaboration with communities. These interviews feature the distinguished speakers from TCIA's 2024 conference Data 4 Public Good (D4PG). D4PG taps into the collective power of community-based changemaking through technology, democracy, and justice. The timely and important themes from these interviews include co-powering, digital justice, data privacy, A.I. in education, Afrofuturism, and the power of narrative for social change. Today's episode guests include: ⭐️ Dr. Walter Greason - Professor & Distinguished Chair of History, Macalester College ⭐️ Liz Sullivan-Yuknis - Co-Executive Director at Partners for Dignity & Rights ⭐️ Ruth Idakula - Program Director, Dignity in Schools ⭐️ Dr. Tanya Clark - Senior Assistant Professor, English Department, Morehouse College ⭐️ Dr. Eric Solomon - Founder & CEO, The Human OS For more information on these speakers and the topics they discuss and to support their organizations, visit the episode show notes link. Also, mark your calendars for July 15-20, 2025 when the D4PG conference will return to Macalester College in the Twin Cities. How can we reimagine our relationship with the future? Listen in to find out! EPISODE SHOW NOTES: https://creativitysquared.com/podcast/ep61-data-justice-a-i-reimagining-our-future-part-2/ JOIN CREATIVITY SQUARED Sign up for our free weekly newsletter: https://creativitysquared.com/newsletter Become a premium member: https://creativitysquared.com/supporters SUBSCRIBE Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform: https://creativitysquared.com Subscribe for more videos: https://youtube.com/@creativity_squared/?sub_confirmation=1 CONNECT with C^2 https://instagram.com/creativitysquaredpodcast https://facebook.com/CreativitySquaredPodcast https://giphy.com/channel/CreativitySquared https://tumblr.com/blog/creativitysquared https://tiktok.com/@creativitysquaredpodcast #CreativitySquared CONNECT with Helen Todd, the human behind C^2 https://instagram.com/helenstravels https://twitter.com/helenstravels https://linkedin.com/in/helentodd https://pinterest.com/helentodd Creativity Squared explores how creatives are collaborating with artificial intelligence in your inbox, on YouTube, and on your preferred podcast platform. Because it's important to support artists, 10% of all revenue Creativity Squared generates will go to ArtsWave, a nationally recognized non-profit that supports over 100 arts organizations. This show is produced and made possible by the team at PLAY Audio Agency: https://playaudioagency.com. Creativity Squared is brought to you by Sociality Squared, a social media agency who understands the magic of bringing people together around what they value and love: http://socialitysquared.com. #D4PG #TCIA #DataJustice #FutureTech #Tech #AI #Ethics #Algorithms #Data #FutureTechnology #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #ArtificialIntelligenceAI #BigData #ArtificialIntelligenceNow #ArtificialIntelligenceTechnology #MachineLearning #TheFutureIsNow #DeepLearning #GenerativeModels #PodcastCommunity #TechPodcast #AIPodcast #DeepLearning #AITech
Nightmare on Sedgwick Avenue Podcast: The Home of Hip Hop and Horror! Season 6 returns, episodes drop every other Friday. This episode features Author/Writer/ Historian Walter Greason and Artist/Cartoonist/Illustrator Tim Fielder who recently released The Graphic History of Hip Hop! Tune in! Follow: https://www.instagram.com/nightonsedgave7 https://www.instagram.com/graphichistorycompany https://graphichistoryofhiphop.com/ #hiphop #horrorpodcast #horrormoviepodcast #hiphoppodcast --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/7octoberz/support
The Future Starts Now I sat down with Dr Andrew Grearson from Woodlands Stud NZ to find out his thoughts on the stakes increase announced last week Harness Racing New Zealand
Willie Mays Celebration of Life Hour 1: Words from Reverend Greason, Jon Miller, Larry Baer, Mayor Brown, and Rob Manfred.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Willie Mays Celebration of Life Hour 1: Words from Reverend Greason, Jon Miller, Larry Baer, Mayor Brown, and Rob Manfred.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today, cohost Alex Simmons and Chris Ryan talk with renowned visual Afrofuturist and graphic novelist Tim Fielder and the distinguished author, historian, and economist Walter Greason. Together, they explore the fascinating process behind creating their 92-page graphic novel, The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Celebrating its 50th anniversary, this ambitious project captures the essence and evolution of the genre from its roots in the Civil Rights Movement to its global impact today. Learn about Tim and Walter's unique collaboration and the challenges they faced in attempting to include the vast number of artists involved in the music and the movement. Graphic History of Hip Hop web site Have any questions or comments? Then please leave them in the Comments Section. Write: TTDSOnAir@gmail.com And follow us on ... @Tell The Damn Story www.Facebook.com/Tell The Damn Story Youtube.com/ Tell The Damn Story If you're enjoying these episodes, take a moment to help wet our whistle and just... Buy Me A Coffee!
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/african-american-studies
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/performing-arts
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies
Hip Hop turned 50 this year. It has been five decades since DJ Cool Herc played a party in the Bronx that gave birth to a global cultural revolution. To honor this anniversary and teach this history, the New York City Department of Education has published The Graphic History of Hip Hop. Dr. Walter Greason wrote the text, which is beautifully illustrated by Afrofuturist graphic artist Tim Fielder. As the first in a series of collaborative graphic novels, The Graphic History of Hip Hop brings together a powerful blend of music, art, and history drawn from over sixty years of research by hundreds of professional historians and other scholars from the humanities and social sciences. The book is designed to engage students as they will see, hear and experience how the world of Hip Hop evolved in response to the rapidly changing political and environments from the 1970s through the 2000s. This work is an essential resource to enhance modern urban and world history curriculums and create a unique and engaging classroom settings for students. This shorter version is free to download as PDF and a longer hardcover version will be published soon. Also see the project website, here. Michael G. Vann is a professor of world history at California State University, Sacramento. A specialist in imperialism and the Cold War in Southeast Asia, he is the author of The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empires, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018). When he's not reading or talking about new books with smart people, Mike can be found surfing in Santa Cruz, California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/music
Listeners, rosin up your headphones and play this podcast hard, 'cause Hell's broke loose in Georgia, and the Devil's on FMR. If you listen, you might laugh or your eyes might roll, but either way Allie gets your soul! Discord (“Season's Greason's”): https://discord.gg/Y5Uw6sdmU2 Email: findingmonsterright@gmail.com Bluesky: @monsterrightpod.bsky.social (Invite-only. Message us for a code!) DISCLAIMER: By listening to this podcast episode, the listener forfeits all right to their immortal soul (hereafter referred to as "the asset") and transfers ownership of said asset to Allison Alžbeta Homiak, the Demonsbane. The asset can be recovered by the listener if and only if they beat Adam in checkers.
For some, critical race theory has become a scapegoat for attempts to censor, silence and erase all discussion of American racism and its legacy. Editors Walter Greason and Danian Jerry have assembled a broad range of scholars and artists to refute these assaults. They speak to Tavis about their book: “ILLMATIC CONSEQUENCES: The Clapback to Opponents of ‘Critical Race Theory' “.
Host Cyrus Webb welcomes authors Walter Greason and Danian Jerry to #ConversationsLIVE to discuss their new book ILLMATIC CONSEQUENCES--- and what they hope readers take away from it.
Tune in to our podcast episode with Staci Greason (All The Girls in Town, Touchpoint Press, July 2022). In her early twenties, Staci was a regular cast member on Days of Our Lives, a popular daytime soap, but she had things she wanted to say in her own words rather than other people's so she switched to writing. But that acting background still comes in handy when she's writing dialogue scenes and means she's good at knowing how people sound and move through the world. Music is also an important part of her life —knowing what her characters listen to is an essential part of her process. Her message to writers: books can have a long and varied life – hers is billed as Bad Sisters meets 9 to 5 and is currently being shopped as a book to feature deal. Staci Greason's literary achievements include award-winning television pilots and screenplays. Her well-reviewed novel, All the Girls in Town, was published by Touch Point Press (July 26, 2022). Her short stories and essays have been published in Brevity, Slate, Lunch Ticket, AFLW, the Same, and the Huff Post. In her past life, she played the late Isabella Toscano Black on Days of Our Lives. Staci lives in Southern California. To learn more about Staci, click here.
Interstellar travel can be real. And you don't need to break the laws of Physics to do it. In this interview, I discuss a realistic way we can send missions to nearby stars in our lifetimes.
Interstellar travel can be real. And you don't need to break the laws of Physics to do it. In this interview, I discuss a realistic way we can send missions to nearby stars in our lifetimes.
So here it is. The very first Historians At The Movies Podcast. If you're new to #HATM, we're (allegedly) the longest running watch party on the internet. Every week for over four and a half years, scholars and lovers of movies and history have joined together every Sunday night to watch and livetweet a movie together. It's been an amazing experience and one that has built a community around the globe. This podcast is the next evolutionary step in Historians At The Movies. Each week we'll bring you top scholars to talk about the films that interest them and the work that they do. Sure, there's some myth busting and maybe a few times where we'll be poking holes in a film for accuracy, but it is more than that. The HATM podcast uses a larger love of film to talk about history and the ways in which our perceptions of the past are shaped by popular culture and how we in turn are shaped by those perceptions. It's a new way of thinking about both film and history, and I hope you'll dig it. Our first guest isn't by accident. Walter Greason is a longtime supporter of Historians At The Movies and a guy who I consider a trusted friend. I've learned a ton from him over the last few years and when I thought about who should be on the podcast first, he was the only choice there was.Walter is among the most prominent historians, educators, and urbanists in the United States. He has spent the past 30 years speaking to audiences in dozens of states, on over 100 college and high school campuses, at dozens of professional and academic conferences, and to community groups across the country. His work is available every day on Twitter, @walterdgreason.He has also lectured internationally, in the United Kingdom, Canada, and New Zealand, and has trained corporate, government, entertainment, media, law enforcement, military, and medical industry professionals on strategies for dismantling racism in their institutions. Dr. Greason has provided anti-racism training to educators and administrators nationwide. Dr. Greason is the author of six books, including his two latest, Industrial Segregation and Cities Imagined: The African Diaspora in Media and History (both Kendall-Hunt Publishers). Walter's digital humanities projects, “The Wakanda Syllabus” and “The Racial Violence Syllabus”, produced global responses in the last three years. In the wake of the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, “The Racial Violence Syllabus” attracted over 4 million individual uses, was translated into seven languages, and inspired projects like the Oscar-winning film “BlackKklansman.” The 2016 “Wakanda Syllabus” defined Afrofuturism as one of the core themes of media convergence and was a crucial element in the public acclaim that supported Marvel Studios' Oscar-winning feature film, “Black Panther.”So that's it! Check it out. This podcast will grow and change as we move along, but I hope you dig it. Like it, subscribe to it, and please do give us your feedback.
The next sequel we are reviewing is "Friday the 13th Part VII: A New Blood" and I interviewed Jason Voorhees's Victim Staci Greason. Staci played Jane and was the 1st victim of Jason in the movie, but she had some great memories from it. We talked about her journey from growing up in a remote part of Colorado to making it in showbiz, how she ended up in LA, working for an agency, how she got Days of Our Lives, her writing process, her book "All the Girls in Town", and more. Staci's IMDb https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0337295/ Staci's Website is https://www.stacigreason.com/ Staci's Instagram https://www.instagram.com/staciwrites/?hl=en Staci's Book is "All the Girls in Town" Next up is our review of "Friday the 13th Part VII: A New Blood " and this is a fun one. Rent it for 2.99 just about anywhere online. Follow us on all social media @sequelsonly and our website is sequelsonly.com Review, rate, and share us with your friends, enemies, neighbors, exes, and even that annoying supermarket clerk!
Former Days of Our Lives star and now author, Staci Greason, visits with us to discuss her fourth novel, All the Girls in Town. In addition to writing novels, Greason also writes essays, short stories, and screenplays. Her newest book tells the story of three women whose lives come together after they are all wronged Read More
Author and soap opera star Staci Greason shares her "she-shed" and her new novel "All the Girls in Town"
Engineer and visionary Jeff Greason joins us to discuss why humanity must continue to explore and develop space. We then segue to what kinds of outposts we may choose to build on other worlds, how we will get there, and how entrepreneurs and nations might benefit and even make a profit. Finally, we look at our future as an interplanetary species, expanding to other star systems. Join us for this very special conversation! Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Jeff Greason Sponsor: Ziprecruiter.com/twis
Grab some beers, the ugliest frat guys you can find, and perhaps a corpse you found in the pool because we're ready to pledge to THE HOUSE ON SORORITY ROW? And here's to help us get in is an actress (Friday the 13th Part VI: The New Blood) and author of All The Girls In Town, Staci Greason! Along the way we discuss hot scalpels, we debate how to convince someone to stick their head out of a toilet, super tiny feet, psychology via x-ray, develop the stages of Banana Town our main character goes through, and we explore the absolute GOAT of this House, Morgan!! All that, plus we dig into one of the most mind-bending party scenes ever committed to film, and rush into a Choose Your Own Deathventure!! Are you ready to party? Too bad, we're doing it anyways! Orphan: First Kill is now in theatres and on Digital and On Demand. Isabelle Fuhrman returns as Esther in this terrifying prequel to the original and shocking horror hit and also stars Julia Stiles. Buy or Rent Orphan: First Kill and watch it today. Rated R. From Paramount Pictures. Never fear - new episodes of Kill By Kill are made available every other Friday! Dish By Dish: A Hannibal Rewatch on the Fridays in-between. Our linker.ee Our TeePublic shop for killer merch is right here: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/kill-by-kill-podcast?utm_campaign=18042&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_source=Kill%2BBy%2BKill%2Bpodcast%2B Have something to say? Find us on Twitter @KillByKillPod Join the conversation about any episode on the Facebook Group! Follow us on IG @killbykillpodcast Check out the films we've covered & what might come soon on Letterboxd! Get even more episodes exclusively on Patreon! Follow our station on vurbl: https://vurbl.com/station/2bdTISeI3X/ Artwork by Josh Hollis: joshhollis.com Kill By Kill theme by Revenge Body. For the full-length version and more great music, head to revengebodymemphis.bandcamp.com today!
Dr. Angie Bukley, and OAC advisor Jeff Greason join us in this week's episode. Both have long careers in space and share their insights on artificial gravity and more.
Hold on to your pueblos while you travel through the Quantimino™ with triple uranium hosts Gemini, Burrito, and Arthur as they bring you into their thought-provoking and entertaining conversations. Double X Quantimino Tech trends, old and new: Phone calling, paper, digital, wet signatures, cursive, checks A look back at the cord-cutting movement Food porn, ASMR, mukbang, pimple-popping, feet Invents the Newz: Bitdefender Uncovers Serious Flaws In Wyze Security Cameras Connected security cameras with streaming video and two-way audio are a great way to keep tabs on what happens at your home when you're not there. They can also be a great way for hackers to spy on and terrorize victims. Having a tinkle, a piddle? Draining the ol' lizard? Taking a whizz, a leak, 'scuse me but I gotta see a man about a horse… So many ways to say it but the real question is: sit or stand? Wait, is that a question? Smahtman Burrito whips out the stats! Do men in Japan stand or sit to urinate? Survey reveals some surprising discoveries about men's toilet habits. This Is The Newz It Seems Like a Lot of You Are Cheating at Wordle Is Someone (Really) Trying To Sue Burger King Over Too-Small Burgers? Study Finds More Americans Have Anal Sex Than Use Twitter Man at hotel accidentally shoots himself in testicles Burrito's Nippon Newz Japanese hot spring charges almost 35 bucks for bucket of uncooked carrots, otaku likely to pay up Japanese government now officially allowed to use question marks and exclamation points Two men hit by woman falling out of window… who was looking at another man who fell off rooftop What I Had For Lunch Deepfake Sponsors: Julio Tejas, Booba Gettz The Crazy One, Thicccum Farmz
This week we had a great conversation with Jeff Greason from Electric Sky and the Tau Zero Foundation, ranging across electric propulsion to cross-solar system transportation to our imperative to expand beyond the planet.
Dr. Walter Greason, history professor, and dept. chair at Macalester College, MN developed the Wakanda Syllabus. He uses advanced technology to transform schools and communities around the world. The post Episode #128: Igniting Change through Global Conversations with Dr. Walter Greason first appeared on Rethinking Learning.
BALTIMORE, MD (WEAA) — Critical Race Theory vs. Culturally Responsive Teaching: What the Right Gets Wrong Dr. Kaye is joined by Dr. Alicia Moore, associate professor of education at Southwestern University in Texas and Dr. Walter D. Greason, professor of world history, American history, and economic history at Monmouth University in New Jersey to discuss the divided issue.
A teammate of Willie Mays on the 1948 Birmingham Black Barons, 96-year-old Greason talks with John Shea on this episode of the Giants Splash podcast that we're sharing with A's Plus listeners. Greason, who fought in Iwo Jima and was the St. Louis Cardinals' first Black pitcher, talks about his life and about MLB reclassifying the Negro Leagues as "major league." | A’s Plus Newsletter: sfchronicle.com/asnewsletter | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Reverend Bill Greason, Willie Mays’ former teammate on the 1948 Birmingham Black Barons, talks with John Shea about Major League Baseball reclassifying the Negro Leagues as a “major league,” and about his amazing life, from fighting in the Battle of Iwo Jima, becoming the St. Louis Cardinals' first African American pitcher and serving as a minister in Birmingham for nearly 50 years. | Giants Splash Newsletter: sfchronicle.com/giantsnewsletter | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, Monmouth University professors Hettie V. Williams, Walter D. Greason, and Anwar Uhuru discuss race and the U.S. presidential election of 2020. Hettie V. Williams is an Assistant Professor of African American History, Walter D. Greason is an Associate Professor, and Emeritus Dean of the Monmouth University Honor’s School, and Dr. Anwar Uhuru is an Assistant Professor of African American Literature. This episode is a conversation about race, racism, critical race theory, and the intersection of race, gender, and class in U.S. society and culture.
Professor Dr. Walter Greason is thinking of turning Dr. Afua Cooper's book 'The Hanging of Angelique' into a graphic novel. In our conversation, we talk about this work as well as Dr. Greason's other work combining history, economics, and graphics together and discuss the transformative power of using new media to tell stories. For more on The Hanging Of Angelique: The Untold Story of Canadian Slavery and the Burning of Old Montreal by Afua Cooper see https://www.harpercollins.ca/9781443406581/the-hanging-of-angelique/ To learn about Angelique see: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/marie-joseph-angelique Find the T. Thomas Fortune comic on The Atlantic: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/02/t-thomas-fortunes-profound-influence-civil-rights/583333/ More about 'Sojourners Trail': https://www.hastac.org/blogs/cathy-davidson/2019/11/17/learning-prof-walter-greasons-real-time-video-and-social-media Follow Walter on Twitter: https://twitter.com/WorldProfessor Follow Samantha on Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrSCutrara See all the Source Saturday videos on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLpPhMEW_jxqClGskVJgNeA More about Walter: Dr. Walter D. Greason is a Dean Emeritus of the Honors School and an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Educational Counseling and Leadership at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. He is author and lead editor on six books, with substantial contributions to another three and over a hundred of academic articles and essays. Dr. Greason is also the founding president of the T. Thomas Fortune Foundation, which led the restoration of the National Historic Landmark dedicated to the most militant journalist of the late nineteenth century. Most recently, he worked with Megan Allas, graphic artist, to design an interactive, educational game titled 'Sojourners Trail' that teaches about Afrofuturism and the Black Speculative Arts Movement. Learn more about me at https://www.SamanthaCutrara.com/ Order Transforming the Canadian History Classroom: Imagining a New 'We' today: https://www.amazon.ca/Transforming-Canadian-History-Classroom-Imagining/dp/0774862831 https://www.ubcpress.ca/transforming-the-canadian-history-classroom #MeaningfulLearning #ComicBooks #ChallengeCdnHist
In this episode, Dr. Walter D. Greason discusses African Americans in the history of New Jersey. Greason is a pioneering scholar in the field of African American history. His groundbreaking book Suburban Erasure: How the Suburbs Ended the Civil Rights Movement in New Jersey is one of the first complete scholarly surveys on African Americans in the history of New Jersey with a focus on the twentieth century. This show can be listened to on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to your podcasts including on Spotify and Stitcher.
In the first episode of the 2020 Election season, I interview Dr. Walter D. Greason, Historian, Educator, and Associate Professor at Monmouth University. We talk about his childhood in a rural, impoverished area, and how he overcame a bad stutter by rhyming along with hip-hop artists. Dr. Greason explains how we should not become solely focused on the upcoming election, but instead see the broader picture and honor the successes of the MOVEMENT. He discusses his experiences as a multi-cultural organizer and lays out a brilliant plan to help save higher education, all while improving the quality of teaching and lowering the cost. I ask him about the importance of art, comics, and Afrofuturism, and he shares his wisdom on the importance of friendship, camaraderie, and community. ***If you enjoyed learning from Dr. Greason please visit his favorite charity, the T. Thomas Fortune Foundation! https://www.tthomasfortuneculturalcenter.org/ Support this podcast
Unfreedom: The Limits of the Fourteenth Amendment Under Reconstruction discusses race in the twentieth century as a specific form of ideological technology. Focusing on the events and voices between Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Movement, Dr. Walter Greason lead a discussion about the economic, political, social, and cultural foundations of white supremacy as products of an emerging industrial order. From the regimentation of the plantation in the early nineteenth century through the rigidity of commodity and financial markets at the start of the Cold War, this talk illuminates the networks that led to entrenched inequality for more than a century. Dr. Walter D. Greason is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Educational Counseling and Leadership at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. Dr. Greason’s research focuses on the comparative, economic analysis of slavery, industrialization, and suburbanization. With a variety of co-editors, Dr. Greason has published Planning Future Cities(2017) – an innovative look at architecture, urbanism, and municipal design; The American Economy (2016) – a provocative examination of race, property, and wealth in the United States since 1750; and the Afrofuturist design textbook, Cities Imagined. His scholarly monograph, Suburban Erasure, won the Best Work of Non-Fiction award from the New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance in 2014. He also won grants from the Mellon Foundation (2011) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (2016). He is also the creator of the #WakandaSyllabus. The subsequent series of essays can be found on the award-winning website, Black Perspectives. This event originally aired at 5:00 p.m., Thursday, June 18, 2020.
On this episode of HR Power Hour, join Liz Greason, co-owner of Maine Intercultural Communication Consultants, LLC for a discussion about overcoming intercultural issues in the workplace. Liz will discuss with listeners the work that her organization does with entities to help the organization understand their relationship with diversity and ways that the organization can evolve to make the organization stronger. The episode focuses on Maine Intercultural Communication Consultant's use of the Intercultural Development Inventory and Intercultural Competency in understanding an organization's strengths and weaknesses related to creating a diverse work environment.
Slasher Scotty is back with its next episode where Scotty is interviewing Staci Greason, who played Jane in Friday the 13th Part 7: The New Blood and Isabella Black on Days of our Lives. Regarding Friday the 13th Part 7: The New Blood, Staci discussed what her audition was like for the film, how her death scene was filmed and prepped, and how William Butler helped her as an actress in horror films. Regarding Days of our Lives, Staci discussed about how technical it is to kiss on screen, what it was like meeting Jennifer Anison on set when she was visiting her father, how it was to meet Ellen DeGeneres when doing a publicity appearance on a talk show, if she still watches the show or if she ever watched it while she was on it, how grueling of a filming schedule it was to be a Daytime TV actress, how stressful it was filming her death scene, and much, much more about both topics.
Slasher Scotty is back with its next episode where Scotty is interviewing Staci Greason, who played Jane in Friday the 13th Part 7: The New Blood and Isabella Black on Days of our Lives. Regarding Friday the 13th Part 7: The New Blood, Staci discussed what her audition was like for the film, how her death scene was filmed and prepped, and how William Butler helped her as an actress in horror films. Regarding Days of our Lives, Staci discussed about how technical it is to kiss on screen, what it was like meeting Jennifer Anison on set when she was visiting her father, how it was to meet Ellen DeGeneres when doing a publicity appearance on a talk show, if she still watches the show or if she ever watched it while she was on it, how grueling of a filming schedule it was to be a Daytime TV actress, how stressful it was filming her death scene, and much, much more about both topics. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/slasherscotty/support
i first learned of Mr. Greason through Sree's New York Times Readalong Sunday program....Walter David Greason is the Chief Executive Officer for the International Center for Metropolitan Growth, a firm that specializes in starting and attracting new businesses to markets in North America. He also teaches world history, American history, and economic history at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. His two books, Suburban Erasure: How the Suburbs Ended the Civil Rights Movement in New Jersey and The Path to Freedom: Black Families in New Jersey, connect undiscovered local elements of the black freedom movement with global trends in economic development. In 1996, Greason was recognized as a contemporary Black History Maker for his work to advance racial integration at Villanova University. In 2011, he was honored as an “International Master Teacher” for his innovative techniques in undergraduate student research. His scholarship is available through his website, www.waltergreason.com.Also discussing the results of the Primary and electoral politics will be Andrea Benjamin......This will be immediately after the Primaries.... Dr. Benjamin is currently working on a project about coalitions, electoral representation, and policy representation in local politics. A majority of the data come from Durham, NC.Andrea Benjamin is originally from Northern California and completed her undergraduate degree at the University of California, Davis.
i first learned of Mr. Greason through Sree's New York Times Readalong Sunday program....Walter David Greason is the Chief Executive Officer for the International Center for Metropolitan Growth, a firm that specializes in starting and attracting new businesses to markets in North America. He also teaches world history, American history, and economic history at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. His two books, Suburban Erasure: How the Suburbs Ended the Civil Rights Movement in New Jersey and The Path to Freedom: Black Families in New Jersey, connect undiscovered local elements of the black freedom movement with global trends in economic development. In 1996, Greason was recognized as a contemporary Black History Maker for his work to advance racial integration at Villanova University. In 2011, he was honored as an “International Master Teacher” for his innovative techniques in undergraduate student research. His scholarship is available through his website, www.waltergreason.com.Also discussing the results of the Primary and electoral politics will be Andrea Benjamin......This will be immediately after the Primaries.... Dr. Benjamin is currently working on a project about coalitions, electoral representation, and policy representation in local politics. A majority of the data come from Durham, NC.Andrea Benjamin is originally from Northern California and completed her undergraduate degree at the University of California, Davis.
The Second After is a pop-punk band that releases impactful and energetic songs. Hailing from Durham, North Carolina the band utilizes chord progression and key changes to create beautifully constructed songs. Comprised of Michael Greason (vocals), Ryan McDonald (drums), Nolan Shambley (bass) and Alfred Williamson (guitar/vocals) and signed to Revival Records, The Second After uses their music to talk about topics important to the members. We were lucky enough to speak with Greason & Alfred about the band's plans for 2020 and experience in the industry! Interviewer: Jeanine Woody
Tag Greason, the Chief Hyperscale Officer at QTS, gives insight on the hyperscale world of the data center industry, plus much more! ------ Thank you for listening. I am appreciative of your thoughts and comments - and thankful for the opportunity to serve the industry through datacenterHawk. ------ Learn more about the data center industry at www.datacenterhawk.com ------ Subscribe to our YouTube Channel at: https://www.youtube.com/c/datacenterHawk?sub_confirmation=1 ------ Follow us online here: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/datacenterhawk_/ LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidliggitt/ LinkedIN: https://www.linkedin.com/company/9488532/admin/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/d_liggitt Twitter: https://twitter.com/datacenterhawk Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/datacenterhawk/ SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/datacenterhawk
Dr. Will Fenton speaks with Dr. Walter D. Greason, Associate Professor at Monmouth University, where he specializes in the comparative, economic analysis of slavery, industrialization, and suburbanization. Dr. Greason is a prolific scholar in field of economic history. He is the author of Suburban Erasure: How the Suburbs Ended the Civil Rights Movement in New Jersey (2012) as well as the co-editor of The American Economy (2015); Planning Future Cities (2017); and Cities Imagined: The African Diaspora in Media and History (2018). In addition to creating the #WakandaSyllabus, the web-based Racial Violence Syllabus, and the award-winning website, Black Perspectives, Dr. Greason led Designing Afrofuturism: Imagining Black Futures through Art, History, and Literature, a spring 2019 seminar that traced how historical African American leaders envisioned the future using the Library Company’s prodigious African American History collections. Fenton and Greason began their conversation by examining several images from The Hampton Album (New York, 1966).
James E. Gunn, Hank Davis, Jeff Greason, and Christopher Ruocchio on Space Pioneers, an anthology of stories about trials and triumphs in the necessary exploration of space by humans. Gunn is a legendary SF author and historian, and Greason is a well-known space entrepreneur as well as author; and Son of the Black Sword by Larry Correia, Part 23.
Dr. Walter Greason, Dean of the honors school and chair of the Department of Education at Monmouth University talks about journalist and civil rights leader T. Thomas Fortune, community building, and tapping into the energy of the festival in order to mobilize locally and nationally.
This week I spoke with Walter D. Greason. Walter is the Dean of the Honors School and an historian in the Department of History and Anthropology at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. His recent works include Planning Future Cities (a co-edited collection on urban development with Anthony Pratcher II), Cities Imagined (a co-edited collection on the Africa Diaspora in media and culture with Julian C. Chambliss), and Industrial Education (a co-edited collection on race and industrialization with David Goldberg). Greason’s groundbreaking cultural history, Suburban Erasure, won the prize for Best Non-Fiction about New Jersey in 2014. He also serves as the Treasurer for the Society for American City and Regional Planning History (SACRPH). A life member of the African American Intellectual History Society, Dr. Greason’s #RacialViolenceSyllabus reached millions of readers after the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, contributing to an ongoing public debate
In this episode, you'll hear husband and wife team -- Daniel and Angela Greaser -- share how they merged their experiences and skills to work together and build a successful business from home and how you can do it too. ➡️ Here are some of the topics discussed: Communication Content Marketing Attracting clients Embracing different roles Playing their strengths Parenting Scheduling time to work on their business Being focused And much more ➡️ My takeaways: Know your strengths Make sure you communicate with those around you what it is you are trying to do Do one thing each day that moves you towards your goal Work with what you have and focus less on what you don't have Treat your business as a business Links mentioned: Www.alltheops.com
A discussion with Dr. Walter Greason about how the academic component of the Annual Zora Festival – the Communities of Color Conference – can deepen the impact of the organization nationally and internationally in terms of sharing community solutions.
Dr. Walter Greason joins the podcast to discuss his Racial Violence Syllabus, which attracted worldwide attention following the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Dr. Greason's syllabus was translated into seven languages and reached millions of people, driving the public debate surrounding the removal of Confederate memorials across the United States. Dr. Greason tells us what motivated him to share the syllabus as well as his experiences in the early 2000's teaching it in a class on the legacy of white terrorism. He walks us through some of the history of racial violence chronicled in the syllabus, including incidents in Cincinnati in 1829 and Philadelphia in 1834. He feels these particular examples are important because they show white supremacy is a national phenomenon and not restricted to the American south. We also discuss how Black communities have organized against acts of racial violence and in self defense. We talk about how police brutality and other forms of state violencereplaced mob violence after the passage of civil rights laws in the 1960s and the emergence of the prison industrial complex. "The rate of police killings in the 21st century [has] exceeded the rate per year of lynchings at the peak lynching period of the late 19th century," Dr. Greason said. "When I came across that data point, I just realized we were seeing things on television and through our media generally, even newspapers and now digital outlets, that were just tolerant of morass—an abyss of organized violence that just kills thousands and thousands of people with no real attention or outrage and in really unjustified ways that violate their fundamental human rights." Our conversation touches on the role of Black churches as spaces for safety and collective action that have been targeted throughout history for white nationalist violence. We also discuss how free speech and assembly rights have been used to defend white supremacist incitements to violence. Finally, Dr. Greason tells us about his new book, "Planning Future Cities," which explores how the places in which we live are created through the evolution of institutions. Dr. Walter Greason is the dean of the Honors School at Monmouth University. His research focuses on the comparative, economic analysis of slavery, industrialization, and suburbanization. Dr. Greason serves as the Treasurer for the Society for American City and Regional Planning History, and with a variety of co-editors, he has published Planning Future Cities (2017) - an innovative look at architecture, urbanism, and municipal design - as well as The American Economy (2016) - a provocative examination of race, property, and wealth in the United States since 1750. His scholarly monograph, Suburban Erasure , won the Best Work of Non-Fiction award from the New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance in 2014. He also won grants from the Mellon Foundation (2011) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (2016). Follow Dr. Greason on Twitter: @WorldProfessor Please listen, subscribe, and rate/review our podcast on iTunes and on Google Play Sign up for the Beyond Prisons newsletter to receive updates on new episodes, important news and events, and more. Send tips, comments, and questions to beyondprisonspodcast@gmail.com Follow us on Twitter: @Beyond_Prison @phillyprof03 @bsonenstein @jaybeware Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/beyondprisonspodcast/ Music & Production: Jared Ware
Check out the latest Bantam Spotlight podcast with Trinity Men's Hockey and Golf Head Coach, Matthew Greason. First, learn about Coach Greason's background and career moving up the coaching ranks. Then, we talked about Trinity Men's Hockey last season and looked towards this year. Finally, we recapped the Trinity Golf Fall season and previewed the Spring season. All that and more, check it out!
Race Haven - Solutions Focused Dialogue About Race In America
During this episode Dr. Scott Speed & John Costino interview Historian and Economist Dr. Walter Greason about his research and work at the intersections of history, race, and economics. Dr. Walter D. Greason is the CEO of the International Center for Metropolitan Growth. He has taught at hundreds of colleges and universities across the United States since 1997 and is currently teaching Business and Economic Development at Monmouth University. Dr. Greason's research interests include African and American history, emphasizing the relationship between poverty and economic development. His interests also include the trans-Atlantic slave trade, innovation in experiential education, and the intellectual legacy of white supremacy. For the last twenty years, he has established himself as the world's leading authority on the economics of race and metropolitan growth. Serving the world's most prosperous metropolitan region (the Boston to Washington, D.C. corridor), Dr. Greason has advised hundreds of businesses and organizations on fiscal management, investment, and development strategies. He also currently serves as the Treasurer of the Society for American City and Regional Planning History (www.sacrph.org) and is an officer on the Membership Committee of the Organization of American Historians. Recently, Dr. Greason won recognition as a Visiting Scholar at James Madison University in Virginia. This was a fascinating interview and dialogue that you do not want to miss. Welcome to The Dialogue!
City life with two young kids left Dan and Danielle wondering when they’d be able to slow down and catch their breath. Eventually, they took matters into their own hands and intentionally chose to slow down by selling everything and leaving Australia in 2011. They have been enjoying a relaxed, fulfilling lifestyle in Costa Rica ever since, and have their sights set on new horizons for the future.
Join The Gist of Freedom as we discuss Benjamin Quarles' Book Black Abolitionists: With Dr. Walter Greason and hosts, Preston Washington & Ty El-Gray! Chapter 5/6 Self Emancipations, Self Help, and Mutual Aid Societies: The Dorcas, Sarah M. Douglass and Sarah Smith The Black Beauty “Black, I am, oh! daughters fair,” But my beauty is most rare; Black, indeed, appears my skin, Beauteous, comely, all within: Black, when by affliction press’d Beauteous, when in Christ I rest; Black, by sin’s defiling flood. Beauteous, wash’d in Jesus’ blood: Black, I am in mine own eyes, Beauteous, in my Lord’s I rise; Black I am to men ’tis true; Beauteous, in the angel’s view: Black, if Jesus frowns awhile, Beauteous, when I see him smile; Black, while in the tomb I lie, Beauteous, when I mount the sky! Written from Solomon’s Songs
Solar is a hot topic here in Georgia. With the announcement of an additional 210 MW solar buyback program from Georgia Power, solar is in the strongest position it has been in the history of the state. However, there is even a bigger plan for solar in Georgia and Georgia Solar Utilities, Inc has a plan that will radically change how solar is deployed in Georgia. Join us as we talk about that plan with Shane Owl-Greason & Robert Green.
STACI GREASON, (ex-Isabella, DAYS OF OUR LIVES) talks about the pre-release of her new novel, "The Last Great American Housewife", her writing career and her recent appearances on the soap.