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Oh my goodness, I butchered the joke in this video. This is how the joke was supposed to go: Albert Einstein discovered that light travels faster than sound. I guess that's why most people seem bright until you hear them speak. I just delivered a version of this talk live at The Thrive Summit hosted by Alicia Decker of Mended Light. A copy of the recording should be available soon at https://laurenkinghorn.com/thrive My free gift to attendees is a 3-hour workshop on How to Rewire Your Brain from Fear to LOVE and LIGHT. You can register for that here: https://laurenkinghorn.com/thrivesummit Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that. -Rev Martin Luther King, Jr
YOU - The Master Entrepreneur - A Guide to True Greatness with Stan Hustad
No the title is not click bait. But of course I'm trying to get your attention so that you might take a time out and actually listen. But my friend that is what all of us are trying to do all the time in life and business today. We are trying to get people to listen. So if I have your attention, I believe I have some interesting ideas in terms of what Donald Trump should do if he gets what could be an extraordinary sentence. There are people who are asking for him to go to jail for a long time. The problem is that in New York we've got muggers thugs and all kinds of other bad people who are never sentenced to jail. And his conviction is being appealed, and there's a good chance that the decision of the court that convicted him and pronounces a sentence on him, will be over turned. But who knows. The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,was also charged with crimes, and he was put in jail. By the way so was Saint Paul, the great Christian apostle If I were his coach, I would have some tough and perhaps effective counsel for helping him deal with the situation, and maybe even turning it into a positive for him and a detriment to his opponents. Some of the same advice might be helpful for you in difficult situation's today. So now let me assure you that it's worth your time to listen to my story.
On April 4, 1968, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., a revered figure in the civil rights movement and a recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize, was tragically shot and killed by James Earl Ray. The incident occurred while King was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Hotel in Memphis, Tennessee. He was only 39 years old at the time of his death. King's legacy as a trailblazer in the American civil rights movement remains profound. He led numerous nonviolent demonstrations advocating for racial equality, notably including the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the Selma-to-Montgomery marches for voting rights, and the historic 1963 March on Washington. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
AP correspondent Julie Walker reports on Obit Dexter Scott King
Psychologist Linda Mintle reflects on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s personal battle with depression, as well as how he embodied the call to love in the face of hate. Pastor Bryan Lorrits, author of "The Offensive Church," reflects as an African-American and pastor on the Rev. King, his place in our current church and cultural dialog over racism, and how well we're moving to a vision of reconciliation. Faith Radio podcasts are made possible by your support. Give now: Click here
This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a tribute to and remembrance of the late Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., with commentary by Dr. King, former U.S. President Barack Obama, the late Robert F. Kennedy, the Honorable Andrew Young, and Rev. Jesse Jackson. The post Remembering The Late Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. (Ep. 7, 2024) appeared first on KUT & KUTX Studios -- Podcasts.
In this conversation recorded for Washington Post Live on Jan. 11, Tennessee Rep. Justin J. Pearson discusses how the legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. has impacted the rising generation of political leaders and why he thinks U.S. institutions are being degraded through partisan politics.
Ahead of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, we discuss our progress toward achieving economic justice and the theme of this year's All Peoples Celebration, claiming dignity.
Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power
Rev Martin Luther King Speech at Montreat pt 4of4 Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast Uploads Audiobooks and Lectures By The Best Black Authors In Audio Format To Download. All Authors Wrote Stories From Their REAL Life, Not Fiction. We also added Martin Luther King Speeches, Insights and Historical Background to the Podcast. Please Download and Share the Martin Luther King Speeches. X X X X please support with 2$ or 8$ per month we try to stay alive and pay for the content to remain online
Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power
Rev Martin Luther King Speech Montreat pt 3of4 Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast Uploads Audiobooks and Lectures By The Best Black Authors In Audio Format To Download. All Authors Wrote Stories From Their REAL Life, Not Fiction. We also added Martin Luther King Speeches, Insights and Historical Background to the Podcast. Please Download and Share the Martin Luther King Speeches. X X X X please support with 2$ or 8$ per month we try to stay alive and pay for the content to remain online
Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power
Rev Martin Luther King Speech Montreat pt1of4 Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast - Black Lives Content Black History | Black Ethics | Black Power Black Authors Audiobooks Podcast Uploads Audiobooks and Lectures By The Best Black Authors In Audio Format To Download. All Authors Wrote Stories From Their REAL Life, Not Fiction. We also added Martin Luther King Speeches, Insights and Historical Background to the Podcast. Please Download and Share the Martin Luther King Speeches. X X X X please support with 2$ or 8$ per month we try to stay alive and pay for the content to remain online
Reflections on MLK Day holiday: Martin Luther King, III, President Biden, VP Kamala Harris, Sen. Ted Cruz and Robert Woodson, founder, Woodson Center. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The 35th Annual All Peoples Celebration on Monday was centered around Dr. King's words, “Let's build bridges, not walls.” We hear from keynote speaker, bestselling author and columnist, Steve Phillips. Then, court transcripts show San Diego County Public Defender Randy Mize admitted under oath last month that he signed off on an investigative report knowing it contained false statements.KPBS Investigative Reporter Amita Sharma joins us to talk about her reporting. And, this Wednesday some San Diegans will put out their shiny new green bins. And for the first time they will include food waste. It's part of the city's new organics recycling program which began rolling out last week with the delivery of thousands of new kitchen pails and green bins to local residents. Finally, the Museum of Us in Balboa Park is reimagining one of its core exhibits, “Race: Are We So Different.” The goal is to shape the new exhibit through the perspectives of our local communities.
We may not be able to change the world like Dr. King, but we may be able to change OUR world.
So I got this email the other day: "Dear Richard. I am a fan. I listen to your podcasts with Jennifer. I would like you to contact Emmet Till. It would interesting to hear what he has to say. Thanks. Regards, Kathie" I wrote to her that the podcast is controlled by our pal Luana Anders on the flipside, that she is in charge of the "guest list" as she's the one with the "clipboard." Imagine my chagrin, when today, Luana mentioned this question. Dear Kathie, Well, something unusual happened. Today during the podcast Hacking the Afterlife, Luana mentioned to Jennifer that "someone had asked me a question" that she wanted me to address. I thought of all the questions I get on Quora on a daily basis - and the only one that popped into my head was yours. So we interviewed Emmett today. It was emotional - hard to do - but like I say, I let Luana decide who the guest list will be. I tried to ask him the same questions I ask everyone - but my emotions overcame me. He's a courageous person to choose a lifetime that included the trauma he experienced. But I'll let him speak for himself. No one will ever believe that we've interviewed Emmett - but that's why we do this work, to show people how easy it is to do this on their own. I hope it helps someone somewhere. Best, Rich Dr. King stopped by as well - we interviewed him a few times in "BACKSTAGE PASS TO THE FLIPSIDE" and I asked him all the questions I ask everyone. He was very profound and eloquent in his answers. When we started the podcast, I knew we'd have to stop for about half an hour in the middle. As it turned out, it allowed me to look up a few details about him (while Jennifer worked with a client). We do this podcast to help people who are suffering with pain and grief - including those who knew the Till family, who to this day suffer over his loss - and to the millions who will be moved by his story yet again when the film comes out. I hope it's a good film, but I appreciate Emmett allowing us to chat with him today. Again - hope this helps someone to converse with their own loved ones on the flipside.
https://www.ihaveadreamspeech.us/
Today on Boston Public Radio: Rev. Cornell William Brooks discusses the Black faith leaders that engaged in a hunger strike for voting rights, and shares why he likens the Jan. 6 Capitol attacks to the Confederate attack at Fort Sumter. Brooks is the Hauser Professor of the Practice of Nonprofit Organizations and Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice at the Harvard Kennedy School. Brooks is the former president and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), a civil rights attorney, and an ordained minister. We then ask listeners about failed voting rights legislation, and what it means for midterms and the 2024 presidential election. Simon van Zuylen-Wood talks about Hillbilly Elegy author J.D. Vance's run for U.S. Senate, and his decision to tag himself as a conservative outsider. van Zuylen-Wood is a freelance journalist based in NYC, who's recently written about the radicalization of JD Vance. Evan Horowitz updates us on how Mass. could bring in more than $1 billion in revenue if voters approve a ballot question to implement a “Millionaire's Tax” in the state. Horowitz is executive director of the Center for State Policy Analysis at Tufts. Revs. Irene Monroe and Emmett G. Price III share their thoughts on the fate of the Democrats' voting rights bill, and reflect on the life and legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Monroe is a syndicated religion columnist and the Boston voice for Detour's African American Heritage Trail. Price is founding pastor of Community of Love Christian Fellowship in Allston, the Inaugural Dean of Africana Studies at Berklee College of Music. Together, they host the “All Rev'd Up” podcast at GBH. We open the phone lines, continuing our conversation with listeners on the state of voting rights. We end the show by replaying our conversation with New Yorker writer Jelani Cobb on his book, “The Essential Kerner Commission Report,” which places the 1968 Kerner Commission Report in today's political context.
Geoffrey Shugen Arnold, Roshi - Zen Mountain Monastery, New York, Sunday 01/16/2022 - Celebrating the Love in Action of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. - Invoking the life and words of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., Shugen Roshi celebrates his teachings on the power of love and its manifestation in the Beloved Community. Sangha is an example of this united effort to live as an expression of love, and the life of practice requires our sincere engagement and action. Dr. King believed in the “practical realism” of love, a power which is always available and can be lived every day. Understanding the interrelated structure of reality from a Christian perspective, he said, “Your suffering is my suffering,” echoing the Bodhisattva's vow to put an end to the suffering of all beings. - Shugen Roshi's dharma talk is preceded by a sangha presentation "From Refuge to Sanctuary: an MRO Tribute to Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King Jr." hosted by senior lay student Chikei Levister. - (You can watch the video of the sangha presentation here: vimeo.com/666366222.)
Do you find yourself focused only on Rev. King's quotes about peace and unity? In this episode, we explore 3 powerful quotes from Martin Luther King, Jr. Ask your questions by using the voice message link below! **Note: we went a few minutes over our 10-min. in this episode since it is packed with important quotes! Join the Building Equity Through Training & Engagement Resources (BETTER) Community quarterly subscription: https://bit.ly/joinbetter21 Follow Educator Aide, Inc. on Instagram: @educatoraide To connect with the voice of this episode, Justine Gonzalez, follow via Instagram: @spirituallystrategic --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/educatoraide/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/educatoraide/support
This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a tribute to the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the 93rd anniversary of his birth, with excerpts from Dr. King’s speeches and commentary from the Honorable Andrew Young, the late Robert F. Kennedy, and President Barack Obama.
This time Steven explores who Rev. Martin Luther King Jr was and what he stood for. His values make him unique among civil rights leaders, especially among the ones standing out today. Steven reads a lesser known speech "A Knock at Midnight" and breaks down the message within. He finishes it off with 5 more speeches you should read. Join the conversation and comment now!If you enjoyed this episode, follow us and subscribe to the show you can find us on iTunes or on any app that carries podcasts as well as YouTube. Please remember to subscribe and give us a nice review. That way you will always be among the first to get the latest GSMC Life & Happiness Podcasts.We would like to thank our Sponsor: GSMC Podcast NetworkAdvertise with US: https://gsmcpodcast.com/advertise-with-usWebsite: https://gsmcpodcast.com/gsmc-life-%26-happiness-podApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/gsmc-life-happiness-podcast/id1489913108GSMC YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7F6CCNXqbWA&list=PLF8Qial15ufpa5VrQZAAsBhjhjmnZ6nCYFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Golden-State-Media-Concepts-Life-Happiness-Podcast-743349489141181/?ref=bookmarksTwitter: https://twitter.com/gsmc_lifeDisclaimer: The views expressed on the GSMC Life & Happiness Podcast are for entertainment purposes only. Reproduction, copying, or redistribution of The GSMC Life & Happiness Podcast without the express written consent of Golden State Media Concepts LLC is prohibited.
Today we remember how James Earl Ray confessed to the murder of Rev King. Todays pod takes a brief look at Kings life, his theology and his legacy
Caribbean Radio Show presents Last Sermon of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr
1-19-2021 Universal Prayer in Remembrance of Martin Luther King Jr. Good morning and welcome, Liz Wessel here, and as we gather together, taking a moment out of our busy lives let us share in a brief time of prayer and peacefulness. Resist the temptation to multi-task and instead offer the gift of your loving presence to this community. Find a sitting position that allows you to be alert—and also relaxed. Close your eyes and rest your hands in an easy, effortless way. Ring the chime: Allow your awareness to scan through your body and, wherever possible, soften and release obvious areas of physical tension. Because we so easily get lost in thoughts, let’s begin with attention to the breath. Using the breath as a primary anchor of mindfulness helps quiet the mind so that you can be awake to the changing stream of life that moves through you. (Tara Brach) God of our understanding, we come to you in these quiet moments, seeking that which is beyond ourselves. In this sacred space; we join in solidarity in the prayers of Reverend Martin Luther King to express our hopes and our dreams for a better world. Eternal God, out of whose mind is this great cosmic universe, we bless thee. Help us to seek that which is high, noble and Good. Help us in the moments of difficulty. Help us to work with renewed vigor for a brotherhood that transcends race or color. (MLK) A way in which every man will respect the dignity and worth of all human personality. A way in which every nation will allow justice to run down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream. A way in which men will do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with God. (MLK) God grant that we will be participants in this newness and this magnificent development. If we will but do it, we will bring about a new day of justice and brotherhood and peace. And that day the morning stars will sing together and the sons of God will shout for joy. (Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.) MLK’s mission for equality resonates with our organizational values of compassion, dignity, justice, excellence, and integrity. Creator God, may we view our work as vocational; a ministry of whole-person healing. May we advocate for those who are poor and vulnerable as we serve our dear neighbor without distinction. (Nancy Jordan) And in closing, as you go about your day continue to reflect on how your role in our organization is not limited to your wise experience and skills. Every time you ask how a patient is feeling or assist a co-caregiver with a task, you are making a positive difference in the lives of others. Building each other up one interaction at a time builds our up our communities. Building up our communities exemplifies Martin Luther King’s vision for equity and equality. (Nancy Jordan) In honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., thank you for your steadfast service to all. May God bless you and all those you love. Painting form the CHA website
The Ministry of Defence is examining a report into Australian military action in Afghanistan, including allegations that soldiers killed unarmed civilians. What might the report reveal about military culture? And when the counting’s over does the fight for real democracy begin? Should President-elect Joe Biden look to the last great campaign of the Rev Martin Luther King to guide his new administration? Also, a profile of Aunty Dorothy Harris-Gordon who died recently. She was the first ordained Aboriginal woman in the Uniting Church in Australia, and the first indigenous woman prison Chaplain in NSW.
The Ministry of Defence is examining a report into Australian military action in Afghanistan, including allegations that soldiers killed unarmed civilians. What might the report reveal about military culture? And when the counting’s over does the fight for real democracy begin? Should President-elect Joe Biden look to the last great campaign of the Rev Martin Luther King to guide his new administration? Also, a profile of Aunty Dorothy Harris-Gordon who died recently. She was the first ordained Aboriginal woman in the Uniting Church in Australia, and the first indigenous woman prison Chaplain in NSW.
Episode 7429 - Rev. Martin Luther King, Mohammed Ali, Sen. Tim Scott, Obama Dr. Jonathan Hansen worldministries.org Recorded 6-22-2020 on OMEGAMAN omegamanradio.com
Our podcast today has as it's special guests prominent Attorney Delano S. Stewart, an outspoken. Civil Rights Leader in the State of Florida for over 50 years, and Pastor Michael Neely, Senior Pastor/Founder of the New Millennium Community Church. Our focus today is the evolving legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Some of the questions that we will seek to answer is how has our country benefitted from Dr. King's example and leadership? Has the African American Communites adapted the principles of Dr. King and are those principles relevant for this generation. Additionally, we will contrast and compare how Dr Kings principles provides tools to effectively battle the racist tendencies of our current President of The United States, Donald J. Trump. Most importantly, how do we maintain Dr Kings principles of brotherhood and love in today's Trump Hysteria
This episode is dedicated to a civil rights leader Rev Martin Luther King . --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/shiraya-thompson/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/shiraya-thompson/support
As we begin the Exodus narratives in the Torah, Reverend Pedro Silva, Minister at the First Congregational Church in Boulder, and a friend and interfaith colleague, in conversation about name, place, freedom and more in honor of the legacy of Rev Martin Luther King, Jr. Here is a link to Pedro's song New Me - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnqLEGRjQeQ&feature=youtu.be
This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a tribute to the late Martin Luther King, Jr, on the 90th anniversary of his birth, featuring Dr. King, and the Honorable Andrew Young and former U.S. President Barack Obama.
This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a tribute to the late Martin Luther King, Jr, on the 90th anniversary of his birth, featuring Dr. King, and the Honorable Andrew Young and former U.S. President Barack Obama.
This week on In Black America, producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a tribute to the late Martin Luther King, Jr, on the 90th anniversary of his birth, featuring Dr. King, and the Honorable Andrew Young and former U.S. President Barack Obama.
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Hosts: Rev. Jeremy Hall, and David P. Gushee, Ph.D. Music by Taketones (Sunset Sessions) Audio from Audio version of Moral Leadership For A Divided Age, used with permission of Brazos Pres.
What does it sound like to SHINE LIGHT into darkness? On today's episode, we honor the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. on MLK Day, Feb 21, 2019 by sharing this "I Have A Dream" speech from August 28, 1963. In part one of a two part series, we start the conversation on what it is to stand with light in darkness. Wikipedia on Rev Martin Luther King Jr.: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther_King_Jr. Questions, comments and requests? Feel free to contact me at brianqdavis@thesaleswar.com Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brianqdavis12/ Music Credit: Jeremy Tyler "Undercover" https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/maybe-youve-felt-this-way/1231973314
The deaths of two sanitation workers leads to a city-wide strike and business boycott in Memphis. The Rev Martin Luther King leads what would be his final march for civil rights and bring recognition to the plight of black workers.
Longtime St. Louisans (from left) Mike Jones, Jamala Rogers and Virvus Jones joined Wednesday’s show to reflect on the impact of what occurred on April 4, 1968.
On this Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday -- marking what would have been the slain civil rights leader's 89th birthday -- we are talking about Dr. King’s legacy, and how the movement for racial and economic equality and justice is positioned moving forward.This year, we’ll also mark the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination, as well as the Fair Housing Act, which President Lyndon Johnson signed into law just a week after King’s death, as cities across the country were enveloped in violence.Violence in many forms remains part of the American landscape, and with the political rise of Donald Trump, violent and abrasive rhetoric now permeate public discourse to a heart-breaking degree, from Charlottesville to the Oval Office. Joining Tom on this MLK Day edition is a panel of guests with keen insights into the long, continuing quest for racial justice in America:DeRay Mckesson is a civil rights activist and the host of a podcast called Pod Save the People; Michael Higgenbotham teaches at the University of Baltimore Law School. He’s the author of Ghosts of Jim Crow: Ending Racism in Post-Racial America; Taylor Branch is the winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Parting the Waters, the first volume of his seminal history of the civil rights movement, America in the King Years. And joining the conversation on the line from Frederick, where she is on the history faculty of Hood College: Dr. Terry Anne Scott. She teaches African American history and writes about African American social and cultural history.Tom and his guests also respond to listener comments and questions.
In Black America producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a remembrance of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the 89th anniversary of his birth. The program features addresses and comments by Dr. King, former U.S. President Barack Obama, and the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
In Black America producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a remembrance of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the 89th anniversary of his birth. The program features addresses and comments by Dr. King, former U.S. President Barack Obama, and the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
In Black America producer and host John L. Hanson, Jr. presents a remembrance of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on the 89th anniversary of his birth. The program features addresses and comments by Dr. King, former U.S. President Barack Obama, and the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
In this podcast episode, we feature Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King’s A Time to Break Silence speech on April 4, 1967 in New York City. While many have listened to Dr. King’s I Have a Dream speech, fewer have considered his words in A Time to Break Silence. He embraced his concern for both the welfare of the African-American soldiers who most often were on the front lines of battle, but also for the poor in Vietnam. Dr. King was one of the few national leaders who correctly understood the struggle in Vietnam was not between Communism and democracy, rather a long battle against French imperialism that had dominated the region for hundreds of years. The fear of the Cold War between the U.S. and Russia had spilled into Southeast Asia where it did not belong. Dr. King saw how the Vietnam conflict was both destroying our own country as well as that of the poor in Vietnam. This was not a universally popular speech among the American people. Time has revealed the wisdom of Dr. King who not only spoke of advancing civil rights in America, but also serving as peacemakers here on earth with all people.
In this podcast episode, we feature Dr. Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. speech I Have a Dream delivered on August 28, 1963. We are about to celebrate the national holiday in honor of Dr. King on January 16th. I thought it timely to release Dr. King’s on this day of remembrance and challenge to for us to recommit ourselves to the continuing fight for civil rights for all. The context for Dr. King’s speech was the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in summer of 1963. The speech was delivered from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial before a quarter million civil rights supporters in Washington, D.C. Many historians declare the speech to be the defining moment of the American Civil Rights Movement
Catherine Felegi was honored this evening by the Cranford Clergy Council and the Interfaith Human Relations Committee with the annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Award for Human and Civil Right. Catherine was recognized for her work organizing the Operation Warm Heart chapter at the First Presbyterian Church. Operation Warm Heart serves the homeless by providing a warm place to sleep as well as providing meals and other services.
We're looking at two plays about black America this week: Kemp Powers' One Night In Miami imagines a meeting in 1964 between boxer Cassius Clay, activist Malcolm X, singer Sam Cooke & American Football star Jim Brown as they decide how they can each change the world. Katori Hall's The Mountaintop is set 4 year's later and imagines Rev Martin Luther King's last night alive, in a hotel room in Memphis Charlie Brooker's distopian TV show Black Mirror was a huge success when it began on Channel 4. The new series has moved on to Netflix - a different scale of budget and a different audience. Can it have the same effect? Ali Smith's Autumn is the first in a quartet of seasonal novels. It imagines a contemporary Britain struggling to deal with its identity London's National Gallery's Beyond Caravaggio exhibition explores the influence of Caravaggio on the art of his contemporaries and followers. Razia Iqbal's guests Emma Dabiri, Ekow Eshun and Hardeep Singh Kohli. The producer is Oliver Jones.
John 10:11-18
Janice Grevious will be honored with the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Award at a community service on January 15 at St. Michael's Church. Janice was the organizer of the first Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service. She talks about this year's Day of Service and about being recognized by the Cranford Clergy Council.
Janet Broderick, rector of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Morristown, NJ, traces the inner journey of Martin Luther King Jr., and challenges us to dig deeply within ourselves to find meaningful purposes for our lives. She suggests--humorously--that our time on earth should be more than a series of holiday sweater sales and celebrity sightings at funerals. (Specifically, her own.) Rev. Broderick's talk is from the 26th annual Morris Interfaith Breakfast on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Jan. 17, 2011, at the Hyatt Morristown. She is introduced by Rabbi Donald Rossoff of Temple B'Nai Or in Morristown. Podcast by Kevin Coughlin for MorristownGreen.com