Category Archives: Events
Friday 3/10 @HotPeasandButta+ @DJDopeShoes @ [BASELINE AESTHETICS Mag Event]
Friday February 10, 2012 – Hot Peas and Butta on the set for the BASELINE AESTHETICS MAGAZINE RELEASE EVENT. 10:00 pm – 4:00 am. Cover Notes: No cover, we are back to FREE Friday night parties! Contact Email: info@hotpeasandbutta.com

Red Bull Music Academy Session Brooklyn feat. Smif N Wessun, Evil Dee, Skyzoo & Buckshot

Talib Kweli DJing Uptown Saturday Night Feb 4th
Bridge Conversations: Exhibit on the Black Male Experience in America
Question Bridge: Black Males – Project Trailer from Question Bridge on Vimeo.
“Question Bridge: Black Males” is a new video installation currently on view at the Brooklyn Museum that consists of a series of interviews with Black men in the United States today. The exhibit will also travel to the Oakland Museum of California (Jan 21 – July 8), the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art (Jan 20- May 19), at Atlanta’s Chastain Art Gallery (Jan 27 – March 17) and the Sundance Film Festival (Jan 19 – 29th).
Huffington Post Interview with Chris Johnson and Hank Willis Thomas, two of the collaborators about their project, which originally began as a response to the 1996 Republican convention in San Diego:
HuffPost Arts: What are some stereotypes of black men that really irk you?
Question Bridge Team: Black men are angry, obdurate, lazy and thuggish beings who don’t care for their families and resist attempts to educate and inspire them.
To some extent we’ve all internalize these impressions but we on the QB team have discovered that it only takes the process of asking them a meaningful question for these impressions to be exploded! A black man you might identify as the most belligerent will come forth with a poignant and probing question and/or answer when given the proper opportunity. How this process works is something worth exploring.
HuffPost Arts: What has changed for black men since you began the project in 1996?
Question Bridge Team: At that time the class and opportunity-based divisions within the black community were far less visible and acute than they are now. Now we have a black male President while at the same time approximately 62% of incarcerated men are black, even though we only comprise about 6% of our population.
Also, since then the cultural commodity of black male media images has become just as dichotomized. On the one hand you have Jesse Williams, one of our Executive Producers appearing as a brilliant and charismatic doctor on ‘Grey’s Anatomy,’ and on the other thug rappers appearing as role models for an enormous percentage of inner city young boys.
Question Bridge is ripe for this time in our cultural history.
HuffPost Arts: What do you hope will happen with the user-generated website? How important is participation to the piece?
Question Bridge Team: The website became a practical necessity once our team discovered that we had far more content than could possibly be contained in a conventional documentary or museum installation. The user-generated element of the website was conceptualized by our collaborator Kamal Sinclair as a way to accomplish a number of key goals for the overall project:
It provides a way for people everywhere to become “privileged witnesses” of the Question Bridge process. We know that once people see and hear what these men have to say, it will affect their ability to treat black men as a homogenous group [and] it provides us with a way to invite black men from all parts of our culture to participate in this process of with their own questions and answers. Once those men join the process, their presence will create a self-defining Identity Map that will function as a unique database of how black men view and define themselves… as opposed to the prevalent images that are routinely projected onto them. There is also a strong community outreach element of the overall project that includes smart posters at what we’re calling Hot Spots that contain QR codes and NFC tags that will allow people out in the world to connect to QB content via the website.
Here’s how I would assess the importance of the many components of the overall Question Bridge project:
The installations are important because they strongly present the unscripted voices and views of black males to American culture in a unique form.
The community outreach projects bring regional attention to the museum installations and also promote a much-needed dialog across generations on themes inherent to the Question Bridge mission.
The Question Bridge Curriculum, which is currently being piloted at schools in New York and Oakland with plans for wider distribution, is vital because it brings the messages, meanings and implications of the Question Bridge project into the lives of young people who desperately need alternative representations of cultural difference.
International Day of Solidarity with Leonard Peltier

The Leonard Peltier Defense Offense Committee calls on supporters worldwide to protest against the injustice suffered by Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier. Gather on February 4, 2012, at every federal court house and U.S. embassy or consulate worldwide to demand the freedom of a man wrongfully convicted and illegal imprisoned for 36 years!
Leonard Peltier is a Native American activist wrongfully accused in 1975 in connection with the shooting deaths of two agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Government documents show that, without any evidence at all, the FBI decided from the beginning of its investigation to ‘lock Peltier into the case’.
Leonard Peltier is 67 years old and in poor health. An accomplished author and artist, Mr. Peltier is renowned for his humanitarian achievements. In 2009, Leonard was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for the sixth consecutive year.
Although the courts have acknowledged evidence of government misconduct—including forcing witnesses to lie and hiding ballistics evidence reflecting his innocence—Mr. Peltier has been denied a new trial on a legal technicality. Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu, 55 Members of Congress and others—including a judge who sat as a member of the court in two of Mr. Peltier’s appeals—have all called for his immediate release.
The Courts may not be able to act but Barack Obama, as President, can. Please join with us to free an innocent man. On February 4, 2012, tell Obama to grant clemency to Leonard Peltier.
IN NYC:
Saturday, February 4, 2012 • 2 to 6 p.m.
Riverside Church, 490 Riverside Drive
(120th and Claremont, Manhattan)
Frank Menusan, Opening Prayer and Native American Flute
Red Storm Drum & Dance Troupe
Performance by Coatlicue Theatre Company
Former Puerto Rican Prisoner of War Luis Rosa Pérez
$5 to $10 Donation at the Door (Nobody turned away due to empty pockets!)
Click here for Events in Albuquerque, Rapid City, San Jose, Tacoma, Canada & Germany
::@Chevon recommends:: The MLK Dance Party w/@Beatminerz (Mr. Walt!), @DJEvilDee @DJEsquire+ more @sutranyc Tonight

::@chevon recommends:: TONIGHT @MoBettaBrown (trumpet) +@BoogieBlind 4 @TheBoomBapLive /Freedom/Rub Party

Tamir Z. Brown & Lyrics To Go Entertainment Present:
The Freedom Party Vs. The Rub
The Boom Bap (featuring The X Factor Boogie Blind), hosted by Greg Nice
Sun, January 15, 2012 at BROOKLYN BOWL
Doors: 6:00 pm / Show: 9:00 pm | Tix @ Door

::@Chevon recommends:: the BLACK POWER MIXTAPE film. FREE 4 @MLKDay @Bam_Brooklyn !!

Brooklyn’s Largest MLK Event is at BAM.
The 26th annual MLK Celebration at the Brooklyn Academy of Music takes place on January 16th at 10:30am.
Following the event, go to the Opera House where BAM Rose Cinemas presents a free screening of the film The Black Power Mixtape 1967—1975.
Featuring never-before-seen interviews with many leaders of the Black Power Movement this moving documentary features a treasure trove of footage shot by Swedish journalists who came to the US drawn by stories of urban unrest and revolution.
Screening at BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
FREE! First come, first seated. One ticket per person.
::@chevon recommends:: 150 years of @BAM_Brooklyn Exhibit
Sanitary Fair stamps, 1864
During the Civil War, BAM held a Sanitary Fair to raise funds to buy medicine and bandages for the Union army. “It raised $400,000, which was a really big amount of money then,” explains Lehner. One of the more popular items sold were “these incredibly rare and beautiful stamps,” she continues. “All of the proceeds from these stamps went to the Sanitary Commission. People would come [to the fair] and post letters to one another in the neighborhood.”
When the Brooklyn Academy of Music kicked off its inaugural 1861–1862 season, the venue offered residents of the borough—then the third largest U.S. city—top-tier cultural happenings without having to trek to Manhattan’s theaters. Aside from performances, the institution, which originally resided in Brooklyn Heights, hosted “everything from social dances to lectures to political events,” says Sharon Lehner, director of the BAM Hamm Archives. Nowadays, BAM attracts gaggles of Manhattanites to Fort Greene for big-ticket draws like Academy Award winner Kevin Spacey, currently performing the titular role in Shakespeare’s Richard III (through Mar 4), and once-reclusive indie-rock hero Jeff Mangum (Jan 19–21). To celebrate its storied past, the institution has searched through its archives to create a rotating exhibit examining two time periods: 1861 to 1967 (Sun 15–Apr 15) and 1967 to today (May 1–Sept 2). We chatted with Lehner about the cultural force’s collection of rare films, photos, promotional knickknacks and artifacts on display for its sesquicentennial.
SEE IT NOW! “From Brooklyn to the World: A History of BAM,” BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building lobby, 30 Lafayette Ave between Ashland Pl and St. Felix St, Fort Greene, Brooklyn (bam.org). Mon–Sat noon–11pm, Sun 1–11pm; free. Sun 15–Sept 2.
Via Timeout!





