On Common Ground: Black Businesses Through Pandemic and Protest | Wednesday, June 24 | 6:00 pm | |
| Many Black-owned small businesses face a precarious moment in the wake of pandemic and civil unrest. How are Oakland’s Black-owned small businesses navigating these social and economic strains? How are they holding community together? Community leaders and business owners join KQED’s Pendarvis Harshaw (Rightnowish) for a conversation about the compounding public health crises of COVID-19 and police violence, how local governments are addressing these issues, and what black businesses are doing to reopen during unsettling times while serving their communities. | |
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UNLADYLIKE2020 California Women and the Vote | Tuesday, June 30 | 6:00 pm | |
| Join KQED, The California Historical Society and Cal Humanities to preview three vignettes from UNLADYLIKE2020 about powerful women who made significant changes in California’s History. We will be featuring stories about Lois Weber, the first woman to direct a feature-length film; Tye Leung Schulze, the first Chinese American woman to vote and first Chinese American woman to hold a government post; and Charlotta Spears Bass, a newspaper editor, Civil Rights crusader, and the first African American woman to be nominated for Vice President. After the screening participate in a live conversation with Sandra Rattley (Writer, Director, and Executive Producer of UNLADYLIKE2020) and Susan D. Anderson (Director of Public Programs for the California Historical Society). | |
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It’s Not Working! The labor force letdown, and how we get back up | Tuesday, July 7 | 6:30 pm | |
| Among rich countries, U.S. workers are uniquely vulnerable during the Covid-19 pandemic. It wasn’t always this way. In the mid 70s, workers had better protections, generally more insurance, and better wages. By tracing the history of how we got here, we can understand what it might take to get us out.Join us for a live conversation in support of the new series How'd We Get Here? from The Bay with KQED's Sam Harnett (Labor and Technocapitalism Reporter), Veena Dubal (Associate professor of Law, UC Hastings) and Jacob Hacker (Stanley B. Resor Professor; Director, Institution for Social and Policy Studies, Yale University). | |
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| San Francisco Botanical Garden | The Garden is essential, now more than ever, as a place of peace, calm, and reflection. Research shows that outdoor places like the Garden promote well-being, good health, and empathy. We invite you to experience the awe and wonder of the planet’s biodiversity as you enjoy more than 9,000 kinds of plants from across the globe. Even under the current public health orders, you can still travel the world in 55 acres at the Garden. |
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American Experience: The Vote Virtual Screening and Discussion | Tuesday, July 21 | 6:00 pm | |
| This summer mark's the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment, guaranteeing women the right to vote. To commemorate those who fought for American women’s suffrage, we'll be hosting a virtual screening featuring excerpts from the new PBS documentary American Experience: The Vote.After the film, join a live conversation about the legacy of suffrage activists and the Amendment’s passage with KQED's politics and government correspondent Marisa Lagos and Elaine Elinson (Co-author, Wherever There's a Fight: How Runaway Slaves, Suffragists, Immigrants, Strikers and Poets Shaped Civil Liberties in California) and Arianna Nassiri (San Francisco Youth Commission, District 2). | |
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| This Email was sent to newsletter@newslettercollector.com | | | KQED 2601 Mariposa St. San Francisco, CA 94110 Copyright © 2019 KQED. All Rights Reserved. |
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