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"A nation's greatness is measured by how it treats its weakest members." -- Ghandi
Without knowing exactly how many times I've cruised past the former barracks across from Queen Elizabeth Park, I was surprised to see that nearly all of the windows covered in plywood. I biked back with my camera - although without the nice afternoon light - and started snapping away when an older Chinese man walked over and started chewing the fat with me.
He told me that these buildings used to be barracks for the veterans of WWII when they returned from the war. Having lived there for over 20 years, the developers of the land gave tenants an order to evacuate by the end of the month. Most of the units were vacant as I walked by, but a few are biting their thumb to the condo developers poaching in their neighborhood.
My new friend apologized for taking up so much of my time with his stories, and I, grateful for the opportunity, felt too humbled by to ask if I could take his portrait standing in front of his garden holding a bucket of unpressed laundry.
November 8, 2010 -- Los Angeles teenage hip-hop collective Odd Future, a.k.a. OFWGKTA (Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All) make their New York City debut at the Studio at Webster Hall.
© 2010 Kathryn Yu. All rights reserved.
Manifestación juvenil contra la inoperancia en la lucha contra la crisis climática , en sant Salvador , del Vendrell .
The future of democracy, the hope of tomorrow. Barak Obama and Senate Candidate Howard Ford, Jr. share a moment in front of a crowd in Nashville.
The Future Panther Tailgate was held on September 10, 2022, on the campus of Eastern Illinois University. (Dominic Baima)
Future Music Festival.
Doomben Racecourse, Brisbane.
March 2, 2013.
*Images copyright © 2013 Charlyn Cameron. *
**Please do not use images without permission**
It might be springtime but you can still take a photo of a building that makes it feel like winter in 2040!
..no its not!
stole this from thhe Dubai Press Club, their offices used to be in our building so we decided to take a look after they left and I found this! heheh
Después de la pirotecnia, el fin de semana estuvo rodeado de comida en abundancia. Una pierna de pavo recalentada el viernes, una deliciosa barbacoa el sábado y finalmente una suculenta pancita xochimilca el domingo.
Tengo que admitir que ahora se me está cobrando la factura con las frecuentes visitas al sanitario, jaja.
drinks and food from the experimental Food Futures menu by FoAM
lib.fo.am/future_fabulators/future_fictions_recipes
photo (c) Kristof Vrancken / Z33
PHOTO CREDIT: OONA MAE
Future Fires is an innovative programme designed to empower young artists by giving them the opportunity to design and deliver their own project with a community that they are part of or who they feel a special connection to.
The five young artists involved in the pilot project in 2008 were responsible for every aspect of their projects from fundraising to outreach – they underwent training, research trips and mentoring to develop the skills they needed in order to make their projects a success.
The five projects were totally different working with a number of different communities including young people at risk, refugees, female asylum seekers, elderly people and young people using everything from spoken word, carnival, film and hip-hop to create work, share stories and learn new skills.
The artists involved in the first year of the scheme were:
Samira Arhin-Acquah; age 23, spoken word and hip hop artist. At Contact she has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company, and was a performer-writer in Contact’s spoken word theatre production ‘I Hear Voices’. She was recently co-facilitator of Contact & QueerUpNorth’s queer Hip Hop project ‘Beyond the Box’.
Borhan Mohammedi; age 21, performer and director. Borhan is a Kurdish-Iranian refugee, who has been in Manchester since 2001. At Contact he has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company; he has trained as facilitator of the Drama Drop In programme and worked on the artistic team for the Arts United project which Contact ran for young refugees. Recently he was Assistant Director on the CYAC show Close Up and took part in the director training scheme ‘Live and Direct’.
Kelly Morgan; age 19, performer and choreographer. At Contact she has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company and has also worked as an assistant facilitator on Drama Drop In and as a choreographer on a range of projects.
Martin Stannage; age 22, writer and performer. Martin is experienced as a writer, spoken word artist and performer. At Contact he has been a Young Writer in Residence. He is one of the leaders of ‘Freestyle Mondays’ an informal weekly open session for local MCs and was a performer-writer in ‘I Hear Voices’. He also has experience as a youth worker.
Yusra Warsama; age 23. At Contact she has been part of Contact Young Actors Company, and has developed as a spoken word artist, recently touring with Apples and Snakes. Yusra was Assistant Director on CYAC show FreeFlow and is currently part of the Incubate programme.
Riedel's future "Smart Staff" has just arrived at IBC 2019! Our trainees are preparing for their scavenger hunt all over the exhibition to explore what broadcast business is all about.
PHOTO CREDIT: OONA MAE
Future Fires is an innovative programme designed to empower young artists by giving them the opportunity to design and deliver their own project with a community that they are part of or who they feel a special connection to.
The five young artists involved in the pilot project in 2008 were responsible for every aspect of their projects from fundraising to outreach – they underwent training, research trips and mentoring to develop the skills they needed in order to make their projects a success.
The five projects were totally different working with a number of different communities including young people at risk, refugees, female asylum seekers, elderly people and young people using everything from spoken word, carnival, film and hip-hop to create work, share stories and learn new skills.
The artists involved in the first year of the scheme were:
Samira Arhin-Acquah; age 23, spoken word and hip hop artist. At Contact she has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company, and was a performer-writer in Contact’s spoken word theatre production ‘I Hear Voices’. She was recently co-facilitator of Contact & QueerUpNorth’s queer Hip Hop project ‘Beyond the Box’.
Borhan Mohammedi; age 21, performer and director. Borhan is a Kurdish-Iranian refugee, who has been in Manchester since 2001. At Contact he has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company; he has trained as facilitator of the Drama Drop In programme and worked on the artistic team for the Arts United project which Contact ran for young refugees. Recently he was Assistant Director on the CYAC show Close Up and took part in the director training scheme ‘Live and Direct’.
Kelly Morgan; age 19, performer and choreographer. At Contact she has been a member of Contact Young Actors Company and has also worked as an assistant facilitator on Drama Drop In and as a choreographer on a range of projects.
Martin Stannage; age 22, writer and performer. Martin is experienced as a writer, spoken word artist and performer. At Contact he has been a Young Writer in Residence. He is one of the leaders of ‘Freestyle Mondays’ an informal weekly open session for local MCs and was a performer-writer in ‘I Hear Voices’. He also has experience as a youth worker.
Yusra Warsama; age 23. At Contact she has been part of Contact Young Actors Company, and has developed as a spoken word artist, recently touring with Apples and Snakes. Yusra was Assistant Director on CYAC show FreeFlow and is currently part of the Incubate programme.