From http://bit.ly/mxkFEB
James Black is not your typical tween. The twelve-year-old from Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, is one of the best junior-high chess players in the country.
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Know Your Neighbor is WNYC's video series about the characters, legends, and good folk living in your midst—about how New Yorkers live and what makes them tick.
For more episodes of Know Your Neighbor, go to:
http://www.wnyc.org/neighbor (less info)
From http://bit.ly/mxkFEB
James Black is not your typical tween. The twelve-year-old from Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, is one of the best junior-high chess players in the country.
--
Know Your Neighbor is WNYC's video series about the characters, legends, and good folk living in your midst—about how New Yorkers live and what makes them tick.
For more episodes of Know Your Neighbor, go to:
http://www.wnyc.org/neighbor (less info)
From http://bit.ly/9SjBzu
By night, Angie Pontani is a burlesque dancer. By day, she's a craft-obsessed homebody in Kensington, Brooklyn, whose passions include crochet, sewing and stain removal.
Watch the video and get to know this sexy "grandmom at heart."
For more episodes of Know Your Neighbor, go to:
http://culture.wnyc.org/neighbor
--
Know Your Neighbor is WNYC's video series about the characters, legends, and mysteries living in your neighborhood—the people on your block with a unique personal style.
We need your help producing this series! Tell us about your neighbor: Leave a comment or email jhsu@wnyc.org and tell us about someone you'd like us to profile. We'll come to your 'hood to produce a video about their story.
From http://bit.ly/7KYL5w
"The struggle is against too many words!" says Greenwich Village poet Samuel Menashe. For more than 50 years, Menashe has lived in the same fifth-floor tenement walkup on Thompson Street.
Jam-packed with books and papers, the apartment is home to some serious wordplay. It's here that Menashe works out his poems; tweaking his compositions, word by word, until they are as bare and honest as he demands that they be.
A typical Menashe poem is shorter than a haiku, sometimes as short as this:
A pot poured out
Fullfills its spout.
"Every word has to count," says Menashe. "Sometimes a poem may go through decades until I finally get the word that makes the poem."
For almost all of his career, Menashe was largely unknown in the United States. It wasn't until 2006, at 81 years old, that he finally got his break: The Poetry Foundation in Chicago honored him with its first Neglected Masters Award and he became the first living American poet to have his work published…
When Natsuko Garcia moved to Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, she decided to build a library for Japanese children...in her living room.
From http://ow.ly/2OJFC
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Know Your Neighbor is WNYC's video series about the characters, legends, and good folk living in your midst.
For more episodes of Know Your Neighbor, go to:
http://www.wnyc.org/neighbor
From http://bit.ly/5lj9nF
Sultana is an East Villager who feels as deeply about Middle East peace as he does about high heels after dark. "I believe in makeup," he says. "Everybody should have makeup on. Even if you're doing the laundry, you should have lip gloss on."
For more episodes of Know Your Neighbor, go to:
culture.wnyc.org/neighbor/
--
Know Your Neighbor is WNYC's video series about the characters, legends, and mysteries living in your neighborhood—the people on your block with a unique personal style.
We need your help producing this series! Tell us about your neighbor: Leave a comment or email jhsu@wnyc.org and tell us about someone you'd like us to profile. We'll come to your 'hood to produce a video about their story.
wnyc.org/neighbor/
Know Your Neighbor is a video series about the characters, legends, and good folk in your midst—about how New Yorkers live and what makes them tick.
Nominate your neighbor: There are one-of-a-kind thinkers, doers and makers on every block of New York City, and I'm counting on you to lead me to them. Tell me about a person in your know that I need to meet: Leave a comment or email jhsu@wnyc.org,
wnyc.org/neighbor/
Know Your Neighbor is a video series about the characters, legends, and good folk in your midst—about how New Yorkers live and what makes them tick.
Nominate your neighbor: There are one-of-a-kind thinkers, doers and makers on every block of New York City, and I'm counting on you to lead me to them. Tell me about a person in your know that I need to meet: Leave a comment or email jhsu@wnyc.org, and follow WNYC on Twitter (@WNYCculture) to catch the latest episode. —Jennifer Hsu
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