Wade on Birmingham

Archive for 'Culture'

The Birmingham channel: To be the best

Monday, February 16th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

Homewood High’s show choir performs in a January competition in Montgomery. From Matthew Westberry.

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November’s Career Development Conference downtown. From Birmingham Education Foundation.

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Custom 1965 Lincoln Continental at last week’s World of Wheels downtown. From NotBob Channel.

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Kingston wears a GoPro. From Dog Days of Birmingham.

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A New Year’s resolution to walk 10,000 steps a day. From Clementine Tufts.

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The Grateful Dead Katie Moellering story visual. From Justin Miller.

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A shoot with Handley Breaux Designs. From Crooked Tree Productions.

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See Tiny Hamster on a dinner date.

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See what brought some Birmingham voters out last week.

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The Birmingham channel: On the map

Monday, February 9th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

Homewood Middle starts wrestling team for girls. From ABC 33/40.

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“Bad Tourism: Birmingham.” From Contact Buzz Comedy.

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I think someone built a Birmingham Police car in “Grand Theft Auto.” I think. From MrOxPlay.

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Coach Myreon Jones puts the Birmingham Storm through drills and workout. From KdotLove205.

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The IBM Smarter Cities Challenge came to Birmingham to work on access to healthy food. From IBM Citizenship.

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Glen Hansard performs “Come Away to the Water” Feb. 2 at Iron City on Southside. From Cady Weldon.

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Nashville rock band Steelism plays “Blind Beggar” on Dec. 9 at Aloft in Homewood. From Paste Magazine.

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James Spann and Dan Satterfield cover Winter Storm 1992 live for WBRC-6. From bamaguynbham.

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Promo for Relay for Life at Birmingham-Southern College. From Brittany Arias.

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Lyman Ward Military Academy performs at the 2014 Veterans Day parade. From Lyman Ward Military Academy.

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http://instagram.com/p/yyI68HwBzA/

Sneaks the hedgehog. From Mark Leo.

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See the documentary “Our Mockingbird,” shot in Birmingham.

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Watch Birmingham high schools in doc ‘Our Mockingbird’

Wednesday, February 4th, 2015

Author Lee to roll out ‘Mockingbird’ sequel book in July

Video: “Our Mockingbird”

Sandra Jaffe’s documentary “Our Mockingbird” made a national TV debut Tuesday. The timing couldn’t have been better.

Readers worldwide rejoiced at the same-day announcement that reclusive author Harper Lee had long ago penned a sequel to “To Kill a Mockingbird.” The new book, “Go Set a Watchman,” arrives July 14 with 2 million copies.

While the title is already a best-seller, several writers have raised concerns about the book’s timing and Lee’s health. A Jezebel essay mentions:

“Harper Lee’s sister Alice Lee, who ferociously protected Harper Lee’s estate (and person) from unwanted outside attention as a lawyer and advocate for decades, passed away late last year, leaving the intensely private author (who herself is reportedly in ill health) vulnerable to people who may not have her best interests at heart.”

The Associated Press reports Lee’s condition at her sister’s November funeral:

“Grieving, ill and seated in a wheelchair, Lee talked loudly to herself at awkward times during the service for her beloved older sister and attorney, Alice, according to two family friends who attended the November service. Lee mumbled in a manner that shocked some in attendance, said one of the friends.”

 

Such is the passion over the author and her beloved 1960 novel.

The documentary features two Birmingham-area schools putting on a stage version of “To Kill a Mockingbird.” Jaffe, the filmmaker, hails from Mountain Brook.

The movie streams online till March 6.

Harper Lee, George W. Bush

President Bush awards the Presidential Medal
of Freedom to Harper Lee in 2007.

The Birmingham channel: Half the city

Monday, February 2nd, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

Exploring the City Federal building downtown at night. From Matt Glasscock.

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The band Wray performs “Jennifer” at Communicating Vessels in Woodlawn. From Spectra Sonic Sound Sessions.

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Truck stop sermon. From Bro Darrell.

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Jan. 18 promotional event with “Jersey Belle” star at Dyron’s Lowcountry restaurant in Mountain Brook. From Jaime Primak Sullivan.

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Birmingham Baker’s Dozen ride on Jan. 17. From Matt Butler.

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A race across trampolines at the Steel City Jump Park at the Crestwood Festival Center. From TwYcH811.

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The band 8 Feet of Soul performed “Stormy Monday” Sunday at Daniel Day Gallery in Lakeview. From Joey Nettleman.

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Ninth-grade students from Shaaray Tefila study civil rights in Atlanta, Montgomery, Selma and Birmingham with nonprofit organization Etgar 36. From Shaaray Tefila NYC.

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Lauren Lippeatt leads a class on “Fierce Flow” yoga. From Lauren Lippeatt.

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Interview with attorney Doug Jones, part of the Jesus at Work series at Avondale United Methodist Church. From Brandon Harris.

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Texas metal band Flyleaf performed Sunday at WorkPlay in Lakeview. From aerialjane.

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A student’s hip hop routine last week at the UAB International Bazaar. From UAB.

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Birmingham Library to hold Local Authors Expo Saturday

Sunday, February 1st, 2015

Local Authors Expo

The Local Authors Expo takes place Saturday at
the Central Branch of the Birmingham Public Library.

The Local Authors Expo returns for a 9th year this Saturday at the Birmingham Public Library.

This showcase for 100 authors offers workshops, children’s entertainment and the opportunity to meet published writers in person.

Participating authors this year are:

Ed Abernathy
Thomas Bates
Jerri Beck
Lisa Benn
Scott Blasingame
Carolyn Bolivar
Javacia Harris Bowser
Jeff Breland
Damien Brown
Barbara Brown
Kevin Cain
Harry Chambers Jr.
Ashley Alice Chappell
Lawayne Childrey
Katie Clark
Stevie Cole
Robert Collins
Joseph W. Connaughton
Sherryl Denise Cook-Godfrey
Artemis Craig
Jessie Crawford
John Davis
Jackson Day
Yakinea Marie Duff
S.L. Duncan
Murray Dunlap
Carol Ealons
Shirley Ferguson
Tracee Ford
June Foster
Wynora Freeman
J.D. Frost
GeNeise Fuller
Kristy Gadson
Jack Gannon
Andrea Gates
Steve Gierhart
Clay Gilbert
Elizabeth Gregory
Sybil Green
King Greta
Vanessa Griggs
Christopher Hamlin
James Hammond
R. Kyle Hannah
Drew Headley
Alex Headley
Leo Henry
Anthony Hill
James Jack
B.J. Keeton
Elizabeth Kitchens
Peter Kirchikov
Kathryn Lang
Keith Lee
Charles Lewis
Jacquelin Lewis
Rebecca Linam
Creola Lucas
Yolanda Marshall-Nickerson
Jon McClure
Danny B. McGuire
Lisa McKinney
Todd McKinney
LaTanya Millhouse
Shirley W. Mitchell
Mary Murphy
Roneshia Murray
Stephanie Osborn
Doctor Osborn
Plato Papajohn
Brittaney Pleasant
Amanda Porter
Myra Rutledge
Harriett Samuels
Grady Sue Loftin Saxon
Keisa Sharpe-Johnson
Beth Shelnutt
Ashley Sherer
Josie Skanes
Greg Starnes
Amy Leigh Strickland
Carly Strickland
Kyle Strickland
Marie Sutton
Ash Taylor
Cedric Threatt
Vickie Tubbs
Betty Tucker
Martin Turk
Jill Dill Vincent
Alberta Watson
JD Weeks
Brian Weimer
Phyllis Williams
Rob Williams
Sharon Williams
Cyndi Williams-Barnier
Pamela Wright
Johnnie Wyatt
Andrea Zug

Keith LeeAt 10 a.m., Keith Lee discusses “Common Legal Issues for Authors and Self-Publishers.” The author is an attorney at Hamer Law Group and writes the Associate’s Mind blog.

Marie SuttonAt 1 p.m., Marie Sutton discusses “How to Make History Come Alive on the Page.” She is the author of “The A.G. Gaston Motel in Birmingham.” [Read an excerpt.]

The free event runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Central Branch of the Birmingham Public Library, 2100 Park Place, downtown [map].

For more information, visit the Local Authors Expo page.

Birmingham Public Library

The Birmingham channel: The world is watching

Monday, January 26th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

Former UAB quarterback Sam Hunt performs “Take Your Time” on “The Ellen Degeneres Show” last week. From “The Ellen Degeneres Show.”

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Birmingham band St. Paul and the Broken Bones performs “Call Me” on “Late Show with David Letterman” earlier this month. From “Late Show with David Letterman.”

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Talk show host Steve Harvey receives a birthday surprise from Comedy Club Stardome’s Bruce and Che Che Ayers. From al.com.

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Promotional video that was part of the winning bid for the World Games 2021. From Big Communications.

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Birmingham band Nowhere Squares’ music video for “She’s So Gross.” From Paul Cordes Wilm.

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Promotional clip for Birmingham. From Moxy.

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Paul Weaver plays “Gladiolus Rag.” From Message in a Bottle Productions.

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Inside Memorial Mound in Bessemer. From Matt Glasscock.

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“Sakhu” by Kayla Gladney and Alesha Mitchell, looking at black women who broke barriers in their professional lives. From UAB Documentary.

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Vaper meetup at Avondale Brewing Company. From Robert Graves.

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Auburn pole vaulters competing at the CrossPlex. From vaultmonkey.

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“The Real Housewives of Birmingham.” From Katie Grant.

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See Mountain Brook shops featured on national television.

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Books: Excerpt from Thomas Spencer’s ‘Five-Star Trails: Birmingham’

Sunday, January 25th, 2015

Five-Star Trails Birmingham, Thomas Spencer

The following chapter is an excerpt from Birmingham author Thomas Spencer’s “Five-Star Trails: Birmingham” [aff. link]. He grew up hiking and camping in Alabama and worked as a reporter for the Anniston Star and the Birmingham News. Spencer is now senior research associate at the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama. He was a founder of the Friends of Red Mountain Park and serves on the board of the Cahaba River Society.

“Five-Star Trails: Birmingham” provides plans and details for three dozen hikes, from downtown to the surrounding wilderness areas.

In this excerpt, Tom takes us on a hike to Oak Mountain State Park’s highest point.

• • •

Hike No. 12: Oak Mountain State Park, King’s Chair Loop

At-A-Glance Information

  • Scenery: ★★★★★
  • Trail Condition: ★★★★☆
  • Children: ★★★☆☆
  • Difficulty: ★★★★☆
  • Solitude: ★★★☆☆
  • GPS Trailhead Coordinates: N33° 21.438′ W86° 42.288′
  • Distance and Configuration: 5-mile loop
  • Hiking Time: 3 hours
  • Highlights: Challenging uphills, great mountaintop views from Eagle’s Nest and King’s Chair, wet-weather waterfalls
  • Elevation: 600 feet at trailhead, 1,200 feet at peak
  • Access, Maps, Wheelchair Access: [included in book]
  • Facilities: Restrooms and changing rooms at the trailhead
  • Comments: Remember that the Red Trail is a shared hiking and mountain biking trail.

Overview

This route is intense because of its uphill climb and the scenic rewards it provides. It’s a great hike for fall colors, providing sweeping scenic vistas. In wet weather, cascading streams tumble down the mountainside. In any season, it’s a quick way to feel far from civilization.

From the North Trailhead, this hike follows the Blue Trail up Double Oak Mountain to two of the park’s favorite overlooks. It continues southwest along the south rim of the mountain before taking the south Red–Blue Connector Trail to the Red Trail, which heads downhill back to the north trailhead.

Route Details

This hike doesn’t mess around. It makes an immediate climb up Oak Mountain. Between the North Trailhead and the Eagle’s Nest overlook, there is a 500-foot elevation gain, and that’s in the first mile-and-a-half. But that early and intense exertion pays dividends. You get away from civilization quickly. Thanks to the size of the park and the way the trail twists up the ridges, you encounter views on this hike in which all you see is woods and mountains, quick access to the feeling that you’ve wandered off someplace remote.

We hiked parts of this route in the warm and dry early fall and enjoyed the way the breezes on the ridges cooled us after a tough climb. We returned in winter after a rain and were surprised to find that what had been dry drainages in the fall had become a series of gushing waterfalls. There was so much water that creek crossings on the Red Trail offered a challenge for anyone wanting to keep their feet dry.

The hike starts at the North Trailhead, across from the gravel parking lot on the north end of the park, near the lower lakes and the park entrance off Alabama 119.

While the White, Yellow and Red Trails gain elevation gradually, the Blue Trail heads directly up the mountain. It is well marked, with plastic blue blazes nailed to trees. Distance markers are posted every quarter-mile; on the Blue Trail, they start at 0 and go up. So at Post 4, you’ve gone 1 mile.

The forests are a mix of pine and hardwood, with a nice sampling of longleaf pines on the ridges and white oaks in the draws; the latter provide a generous supply of fat acorns in the fall. When we went back in winter, the acorns were harder to find, likely gobbled up by the wintering wildlife. What was present in the winter that had not been there in the fall was water. And lots of it. A little less than a half-mile into the hike, you begin crossing a series of streams dropping down the mountainside, creating little waterfalls as they go. At the 1-mile mark, you pass the north Red–Blue Connector Trail, which serves as a shortcut back to the parking lot if you need it.

Oak Mountain State Park

Oak Mountain State Park
(click image for larger version)

King's Chair Trail map

King’s Chair Trail map, above,
and elevation profile, below

King's Chair Trail elevation profile

Shortly thereafter, the trail splits. Continuing straight, the original Blue Trail offers several unobstructed views of Shackleford Ridge, then descends gently to a saddle between ridges before resuming its upward climb. If you’ve had enough of steep hills by now, this is the way to go. Be forewarned, though, that heavy rains can turn the original Blue Trail into a swiftly flowing creek. Alternatively, if you turn left at the junction, a newer Blue Trail (with the same blue blazes) makes an exceedingly steep 0.2-mile climb to a rock outcropping at the Eagle’s Nest overlook, then continues downhill not quite as precipitously to rejoin the original Blue Trail just before the final pitch up to the Double Oak Mountain ridgetop. From the top of the rock at Eagle’s Nest, you can see yet another perspective of Shackleford Ridge and the park’s highest point. From all points, your view is forest and twisting mountain ridges that hide any evidence of civilization.

At the 1.5-mile marker on the trail (you’re about 2 miles into your hike if you went up to Eagle’s Nest), you top the ridge and reach the junction with the spur trail to the King’s Chair Overlook. Take the spur. At 0.3 miles, it’s a little longer than the spur to Eagle’s Nest, but it’s much less arduous.

At the rocky outcropping of King’s Chair, you get your first chance for wide-open views from the southeastern ridge of the mountain. In the far distance across the wide Coosa River Valley, the Talladega Mountain ridges are visible. In the middle distance, you’ll see steam rising from the cooling towers at Alabama Power’s Gaston electrical plant in south Shelby County, along the river.

Returning to the main trail, continue south along the ridge on the Blue Trail to the southern Red–Blue Connector. Take that connector, which cuts back to the north 0.75 miles to the Red Trail, which in turn takes you back to the North Trailhead. The return trip is especially nice if it has been raining. Those little mountain streams gather together with more volume, creating trailside waterfalls and challenging creek crossings. Along the way, you’ll notice stonework in the drainage system along the road. In the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps built the Red Road. Remember that you’re sharing this trail with mountain bikers.

The trip back to the parking lot is well marked and easy.

Directions

From I-65, follow the directions on page 111. After entering the park, you’ll drive almost its entire length to get to the North Trailhead.

From US 280, follow the directions on page 111. About a mile past the back entrance to the park, the North Trailhead parking lot will be on your right, along the main park road.

• • •

Thomas Spencer has two library events in March: a brown bag lunch talk at noon March 11 at Emmet O’Neal Library in Mountain Brook [map]; and a book signing at 6:30 p.m. March 19 at Homewood Public Library [map].

He also has a free group hike at 10:30 a.m. Feb. 28 at Perry Lakes Park with Southeastern Outings. Other hikes with him and Scale Back Alabama will take place through April. For more information on the hikes, email Tanya Sylvan at Keen Communication or Tom Spencer.

“Five-Star Trails: Birmingham” (November 2014, Menasha Ridge Press)

Thomas Spencer

The Birmingham channel: Clips from causes

Monday, January 19th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos, featuring nonprofit organizations in honor of today’s Martin Luther King Day of Service …

“American Artifacts” visits the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. From C-SPAN.

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Carlos Izcaray is the new music director of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra, shown here in a 2013 interview from Casa da Música. From Casa da Música.

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How Easter Seals helps people with disabilities. From Easter Seals of the Birmingham Area.

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At age 6, Emily didn’t realize that her tummy ache could be ovarian cancer. From Laura Crandall Brown Ovarian Cancer Foundation.

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A look at New Rising Star’s mission for 2014-15. From New Rising Star Community Support Corporation.

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Glenwood’s work with people with autism. From Glenwood Inc.

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Celebrating Founder’s Day at the A.G. Gaston Boys and Girls Club. From A.G. Gaston Boys and Girls Club.

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Cedric Sparks with the City of Birmingham Mayor’s Office Division of Youth Services speaks at the Exchange Club luncheon. From Exchange Club Child Abuse Prevention Center.

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How Not Forgotten helps street children of Iquitos, Peru. From Not Forgotten.

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Sonya Moore and her family find a new start with the Alabama Baptist Children’s Homes and Family Ministries. From Alabama Baptist Children’s Homes and Family Ministries.

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See reaction to the UAB Faculty Senate
no confidence vote
in President Ray Watts.

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See a tour of BrickFair Alabama, the Lego showcase.

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The $1 billion question: Can UAB afford to keep Watts as president?

Thursday, January 15th, 2015

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Alumni upset over UAB’s decision to drop football
have responded on donation request cards.

In college, I had to make cold calls to alumni to solicit donations. They weren’t just any alumni, and it wasn’t for just any gigantic endowment fund.

I played in marching band every year, and it costs thousands of dollars to maintain uniforms, rent buses and buy and repair instruments. I called “bandies” to catch them up on recent shows, but more importantly, hit them up for cash.

I have a soft spot for those tasked with fund-raising for their schools and causes. It’s not an easy job.
Campaign for UAB

The most recent posted update for the Campaign for UAB

One Birmingham institution is in the middle — nearly dead center — of its $1 billion drive, the Campaign for UAB. As of Oct. 31, it had raised $534 million. It may be closer to the end than anyone knows.

The events of the last couple of months have changed the momentum:

  • Nov. 29: The football team wins its final season game, making it bowl eligible for the first time in 10 years. Bill Clark would later be named Conference USA Coach of the Year.
  • Dec. 2: President Ray Watts announces he is dropping the football, rifle and bowling teams.
  • Last week: Graduate Student Government passes resolution of no confidence in Watts.
  • Friday: Watts speaks publicly for the first time since Dec. 2, announcing an independent review of the numbers that led to his decision.
  • Tuesday: Undergraduate Student Government Association passes resolution of no confidence in Watts.
  • This morning: Faculty Senate passes resolution of no confidence in Watts.

Video: Susan Key explains the Faculty Senate vote.

Following the Senate vote, Susan Key of the Collat School of Business told a reporter, “It’s the first ‘no confidence’ vote in Alabama that I’ve ever heard of. … You really can’t lead if you don’t have any followers behind you.”

It’s telling that the faculty’s no confidence resolution barely mentions football or athletics at all; their dispute is over a lack of shared governance during Watts’ 22 months in office. His round of secret, closed door meetings with segments of the university appear to have had little effect, except to illuminate his discomfort with transparency.

Off campus, a number of cities including Birmingham proper have passed their own resolutions supporting UAB football.

Video: overview of today’s no confidence vote from UAB faculty

Ray WattsWatts said in a statement, written and video, that he would continue to work hard as president to regain trust and build consensus. The UA board of trustees, his employer, has also said it would continue to support him.

It’s clear that the Free UAB movement has built a coalition of students, employees, alumni, fans and donors that has real clout. In 6 weeks, it has gained widespread support on campus and appears to move quickly, even as the administration response has seemed almost glacially slow.

But the resolutions are symbolic, and it’s unclear whether recent similar votes of no confidence at other campuses nationwide have had any effect.

The $1 billion question is how it will impact fund-raising, and to a lesser extent, enrollment. It may take years to determine if students are staying away in droves from UAB, but only months to see if donations dry up.

The Campaign for UAB, launched in October 2013, is intended for research, economic development, faculty recruitment and construction. Disappearing dollars will not only hurt the school but also the city.

The good news is that the campaign reached the halfway point in under a year, with the original end date of 2018. The bad news is the school could extend the deadline to 2118 and still not raise the other $500 million.

UAB expects to raise $35 million from faculty and staff. If we assume that half has been raised, it’s likely they can kiss the other $17.5 million goodbye.

UAB expects a drop in support because of the announcement, based on findings in the increasingly flimsy CarrSports report. One Birmingham business owner has already canceled his $1 million commitment based on the football decision.

The alumni in Free UAB have been vocal about their commitment not to donate until Watts is removed from office and football is restored. They have posted numerous photos of pledge cards with large handwritten cries of “Not another dime” and “Fire Ray Watts” (shown above).

UAB and the UA board of trustees must decide whose numbers matter more, before they become dire.

Johnny Johns, best known as CEO of Protective Life, has a dual role as UA trustee and co-chair of the Campaign for UAB. He can either back up his hatchet man Watts or he can attempt to rescue the $500 million in future donations, but he can’t do both.

I know from firsthand experience the challenges of raising thousands of dollars for nonprofit organizations. I learned a lot from manning the phones back in my college days, especially about how institutional reputation could make or break my pitch long before I opened my mouth.

Let’s see the month-to-month numbers behind the giving in the Campaign for UAB. They can paint a picture far more vivid than the hollow repeated promises of a puppet president.

Watts costs $2,338.26 a day in salary. But keeping him could cost UAB and Birmingham thousands, maybe millions, of dollars in the long run.

BrickFair to rebuild universe in Lego form

Thursday, January 15th, 2015
BrickFair Lego ships

Photo: Joe Miserendino (CC)

BrickFair lets builders sail away with their imagination.

OK, so “The Lego Movie” didn’t pick up an Oscar nomination today for Best Picture … or even for Best Animated Picture. (It did nab one for Best Song.)

What’s the consolation prize? BrickFair.

The annual Lego convention takes place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in Birmingham. Exhibitors show off their creative side with cityscapes, ships, robots, churches and more.

BrickFair Lego carousel

Photo: Joe Miserendino (CC)

Santa’s elves enjoy vacation in this Lego scene.

BrickFair Stay and Play Room

Watch where you step: the Stay and Play Room

Attendees can try their hand in the play area and win prizes.

Admission is $10, free for age 3 and younger. The event is at the BJCC Exhibition Hall downtown [map].

For more information, visit the BrickFair site.

BrickFair

Video: A look at BrickFair Alabama

The Birmingham channel: The long climb

Monday, January 12th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

Scooby Doo freestyles at the Monster Jam this past weekend at the BJCC Legacy Arena. From jshlacoste06.

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Homeowner shows flooding area at Oxmoor Landing subdivision from December to May. From Lisa Antoine.

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Casey Ryan competes in a U.S. Practical Shooting Association match Jan. 5 at the Brock’s Gap Training Center in Hoover. From Casey Ryan.

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Cuttin’ Loose performs “Ain’t No Sunshine.” From jp2ndtime.

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A golf lesson from Lane Kiffin. From Lauren Scott.

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UAB professor John Wittig honored at PRCA-Birmingham’s January luncheon at the Birmingham Public Library. From PRCA-Birmingham.

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Michelle Blackwood and Henry Hughes of the Friends of Shades Creek talk salamanders at the Homewood Forest Preserve. From Starnes Publishing.

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Highlights from a Five Loaves Birmingham corporate event for Christmas. From John Lankford.

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Promo for the Birmingham Vaper Group. From Vapor Hut Media.

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Set construction for “The Producers” at the Virginia Samford Theatre on Southside. From Virginia Samford Theatre.

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http://instagram.com/p/xiqAQEAup2/

Riley Cutcliffe scales a building with a football in his hand. From Daniel Cutcliffe.

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‘Warhol: Fabricated’ exhibit at AEIVA through end of February

Friday, January 9th, 2015

Andy Warhol, Vote McGovern

Andy Warhol’s screen print “Vote McGovern” is prepared
for exhibition. It’s part of “Warhol: Fabricated,”
opening tonight at UAB.

UAB’s new AEIVA features an exhibit opening tonight by one of the foremost modern American artists.

“Warhol: Fabricated” has nine screen prints and 120 photos from Andy Warhol showing his impact in various media and on the artistic landscape.

Two free events kick off the 2-month exhibit at the Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts:

  • 4:30 today: Panel discussion on appropriation in art, with New York artist Charles Lutz, AEIVA curator John Fields and director Lisa Tamiris Becker;
  • 6-8 tonight: Opening reception.

The university has received a number of Warhol works over the years. The show features those pieces, along with loaners from the Andy Warhol Museum, the Booth Western Art Museum, the Birmingham Museum of Art, Beta Pictoris and private collectors.

AEIVA is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. weekdays and from noon to 6 p.m. Saturdays. Admission is free.

The institute is located at 1221 10th Ave. S., Southside [map]. For more information, visit the event page or contact AEIVA@uab.edu or (205) 975-6436.

Andy Warhol

Photo: Jack Mitchell (CC)

AEIVA

The Birmingham channel: Peak performers

Monday, January 5th, 2015

A look at Birmingham in videos …

“Love Don’t Die” by the Fray, covered by Stormie Leigh. From Stormie Leigh.

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Skateboarding in Birmingham and Tallahassee. From Southern Legacy.

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“Fresh Grown” by Anna Lloyd, on healthy eating. From UAB Documentary.

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Sloss Furnaces. From Sir Stricklin.

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Going to the Birmingham Zoo in 1964. From Patricia Anne Rhodes.

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Southern All Stars Asphalt Series: Early Bird 100 at the Birmingham International Raceway around 1990. From bubba35741.

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Baton Rouge rapper Kevin Gates at Club Rain in Hoover. From iGotTheDirt.

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You wanted 20 minutes of motorcycle-cam to Birmingham, right? From Matthew Horne.

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Ferragamo Frost’s mixtape release party at Club Rain in Hoover. From Breakin Bread Records.

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Birmingham Bowl: The Florida Gators go bowling at Vestavia Bowl. From Florida Gators.

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Birmingham Bowl: The East Carolina Pirates visit the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. From ECU Athletics.

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Birmingham Bowl: game highlights. From Saturday Down South.

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The East Lake Initiative. From Christ Church Birmingham.

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Nowhere Squares’ video for “Too Stuck Up,” directed by Paul Cordes Wilm. From Step Pepper Records.

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Light Dreams at the Alys Stephens Center on Southside. From Randal Crow.

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Red-shouldered hawk has lunch. From Alabama Wildlife Center.

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http://instagram.com/p/xbr9bhwxxb/

Chandrel boxes. From Wayne Heard.

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http://instagram.com/p/xaUKcdx6Mn/
Spinning at the McWane Science Center. From Amanda.

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See Emmylou Harris in concert.

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See folk dancing at one of Birmingham’s most popular food festivals.

• • •

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Books: Excerpt from Marie Sutton’s ‘The A.G. Gaston Motel in Birmingham’

Saturday, January 3rd, 2015

Marie Sutton - AG Gaston Motel in Birmingham

The following chapter is an excerpt from Birmingham author Marie Sutton’s “The A.G. Gaston Motel in Birmingham” [aff. link]. She is a writer with a passion for immortalizing the African-American experience, married to the Rev. James Sutton with two children, Simone and Stephen.

In this excerpt, Sutton shares the history of segregated Birmingham and the rise of entrepreneur A.G. Gaston.

• • •

Locked Out, but Creating a New Way

“I couldn’t understand why the color of your skin made you better than me. That didn’t make sense.”

— Brenda Faush, a native of Birmingham

Alabama’s scorching summer days do not discriminate. Beneath the merciless sun, there is neither black nor white, rich nor poor — the warmth oppresses all. From the pristine streets of Mountain Brook to the dusty roads of Acipco-Finley, the thick, humid air can be suffocating and the pavement like hot lava.

If your skin is brown, however, it doesn’t take long for a million little reminders — like needle-thin icicles — to prick you back into reality; not even the indiscriminate Alabama heat can thaw out cold hearts or melt away the blistering, blue knuckle winter of segregation.

During the 1950s — in the sweltering June, July and August months — a Negro child had to still any excitement at the sight of Kiddieland Park. Riding along the endless stretch of Third Avenue West in Birmingham, the fairgrounds could be spotted from the road. The smell of salty, buttered popcorn and sweet, airy cotton candy was a seductive lure. The bright, colorful Ferris wheel sliced through the skyline, and the grounds danced with spinning boxcars, mock airplane rides and a merry-go-round.

Kiddieland was an annual summer carnival that was created in June 1948 for area children. Described by the Birmingham News as a “miniature Fairyland,” it was touted as “welcome to all,” though it was understood that that meant everyone except Negroes. The fair featured Sunday concerts, “hillbilly” shows, a “pint-sized edition of the Southern Railway’s Southerner” train and advertisements that showed rosy-cheeked children drunk with glee. It was not until years later that blacks were allowed to come, but only on the last day when the stuffed toys were usually picked over and nearly gone; the vendors were packing up and the popcorn stale.

Ask a room full of blacks who grew up in Birmingham during that time, and only a scant few won’t mention how their memories were stained by not being allowed to attend the fair.

“I remember looking over there and knowing that I couldn’t go and not quite understanding why,” remembered Samuetta Hill Drew, who was a colored child in Birmingham during the 1950s.

Tamara Harris Johnson’s parents tried to shield her from the Kiddieland discussion, she said. Even though the street on which the fair sat was a main artery to downtown, her parents, and many others, found alternate routes so as not to explain why admission to the fair was more than a dime. It also required that your skin be white.

That was the way it was in Birmingham. If you were black, you were only given access to scraps of the American dream, the torn and tattered pieces, the chewed up and spit out ones. Jim Crow laws made sure of it.

City ordinances deemed it illegal for blacks and whites to play cards together or even enjoy movies collectively unless there was separate seating, entrances and exits. And the only way they could eat in the same room was if they were divided by a solid partition that reached at least 7 feet from the floor. Signs that read “whites only” hung on doorways and water fountains throughout the city. Even the telephone directories noted whether people or businesses were “C” or “Colored.”

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Emmylou Harris, the tribute concert

Friday, January 2nd, 2015

Emmylou Harris

They’re playing DC to honor a Birmingham songbird.

The extravaganza “The Life and Songs of Emmylou Harris: An All-Star Concert Celebration” promises a roster of two dozen artists performing the singer-songwriter’s works. The show takes place Jan. 10 at Washington’s DAR Constitution Hall. Tickets are $86.15 to $239.90.

Buddy Miller and Don Was serve as musical directors, with a jam-packed lineup:

  • Alison Krauss
  • Chris Hillman and Herb Pedersen
  • Conor Oberst
  • Daniel Lanois
  • Iron and Wine
  • Joan Baez
  • John Hiatt
  • Kris Kristofferson
  • Lucinda Williams
  • Martina McBride
  • Mary Chapin Carpenter
  • Mavis Staples
  • The Milk Carton Kids
  • Patty Griffin
  • Rodney Crowell
  • Sara Watkins
  • Shawn Colvin
  • Sheryl Crow
  • Shovels and Rope
  • Steve Earle
  • Trampled by Turtles
  • Vince Gill

The concert will be filmed for possible release on television or DVD.

Harris, a Birmingham native, most recently released “Old Yellow Moon” with Rodney Crowell in 2013. It reached the Billboard Country Top 10 and earned her a 13th Grammy Award.

Emmylou Harris

• More Emmylou Harris coverage

Video: “Love and Happiness” (live), by Emmylou Harris, Shawn Colvin and Buddy Miller