Showing posts with label homelessness marathon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homelessness marathon. Show all posts
Saturday, March 22, 2008
11th Annual Homelessness Marathon Archived Videos
Archived video taken during the first three (3) hours of the 11th annual homelessness marathon held in Nashville, Tennessee is available online for viewing, here (part 1) and, here (part 2) [via FreeSpeech TV].
Labels:
2008,
homelessness marathon,
video
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Show airs, focused on area homeless: Part of nationwide marathon broadcast
Read the article, here [via Daily Tar Heel; Chapel Hill, N.C.; 2/20/2008].
Monday, February 18, 2008
WGDR 91.1 FM Plainfield VT
*Updated*
Just found out today that WGDR 91.1 FM located in nearby Plainfield, Vermont plans on airing a portion of the 11th annual homelessness marathon from 8PM to 1AM and, if all goes as planned, I will be in the WGDR studio from 9PM to 1AM.
*Update*: Read a local news report concerning it, here [via Barre - Montpelier Times Argus; 2/19/2008].
*Note*: last updated on Wednesday, February 20, 2008 at 5:35 AM [EST].
Just found out today that WGDR 91.1 FM located in nearby Plainfield, Vermont plans on airing a portion of the 11th annual homelessness marathon from 8PM to 1AM and, if all goes as planned, I will be in the WGDR studio from 9PM to 1AM.
*Update*: Read a local news report concerning it, here [via Barre - Montpelier Times Argus; 2/19/2008].
*Note*: last updated on Wednesday, February 20, 2008 at 5:35 AM [EST].
Labels:
broadcast,
homelessness marathon,
news,
vermont
Video Excerpts from 2004 Homelessness Marathon
Video excerpts from the annual homelessness marathon held on the streets of Cleveland, Ohio in February of 2004. This was shot and edited by Julia M. Brindle. [...]
[via YouTube, here; posted by homelesstaskforce (February 07, 2008); length: 9:26 minutes/seconds]
Labels:
2004,
homelessness marathon,
video
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
11th Annual Homelessness Marathon Schedule
The Homelessness Marathon is divided into short (5-minute) prerecorded segments and longer (53 minute) live segments. All times are eastern.
The broadcast starts at 7 p.m., EST, on Wednesday, Feb. 20th and ends at 9 a.m. on Thursday, Feb. 21st.
Hour 1 - SHORT: Welcome from "Nobody" (live)
(7pm) LONG: A panel of homeless Nashvillians.
Hour 2 - SHORT: Performing A One Night Count
(8pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 1 - The Civic View.
Co-hosts: George Gruhn, CEO of Gruhn Guitars and Howard
Gentry, Chairman, Mayor's Homelessness Commission.
Hour 3 - SHORT: Housing First
(9pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 2 - The Street
View. Co-Hosts: Father Charlie Strobel, founding director,
Campus for Human Development, and Patricia Bryant, a
currently homeless Nashvillian.
Hour 4 - SHORT: Poetry by Homeless Teens
(10pm) LONG: National Hour I - A survey of homelessness in three cities
in the east and midwest.
Hour 5 - SHORT: Homeless Vets
(11pm) LONG: Homelessness, Crime and Criminalization. Co-Hosts:
Matt Leber, organizer, Nashville Homeless Power Project
and Tulin Ozdeger, civil rights director, National Law
Center on Homelessness and Poverty.
Hour 6 - SHORT: Street Poetry
(mid) LONG: "The War and The Poor - Co-Hosts: Norman Solomon,
author of "War Made Easy" and Frances Fox Piven, author
of "The War At Home: The Domestic Cost of Bush's
Militarism."
Hour 7 - SHORT: Addressing Rural Homelessness
(1am) LONG: The Fight in Fresno - A live remote from Fresno, CA.
Hour 8 - SHORT: A Homeless Job Program
(2am) LONG: The Working Poor. Co-Hosts: William Miles, Nashville
Jobs with Justice, Cornell Professor of Sociology
Thomas Hirschl.
Hour 9 - SHORT: Registering Homeless Voters
(3am) LONG: National Hour II: A survey of homelessness in three cities
on the West Coast, including Los Angeles.
Hour 10 - SHORT: Generational Homelessness
(4am) LONG: International Hour. Co-host to be Peter Fredriksson,
senior adviser to the Housing Ministry of Finland.
Hour 11 - SHORT: Homeless School Kids
(5am) LONG: Fighting Back - Co-Hosts to be Cheri Honkala, director
of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign,
Paul Boden, director of the Western Regional Advocacy
Project and Clemmie Greenlee, this year's "Nashvillian
of the Year!"
Hour 12 - SHORT: Street Poetry
(6am) LONG: Health Care and Homelessness. Co-hosts, John Lozier,
Director National Health Care for the Homeless, and
co-host TBA.
Hour 13 - SHORT: TBA
(7am) LONG: Will the Foreclosure Crisis Drive People to the
Streets? Co-hosts Danilo Pelletiere, research director,
National Low Income Housing Coalition and a co-host TBA.
Hour 14 - SHORT: TBA
(8am) LONG: First: Where Is The Housing? Co-Host, Jeremy Rosen,
executive director, National Policy and Advocacy
Council on Homelessness. Next: TBA
The broadcast starts at 7 p.m., EST, on Wednesday, Feb. 20th and ends at 9 a.m. on Thursday, Feb. 21st.
Hour 1 - SHORT: Welcome from "Nobody" (live)
(7pm) LONG: A panel of homeless Nashvillians.
Hour 2 - SHORT: Performing A One Night Count
(8pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 1 - The Civic View.
Co-hosts: George Gruhn, CEO of Gruhn Guitars and Howard
Gentry, Chairman, Mayor's Homelessness Commission.
Hour 3 - SHORT: Housing First
(9pm) LONG: Homelessness in Music City - Part 2 - The Street
View. Co-Hosts: Father Charlie Strobel, founding director,
Campus for Human Development, and Patricia Bryant, a
currently homeless Nashvillian.
Hour 4 - SHORT: Poetry by Homeless Teens
(10pm) LONG: National Hour I - A survey of homelessness in three cities
in the east and midwest.
Hour 5 - SHORT: Homeless Vets
(11pm) LONG: Homelessness, Crime and Criminalization. Co-Hosts:
Matt Leber, organizer, Nashville Homeless Power Project
and Tulin Ozdeger, civil rights director, National Law
Center on Homelessness and Poverty.
Hour 6 - SHORT: Street Poetry
(mid) LONG: "The War and The Poor - Co-Hosts: Norman Solomon,
author of "War Made Easy" and Frances Fox Piven, author
of "The War At Home: The Domestic Cost of Bush's
Militarism."
Hour 7 - SHORT: Addressing Rural Homelessness
(1am) LONG: The Fight in Fresno - A live remote from Fresno, CA.
Hour 8 - SHORT: A Homeless Job Program
(2am) LONG: The Working Poor. Co-Hosts: William Miles, Nashville
Jobs with Justice, Cornell Professor of Sociology
Thomas Hirschl.
Hour 9 - SHORT: Registering Homeless Voters
(3am) LONG: National Hour II: A survey of homelessness in three cities
on the West Coast, including Los Angeles.
Hour 10 - SHORT: Generational Homelessness
(4am) LONG: International Hour. Co-host to be Peter Fredriksson,
senior adviser to the Housing Ministry of Finland.
Hour 11 - SHORT: Homeless School Kids
(5am) LONG: Fighting Back - Co-Hosts to be Cheri Honkala, director
of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign,
Paul Boden, director of the Western Regional Advocacy
Project and Clemmie Greenlee, this year's "Nashvillian
of the Year!"
Hour 12 - SHORT: Street Poetry
(6am) LONG: Health Care and Homelessness. Co-hosts, John Lozier,
Director National Health Care for the Homeless, and
co-host TBA.
Hour 13 - SHORT: TBA
(7am) LONG: Will the Foreclosure Crisis Drive People to the
Streets? Co-hosts Danilo Pelletiere, research director,
National Low Income Housing Coalition and a co-host TBA.
Hour 14 - SHORT: TBA
(8am) LONG: First: Where Is The Housing? Co-Host, Jeremy Rosen,
executive director, National Policy and Advocacy
Council on Homelessness. Next: TBA
Labels:
2008,
homelessness marathon,
nashville,
schedule
Friday, September 21, 2007
What the blog Really Ought to Be?
Toward the end of a recent podcast during which Jeremy Alderson was interviewed by Kevin Barbieux (The Homeless Guy), which is featured on The Homeless Guy Podcast site (here), Jeremy mentioned that he would like to know the thoughts of people concerning what the Homelessness Marathon blog really ought to be.
Feel free to leave such thoughts within the comment section of this particular post.
Feel free to leave such thoughts within the comment section of this particular post.
The Homeless Guy Podcast: Jeremy Alderson
Check out Kevin Barbieux's (The Homeless Guy) Podcast featuring guest Jeremy Alderson, here.
In addition, read Kevin's blog post about it, here.
In addition, read Kevin's blog post about it, here.
Labels:
homelessness marathon,
nashville,
podcast
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Democratic Presidential Candidates Invited to Historic Debate
Press Release (excerpted):
For immediate release
Contact: Jeremy Weir Alderson, [--snip, snip--]
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATES INVITED TO PARTICIPATE IN HISTORIC DEBATE
The Homelessness Marathon, America's only national broadcast focusing on homelessness and poverty, has invited the Democratic presidential candidates to participate in a debate unlike any other in American history: The sole topic will be the candidates' plans for ending poverty, and all of the questions will be asked by homeless people.
This debate will take place in San Francisco, starting at 5 p.m., PST, on Wednesday, January 30, 2008.
The debate will be incorporated into the next edition of the Homelessness Marathon, an annual, 14-hour-long live radio broadcast that this year aired on 120 stations coast-to-coast. Free Speech Television, which reaches, potentially, 25 million homes, will televise this event live. And the debate will be supported by a coalition that so far includes:
- KBOO - San Francisco's "Poor People's Radio"
- Poor Magazine
- Dollars and Sense Magazine
- Progressive Democrats of America
- San Francisco Bay View ("National Black Newspaper")
- San Francisco Coalition on Homelessness
- Western Regional Advocacy Project
"We're relatively small organizations," comments the Homelessness Marathon's founder, Jeremy Weir Alderson, "but we stand for something big, and that's that the people, themselves, have a place in this process. We'll have questions asked by all kinds of homeless citizens, whether they're vets, former foster kids, migrant farm laborers, mothers, minimum wage workers or disabled people whose disability checks aren't big enough to get them housing."
"Everyone knows," Alderson adds, "that the candidates spend a lot of time courting the rich, but will they turn out for the poor? We're betting that they will."-- 30 --
Labels:
2008,
homelessness,
homelessness marathon,
politics,
poverty
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Ducky Doolittle's Talking Points
Ducky Doolittle was one of the co-hosts during the 2:00 AM [EST) long program talking from experience about: Why Do So Many Foster Kids Wind Up On The Streets?
[via Homelessness Marathon 2007 Schedule]
Ducky blogged up their talking points used while on-air during the hour of discussion concerning the link between foster care systems and homelessness (excerpted):
[via Ducky DooLittle (excerpted), here (If the kids were united, we could never be divided!: Wednesday, February 21, 2007)]
[...] Co-Hosts: Ducky Doolittle, a rape crisis counselor and sex educator who became a street prostitute when she first got our of foster care, and Richard Wexler, director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform and author of "Wounded Innocents: The Real Victims of the War Against Child Abuse," and Jennifer Rowan, a formerly homeless former foster kid now the Fresno County Youth Advocate.
[via Homelessness Marathon 2007 Schedule]
Ducky blogged up their talking points used while on-air during the hour of discussion concerning the link between foster care systems and homelessness (excerpted):
[...]Fostercare is the
fast track to homelessness
AGED-OUT FOSTER KIDS FACE
-very high rates of homelessness
-don’t have enough food to eat
-don't go on to college
-only 46% have a high school diploma
-have mental health problems
-have very unstable living arrangements
-face eviction
-move around a lot
-involved with the criminal justice authorities. (arrested or incarcerated)
-often victimized physically or sexually
THEY NEED LIFE SKILLS
Money management
Budgeting
employment support
educational support (college entry)
Health care
Shopping
cooking, nutrition
Sexuality
ResourcesRole Models
THE FACTS
PBS program Age Out
Nationwide, an estimated 30,000 adolescents age out of the foster care system each year. According to the Child Welfare League of America, 12-36 percent become homeless, 56 percent are unemployed, 27 percent of male children end up in jail. (Nearly 11,000 kids a year go homeless.)
Charlotte Observer
Reports 1 in 8 go homeless in North Carolina.
mnhomelesscoalition.org
Approximately 2,000 youth age out of foster care each year in Minnesota. (More than 500 kids a year go homeless.)
These are just the kids they can track.
Kids slip through the cracks. Disappear. Move.
For example, in MN cases were closed on 261 youth who were runaways from placement and 189 youth listed as "missing data."
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
-Mentor older kids and help them make and independent living plans
-Take in older foster kids. Keep them for their lifetime as family.
-Create a resource list for homeless kids in your neighborhood with a list of drop in centers, clinics, soup kitchens, food pantries... you can get some resources here: Cwla.org. Copy it and keep copies in your wallet to give homeless people who are about 24 and under. Create on for adults as well.
WHERE I GOT MY FACTS:
On the streets. I lived it.
http://www.jimcaseyyouth.org/docs/media_art_charobserver.pdf
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/youth/jan-june05/foster_care_5-19.html
http://www.mnhomelesscoalition.org/resources/toolkits/foster-care-toolkit/challenges/
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9944,kihara,9673,5.html
http://www.cwla.org/programs/fostercare/agingoutresources.htm
[via Ducky DooLittle (excerpted), here (If the kids were united, we could never be divided!: Wednesday, February 21, 2007)]
Labels:
broadcast,
facts,
foster care,
homelessness marathon
In the News: Homeless find platform on radio ...
Fresno chosen for annual show to call attention to city sweeps, here [via The Fresno Bee; Wednesday, February 21, 2007 (includes photos)].
Labels:
broadcast,
california,
fresno,
homelessness marathon,
news
Last Hour, Waning Minutes

[photo via the Homelessness Marathon Tabernacle of Truth live Webcam]
Labels:
broadcast,
homelessness marathon
Tuesday, February 20, 2007
10th Annual Homelessness Marathon National Radio Broadcast: Airs Tonight (2/20th) @ 7pm Until Tomorrow (2/21st) @ 9am [EST]
Call in, starting from 7:00 PM [EST] tonight
(Tuesday, Feb. 20th)
until 9:00 AM [EST] tomorrow morning
(Wednesday, Feb. 21st):
1-877-NOBODY-8
(1-877-662-6398)
If you are homeless: 1-866-LEFTOUT
(1-866-533-8688)
Email your questions:
questions@homelessnessmarathon.org
(Tuesday, Feb. 20th)
until 9:00 AM [EST] tomorrow morning
(Wednesday, Feb. 21st):
1-877-NOBODY-8
(1-877-662-6398)
If you are homeless: 1-866-LEFTOUT
(1-866-533-8688)
Email your questions:
questions@homelessnessmarathon.org
For additional information, including where to access the broadcast via online streaming, visit the Annual Homelessness Marathon Website.
Labels:
broadcast,
homelessness marathon
Open Thread
As the description of this blog indicates, [t]his blog has been set up for the Annual Homelessness Marathon for people to use to discuss what they hear during the broadcast, [...]. Let us hear from you.
Please feel free to use the comment feature of this particular post thread to post your comments concerning matters you have heard discussed during the 10th Annual Homelessness Marathon broadcast in order to share your own thoughts and insights about such with anyone who may visit the blog.
Please feel free to use the comment feature of this particular post thread to post your comments concerning matters you have heard discussed during the 10th Annual Homelessness Marathon broadcast in order to share your own thoughts and insights about such with anyone who may visit the blog.
Labels:
broadcast,
comments,
homelessness marathon
In the News: Fresno's homeless
[...]
Recent discussion about Fresno's homeless has been fueled, in part, by criticism heaped on the city by a federal judge and some national advocates, including one who is coming to town Tuesday to broadcast a national radio show.
[...]
A national advocate says he decided to air a radio broadcast in Fresno after hearing about a number of the city's controversial tactics, including penalizing shopping-cart thieves, throwing away possessions during encampment raids and fencing off places where the city's destitute gather.
Jeremy Weir Alderson, a broadcaster from New York state, says he will interview some of Fresno's homeless and several local advocates during a 14-hour radio show scheduled to begin Tuesday afternoon.
Alderson airs his show from a different city each year and targets places that have made national headlines for their handling of the homeless. His 10th annual Homelessness Marathon will begin at 4 p.m. and be carried locally on KFCF 88.1 FM.
Fresno First Mexican Baptist Church will host the show, which will be made available to Pacifica Radio Network, allowing stations throughout the country to broadcast it.
[...]
Read the entire article, here [via The Fresno Bee; Monday, February 19, 2007 (includes photos as well as blog post type of commenting featuring available at bottom of page)].
Labels:
broadcast,
california,
fresno,
homelessness marathon,
news
Thursday, February 15, 2007
Broadcast Schedule & Stations Airing List Posted
The 10TH Annual Homelessness Marathon (2007) broadcast schedule has been posted, here and, the station list was also posted as well, here [Homelessness Marathon Website].
Labels:
homelessness marathon,
schedule,
station list
Friday, February 9, 2007
7th Annual Homelessness Marathon Video Excerpts
(length: 10 minutes)
(length: 6:46 minutes)
[via YouTube]
Labels:
homelessness marathon,
video,
youtube
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Homelessness Marathon on MySpace
Visit the Homelessness Marathon site hosted on MySpace, here (includes videos).
Labels:
homelessness marathon,
myspace
Wednesday, December 27, 2006
Declaration of Principles
[by Nobody]
On the Homelessness Marathon, we talk to many different kinds of people who hold many different views about how to end homelessness. We're glad to present a wide diversity of opinion, but we also want people to know where we stand ourselves.
At the Homelessness Marathon, we believe that the elimination of poverty is a moral duty for society. We believe that fulfilling this duty makes for a better society. [...]
[read more, here; via Annual Homelessness Marathon Website]
On the Homelessness Marathon, we talk to many different kinds of people who hold many different views about how to end homelessness. We're glad to present a wide diversity of opinion, but we also want people to know where we stand ourselves.
At the Homelessness Marathon, we believe that the elimination of poverty is a moral duty for society. We believe that fulfilling this duty makes for a better society. [...]
[read more, here; via Annual Homelessness Marathon Website]
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
An old column from 2001
by Nobody
When I was a boy, I saw ads referring to products developed at "The Betty Crocker Institute." I imagined an ivy-covered campus around which professors strolled while discussing the finer points of cakeology. It took a while before I caught on that this "Institute" had all the substance of a mail-order PhD, but even so, I think it has more credibility than the "Manhattan Institute." At least what Betty Crocker put out you could swallow.
[read more, here; via Annual Homelessness Marathon Website]
Labels:
column,
homeless,
homelessness marathon,
nobody,
opinion
New & Improved
Welcome to the new and improved Annual Homelessness Marathon blog.
If you have bookmarks or links to the previous version of the blog (here), please update them to direct to the new blog instead: i.e., homelessness-marathon.blogspot.com
Thank you!
If you have bookmarks or links to the previous version of the blog (here), please update them to direct to the new blog instead: i.e., homelessness-marathon.blogspot.com
Thank you!
Labels:
blog,
homelessness marathon
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