Blog

Pilot Season’s Lack of Diversity

pilot season's
lack of diversity

By: Lauren Gill Thirty-five new prime time television shows will be showing on the major networks in the fall and the lack of diversity and reinforcement of typical stereotypes is fairly startling.  In The New TV Season, One Stereotype at a Time, Mike Hale points out only two of the 35 shows that will be premiering have minority actors as their main leads.  His New York T...

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Remaking America Through the Arts

Remaking America
Through the Arts

By: Kenyon Adams Last fall I had the pleasure and honor of contributing to the National Arts Policy Roundtable, an inspired gathering engendered in the minds of Robert Redford and his friend Robert Lynch (President of Americans for the Arts). The roundtable was recently discussed in the article Remaking America Through the Arts on The Huffington Post. For obvious rea...

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Visions of A City Yet to Be—Public Art as Cultural Renewal

Visions of A City
Yet to Be— Public
Art as Cultural
Renewal:

A Profile
of Artist
Rebecca Locke

England-born and New York City-based artist Rebecca Locke is thankful to come from a place that has inspired her work—a faded seaside resort for which she has great affection. And yet, it is not a place one readily admits one is from. Its name, “Bognor,” is a byword for “nowhere-ness”; in common English usage it suggests “a place that one would rath...

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Educational Equity: A Faithful Perspective

Educational
Equity:
A Faithful
Perspective

The American education system is shockingly unequal but Christians recognize the abilities that God has given to every child. Nicole Baker Fulgham encourages church communities to get involved in educational inequity in three practical ways.

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Entrepreneurship for Artists

Entrepren-
eurship
for
Artists

Ei featured in this article Regent’s CforE featured in Kingdom Business in April 2010.

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A Really Good Story

A really
good story

By: Amelia Peterson Stories make us more alive, more human, more courageous, more loving. – Madeleine L’Engle From what I can tell, a really good story usually involves some moment of hopeless impossibility, followed by a resolution that is both unpredictable and inevitable. The audience, and often the characters in the story, come to the resolution thinking, “...

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