“LGBT in the South” conference

February 28, 2014 at 8:00am until March 1, 2014 at 3:00pm
Where
The Venue, 21 Market Street, Asheville, NC & First Congregational UCC, 20 Oak Street, Asheville
Description
OVERVIEW:
Join us for a dynamic conference titled “LGBT in the South: Advocacy Within and Beyond the Law” in Asheville, NC from February 28 to March 1, 2014. Designed for organizers, attorneys, service providers, ministers and community members, the conference will feature presentations, discussions and panels focused on how to effectively advocate for LGBT equality in the South – using both established and new strategies.

Shannon Minter, Legal Director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, will keynote the conference. CLE credit is available for attorneys for Friday’s sessions. All are invited to attend both Friday and Saturday, with scholarships available.

CO-SPONSORS:
Hart Law Group, the Campaign for Southern Equality, and the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

MORE INFORMATION:
Check out the conference website – www.lgbtinthesouth.com – for a full agenda, list of speakers, and registration information. Scholarships are available, with a January 7, 2014 application deadline.

https://www.facebook.com/events/1418044795097226/

SMALL BUSINESS PROVIDES OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOCAL ECONOMY

SMALL BUSINESS PROVIDES OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOCAL ECONOMY

Local Businesses make it a Mission to Promote and Foster the Development of Non-Profit Organizations, Other Small Businesses, and Local Artists.

 

Columbia has witnessed a rapid growth and revitalization to various business districts in the downtown area. New restaurant, retail, and hospitality venues have emerged throughout the course of 2013. Many of these new businesses are locally owned and operated by Greater Columbia residents. This Famously Hot city is working on becoming a city that is Famously Small Business Friendly. Historic buildings have received uplifts, and new construction has materialized on some city blocks. These small business owners are working collaboratively together to keep more revenue in the state, better the local economy, and give back in new ways. Owners Ryan Pettitt and Kurtis Drake of Bubble Tea Café are among the ranks of this small business network.

 

“We are excited to have the opportunity to own and operate two locations within the Greater Columbia area,” Pettitt said. “We pride ourselves on the ability to collaborate with other business owners as well as create a platform for non-profit organizations to showcase their cause,” Drake added.

 

Bubble Tea Café is opening its second location in downtown Columbia in the historical Cornell Arms Apartment building located at 1226 Pendleton St. They will hold a Grand Opening Celebration on Saturday, August 31st from noon until 6pm. Throughout the day, Bubble Tea Café will host local talent including Musicians Misti Thurber and Brian Fitch and Magician Jeffrey Pardue. In addition, representatives from Habitat for Humanity will be on site to enlighten customers on opportunities to get involved, and Pets Inc. will have dogs available for adoption. There will be free samples and door prizes as well as a local food vendor (The Wurst Wagen) selling authentic German Bratwurst.

 

Bubble Tea Café was founded in 2011 to provide customers with a healthier alternative to indulgent beverages. This Taiwanese drink is made with a black tea base that can be customized to create the perfect flavor combination by mixing some of the 40 plus natural powders. Bubble tea is served with a big fat straw so that the popping or tapioca pearls can be enjoyed while sipping on the refreshing beverage.

 

If you’d like more information regarding the Grand Opening Celebration, or to set up catering events for special occasions, please contact

Contact: Ryan Pettitt

Tel: 803-445-1050

Cell: 803-984-0530

Email: bubbleteacafe12@gmail.com

Campaign Productions Announces Southeast Premiere of The CAMPAIGN Documentary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Christie Herring & Marc Smolowitz, Campaign Productions
415-290-5812; CampaignDoc@gmail.com

Campaign Productions Announces Southeast Premiere of THE CAMPAIGN,
screening at Carolina Theater as part of North Carolina Gay and Lesbian Film Festival 2013
– Saturday August 10th at 2:50 PM and Thursday August 15th at 7:15 PM –

ITVS-funded Documentary Details the Campaign to Defeat California’s
Wildly Controversial Proposition 8, Banning Gay Marriage and Igniting a National Movement.
________________________________________

(SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – August 1, 2013) – Campaign Productions is pleased to announce that its recently completed documentary – THE CAMPAIGN – will have its Southeast Premiere at the North Carolina Gay and Lesbian Film Festival on Saturday August 10. Directed by award-winning filmmaker Christie Herring and produced by Herring and her Academy Award nominated producer Marc Smolowitz, the film takes a heartbreaking and inspiring look at California’s No-on-8 Campaign to defend same-sex marriage, which unfolded in 2008.
With the recent changes on both Proposition 8 and DOMA, a Southeast Premiere for a film on marriage equality is timely for North Carolina audiences. North Carolina passed a law similar to Proposition 8 in May 2012 – Amendment One – a Constitutional Amendment at the ballot box, which passed by 61% to 39%. Filmmaker Christie Herring is a graduate of Duke University (’96) where she studied film. She also grew up in Mississippi, and the Southeast Premiere has special resonance for her. “I kept a close eye on the Amendment One election, as I still have many friends in North Carolina. I am so pleased to bring the film to a place I once called home and where the issues are so recently and directly relevant.”
Through an intimate ensemble approach, “The Campaign” unfolds as a human drama that follows five ordinary people compelled by a passionate belief in equality. Early on, we meet Holli, Claudia, Richard, Anne and Alison — an unstoppable group of activists, volunteers and campaign workers whose stories are the heart of the film. Their collective experiences in real time provide a window into a timeless story — what inspires everyday people to opt in for something bigger than themselves — win or lose.
Five years in the making, “The Campaign” marks the long-form directorial debut Herring, who studied documentary at Stanford University and began the journey of making this film in May 2008 as a volunteer on the No-on-8 campaign herself. She reflects, “When Prop 8 landed on the ballot, I was shocked that my rights were about to be voted on. I signed up to volunteer, and the moment I walked through the doors of the “No on Prop 8” campaign headquarters in San Francisco, I knew I had walked into a film I had to make.” She adds, “I quickly gained exclusive access to insider moments from the campaign that no news outlets would every carry. It became apparent that my contribution to the Prop 8 political firestorm would be to document it.”
As Herring helps viewers develop a level of closeness with her contemporary characters, she also chooses to place them inside a larger 50-year national story that explores the battle for recognition of same-sex relationships since the 1950s. Lushly edited archival sections bring together rare and unseen footage of gay life with seminal broadcast clips and political ads that help put a human face on the marriage debate over time. Key events establish an historical timeline with common themes recurring on both sides.
When Herring’s story lands squarely back in 2008, just days before the election, California’s Proposition 8 takes center stage, ready to take its place in Herring’s timeline of important events. From this point forward, the film returns to its characters — the mixed-emotions they feel with unfolding family relationships; their self-empowerment through activism; the struggles they navigate in deciding how much of oneself to sacrifice for the cause. In the end, characters drive the story of “The Campaign,” from their initial confidence that Prop 8 will be defeated, through their frustrating experiences of unfavorable polling numbers, to their heart breaking 52-to-48-percent defeat on election night, and the turmoil beyond. We see the lives of real people in the balance, not polished representatives.
“The Campaign” is a co-production of Campaign Productions, LLC and the Independent Television Service (ITVS), with funding provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). It runs a public television hour and is both directed and produced by Christie Herring; produced by Marc Smolowitz (The Weather Underground); and produced by Brook Holston. Academy Award nominated Sari Gilman (Kings Point) is the editor. Original score is composed by Jacob Garchik and recorded by the Kronos Quartet. Original Animations were done by Christopher Gaal, Crazybrige. For more information about “The Campaign,” go to www.TheCampaignDocumentary.com. To arrange for interviews, call 415-290-5812.
_____________________________________________________
EVENT DETAILS – THE CAMPAIGN
**FILM SCREENING: THE CAMPAIGN – Southeast Premiere – Screening at NCGLFF 2013

Date and Time: Saturday, August 10, 2013 at 2:50 PM
Thursday, August 15, 2013 at 7:15 PM
Location: Carolina Theater, 309 West Morgan Street, Durham, NC 27701
Tix & Information: http://www.carolinatheatre.org/ncglff/films/campaign

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Mountain Moral Monday Rally

Join the Campaign for Southern Equality and many other sponsoring groups for a Mountain Moral Monday rally – August 5th, 5 to 6:30 p.m. in Pack Square Park (downtown Asheville).

Rev. Beach-Ferrara, of CSE, will be speaking, along with Rev. Dr. Barber about policies from the North Carolina General Assembly that are taking N.C. backwards. We will not sit idly by as $500 million in education cuts, the most restrictive Voter ID law in the nation and policies that make LGBT people in N.C. second-class citizens under the law take place.

Join us for this non-partisan rally! https://www.facebook.com/events/146561792210062/