

Sewing: Gordon Parks' photos of Stokely Carmichael in MFAH show the dignity of Black Power movementSewing: Gordon Parks' photos of Stokely Carmichael at MFAH show the dignity of Black Power movement Hands-On With Microsoft's New Surface Pro 9 LaptopHands-on: Microsoft's Surface Pro 9 laptop gets a lot right and thanks to Intel 12th gen and unique usability, it might be worth the relatively high asking price.

ByYourLogic put down the lathe next time marybethbarone ? This will be interesting.Barney isn't the only children's property that this has happened to and it kind of makes we want to see a rating system applied for such shows like 'you must be 5yrs old or less to watch' Ultimately this wasn't for adults, but we judged it as if it was The Unbearable Blandness of “Barney”What made Barney, the purple dinosaur and ’90s kids’ TV sensation, so infuriatingly loathsome? A new two-episode docuseries from Peacock, “I Love You, You Hate Me,” dares to investigate.

InformantThe reason to watch “The Picture Taker” isn’t this debate about the photographer Ernest Withers’s motives instead, it’s the impressive archive of images, which the director is smart to build the film around, our critic writes. ‘The Picture Taker’ Review: Civil Rights Photographer and F.B.I. CDT (2300 GMT), said Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez at a news conference. Shell Texas chemical plant fire contained, sheriff saysĪ fire at Shell Plc's Deer Park, Texas chemical plant appeared to be contained by 6 p.m. The reporters were unable to find out how much Withers was paid to spy on his colleagues, or how and why the FBI was able to recruit him in the first place. They revealed Withers had been playing his double role since at least 1968, meeting with agents and providing them with information ranging from insider details on upcoming protests to the license plate numbers of the movement’s leaders. He was present on the night King was assassinated. Withers was a stalwart of the civil rights movement and was entrusted to record its history. The case brought violence against Black people in the southern states to national attention. He was also the only photographer who fully covered the Emmett Till trial, even sneaking a camera into the courtroom. Withers traveled with Marin Luther King Jr.Įxtensively, capturing the moment he rode the first desegregated bus. , directed by Phil Bertelsen, will explore Withers’ complicated legacy and ask whether the photographer was a friend of the civil rights movement or an enemy. The documentary beautifully displays his photographs.
