PodParley PodParley

It's Complicated

Some Brooklynites are wrestling with their own role in gentrification. Changes may be welcomed, but they come with mixed emotions for many. This week we take a walk in Bed-Stuy with 14-year-old Corrine Bobb-Semple. She's grown up in the neighborhood and for the last few years she's been reconciling the changes in her neighborhood with her experiences at St. Ann's, the elite prep school in Brooklyn Heights where she is surrounded by students who are a part of the gentrification process. We'll meet a black homeowner and community organizer named Mark Winston Griffith who tells us how he landed in his home, and the conflicted security it affords him. We also meet Allie LaLonde and Emily Wilson, two 20-something new arrivals to Bed-Stuy who talk about how hard it can be to move outside the circle of gentrified coffee shops and bars.  And we journey back to East New York where a community of artists that has lived there for years is bracing for change. We meet Catherine Green, who started Arts East New York because there were no arts organizations in the neighborhood. Now she's determined to let her organization, and the communities it serves, have a say in how their neighborhood is capitalized. She also introduced us to her friend, artist Rasu Jilani, who is turning the conversation away from developing economies and toward preserving ecosystems. Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.

Episode 7 of the There Goes the Neighborhood podcast, hosted by WNYC Studios and KCRW, titled "It's Complicated" was published on April 20, 2016 and runs 34 minutes.

April 20, 2016 ·34m · There Goes the Neighborhood

0:00 / 0:00

Some Brooklynites are wrestling with their own role in gentrification. Changes may be welcomed, but they come with mixed emotions for many. This week we take a walk in Bed-Stuy with 14-year-old Corrine Bobb-Semple. She's grown up in the neighborhood and for the last few years she's been reconciling the changes in her neighborhood with her experiences at St. Ann's, the elite prep school in Brooklyn Heights where she is surrounded by students who are a part of the gentrification process. We'll meet a black homeowner and community organizer named Mark Winston Griffith who tells us how he landed in his home, and the conflicted security it affords him. We also meet Allie LaLonde and Emily Wilson, two 20-something new arrivals to Bed-Stuy who talk about how hard it can be to move outside the circle of gentrified coffee shops and bars.  And we journey back to East New York where a community of artists that has lived there for years is bracing for change. We meet Catherine Green, who started Arts East New York because there were no arts organizations in the neighborhood. Now she's determined to let her organization, and the communities it serves, have a say in how their neighborhood is capitalized. She also introduced us to her friend, artist Rasu Jilani, who is turning the conversation away from developing economies and toward preserving ecosystems. Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.

Some Brooklynites are wrestling with their own role in gentrification. Changes may be welcomed, but they come with mixed emotions for many. This week we take a walk in Bed-Stuy with 14-year-old Corrine Bobb-Semple. She's grown up in the neighborhood and for the last few years she's been reconciling the changes in her neighborhood with her experiences at St. Ann's, the elite prep school in Brooklyn Heights where she is surrounded by students who are a part of the gentrification process.

We'll meet a black homeowner and community organizer named Mark Winston Griffith who tells us how he landed in his home, and the conflicted security it affords him. We also meet Allie LaLonde and Emily Wilson, two 20-something new arrivals to Bed-Stuy who talk about how hard it can be to move outside the circle of gentrified coffee shops and bars. 

And we journey back to East New York where a community of artists that has lived there for years is bracing for change. We meet Catherine Green, who started Arts East New York because there were no arts organizations in the neighborhood. Now she's determined to let her organization, and the communities it serves, have a say in how their neighborhood is capitalized. She also introduced us to her friend, artist Rasu Jilani, who is turning the conversation away from developing economies and toward preserving ecosystems.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.

POPCORN GIRLZ Angelin Priscilla Priscil & Jeni AKA the popcorn girls (ishtathukku) chills talks about what's on their mind about random stuff. There goes their lingo and mokka jokes along with their pieces of minds. The Lofty Entrepreneur, hosted by Tanisha Coffey Tanisha Coffey The Lofty Entrepreneur goes behind the scenes of entrepreneurship / being a small business owner. We dive into the entrepreneur's journey, talk with experts about topics not commonly shared with small business owners & humanize the experience. There's no sugar-coating here. So, whether it's tips, tools, resources, education or inspiration you need, to help you go to the next level of YOU as a self-employed person--you can find it here! Support The Podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/the-lofty-entrepreneur/supportGet Help: http://www.TheLoftyEntrepreneur.com/DiscoveryCall The Blunt Podcast William Burton It’s not always going to sound nice, won’t really be clean and definitely will not be right 100% of the time; but sometimes it needs to be said in order to further the conversation. This podcasts “goes there”. Let’s roll! Cover art photo provided by Joel Filipe on Unsplash: https://unsplash.com/@joelfilip That's P1 Ryan and Sara Thomas If you discovered Formula 1 because of Drive to Survive, we're the podcast for you. Ryan is a lifelong Dallas Cowboys fan, and never thought of car racing besides the Tollway--until Netflix stepped in. Sara loves football and got REALLY into it early in her and Ryan's relationship. Likewise, watching Drive to Survive got her interested in the insane money and even crazier storylines. They review races, explain how this crazy "sport" works, and all sorts of other things relating to Formula 1. But just like the races themselves, there's no re-dos--the podcast goes up as it was recorded.
URL copied to clipboard!