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Thursday, May 27, 2004

I just finished writing a "Pick" for this week's paper on the June 6 Talib Kwelishow at The Paramount. I'm very excited about this show, and even more excited that there's been so much great hip hop during a year when we're doing this event. At the De La Sol show, I spoke for a while with Joan Javier of the New Voters Project about the connection between a political action and hip hop. The New Voters Project has been one of our co-sponsors and did voter registration at the show. At least I think it was Joan I was talking to about this subject. At any rate, we (or me and someone) were discussing about how the incredible energy that hip hop engenders is the perfect place to politicize people. It makes sense when you think about certain hip hop artists that you'd have that connection, but I forget, sometimes, how much of contemporary hip hop is really just pop music disguised as rap saying as little as possible. I'm not really knocking that either—I'm as much of a trash head and junkie for that stuff as anyone else, and it's not like I change the station when Beyoncee is singing Naughty Girl, but I definitely prefer the underground stuff.
I learned yesterday, from Don Hazen, who runs Alternet.org, that SFR is going to have the opportunity to participate in some of the national efforts they will be promoting to inform people on a variety of issues relating to national politics and policies. This fits well with SFR's plans for the next six months as well. It's my goal that we can write about education, nukes and civil liberties in such a way that voting in November has resonance. It's not just voting for the sake of voting, it's voting because the decisions made at the federal level have such a grave impact locally, particularly for New Mexico when it comes to nuclear issues. Our cover story next week will help elucidate what I'm saying. And for those of you reading (is anyone reading out there), we are working on getting our stories onto our website! Hello; 21st Century anyone?