We’re so excited to share Miss Jessie’s Multicultural Curls with our first 100 Festival attendees. Celebrate your curls with the help of the Miss Jessie’s experts! Don’t miss out. Register NOW!
Get Your Curl on with Mixed Chicks at the Mixed Remixed Festival!
Our first 100 attendees will be the lucky recipients of Mixed Chicks Trial & Travel Pack! Moisturize, control frizz, define curls. Get to the Festival early. Don’t miss out!
The Center for the Mixed Voice Signs On as Sponsor of Mixed Remixed Festival
Presenter Spotlight 2015: Writer Anoosh Jorjorian
Sound Off!: Parents of Multiracial Kids Talk about Books, the Media & the Race Talk
June 13, 2015 3:00pm-3:50pm
Anoosh Jorjorian writes on the politics of parenting. Her work has been published at Salon, Time.com, the Huffington Post, and Black Girl Dangerous, and she blogs at www.aranamama.com. Follow her on Twitter @aranamama.
Presenter Spotlight 2015: Writer Liz Dwyer
Sound Off!: Parents of Multiracial Kids Talk about Books, the Media & the Race Talk
June 13, 2015 3:00pm-3:50pm
Liz Dwyer is a Los Angeles-based writer, editor, and mom. She has written about race, parenting, and social justice for several national websites and print publications and on her own blog, Los Angelista. Dwyer is also a breast cancer survivor and believes in fangirling about Depeche Mode.
“I’m Black. I’m White. I’m Both. I’m Neither.”
This is a really great essay by Celeste Headlee about her multiracial family.
“MESSAGE TO THE READER: This blog post contains strong language.
I’m black.
My grandfather is William Grant Still, the “Dean of African-American composers.” His skin was the color of maple syrup. Mine is the color of café au lait. My grandfather suffered countless indignities and injustices because of his color. I remember them still, almost viscerally. They still feel personal to me.
When he was going to Oberlin College to accept an honorary degree, he drove from Los Angeles with his family. He couldn’t stay at the white hotels because he was black; he couldn’t say at the black hotels because his wife was white. So he drove 2,300 miles without stopping. In photos of the event, he’s stooping; he looks exhausted. I’ve heard that story dozens of times, and yet, my cheeks feel hot thinking about it even now. It still makes me angry.
My grandparents had to get married in Tijuana because their marriage was illegal in the US. That’s personal. He had to build a six-foot fence around his home to protect my mother and her brother from violence. It was the 1940s and people were dragging mixed-race families out of their beds, beating them, sometimes setting their homes on fire. I look at my mother sometimes and think about how lucky I am.
I have the same amount of black ancestry as Sally Hemings, slave to Thomas Jefferson and mother to six of his children. (Side note: three of those children lived their adult lives as white. They passed.)”
Read the rest of the essay here.
Growing Up Mixed & Expanding Your Dream
One of the things we hear most from people who finally come to the Mixed Remixed Festival is: “I never knew a place like this existed.” There’s a kind of awe, and relief, and belonging they feel that they have never felt before — many times not even in their own families. Festival favorite and volunteer Shelly Krause (far right in photo) explains it even better than I can in this short 1.5 minute video. Thank you Shelly!-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
[youtube]https://youtu.be/rUAd_2PB01M[/youtube]
THANK YOU! You made it happen for the Mixed Remixed Festival!
Thank you so much for your support of the Mixed Remixed Festival! Because of you, we were able to raise $12,067 for the Festival this year! That’s way beyond our goal of $10,000 and even more than last year’s final funding number! WOW!
It was truly a community effort: 140 donors in 6 countries donated over the course of 40 days! THANK YOU!
So now, we can’t wait to see you on June 13 to see what your donations have helped support! Don’t forget to register. We want to know that you’re coming so we can give you an extra special hello!-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
THANK YOU! Now let’s STREEEETCH!
We want to thank all of you who have donated to the Mixed Remixed Festival and are helping to keep this event viable and free! We have met our target goal of $10000! Whew! Now, can you help us meet some of our stretch goals?
With more funding we are excited to tackle some of these goals for the Mixed Remixed Festival for 2016:
What can we do if we raise more than our goal? A lot!
- Travel Scholarships for Participating Artists
- Travel Scholarships for Festival Attendees
- Add more days of programming to create a 3-day Festival
- Sponsor a money prize merit scholarship for an emerging artist
- Stream the Mixed Remixed Festival Live
- Produce regional festivals in New York, Seattle, San Francisco, etc.
- Institutionalize this annual festival with a paid staff member so that the festival has a long life and supports many artists and attendees
And we’re making this easy for you: you can donate just $1! We just need to know that you value this project! We need to know that you need this home space for stories that reflect you and your family. Make sure the crowd is funding this crowdfunder!
Our Indiegogo crowdfunder ends on MAY 4! HURRY! DONATE NOW!
Presenter Spotlight 2015: Comedian Alex Barnett
Alex Barnett
Panel: What’s So Funny About Being Mixed?, Tateuchi Democracy Forum, June 13, 2015, 1:00pm-2:20pm
Storyteller’s Prize Presentation & Live Event, June 13, 2015, 6:30pm-8:00pm
Alex Barnett’s comedy is about family, specifically his family. As the White, Jewish husband of a Black woman (who converted to Judaism) and the father of a 3 year-old, Biracial son, he focuses his attention on the challenges of being a parent in a bad economy and the issues that confront interracial families (including the dynamics between members of the same family who are of different races). Alex has been seen on the Katie Couric Show and the PIX 11 Morning Show, been featured on Sirius/XM Radio’s “Raw Dog Comedy,” NBC’s EVB Live, RT TV America and NYC-TV and in The Wall Street Journal, The Huffington Post, and CNN.com.
Twitter: @barnettcomic
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlexBarnettComic
Website: http://www.alexbarnettcomic.com/
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