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The Magic City Classic Event Schedule

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It all began in 1924, and became an annual tradition in 1945. The Magic City Classic, the largest HBCU classic in the nation, grosses $24.3 million.

This event, that attracts almost 100,000 people to the city every year is a fun-filled, unofficial holiday weekend within itself. There is so much to do, you are bound to have to miss something. Don’t fret, though, there are some major events that are not to be missed.

Per the Magic City Classic website:

Thursday, Oct. 29-

Magic City Classic Festival at Legion Field, 6 p.m., free. Featuring an exhibition at 4 p.m. Festival features Whodini, Logan the Entertainer, James Crumb, Jr., and Yung Vokalz.

Alumni Pep Rally at the Platinum of Birmingham , 7 p.m., $12 online, $15 at the door.

Classic Kick-Off Block Party at The Southern Kitchen Rooftop in Uptown, 4 p.m., donations accepted. Presented by 95.7 JAMZ and 98.7 KISS FM. Rickey Smiley will be the host.

Friday, Oct. 30-

98.7 KISS FM and Coors Light Tailgate Sunset Party at Legion Field, 4 p.m., free.

Magic City Expo with Tom Joyner at the BJCC North Exhibition Hall, 5 a.m.

Saturday, Oct. 31-

McDonald’s Magic City Classic Parade in Downtown Birmingham at Legion Field, 8 a.m., free. Over 30 high school bands will be in the parade to get the day started.

Ford Tailgate Takeover at Legion Field, 10 a.m. The event will feature DJ battles, concerts, drum major performances and prize giveaways.

Coors Light Pre-Game Tailgate Party at Legion Field, 10 a.m., free. Sponsors will be giving out a lot of free things and multiple DJs and stages will keep you entertained.

74th Annual Magic City Classic at Legion Field, 2:30 p.m. Halftime show will feature Anthony Anderson from ABC’s “Black-ish” and the Alabama A&M Marching Maroon and White Band and the ASU Mighty Marching Hornets.

Post game concert at Legion Field by R&B group Jagged Edge.

For all of the events, bands participating in the parade and additional information, go to http://www.themagiccityclassic.com.

Daily Quote ~October 30, 2015~

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Spiritual Thought/Empowerment
Jesus_cross

 

CHINA’S EASING OF BIRTH LIMIT A BOON TO COUPLES, COMPANIES

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BEIJING (AP) — China’s decision to abolish its one-child policy is a boon to couples and to sellers of goods from formula to diapers to toys. And it might help defuse economic stresses caused by an aging population.

The impact of the surprise change announced Thursday is expected to be gradual. But with incomes rising in the world’s most populous country, even a small uptick in births could translate into higher demand from Chinese that could ripple around the world.

The decision to let all married couples have two children, ending a policy that limited many urban families to one, coincides with official efforts to encourage economic growth based on consumer spending.

Wei Guang, the father of an 8-year-old son, said he and his wife already were considering whether to have a second child, even though the cost was daunting. Wei said food, clothes, nannies, after-school lessons and other expenses can cost 100,000 yuan ($16,000) a year.

“We know the cost will be substantial,” said Wei, 51, who works in media and whose wife is in her 30s. “But we can manage.”

Citigroup researchers said they expect a 5 percent to 10 percent rise in Chinese births.

The one-child policy had been intended to conserve resources, and the ruling Communist Party has said it led to 400 million fewer births. But that also caused China’s average age to soar, prompting concern about whether a shrinking workforce could support a growing pool of retirees.

China already had one of Asia’s highest median ages at 37.3 years in 2014, and that could rise to 40 by 2025, according to Media Eghbal of Euromonitor International, a research firm.

The size of China’s working-age population ages 15 to 64 is set to decline starting next year, according to Eghbal. Euromonitor estimates that the workforce will shrink by 11 million people in 2015-20.

The latest change “is significant and likely a response to the pressures that have been building,” said Eghbal.

No one anticipates any immediate boom in babies or economic growth for China. It will take decades for babies born under the relaxed policy to have a significant effect on the workforce.

“Everything for the next 15 or 20 years is already baked into the cake,” says Nicholas Eberstadt, a demographer at the American Enterprise Institute.

Because of the cost of raising a child, some Chinese families may also hesitate to take advantage of the policy change.

“The effect will be minor because a lot of people seem to be happy with one child now,” says University of Washington anthropologist Stevan Harrell, who has studied Chinese demographics. “That would not have been the case 30 years or even 20 years ago.”

Still, analysts suggest that the end of the one-child policy could help eventually.

“It clearly will help the economy but not in the near future,” says Seth Kaplowitz, a lecturer in finance at San Diego State University who worked in China’s real estate market in the late 2000s. “Having the birth rate go up will definitely stimulate the economy.”

Kaplowitz predicted that an increase in babies will eventually provide a “whole new base of opportunity” for U.S. and other consumer products companies. A string of Chinese product safety scandals has helped boost demand for imported milk, food and baby care products, allowing foreign brands to charge premium prices.

On Thursday, shares of Mead Johnson Nutrition Co., which makes Enfamil and other baby formula, rose more than 3 percent. The company, based in Glenview, Illinois, derived more than half its revenue between July and September from Asia.

“China is an important market for us, and we will be carefully monitoring this latest policy adjustment,” said Chris Perille, a company spokesman.

Jeremy Haft, an entrepreneur who does business in China and is the author of “Unmade in China: The Hidden Truth About China’s Economic Miracle,” says, “The bad news for China is that the demographic damage has already been done.”

But Haft adds: “The good news for American companies is that as China’s population growth accelerates, all these people will need to be fed, clothed, housed, healed, powered, transported, and networked. It’s an opportunity to create trillions of dollars in new prosperity and millions of new jobs in American agriculture, manufacturing, and services.”

The birth limits that were enacted in 1979 dramatically changed the status of children in Chinese society. Even families with modest incomes lavish money on their “little emperors,” paying for dance, music and English classes.

Su Weihua, the mother of an 8-year-old daughter in the southern city of in Guangzhou, said she was making plans to become pregnant next year. She already is thinking about how to pay for a second child.

“I think we may spend less on things like traveling, luxury goods, expensive new phones or a bigger house,” said Su, 36.

Wiseman contributed from Washington. AP Business Writer Joe Pisani in New York also contributed to this report.

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Keeping an Eye on Safety for October 29, 2015

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By Samuetta Hill Drew

 

Halloween Safety Tips is the focus this week because soon ghosts, goblins, witches, warlocks and other strange or funny creatures will be walking the streets, malls and other locations this weekend. Some will be masked and others not. Some will make us laugh while others will take our breath away. Some will imitate super heroes ready to save the world, where others will represent creatures ready to devour it. Whatever the choice, it is important to help ensure you and your loves ones are not injured or harmed.

S – Stay away from homes of strangers. Unfortunately, everyone does not like children. They could possibly use this time to commit harmful acts (tricks) such as passing out unsafe candy.

A – Always trick or treat with a group and never alone! It’s safer if a responsible adult accompanies the group. Make sure your parents know the route you’re taking if they are not going with you. Go only to well-lit homes and don’t go inside a stranger’s home.

F – Follow the manufactures instructions with regards to costumes and face painting.

E – Eat only factory made candy. Examine all candy before eating it! Avoid eating homemade candy from strangers. Check to make sure the candy wrappers has not been tampered with nor is too small for very young children to eat because they may get choked.    

T – Try to make sure all costumes are reflective or place some reflective tape on the ones that are not so they can be easily seen by a driver at night.

Y – You should always make sure if a mask is worn that the person can easily see out of it. The holes for the mask’s eyes should be large enough for clear visibility.  

T – Test any face makeup first by placing it on small portion of your face before using it all over, maybe a couple days prior to Halloween. You want to make sure there’s no allergic reaction. If the makeup has a strange odor, throw it away because it’s probably spoiled. Make sure you are very cautious about makeup around the eyes. You don’t want the eyes to become irritated. Remember it is important to protect your SKIN AND EYES!

I – It is important to look both ways before crossing the street.

P – Practice good walking safety by carrying a flashlight. Don’t run from home to home.

S – Stay away from vandalism like egging a car or home. You could get seriously injured by the owner, plus it’s the wrong thing to do!!!

Remember to always Keep an Eye on Safety!!!

Daily Quote ~ October 29, 2015~

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Spiritual Thought/Empowerment
lost_tie_by_vanleith-d4em3se

 

Q & A Session, Birmingham’s Q Dot Davis Starting Career off Positively

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By Ariel Worthy

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It seems as if Birmingham will have a star on the rise. Not a local star, but one whose name the country will know.

Quincy Davis, who goes by Q Dot Davis, is definitely on the rise. Opening for Curren$y, Waka Flocka Flame, Kevin Gates, Ace Hood, Nappy Roots, 3 6 Mafia, it is obvious that Davis is on his way to the top.

“It’s cool to connect with artists that I’ve grown up on,” Davis told the Birmingham Times, “and I get to share the stage with them on the same night, it’s cool.”

Davis has performed at A3C Festival, Atlanta’s version of SXSW.

How did you get started with music?: I’ve been on the promotional side of it for about 12 years now. It started out with just clubs, and with that I would run across artists that they would bring to the clubs and I’d stick around to meet them. I had a interest in it. After I got done with college football (at Cumberland University and MInot University in North Dakota) I moved back to Birmingham and started recording. I started mingling with those crowds again, and I kind of fell into it. It wasn’t something I did as a child, but it’s something i grew to love.

What inspires you musically?: Life. It is such a relief to just get on a track and express things that are going on that you might not want to talk about with anybody, but you go on a beat and express it. It’s the ultimate relief to let it out. Life definitely inspires all the work I do.

If you had to pick another passion other than music, what would it be?: I like to connect people, so I’d be in some area of business that would allow me to connect people.

So if you weren’t doing music, what would you be doing?: I’d probably still be doing sports. I also played baseball, and at one point I held the state record for number of stolen bases. So I always thought I’d get back into baseball, but music is going well for me.

Why do you think music is important?: One thing it does is connects people and emotions. If I’m in a bad mood, I find a song that might bring back that mood that I’m looking for. No one can say that’s not true.

What is the most important instrument to you?: The Drums. It’s what i listen to for a beat.

How would you say football and music are similar?: There’s always going to be competition to be in the “top spot.” You have to be focus on what you’re doing to get to a higher level.

Who are some of the local artists you have worked with?: IV Profen and Shaquille DeAndre. They’re on my LOE label, Loyalty Over Everything, and I’ve also worked with a good friend of mine, Benjamin Jonez, 3SE is also a label here in town.

What is your favorite piece of work that you have done?: My first song put on iTunes. it was about real life stuff that happened to me. i was able to create something that people related to. It’s called, “Thought We Was Gon Ride.”

How would you describe your music?: It is rap, if you have to put a label on it, but i like to blend all types of music. I don’t really corner it into a genre.

So where can people find your work? They can find me on social media, of course. They can also find me on Reverbnation.com/qdotdavis

Search for Davis on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram under Q Dot Davis.

Arrest video fallout: Spring Valley High Officer Ben Fields fired

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(CNN)The South Carolina deputy who slammed a disruptive student on the floor and tossed her several feet has been fired.

Other students in the classroom at Spring Valley High School caught the incident on video.

Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott suspended Deputy Ben Fields without pay, and then fired him Wednesday.

Fields violated police regulations when he threw the girl, the sheriff said.

Fields was the Spring Valley High School resource officer whose actions Monday were recorded by students and ignited a firestorm on social media. Among the criticisms: his admitted use of “muscling techniques” to get the student out of her chair.

But that’s only one part of the story. Federal investigators have gotten involved. Another student arrested from the classroom has spoken out. And the sheriff is criticizing a South Carolina law that he says muddles the role of school resource officers.

Sheriff says student deserves part of blame

Richland County has 87 school resource officers, Lott said, and the “actions by Deputy Fields was not typical of the job I expect them to do.”

Fields did wrong and was fired for his actions, Lott said.

But the student must shoulder responsibility for the disruptive behavior that escalated to the officer being called in, the sheriff said.

“When a classroom is disrupted by a student, that disrupts the education process and the students can’t learn and the teachers can’t teach,” Lott said. “We have to have discipline in our schools.”

What the student did does not justify the officer’s actions, the sheriff said, but she must take responsibility for her role.

“We must not lose sight that this whole incident started by this student,” he said. “She is responsible for initiating this action. Some responsibility falls on her.”

Sheriff: The student hit the officer

Outrage after South Carolina officer arrests student
Outrage after South Carolina officer arrests student 02:23

At least three videos have surfaced of the violent arrest at Spring Valley High School. The sheriff said one of the videos shows the girl attacking the officer before the arrest.

“When the officer puts his hands on her initially, she reaches up and she pops the officer with her fist,” he said.

Still, after watching all the footage, Lott told reporters that he “wanted to throw up.”

“There’s no justification for some of his actions,” the sheriff told CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360°” on Tuesday night.

The videos show the officer standing over the student, seated at her desk. He puts his arm near her neck, then yanks her backward. The desk, which is attached to her chair, tips over; the student crashes backward onto the floor.

But Fields didn’t let go, lifting her slightly off the ground. She flies out of her desk and slides several feet across the floor.

Conflicting reports on injuries

Sheriff’s department spokesman Lt. Curtis Wilson said there were no reports of any injuries. And the sheriff said he did not believe the girl was seriously hurt.

“To my knowledge, she wasn’t injured whatsoever,” Lott said. “She might have had a rug burn or something like that, but she was not injured.”

But Todd Rutherford, the student’s attorney, said his client now has to wear a cast on her arm.

The girl also suffered a bruise on her head, her attorney said.

Student: It started with a cell phone

The 16-year-old girl who was taken to the ground was arrested on a charge called “disturbing schools.” A classmate, Niya Kenny, 18, was also arrested on the same charge.

Classmate of arrested South Carolina teen speaks out

Classmate of arrested South Carolina teen speaks out click picture above to watch.

Kenny told CNN’s Don Lemon on Tuesday night the incident started when her math teacher told the other girl to give up her cell phone. The girl refused and defied orders from the teacher and an administrator to leave the classroom.

That’s when Fields was called in, Kenny said. The school resource officer asked the girl to leave the classroom with him.

Kenny said the offer moved the girl’s laptop off her desk.

“He grabbed her arm, and he put his arm around her neck at first. So that’s why you actually see her — if you get the right video — then you’ll see her trying to swing at him,” Kenny said.

“And at that point, he just flipped the desk back and grabbed her out of it and threw her. And that’s when you see her rolling across the floor.”

Kenny said she and other classmates had their cell phones recording because of the officer’s reputation.

“When he came in the classroom, I immediately told my classmates, ‘Get your phones out, get your phones out. I think this is going to go downhill.’ And it did.”

Her attorney, Simone Martin, said she’s been told “by a number of the students that he is referred to as Officer Slam as opposed to Officer Fields. And that’s telling.”

Kenny was arrested and accused of disturbing school after yelling and cursing at the officer, according to an incident report.

Who is Ben Fields?

Civil rights investigation

The FBI and U.S. attorney’s office have opened a civil rights investigation to determine whether federal laws were violated during the student’s arrest, a Justice Department representative said.

The sheriff said the FBI is also to be the lead agency in a criminal investigation.

“We do not want any issues with the community or those involved having questions concerning conflicts of interest in this investigation,” he said.

Analyst: Officer within his rights

CNN law enforcement analyst Harry Houck cautioned against jumping to conclusions about Fields, even if the footage “looks really bad.”

If an officer decides to make an arrest, he or she “can use whatever force is necessary,” said Houck, a retired New York police detective.

“So if you don’t comply with my wishes,” he said, “then I can do whatever it takes to get you out of that seat and put handcuffs on you.”

Opinion: Police shouldn’t be doing school discipline

Sheriff criticizes law on disrupting school

Houck said the officer shouldn’t have been called in to deal with the student in the first place.

Sheriff: Resource officer shouldn't be a disciplinarian

Police in schools: Why are they there?

But South Carolina has a law that muddles the role of school resource officers, the sheriff said.

“Unfortunately, our Legislature passed a law that’s called ‘disturbing schools,’ ” he said.

“If a student disturbs school — and that’s a wide range of activities, ‘disturbing schools’ — they can be arrested. Our goal has always been to see what we can do without arresting the kids. We don’t need to arrest these students. We need to keep them in schools.”

Daily Quote ~October 28, 2015~

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Spiritual Thought/Empowerment
dare

 

Outrage after South Carolina officer throws, arrests student in classroom

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(CNN)The video shows a South Carolina school resource officer standing over a student, seated at her desk. He puts his arm near her neck, then yanks her backward. The desk tips over and the student crashes onto the floor.

The uniformed officer doesn’t let go, sharply tugging the student toward the front of the classroom. She flies out of her desk and slides several feet across the floor.

“Give me your hands,” the officer says.

His is the only voice heard. Other students sit calmly and quietly, one of them covering his face with his hand.

Teacher drags 6-year-old student through hallway

Yet many haven’t been so quiet since the footage out of Columbia, South Carolina, surfaced.

Some have defended the officer, many pointing out that the video isn’t complete. It doesn’t show what happened before, including what the student did and how many times authorities — a teacher, a school administrator and finally the officer, Richland County Sheriff’s Deputy Ben Fields — had asked her to get up.

Others, though, think the video shows more than enough to warrant Fields’ firing. There’s no excuse, they say, for a law enforcement officer to act that way against a student who hasn’t harmed or threatened anyone.

I can’t imagine any justification for treating a child like that in a classroom,” Victoria Middleton, the head of South Carolina’s ACLU chapter, told CNN’s “New Day” on Tuesday. “… Whatever led up to it, whatever rationale may be presented, does not justify the force with which that student was treated.”

Curtis Lavarello, one of more than 46,000 people employed full time as school resource officers, has seen this kind of scenario “played out hundreds of times, … and it’s one that can be handled so simply.” But he can’t explain why this one was handled as it was.

“We saw a pretty routine discipline issue become a criminal issue in just a matter of minutes,” said Lavarello, head of the School Safety Advocacy Council. “… It escalated needlessly.”

Student arrested; officer on administrative duties

At least two videos shot by students show the dramatic scene Monday inside a math classroom at Spring Valley High School. None show much of what happened before it, however.

According to Lt. Curtis Wilson, a spokesman for the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, the instructor had asked the student “to leave the class several times.”

“The assistant principal was there as well,” Wilson said. “Then the officer was called to actually have the student removed from that location. The student refused.”

This is where the video picks up, capturing Fields as he says, “You’re either going to come with me, or I’m going to make you.” Click the photo below to see the video.

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The student doesn’t budge. Fields tells her, “Come on, I’m going to get you up,” and tries to pull her from the desk.

The officer gets the student up only after she first crashes to the floor and is then flung across the room.

Wilson said that no one was injured in the incident.

The student — who was released to her parents after the incident — faces a charge of disturbing schools, according to Wilson. Another female student, Niya Kenny, faces the same charge after allegedly standing up for the other teenager, her mother, Doris Ballard told CNN.

The FBI and area U.S. Attorney’s Office have opened a civil rights investigation to determine whether federal laws were violated during the student’s arrest, a Justice Department spokesperson said.

Sheriff Leon Lott said that the FBI will be the lead agency in a criminal investigation.

“We do not want any issues with the community or those involved having questions concerning conflicts of interest in this investigation,” he said.

For now, Fields is on administrative duties and won’t return to his customary assignment at Spring Valley High. And his boss, Lott, is determined to get to the bottom of what happened.

“He was disturbed by what he saw, (and) he has questions just like everybody else does,” Wilson said of Lott. “And he wants answers to those questions.”

‘She’s a kid’

Whatever happened before the incident, criminology expert David Klinger finds it hard to justify the deputy’s actions.

“It literally makes no sense, as I’m looking at it, why he would escalate to that point — [to] pick her up, pick up the chair she’s in, the desk she’s in, and toss her,” said Klinger, a criminology professor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

“There may be some logical explanation, but I can’t see it.”

Shocked Twitter users couldn’t understand it, either.

“I don’t care what this kid supposedly did. She’s a kid,” Charles Clymer tweeted. “Did she threaten his life? No? End of discussion.”

charles

Julia Carmel wondered what would have happened if there was no video footage.

“When a cop can be as violent as the #AssaultAtSpringValleyHigh video in front of classroom audience, I fear what he’d do w/ nobody watching,” she tweeted.

Julia

James Manning, the head of the Richland School District Two board, called the video “extremely disturbing.”

“I can assure you that we are taking this matter very seriously,” he said in a statement. “The district superintendent has been in constant contact with the Richland County sheriff to express our concern over this matter, and the district has banned the deputy in question from all District Two property.”

Analyst: The officer was within his rights

CNN law enforcement analyst Harry Houck, though, cautioned against jumping to conclusions about Fields, even if the video “looks really bad.”

If an officer decides to make an arrest, Houck said, he or she “can use whatever force is necessary.”

“So if you don’t comply with my wishes … then I can do whatever it takes to get you out of that seat and put handcuffs on you,” said Houck, a former New York police detective.

That said, Houck questioned why the officer was even called in to deal with the student in the first place.

“Cops are at a school in the event a crime is being committed,” he said.

“Too often, these teachers in these schools are calling on the cops because they have a disruptive student in the classroom. This is not a cop’s job.”

He was seconded by Sunny Hostin, a former federal prosecutor and current CNN legal analyst. Hostin doesn’t think anything could have justified the deputy’s actions in the first place, but generally challenged the idea of law enforcement being involved in incidents like this one.

“We in our schools, at least in the United States, are too quick to call in the police to deal with behavioral situations,” Hostin said.

There were more than 82,000 school resource officers working full or part time at 43% of the nation’s public schools during the 2013-2014 school year, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. Such officers have the same credentials and capabilities of any police officer. But in light of where they work, they also have a distinct role as what a 2013 congressional report calls “a hybrid educational, correctional and law enforcement officer” serving as mediators and educators as well as law enforcers.

And in this case, Lavarello from the School Safety Advocacy Council doesn’t think this school resource officer should have ever been involved in what “should have been left in the school discipline area.” Once the officer was involved, he could have deployed “a lot of strategies” like having the other students leave the room first.

“It’s something that can be handled relatively simply with training and having school administrators know when to best use a school resource officer,” he said. “And this doesn’t appear to be the case.”

Officer’s career marked with lawsuits, praise

Deputy Ben Fields

Fields did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment Monday night. But court documents and a sheriff’s department newsletter offer a study in contrasts in his career.

The officer was a subject of two lawsuits in the past decade.

In the first case, Fields was accused of excessive force and battery in a 2007 lawsuit. A jury ruled in favor of the officer.

The second case is scheduled to go to trial in January. Fields is one of several defendants listed in a suit filed by a student against the school district over his expulsion.

Fields has also received commendations for his work in schools. He was given a Culture of Excellence Award by a Richland County elementary school where he worked as a school resource officer in 2014.

“Ben has been working for the Richland County Sheriff’s Office Department since 2004 and joined the School Resource Officer Program in 2008,” a sheriff’s department newsletter said.

“He is assigned to Spring Valley High School as well as Lonnie B. Nelson Elementary School, and has proven to be an exceptional role model to the students he serves and protects.”

Rickey Smiley hosts 6th Annual Fun Day @ Birmingham’s Railroad Park

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Andre J. Thomas, Contributing Blogger
IG: @AndreTheBlogger
People can no longer say “It’s nothing to do in Birmingham!” Nearly every weekend it seems as if there are family friendly events happening throughout the city. Yesterday, I had the opportunity to stop by Birmingham’s #RailroadPark to catch Birmingham’s 5th District Annual #FunDay. It was my first time attending the event, but I must say it was tons of FUN!
The annual event is sponsored by Birmingham City Councilman Johnathan Austin and Magic City Smooth Jazz.  The Fun Day was hosted by Birmingham’s favorite radio personality, Rickey Smiley of the Rickey Smiley Morning Show. Featuring interactive activities for kids such as pumpkin decorations, carnival ride, and face painting, we also saw the debut of the Stephonia McLinn’s “Say Cheese” photo booth.
While the kids were having fun throughout the park, adults were able to sit in their lawn chairs and listen to the smooth sounds of Jazmin Ghent. Ghent’s cover of “No Diggity” by #BlackStreet was definitely a crowd favorite.
Make sure you continue to read The Birmingham Times to find out what’s happening throughout the Magic City.
@AndreTheBlogger is an entertainment blogger and radio personality for the Joe Lockett Show on 101.1 FM & 1260 AM. He can be heard every weekend from 4pm – 7pm CST. 

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To read more stories by Andre J. Thomas, please visit his website at www.andrejthomas.com