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How Birmingham Voice Actor, Writer Erika Wade Became the Consummate Creator

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Erika Wade, 33, born and raised in Fairfield, is up for a Southeast Emmy award for her work as a performer/narrator on the Alabama Public Television series Yellowhammer History Hunt. (Provided)

By Keisa Sharpe-Jefferson | For The Birmingham Times

If unconventional success could embody a person, creator Erika Eileen Wade, an award-winning voice actor, writer and producer and the founder of Birmingham-based Glenda’s Baby Productions, could fit the bill.

Wade, 33, born and raised in Fairfield, is up for a Southeast Emmy award this month for her work as a performer/narrator on the Alabama Public Television series Yellowhammer History Hunt.

It wouldn’t be her first award for the series, but it would be the first award for her individually.

Yellowhammer History Hunt is an educational video compilation highlighting historical Alabama places and people. Wade said she recorded these voice-overs in her makeshift home studio – her “coat closet.”

The first Southeast Emmy Award for Yellowhammer History Hunt came in 2022, with the second Emmy for the same program in 2023.

She received her first Emmy “after recording in my closet, while trying to keep my dog – that I’d just bought – from barking, while underneath my coats. They took that sound, and they mixed it,” she said.

She also won a couple of Telly Awards (honoring video and television projects across all screens) for her voice-over talent for History Hunt as well.

The Consummate Creator 

 There are many more layers to her diverse and celebrated resume.

Wade also recently wrote a movie that will be based in Birmingham, has so much interest that she’s currently in a bidding war with production companies, she said.

“I can’t speak too much on it, but it’s about a topic that’s near and dear to me about Black women and mental health.”

Asked about her winning formula, she said it’s an innate gift. “My marketability can’t be taught,” said Wade. “I have a natural empathy that I can take from reading a script, then I put it in my voice, and deliver it as if I’m speaking directly to you. I’m not just talking to a sound board or talking into a mic. I always visually put a person in my head.”

The Gift Made Room

Erika Wade graduated from ASFA in 2008 and attended the University of Alabama. She then attended Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) where she obtained her Master of Fine Arts in 2016. (Provided)

Throughout her career, Wade said her first meaningful award came when she was a senior at the Alabama School of Fine Arts (ASFA) during the 2007/2008 school year and was awarded spoken word champ for Word Up! in the City of Birmingham, an honor given to youth who express themselves creatively.

It landed her a job writing for the Birmingham News writing for the Opinions section and taught her that she could “make a living off of creating things.”

Wade graduated from ASFA in 2008 and attended the University of Alabama, where she published a book at age 19 – ‘Eyestodewhurld’ an anthology poetry book about political culture, Black history and culture, the decay of society and other themes on the human experience from the early 2000’s.

She then attended Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) where she obtained her Master of Fine Arts in 2016 the same year she was “selected as a finalist for the Kennedy Center’s MFA (Master of Fine Arts) playwrights which meant she was “chosen as one of the top 22 playwrights in the country at the time” for her play Justifiable Force, sparked by the Black Lives Matter movement.

After graduating from SCAD, Wade traveled to Los Angeles in 2016, California to light the flame of her desire for a career in show business. And it worked.

In 2017, she performed her one-woman show, The Rhythm/Da Blues, in L.A. at the Comedy Film Festival. The show, which tracks the life of a young, Black woman named Lena Darling and all the joys and pains of her life experiences, was written while she was in grad school at SCAD.

On opening night of the show, she was called by a colleague from SCAD who worked in development and programming at MGM “and asked if I could be at MGM (Studios) that week to meet with the Vice President in development and programing…. and off that same show script (The Rhythm/Da Blues), was asked to pitch some original titles.”

While nothing transpired from that meeting about her production, a relationship with MGM Studios was born and she earned a reputation “as a creative who can take an idea that might be stale, and breathe new life into it,” said Wade.

Emotionally Intelligent Acting

Not only is Wade an accomplished artist, but she also teaches others how to write and act.

She favors a method which allows actors to get in and out of character, rather than becoming completely immersed in a role.

It’s what she calls emotionally intelligent acting. The goal, said Wade, is to play the role without losing sight of self.

“Because at the end of day, acting is only beautiful if you’re doing just that – acting; if you can leave it and you can still be who you are and not let that role infect you,” she added.

Tracking Success

Growing up in Fairfield with her mother and older brother, Kevin Brown (owner of Xtreme Fitness and Performance in downtown Birmingham), she always knew her work would involve creative vocal and written projects.

“I would sit and watch The Smurfs with my grandma and give alternate scenarios,” said Wade.

Her grandmother, who lived in Birmingham’s Dolomite community, gave Wade the confidence that helped instill the fortitude she takes into each project.

Once she finished her schooling and after graduating from SCAD in 2016, she told her mother she was going to Los Angeles, California. That next week, she relocated and stayed in the City of Angels until 2022.

That’s when she came back home to Birmingham – all part of her resume-building strategy, she said.

“It was never just to go to LA and lose sight of Birmingham …. It was always to learn what I could, get the networks that I could, and bring that back to the city,” she said.

People “thought it was crazy” when she told them she was moving back to Birmingham to create content.

And Wade said she has stayed the course since “because the film market (in Birmingham) is blossoming and it’s new.”

Growing in Confidence

Wade said her career course has always been certain, but far from perfect.

The confidence you see from her now, in a lot of ways, “came from failure,” she said. “In a lot of ways, I was my own worst enemy when it came to elevating in my field. I didn’t believe I could do things.”

And that doubt, she said, was visible to others who “can smell it on you.”

She said she saw colleagues, who were not as qualified or who didn’t want it as much as she did, get opportunities because they walked into a room like they believed they should be there. That’s when her course changed for her, she said.

“I woke up and decided one day if I fail, it’s not going to be because of me. It’s going to because the stars aren’t aligning or it’s not God’s will, it’s not going to be me anymore. That changed things immediately for me,” said Wade.

The Name Says it All

“When I make my first million, my mother has already told me she wants half,” said Wade, laughing. “Not 10 percent, but half.”

And Wade said her mother deserves every penny.

Her production company, Glenda’s Baby Productions, is named for her mother, Glenda Brown-Wade.

She is, literally, her mom’s baby daughter and the product of her mother’s confidence.

“My mom has always been the type of person that understood what I was interested in, and I was the type who had to see it for myself.  So, she just provided that safety net for me to go and do things that I needed to do, but to know home is always here.”

And for those seeking a career in the arts or otherwise, Wade said the best way to get into the industry and to stay in the industry is to know your audience and to meet them where they are.”

For more on Wade visit www.glendasbaby.com.

PEOPLE, PLACES & THINGS

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Singer Keri Hilson attends 6th Annual Black Love Summit at Garden City Events on October 21, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images)

By Gwen Deru | The Birmingham Times

TODAY…
**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**ALABAMA BLAZIN BINGO, 6 p.m. at Overtime Grill and Bar.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**WELCOME TO FUNKY TOWN featuring ZAY FOGLE at the Perfect Note.

**BAMA ROOTS RADIO presents: ZACH AUSTIN & ALEXA FONTAINE at the Nick.

**PEACE DECAY, CONFUSION’S PRINCE, REFUSE TO THRIVE and CERVIX at Saturn.

**3RD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**THIRST TRAP THURSDAY, 5 p.m. at 2400 7th Avenue South.

**LIVE BAND KARAOKE hosted by ELLE JAI at Perfect Note.

**KIKSTART at Water Mark in Bessemer with Free Food Boxes, 9 a.m.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and
Thursday.

**EACH AND EVERY THURSDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**THIRSTY THURSDAYS at D’ZIRE Bar and Lounge.

**KARAOKE, 5-9 p.m. at Courtyard Alabaster Bar and Grill.

**THIRD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**TASTEMAKER THURSDAY – Every Thursday at Blaze Ultra Lounge, 228 Roebuck Plaza Drive, 8 p.m. – 12 a.m. with DJ Ace Twon (95.7 JAMZ) in the mix hosted by Audio Life and GMC Promo.

**THIRSTY THURSDAY at Hookah 114 17th Street No.

**TEQUILA THURSDAY at the Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**THROW BACK THURSDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge, 3801 Richard Arrington, Jr., Blvd.

**FILMMAKER HAPPY HOUR- Every 3rd Thursday, at Sidewalk Film Fest. Meet with other filmmakers and
discuss your newest projects.

**EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT KARAOKE, 6:30 at Ruth’s Place hosted by LADY WOO and with DJ SHAY.

FRIDAY…
**EVERY FRIDAY – STORYTIME AT THE GARDENS, Every Friday, 10 – 11 a.m. FREE at BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**40 Years of The Nick with CLAY CONNOR & KYLE KIMBRELL at The Nick.

**40 Years of The Nick with SHAHEED & DJ SUPREME & TOMORROW’S OLD TRIO at the Nick.

**TRIBUTE TO THE ISLANDS ALL WHITE PARTY featuring THE REVOLUTION BAND at Perfect Note.

**EVERY FRIDAY, R&B at The Chandelier, 212 Cahaba Valley Road in Pelham with DJ MANISH mixing live. FREE Entry.

**EACH AND EVERY FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**LIT FRIDAYS WITH RIPCORD, 8 p.m. – 2 a.m. at 4501 Gary Avenue in Fairfield.

**AFRO CARIBBEAN NIGHTS (Every Friday Night) at Ash’s on 2nd, 7 p.m. until with Reggae, Afro Beats, Dancehall and Top 40 Hits.

**FIREBALL FRIDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**FRIDAY NIGHT RAP, Every 1st and 3rd Friday at Crescent Cultural Center, 1121 Tuscaloosa Avenue, SW.

**MILK AND HONEY at Saturn.

SATURDAY…
**EVERY SATURDAY at BIRDSONG FARMERS MARKET, 9 a.m. – 12 p.m., 2824 5th Avenue South, at Automatic Seafood.

**THE MARVEL CITY CARIBBEAN FOOD AND MUSIC FESTIVAL, 11 a.m. at 1623 2nd Avenue North, Bessemer.

**SATURN SUMMER MARKET, Noon at Saturn.

**USFL CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP, 2 p.m. at the Protective Stadium.

**LAUREN DAIGLE, 7 p.m. at the Legacy Arena.

**ZOO BREWS at the Birmingham Zoo, 6-9 p.m. Experience more than 20 breweries from all over Alabama and the southeast while you travel through the Zoo.

**WINE DOWN HAPPY HOUR, 4 p.m. – 9 p.m. at Saferoom Lounge Bar.

**EACH AND EVERY SATURDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**EVERY SATURDAY SOLD OUT – THE SATURDAYS JUMP OFF, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 8th Avenue West.

**ALMA RUSS Free Show with 40 years of The Nick, 5- 7 p.m. at The Nick.

**40 Years of The Nick Rocks Celebration with P.O.T.I.S., BLOOD MOON RIOT, SHADOWS OF THE WIND & OXMOOR! NIGHT 2! at The Nick.

**DRUMMER JAMES PJ SPRAGGINS, 1 p.m. at Perfect Note.

**DENO’S FINAL FUNK SHOW, 6 p.m. at the Perfect Note.

**RUN IT BACK SATURDAYS at Platinum of Birmingham.

**LOUD & PROUD: THE OFFICIAL PRIDE PARADE AFTER PARTY at Saturn.

SUNDAY…   
**WORSHIP AT THE SIXTH, 9:30 a.m. at Sixth Avenue Baptist Church.

**EVERY SUNDAY – SOUL FOOD SUNDAYS, 1-5 p.m. (Every Sunday) at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**SUNDAY FUN DAY at DZIRE BAR AND LOUNGE, 4120 3rd Avenue South. Call 205-266-2594 for more.

**SUNDAY FUNDAY for the grown Folks Kickback at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**EVERY 3rd SUNDAY JAZZ JAM SESSION, 4-8 p.m. at the Ferus on 41st.

**CITY WIDE PRAYER MEETING, Every 4th Sunday, 4 p.m. for one hour at Birmingham Easonian Baptist Bible College. The Lord’s Supper will be served and hosted by the Knights of Pythias & Court of Calanthe.

**BIRMINGHAM LEGION FC vs INDY ELEVEN, 6 p.m. at Protective Stadium.

**40 Years of The Nick Burlesque Open Stage Night at the Nick with BELLA DONNA & PATSY FINE at The Nick.

**SOULFUL SUNDAY BRUNCH with VOCALIST DEDEE FRAZIER at the Perfect Note.

**BLACK JOE LEWIS & THE HONEYBEARS at Saturn.

MONDAY…
**YWCA CREW 2024 TEEN ENRICHMENT PROGRAM, June 10 – July 12, 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more: FRC@ywcabham.org or 205-949-5550.

**BIRMINGHAM BAND STAND with Special Guest TEMPLE MONARC at The Nick.

**RNB MONDAYS, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 Eighth Avenue West.

TUESDAY…
**KIKSTART at Water Mark in Bessemer, 9 a.m. with Free Food Boxes…until all gone.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and
Thursday.

**DIAPER GIVEAWAY every Tuesday, 10 a.m. at the Titusville Library.

**EVERY TUESDAY SPECIAL TUESDAYS with Food, Drinks Specials at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**EVERY TUESDAY – TUESDAY NIGHT TRAILS 5:45 p.m. at Red Mountain Park.

**EVERY TUESDAY is SOUL CAFÉ Happy Hour introducing the Soul Café Happy Hour, 5:30-9:30 p.m. with Soul Goodies, Soul Spirits and Soul Music including $5 Titos and Redmont, at The Vault.

**JOSE CARR’S JAZZ JAM, 7:30 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company 5510 Crestwood Blvd.

**CARIBBEAN NIGHTS with Reggae, Caribbean and Island Vibes, 9 p.m. – until… with DJ Serious Mixing and hosted by KJ and MANNY at The Vault, downtown.

**TASTY TUESDAYS at Platinum of Birmingham.

**BIRMINGHAM SONGWRITER’S ROUND with Host SUSANNAH SEALES at the Nick.

**PINK FLAMINGOS at Saturn.

WEDNESDAY…
**INTERFAITH NOONDAY PRAYER SERVICES, every Wednesday, at Linn Park, in Downtown Birmingham.

**WORKOUT WEDNESDAY at Five Points West Library at 10:30 a.m. for chair yoga and other chair exercises.

**WEDNESDAY NIGHT POOL TOURNAMENT AND KARAOKE NIGHT, 5 p.m. at
Carter’s Hookah Lounge and Grill, hosted by Jo Sweetz with the Pool Tournament, at 7 p.m. and Karaoke at 8 p.m.

**EVERY WEDNESDAY, YOU, ME & RNB, 6 p.m. at 2206 Bar & Lounge, 2206 31st Street, with DJ You, Me & Playlist.

**D’ZIRE WEDNESDAYS, EACH AND EVERY WEDNESDAY with Free Mimosas, 8- 10 p.m. with DJ GORGEOUS in the Mix at 4120 Third Avenue South.

**WEDNESDAYS WEEKLY JAZZ JAM, 7- 10 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company, 5510 Crestwood Blvd. Food
until 9 p.m., Music until 10 p.m. and Drink until 11 p.m.

**EVERY 4th WEDNESDAY at FACE’S LOUNGE KARAOKE hosted by ARETTA, 6:30 p.m. at 7070 Aaron Aronov Dr. in Fairfield.

**ZEN COWBOYS & DANNY HAMMONS at The Nick.

**MDOU MOCTAR with BAT FANGS at Saturn.

NEXT THURSDAY…
**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**ALABAMA BLAZIN BINGO, 6 p.m. at Overtime Grill and Bar.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**FAREWELL LIVE BAND KARAOKE with DOMINIQUE at the Perfect Note.

**DRAG NIGHT LUBE WRESTLING at the Nick.

**3RD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**LAMONT LANDERS with KATIE SHECTER at Saturn.

NEXT FRIDAY…

**EVERY FRIDAY – STORYTIME AT THE GARDENS, Every Friday, 10 – 11 a.m. FREE at BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS.

**GWAR at Iron City.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**JENNA McCLELLAND & JOHNNY HAYES at The Nick.

**TRIBUTE TO ANITA BAKER with SHARRON COLLINS at Perfect Note.

**STEEL CITY MEN’S CHORUS at Saturn.

THINGS TO DO IN JUNE…

**NEXT SATURDAY- JUNETEENTH CELEBRATION AT BCRI – The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, Urban Impact, Inc. and CREEED63 are hosting its annual Juneteenth Celebration on Saturday, June 15, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. across three blocks on 16th Street North between 3rd and 6th Avenues North. Juneteenth marks the full emancipation of enslaved people in the United States. The celebration will feature music, dance, arts, wellness, history, heritage STEAM enrichment, personal development, sports and a car show. FREE! For more: www.bcri.org/upcoming-events.

**NEXT SATURDAY – 26th MAGIC CITY SICKLE CELL WALK at Railroad Park, 8 a.m. – Noon. Bring your family and friends for an informative, health conscious friendly morning in the park. Join a team. Register at: sicklecellwalk.swell.gives. For more info, call, 205-780-2355 or walk@sicklecellbham.org.

**NEXT SATURDAY- PANCAKES AND PRINCESSES – Spend the morning at the Birmingham Zoo for an enchanted day with the magical court of characters during the Royal Pancakes and Princesses Breakfast on the Balcony and Terraces of the Zoo’s Administration Building, First Seating is 8:30 – 10 a.m. Second Seating it 10:30 a.m. -12.

HAPPY FATHER’S DAY!!!

**JUNE 16 – THE R&B MONEY TOUR featuring TANK with KERI HILSON and CARL THOMAS, 8 p.m. at the BJCC Concert Hall.

**JUNE 16 – CELEBRATING DAD – JAZZ MUSIC on FATHER’S DAY, 6 p.m. with BO BERRY QUARTET featuring Vocalist LORETTA HILL at Jazzi’s On 3rd.

**JUNE 28 – GARDENDALE SUMMER JAM FAMILY RESOURCE FAIR is Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Gardendale Civic Center, 857 Main St. There will be a wheelchair wash, games, food trucks, water activities and more resources than ever including the Full Life Ahead Foundation, Libby’s Friends, the Regional Autism Network, United Ability, that can positively impact the lives of individuals with disabilities and their families. For more, 205-290-4597.

**JUNE 28, 29 and 30 – BOB MARLEY DAY CELEBRATION – A CARIBBEAN JERK FESTIVAL, Noon – 6 p.m. at Linn Park. For more, 205-834-6938.

AT BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS….

**SECOND TUESDAY NATURE TRIVIA NIGHT – Join fellow nature lovers for an evening filled with fun, learning and camaraderie. Enjoy complimentary drinks and engage in friendly competition for a chance to win a prize. DATES: June 11, July 9, August 13, 7-9 p.m. Every Second Tuesday.

**JUNE 12 – CREATING A BACKYARD WILDLIFE HABITAT, 9-10:30 a.m. in the Conference Room with Master Gardener PEGGY THOMPSON. Gain insights into planning and nurturing a thriving ecosystem in your own backyard. Enjoy the walk through the Kaul Wildflower Garden’s Senior “living Bird Feeders with Friends’ Senior horticulturist KEITH TURNEY.

**JUNE 14 – THE FOUR ELEMENTS OF JAPANESE GARDEN DESIGN, 9 -10 a.m. in the Japanese Gardens with Friends’ horticulturist JULIA ADAMS. Learn about plants, rock, water and ornament while surrounded by the beauty of nature in this outdoor class.

**JUNE 20-21 – TEACHING CONFERENCE: STEM TEACHER INSTITUTE, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m. for K-6 educators to explore STEM in the context of nature and the outdoors.

**JUNE 25 – CYANOTYPES: BLUEPRINTS FROM NATURE, 1-2 p.m. to learn the photographic technique that produces stunning indigo-colored images on paper capturing the beauty of nature without a camera.

**JUNE 28 – Cultivating the practice of nature observation, 10-11:30 a.m. for a workshop on phenology, the study of natural events in relation to seasonal and climatic changes.

HAPPENINGS AT SIXTH AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH…

**WORSHIP SERVICE every Sunday.
**EVERY MONDAY MORNING MEDITATION WITH PASTOR CANTELOW, 7:15 a.m. Contact the church at (205) 321-1136 or (205) 321-1137.
**CHILDREN’S CHURCH & COLLISION CHURCH, each First Sunday at 9:30 a.m. for K-5th (Children’s Church), 6-12th (Collision).

AT GIFTED CITY CHURCH… EVERY SUNDAY!
**GIFTED CITY CHURCH, Sunday Worship is 10 a.m. at 228 Second Avenue North in the Downtown, City Center. Join the one-hour service with children’s service and complimentary coffee and tea. For more: info@thegiftpad.org.

COMING SOON…
**JULY 10 – THE QUEENS OF R&B: XSCAPE & SWV at the BJCC.

**JULY 11 – CHRIS BROWN – THE 11:11 TOUR at Legacy Arena.

**SEPTEMBER 28 – MAXWELL: THE SERENADE TOUR at the Legacy Arena.

**OCTOBER 5 – THE REUNION TOUR 2024 with KIRK FRANKLIN, YOLANDA ADAMS, FRED HAMMOND, MARVIN SAPP & THE CLARK SISTERS with special guest KIERRA SHEARD-KELLY at the Legacy Arena.

**OCTOBER 13 – 85 SOUTH: BIG BUSINESS COMEDY TOUR at the Legacy Arena.

Well, that’s it. Tell you more ‘next’ time. People, Places and Things by Gwen DeRu is a weekly column. Send events, your things of interest and more to: gwenderu@yahoo.com and thelewisgroup@birminghamtimes.com.

 

Myrna Carter Jackson, Prominent Birmingham Civil Rights Activist, Dies at 82

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Myrna Carter Jackson, a Birmingham civic leader and Foot Soldier who participated in marches, sit-ins, demonstrations and other Civil Rights activities, died on May 31. She was 82. (Screengrab, YouTube)

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

Myrna Carter Jackson, a Birmingham civic leader and Foot Soldier who participated in marches, sit-ins, demonstrations and other Civil Rights activities, died on May 31. She was 82.

Mrs. Jackson, who was arrested and jailed twice during the 1963 marches, went on to become one of the city’s most visible and prominent activists serving in leadership with the Birmingham NAACP and joining the board of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (BCRI) where she educated tour groups from around the world about the city’s history and role in global change for human rights.

She stood out not only in the community, but among family as well.

“She was our most respected aunt,” said her niece Tracy Boone, of Birmingham. “You respect all of your aunts because of who they are but there was just something different about her. We called all of our aunts by their first names, but you couldn’t call her by her first name. You either had to call her ‘Mrs. Jackson’ ‘Mrs. Myrna’ or ‘Aunt Myrna’ … and everybody called her ‘auntie’. If you say mama, ‘auntie’s on the phone’ she didn’t have to say which one. She knew who it was. That was the level of respect.”

Her aunt made sure the family knew about Birmingham’s Civil Rights history, said Boone. “It was taught in the family just as much as she taught it outside the family.”

Boone said her aunt was known for something else as well. “She was a great cook – oh my God – she was the best cook and baker. She could sell her cakes and pies … She was a giant to us.”

Former Jefferson County Commissioner and radio personality Shelia Smoot recalled Mrs. Jackson was a advocate when many others were not. “She was my biggest supporter when people told her not to,” said Smoot. “I knew her all my career.  I met her when I traveled here from Anniston to a Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) Junior Board meeting in my 20’s. I never knew she had my back until that 2002 race (for Jefferson County Commission).  She didn’t back down and she taught me so much.”

Mrs. Jackson, who received many awards for community service and activism, was a lifelong participant for Birmingham causes from the Children’s March to the Monday Masses, organized by the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights (ACMHR), led by the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth. That work continued throughout her life. She helped organize the 2009 conference between youth and law enforcement with the BCRI and the FBI. In 2017, Mrs. Jackson helped commemorate the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument.

She was an active member of the Metro Birmingham Branch of the NAACP and served as the first vice president for over 20 years and went on to establish the Women in the NAACP (WIN), where she served as the chairperson for the last 10 years. In 2018, Mrs. Jackson served as interim president of the Birmingham NAACP.

Myrna Carter Jackson died on May 31. She was 82. (Screengrab, YouTube)

Civic Leader

Mrs. Jackson was born on July 9, 1941, in Birmingham, Alabama, to Willie George Carter and Willie Lee Ledger. She accepted Christ at an early age and was baptized under the pastoral ship of Rev L. M. Turner.  She was a Sunday School teacher, member of Number 3 usher board and the head of the Youth Ministry. She later joined Bethel Baptist Church Berney Points under the leadership of Rev. William H. Greason, where she was a Sunday School teacher.

She attended Thomas and Shields Elementary Schools and graduated from A.H. Parker High School in 1958 at the age of 16, attended Barbara Durr Beauty College and became a licensed cosmetologist, in 1965 and owned her own business.

Mrs. Jackson later attended Lawson State Community College in Birmingham and after graduating became a certified substitute teacher and taught at several schools in the Birmingham City School System. She later worked for Macy’s and Parisian’s department stores.

In 2000 Jackson graduated from Miles College in Fairfield, Alabama, with her BSW degree. During her matriculation at Miles, she was inducted into the Iota Delta chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.

After graduating from Miles College, she helped with workforce development to provide social services after Hurricane Katrina and later joined Birmingham Works for Youth to provide job training and skills for school-age children.  Mrs. Jackson was then appointed commissioner of the Housing Authority of the Birmingham District by Mayor William Bell.

In 1965, she married Jethro Jackson in 1965 and to this union a son, Jeffrey D. Jackson, was born. Years later she married Isaac V. Jackson and a son Michael V. Jackson was born.

Her Legacy

Mrs. Jackson leaves to cherish her memories, a loving and devoted son Jeffrey Jackson and son Michael (LaBrena) Jackson; two grandchildren Denitra “Lady” Streeter and Kieron Jackson; a brother, Willie G. (Barbara) Carter Jr , Decatur, Ga; four sisters, Sylvia Weatherspoon, Lee Edna Boone, Iris Elom  all of Birmingham,  AL, and Wanda (Matthelon) Morton of Shreveport,  LA; a sister in law Hattie  Carter of Birmingham,  AL; caring and devoted caregivers,  nieces Adrienne (Edwin) Adams and Tracy Boone,  and great niece Adrianna Adams; and a grand host of nieces, nephews, cousins and other relatives and friends; She was preceded in death by two brothers, Alfred Lee Carter and John Carter.

Services will be held Saturday June 8 at Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, 1530 6th Ave. North, Birmingham, 35203 at 1 p.m.

Ladarrion Williams Left Alabama as Struggling Writer, Returned as NYT Bestselling Author

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Ladarrion Williams signs copy of his New York Times best seller at Books-A-Million in Alabaster (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

By Marika N. Johnson | For The Birmingham Times

Ladarrion Williams left Alabama several years ago as a struggling playwright, endured failure, lived without a home and returned last week as a New York Times best-selling author.

Williams celebrated the release of his book, Blood at the Root, an instant best seller on the New York Times’s Young Adult Fiction list, coincidentally at the same store where he once worked at Books A Million in Alabaster, AL.

Patrons filled the aisles for the book signing on Friday, May 30 as stacks of his books stood as a testament to Williams’s determination and talent.

“I want to write, for us and about us, but not at the expense of us,” Williams, a Helena native now based in LA, told Publishers Weekly. He shared his mission online for writing the story. “No police brutality and no racial drama.”

Family members from left: Greg Williams (father); Arian Allen (sister), Theresa Allen (mother) with author Ladarrion Williams. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

This fantasy young adult novel began as a question on social media during COVID, “What if Harry Potter went to an HBCU?” From there Williams penned Blood at the Root.

The story was originally meant to be a TV series but was met with rejection. Despite numerous setbacks, a friend suggested he turn the script into a book. Williams delved into writing the novel, exploring the themes of identity, resilience, and cultural heritage with a fictional Historically Black College and University (HBCU) as the backdrop.

The main character, Malik, resonated deeply with readers, catapulting it to bestseller status leading to three book deal through Labyrinth Road, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books. He is currently working on a sequel.

Supporters at the book signing Book Club members, Lareisha and Latanya Higginbottom, Jamara Wright and Shannon Moore, who drove from various locations around the state. All attended Alabama State University together and were there to share their support of Williams and his mission “to shine a light on HBCUs.”

Family members were also present in support including parents (Theresa Allen and Greg Williams), cousins, his sister Arian Allen and her son Ashton Bevel (to whom the book is dedicated). Arian shares that “[Ashton] gets to live vicariously through the book, giving him a picture of how we were as kids.”

Also among the attendees was Williams’ former high school theatre teacher who recalled Williams’ passion for writing. She re-printed and gifted him the first play that he wrote while attending Thompson High School. “We knew he was going to do it, he had the drive”, said Jane Ganey. “We all knew he was destined for something big, but seeing it happen is just incredible.”

To purchase a copy of the book visit

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/738959/blood-at-the-root-by-ladarrion-williams/ or https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0593711920?tag=randohouseinc7986-20

Former teacher Jane Ganey hands Williams a reprinted copy of one of his old stage plays from Thompson High School in Alabaster. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

Birmingham Residents Voice Concerns About City’s Proposed $554 Million FY25 Budget  

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Nearly two dozen Birmingham residents showed up at City Hall Monday evening for the City Council budget hearings to voice some concerns. (Keisa Sharpe, For The Birmingham Times)

By Keisa Sharpe | For The Birmingham Times

Nearly two dozen Birmingham residents showed up at City Hall Monday evening for the City Council budget hearings to voice some concerns and ask for budget expenditures to help with various improvements in their neighborhoods.

The city’s fiscal year begins July 1.

Darlene Tarrance, a Roosevelt Village resident, said she was concerned about “people coming to our neighborhood to dump things on empty lots … ”

Tarrance said she left a note in a suggestion box outside the council chambers for city leaders to consider installing cameras at dump sites in local neighborhoods “to catch those offenders.

Others asked city leaders to address various items like improving the condition of local roadways, providing consistent trash pickup to known dumping sites/empty lots, and adding more safety measures and police presence for communities with high crime, including West End and Inglenook.

Birmingham Council President Darrell O’Quinn said the spending plan for next year is identical to this year’s budget. City officials are using the $554 million 2024 budget as a stand-in for the coming year to allow staff to catch up on work lost due to what the city called a computer network disruption, which several news organizations have reported as a ransomware attack.

Gwen Webb, president of the Inglenook Neighborhood Association, said after the meeting she was disappointed the city proposed a budget based on last year’s numbers.

“Costs have increased across the board for police and fire and other services over the past year and we’re using a 2024 budget,” said Webb. “Why not just pay to fix the [ransomware] attack?”

O’Quinn encouraged citizens to stay engaged the next few weeks as financials are still being reconciled. And he added, “We are all anticipating that what you see proposed and what will be approved may be vastly different,” said O’Quinn, who applauded those who shared their concerns, even though some items mentioned were outside of the city’s control (like cutting overgrown grass on private lots owned by citizens), he said.

However, he pointed out “over the past six years, the city has paved close to 60 miles of roadways “and that doesn’t include pothole repairs and the permanent patching that we do,” he said.

Darlene Tarrance from Roosevelt Village puts a suggestion in the box for city leaders to consider installing cameras at dump sites in local neighborhoods. (Keisa Sharpe, For The Birmingham Times)

Monday’s speakers also included several members from People’s Budget Birmingham, a group that advocates for more public participation in the city’s budget process. According to its website, the organization demands an end to “the near total control the mayor has over the city budget” and urges that “city councilors regain the power to make changes to the city budget that best meet the needs of the people they represent.”

The mayor holds the budget power thanks to Alabama’s 2016 Mayor-Council Act, which critics have said shifted that balance of power too heavily toward the executive.

Gabriel Cubero, executive director for People’s Budget Birmingham pointed out Woodfin’s absence from Monday’s meeting to which some members of the audience applauded in response.

“We stand here for three minutes to tell all of you, ‘I need better roads, I need better parks, I need better security, I need better transportation,” all the while the person, people or department with the power to change the budget is unable to attend,” Cubero said to the council, referring to the three-minute time limit for speakers.

The mayor’s office said Woodfin “has never attended the budget hearings which as hosted by the council.”

Councilors in attendance included Clinton Woods (District 1), Councilor Hunter Williams (District 2), President Pro Tem Wardine Alexander (District 7), Councilor Crystal Smitherman (District 6), Council Valerie Abbott (District 3), Councilor Carol Clarke (District 8) and O’Quinn.

Councilors LaTonya Tate (District 9) and J.T. Moore (District 4) were not present.

Next steps involve the council adopting the proposed budget by June 20.

‘He Got Down on One Knee and Had the Ring and I Was Like ‘Absolutely Yes,’

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By Je’don Holloway-Talley | Special to the Birmingham Times

ALETHIA & CECIL BARKER

Live: Hoover

Married:  May 28, 2011

Met: Late November 2009, at The Worship Center Christian Church’s former campus in Center Point. Alethia was on the praise and worship team, and it was Cecil’s first rehearsal as the church’s new drummer.

“I kinda had a thing for drummers [but] what attracted me to Cecil was his worship,” Alethia said. “Even though he was drumming he still stopped to give God praise; it was his love for God that captured my eye.”

“I noticed Alethia at my first rehearsal and the thing that stuck out to me was her natural beauty. She was well-manicured, and her hair and makeup were nice but not overdone. I could tell that what she looked like was also how she would look if she didn’t have any of it on and I find that highly attractive,” said Cecil. Asked how they made a connection, “she came after me,” Cecil laughed.

“[Flirting with Cecil] was a joke,” Alethia said. “Cecil was driving around with a box of Gain washing powder in his car and my friends dared me to ask him for some… and then the next time we came to rehearsal, he came in with some McDonalds and I said ‘Hey, where’s mine?’ and he said, ‘this time I ain’t got it, but I got you the next time.’ And then after that, I found him on Facebook and messaged him. We talked on there for a little while and then exchanged numbers.”

“Like I said, she came after me,” Cecil laughed.

First date: Spring 2010, at the Guitar Center in Hoover. “Cecil loves drums, so he picked me up and we went there. He was playing the drums and trying different drumsticks and we were talking about his love for drums and music in general,” Alethia recalled.

“The fact that she didn’t find it weird that that was the route we took for our first date was great. The goal with Alethia was not to approach the relationship the way I approached others in the past. I didn’t go the conventional route, I was vulnerable enough with her to show her what I loved from the start,” Cecil said.

Soon after their first date, the couple started a twice-weekly tradition. “We would go on day dates on Wednesdays before Bible study, and on Thursdays before rehearsal at Ruby Tuesdays and ate at the salad bar and got to know each other better,” Alethia said.

The turn: April 30, 2010, over the phone during a drive home after church. “I said some very specific words about us,” said Cecil. “I told her I didn’t want to play any games and that if we were going to continue she had to accept who I am, and where I am in my life. At the time I was only 25 years old and there’s a 4-year age difference and I assumed that because [she was almost 30] she would want to get married sooner than I would, but she elected to stay with me.”

“I remember trying to get a definite answer on where we were early on, and he said just go with the flow. I was thinking to myself I am older than he is and I didn’t want to be with somebody six and seven years and still dating them. But, I prayed on it, and decided to flow with it and we made it official,” Alethia said. “He had told me he wouldn’t be ready for marriage for 5 or 6 years, but I also remembered what God had told me and I knew it wasn’t going to take that long.”

Alethia and Cecil Barker met in 2009 at The Worship Center Christian Church and married in 2011. (Provided Photos)

The proposal: October 2010, in the church parking lot at the Worship Center Christian Church’s former campus in Center Point.

“I proposed to her six months before I proposed the conventional way. I hugged her and said ‘May 28th’, and she said, ‘what?’ And I said, ‘that’s our wedding date.’ And I didn’t know anything about what day that fell on, I just knew I heard the spirit of God, and when I hugged her that’s what came out my mouth. But I officially got on one knee and asked her to marry me in front of everyone at rehearsal at the church in March 2011,” Cecil recalled.

“I was straight confused because I was like, ‘what is May 28th? where did that come from? And after he told me I started crying because I was happy, but I was also tickled because just six months ago he said it would take five or six years for him to be ready to get married,” Alethia said.

“Then in March when he got down on one knee, he came into rehearsal acting weird and kind of stand-offish, so I kinda had an attitude. But then after rehearsal, he got on the microphone and called me down from the choir stand to come to the pulpit, and I was like, ‘what is he doing?’ Then he got down on one knee and had the ring and I was like ‘absolutely yes,’ and I cried again,” Alethia said. “And my daughter Ayana [five years old at the time] was there and she started crying too.”

The wedding: At Mount Hebron Baptist Church in Acipco [Birmingham], officiated by their pastor, Bishop Vanable Moody of the Worship Center Christian Church. The couple’s colors were orange and grey.

Most memorable for the bride is her walk down the aisle. “My dad has passed on now, and he walked me down the aisle so I still have those photos to go back and look at,” Alethia said.

Most memorable for the groom was his surprise wedding guests. “My family from Chicago surprised me. My mother invited them, and I had uncles, aunts, and cousins come down from Chicago that I didn’t expect to be there and I thought that was really dope,” Cecil said.

The newlyweds honeymooned in Gatlinburg, Tenn. “I just remember being away with him and enjoying being with him as my husband, it was so surreal to be married,” Alethia said. “I agree, spending time and still processing being married,” said Cecil.

Words of wisdom: “Being open and honest and being able to handle the honesty that is given to you. Don‘t be afraid to speak on how you feel about anything and allow the other person grace in receiving what you put out,” Alethia said. “Give space and allow room to come back and kumbaya later on. Also, without God being the center and the focus of our marriage we wouldn’t still be together, we allow him to lead us and guide us.”

“Always keep in mind that your spouse was an individual before they met you so a lot of what you’re going to experience with your partner doesn’t have anything to do with you but rather their growth as an individual, so just be patient,” Cecil said.

Happily ever after: The Barkers attend the Worship Center Christian Church [both campuses on Derby Parkway and Bessemer] where Alethia serves on the praise team, and Cecil is the production manager. They are a blended family with three children, Ayana, 20, Joshua, 16, and Azariah, 11, from their union.

Alethia, 42, is a Homewood native, and Huffman High School grad, currently pursuing a bachelor’s degree at Strayer University [online] in business administration and works for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama in the claims department.

Cecil, 38, is a Chicago, Illinois, native, by way of West Alabama. He graduated from Livingston High School [Livingston, Ala.], and works as the production manager for The Worship Center Christian Church.

“You Had Me at Hello’’ highlights married couples and the love that binds them. If you would like to be considered for a future “Hello’’ column, or know someone, please send nominations to Barnett Wright bwright@birminghamtimes.com. Include the couple’s name, contact number(s) and what makes their love story unique.

Birmingham Personal Injury Attorney | Guster Law Firm, LLC

$50 Million Amphitheater Adds Another Attraction to Birmingham’s Uptown Entertainment District

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On Monday, the BJCC, along with city officials and amphitheater operator Live Nation, broke ground to begin construction on a new 9,380-capacity amphitheater in Uptown. (Artist Rendering)

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

Birmingham’s booming Uptown Entertainment District got another boost on Monday when the BJCC, along with city officials and amphitheater operator Live Nation, broke ground to begin construction on a new 9,380-capacity amphitheater on the city’s north side.

Recently, forbes.com, a national business media and publishing company, named the Uptown Entertainment District, with its Protective Stadium, renovated Legacy Arena and dining and shopping options, as a Neighborhood to Watch.

And that review came before Monday’s groundbreaking. The $50 million amphitheater will be located near the former Carraway Hospital which is being redeveloped to bring other entertainment, dining, retail, and residential options to the Druid Hills neighborhood.

It also follows historic investments in BJCC venues, including a major upgrade to Legacy Arena and the construction of Protective Stadium.

“The amphitheater rounds out the venues in the state’s largest entertainment district, and it will bring more people to enjoy the amenities across the county,” said Jefferson County Commission President Jimmie Stephens.

(The Black Contractors Association of Alabama and two other plaintiffs last week filed a lawsuit accusing the BJCC of failing to adhere to all or part of the terms of the resolution and agreements with the city and county as it relates to the inclusion of historically underutilized businesses, which BJCC officials denied.)

The amphitheater will host a variety of events and concerts and is expected to host around 20 shows each summer concert season and accommodate a variety of festivals, community gatherings, special events.

Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin, third from left, joined by members of the Birmingham City Council break ground on the $50 million amphitheatre in downtown Birmingham. (Provided)

“This is a day that’s made possible by the hard work and commitment of so many individuals and leaders in our community,” BJCC CEO Tad Snider said. “We’re proud of the collective effort put into building a new entertainment venue that will serve local residents and give visitors yet another reason to come to Birmingham.”

Mayor Randall Woodfin said the venue “will be an anchor that will spur other development that will improve the quality of life for residents in the area and for the city as a whole … As excited as we all will be to have a new place to see concerts, I’m most excited about what this will do for all of our Northside neighborhoods.”

Darrell O’Quinn, president of the Birmingham City Council, agreed. “We know that our investments in community infrastructure like this create a ripple effect that adds new life and vitality to our city. They also generate new resources for city services and investments that touch all corners of the city and county.”

BJCC board chair Michael Keel said the addition of the amphitheater comes at a time of historic success for the complex.

“We have broken every kind of record in recent months, thanks to the community’s support and investments in our facilities, and the hard work of our staff,” BJCC board chair Michael Keel said. “The BJCC is a community asset in every sense of the word, and the amphitheater will ensure that we can serve our community even better in the future.”

The ceremony came after a lawsuit filed by the Black Contractors Association of Alabama and two other plaintiffs asking for construction to be halted for failing to include historically underutilized businesses.

In a statement Snider said, “under the amphitheater construction bid we awarded in May, more than 26 percent of eligible spending will go to minority- and women-owned firms. That includes a $3.1 million site- grading contract that went entirely to a minority-owned firm.

“In addition, more than 33 percent of the design work on the project went to minority- and women-owned firms … these results reflect the good-faith effort we have made and continue to make to achieve strong minority participation …”

A hearing on the issue is scheduled to take place at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Jefferson County Courthouse.

Birmingham Water Works General Manager Michael Johnson Retires 

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Birmingham Water Works General Manager Michael Johnson has retired. (Provided)

bwwb.org

Birmingham Water Works (BWW) General Manager Michael Johnson has retired.

BWW Chairwoman Tereshia Huffman issued a press release early Monday that said in part, “we wish Mr. Johnson well and thank him for his service to the system … the Board of Directors is in the process of determining who will serve as an Interim General Manager. We expect that decision to be made in the very near future. Until that time our three Assistant General Managers will run day-to-day operations.”

Efforts to reach Johnson for comment were unsuccessful.

Huffman said the Board of Directors has been actively assessing system operations and “continue to receive feedback from all stakeholders including customers, employees, local elected officials and the general public.”

She added that the utility will begin a national search for a General Manager “who will aggressively implement our new organizational structure and plans under development to better serve our customers.”

Johnson had held the position since 2019. He is a retired U.S. Marine colonel with over 26 years of service as an active duty and reserve military officer and first joined the utility in 2008 as assistant GM of finance and operations after serving as director of finance for the City of Birmingham. The BWWB named him interim GM in December 2018, succeeding Mac Underwood. He took the helm on March 27, 2019.

R&B Icon Adina Howard to Highlight Pride Month Celebrations in Birmingham

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Central Alabama Pride Inc. on June 9 will feature R&B icon Adina Howard. (Provided)

By Sym Posey | The Birmingham Times

June is Pride Month, and the city of Birmingham along with Central Alabama Pride Inc. (CAP) will celebrate with more than a dozen events, including Pride Fest on June 9, which will feature R&B icon Adina Howard, who rose to fame in the mid-1990s with her debut single “Freak Like Me.” Also performing will be house music diva Robin S., known for her hit song “Show Me Love,” as well as local, regional, and national talent.

“A lot of folks are excited about Adina Howard,” said CAP President Josh Coleman. “The most outreach we received when we posted on social media was folks really anticipating her. I’ve spoken to [Howard], and she’s super excited to be here.”

Pride Month is a time to recognize the LGBTQ+ community and spread a message of equality and acceptance. The Magic City’s Pride celebrations began on June 1 with the Funky Food Truck Festival at Cahaba Brewing Co. and will continue throughout the month with events like the annual Pride Parade on June 8 in the Lakeview community.

Central Alabama Pride Inc. President Josh Coleman. (Provided)

Coleman said the celebrations are more than just gatherings—they are moments to embrace, remember, and educate.

“It’s a happy time for not only us but for the community,” he said. “We do this solely for the community. It’s a lot of hard work, but it’s rewarding to see people enjoying themselves, especially during the parade and the festival, without any borders.”

CAP, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to spreading the message of equality, wants to make Pride Month activities accessible to all, Coleman said.

“We see other Prides across the country, and I understand why things are expensive and that it takes a lot to produce and be successful. … Look at places like Nashville, [Tennessee], and Atlanta, [Georgia, where] they charge a little bit for their festivals. … Five or 10 dollars might not seem like a lot, but for some folks it can be, especially young people,” he said.

Since Birmingham’s first Pride celebration in 1979, this annual outdoor festival has brought together the LGBTQ+ community with food, music, and live entertainment.

Beacon of Hope

“When I came to Birmingham at age 18, [Pride Fest] was like a beacon of hope. I remember how much fun I had. It was my first Pride, and it was the first time I saw people really living their authentic selves,” said Coleman, who is originally from Cullman, Alabama.

The CAP president came to Birmingham in 2013 and has been part of CAP since 2015, when he started volunteering with the organization.

“I worked at McDonald’s all through high school and was a general manager. I left and became a director of operations for a 28-store Pizza Hut franchisee, and then I moved to Birmingham. That’s when I kind of started volunteering and doing different stuff with different boards and agencies. That and the Pride work really ingrained me in the community,” said Coleman, now in his third year planning the event.

After the COVID-19 pandemic, “[CAP] rebranded and restarted the entire organization,” he said.

“In 2022, we had a volunteer sign-up, and [one volunteer] came and worked all day. I mean she was one of the best volunteers. At the end of the day, she thanked us for letting her volunteer and then she told us her story. She said her child had recently committed suicide because they weren’t accepted at school and … not much [when] they were at home. I believe it had just happened. She said she saw this call to volunteer, and it was a sign,” Coleman recalled.

“She’s volunteered every single year since she signed up. Seeing that and the impact that our work is doing by being able to uplift the community really resonates with me, and I hold stories like that very near and dear,” said Coleman, adding that the work he does has allowed him to have encounters with many people from all walks of life.

“Finding My Rainbow”

This year’s Pride Month is special to Coleman for another reason — his first book, “Finding My Rainbow,” will be released at a Book Launch Party on June 12, at 6 p.m., at the Magic City Acceptance Center (3130 3rd. Ave. S., Birmingham, AL).

“It’s a book about me coming out as a gay boy in a small town, Cullman, Alabama, and growing up to do what I do now,” said the CAP president, who is the city of Birmingham’s first gay LBGTQ+ liaison.

“I had this crazy idea to write a children’s book, but it started as a long form book about me,” said Coleman. “All the book bans and everything that was happening not only in Alabama but across the country [seemed like] the silencing of people and the diluting of queer voices to me, [so] I believed I could turn what I had written into a book for children. [“Finding My Rainbow’] is not only for those who identify as LGBTQ but also for others that want to be supportive. It speaks to the power of love and acceptance.”

Writing this book has been “a journey,” he added. “It’s brought back emotions for me. Thinking about when I was young, the people talking, and the different things that have happened, it kind of hit me.”

The 46th Annual PrideFest will be held on Sunday, June 9, at Linn Park in Downtown Birmingham. Gates open at 11a.m., and the daylong festival is a FREE event open to all!

Pride Month Events

Pride Fest is just one of the many Pride Month events taking place in the Magic City this year. Here are a few more:

PRIDE SKATE NIGHT

What: Roller skating, music, and socializing; organized by Central Alabama Pride Inc.

When: Tuesday, June 4, 7 p.m.–10 p.m.

Where: Skates 280,7043 Meadowlark Dr., Birmingham, AL

Admission: Free, donations accepted at the door

Organized by Central Alabama Pride.

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

PRIDE IDOL

What: Singing competition with $300 prize for the winner, plus a spot on the main stage at Pride Fest

When: Wednesday, June 5; doors open at 7 p.m., in-person registration starts at 7:30 p.m., show begins at 8 p.m. (register online here)

Where: Saturn, 200 41st St. S., Birmingham, AL

Admission: Free, donations accepted

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

PRIDE GLOW BOWLING

What: Cosmic bowling, with black lights used to illuminate the bowling lanes and pins, giving a fluorescent effect in the dark

When: Thursday, June 6, 9 p.m.–11:30 p.m.

Where: Bowlero, 2908 Riverview Rd., Birmingham, AL

Admission: $20, includes unlimited bowling and shoe rental

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

PRIDE MILK & HONEY

What: Friday night dance party with music by DJ Coco, David X Daisy, Stevo Blaque, as well as performances by Twhat Weiland, LT Fresh, Luminarts Entertainment, and more

When: Friday, June 7 at 9 p.m.

Where: Saturn, 200 41st St. S., Birmingham, AL

Admission: $25 in advance, $30 day of show

More Info: Saturn website, Central Alabama Pride website, or Facebook page

PRIDE DRAG BUNCH

What: Brunch with drag show featuring Shannel, Alex Andrews, Tiffany Carrington, Green, Malik Carrington, Lauren Lou and more; hosted by Erika and Daroneshia D’nae Starr

When: Saturday, June 8 at 11 a.m.

Where: Haven, 2515 6th Ave. S., Birmingham, AL

Admission: $35 general admission; $50 meet-and-greet with artists; $800 VIP tables for eight people, includes brunch buffet, meet-and greet, table beverage service (online tickets available here)

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

PRIDE PARADE

What: Mardi Gras-style parade led by Grand Marshals Joi Miner, a poet and novelist, and DIY Drag, a group of experimental drag artists; parade includes marchers, floats, organizations, businesses, and community groups

When: Saturday, June 8, at 8 p.m.

Where: Parade route along Seventh Avenue South, from 32nd Street South to 22nd Street South, in the Lakeview neighborhood of Birmingham

Admission: Free

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

PRIDE FEST

What: Daylong festival with drag artists, live music, vendors, food trucks, kids activities, other entertainers, and more, hosted by Kharris and Dominique Divine; lineup includes Adina Howard, Robin S., Mrs. Kasha Davis, Axel Andrews, Angeria Paris VanMicheals, Brita Filter, and other performers

When: Sunday, June 9, 11 a.m.–7 p.m.

Where: Linn Park, 710 20th St. N., Birmingham, AL

Admission: Free general admission; $100–$150 VIP, perks include food, drinks, meet-and-greet with artists (tickets available online here)

More Info: Central Alabama Pride website or Facebook page

“FINDING MY RAINBOW” BOOK LAUNCH PARTY

What: Family-friendly event to celebrate publication of “Finding My Rainbow,” a new book by Central Alabama Pride President Josh Coleman, which the author describes as a “heartwarming children’s book that tells the story of Josh, a young boy from Alabama, on his path to self-discovery and acceptance. Perfect for families, educators, and allies, this story celebrates the power of love and pride.” Party includes drag queen story hour hosted by Kharris, author Q&A, book signing, snacks, and drinks.

When: Wednesday, June 12 at 6 p.m.

Where: Magic City Acceptance Center, 3130 Third Ave. S., Birmingham, AL

Admission: Free, books available for purchase ($18.99 hardcover); RSVP online here

 

Exclusive Alabama Resident $24 Tickets on Sale Now for ‘BARNSTORM BIRMINGHAM’ Celebration at Rickwood Field

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Major League Baseball and UNINTERRUPTED, the award-winning athlete storytelling brand, on Friday announced ‘BARNSTORM BIRMINGHAM,’ a Juneteenth celebration at Rickwood Field. (Provided)

mlb.com

Major League Baseball and UNINTERRUPTED, the award-winning athlete storytelling brand founded by LeBron James and Maverick Carter, on Friday announced ‘BARNSTORM BIRMINGHAM,’ a Juneteenth celebration at Rickwood Field that will be centered on Fam Jam, a celebrity softball game, followed by an electric performance by global music superstar Metro Boomin.

Launched by former All-Star pitcher CC Sabathia and UNINTERRUPTED co-founder Maverick Carter, UNINTERRUPTED Fam Jam is a celebrity event platform where attendees will witness another kind of history as stars of entertainment, sports and baseball descend on Birmingham to thrill fans in a brand of celebrity softball with remixed rules that will celebrate the Negro Leagues in a fresh way.

The initial list of celebrities and athletes scheduled to play in the game include Birmingham’s own and Emmy nominated writer, stand-up and Actor Roy Wood Jr., former National League MVP & World Series Champion Ryan Howard, former NBA Champion Stephen Jackson, comedian and actor DC Young Fly, NFL Hall of Famer Terrell Owens, NFL Quarterback & former Florida State University baseball star Jameis Winston, and comedian and actor Sam Jay. More participants will be announced in the weeks leading up to the event.

On Friday, tickets for the game went on on-sale in an exclusive opportunity for Alabama residents (determined by local zip codes) through Tuesday, June 4 at MLB.com/rickwood. Tickets for the general public will be available for sale on Wednesday, June 5, and will include a bundled ticket offer to the MiLB at Rickwood game being held the day prior The prices for BARNSTORM BIRMINGHAM tickets are $24 in a nod to Birmingham’s own, the great Willie Mays.

This event at Rickwood Field, the country’s oldest ballpark, is the latest added alongside on MiLB at Rickwood (Tuesday, June 18) and MLB at Rickwood (Thursday, June 20), all of which are in tribute to the Negro Leagues and its players, including Mays. As with both games, MLB will make a select amount of tickets for Barnstorm Birmingham available for free to local youth and community groups.

Barnstorming was an integral practice of Negro Leagues baseball in an era when teams and players in the Leagues traveled to different communities to promote their style of baseball. Existing and future information on these events can be found at MLB.com/rickwood.

UNINTERRUPTED is the award-winning athlete storytelling brand, within The SpringHill Company (TSHC), founded by LeBron James and Maverick Carter, that combines revolutionary content, experiences and consumer products.

Since 2015, the UNINTERRUPTED brand has existed to partner with athletes to invite the sports community to celebrate the humanity in sport through culturally connected content. UNINTERRUPTED original content properties and franchises include Top Class, Iman Amongst Men and more. For more information visit www.uninterrupted.com and follow @UNINTERRUPTED on social media.