i have every right. daryl lamont jenkins is an anti-racist who runs the website one people s project. julie was, i m guessing at her wit s end. she wanted to talk to somebody. it s obvious they are going through something. they are asking for my help so, okay. you got it. you got it. i mean, i think of you as a human first. i don t think of you as an adversary. bryon s first conversation with daryl lasted more than three hours. he was educated. he knew what the hell he was talking about. we liked lot of the same he was the son of a preacher and in the punk rock movement in new york. our conversation was about the music scene. we was able to get together on kind of like this common bond that we had with each other to begin with. and, you know, just became something else as we went along. and the more i talked to him, the more i realized i had in common with him than some of the guys i buddied up with for close to 20 years. but that really changed me in a lot of ways.
and grandkids. stop that! stop that! but it s you know, the music transcends music and becomes moments for a lot of people. so the go-go s are iconic if i must say so myself and toot my own horn. i like that. who came up with the idea when did you talk to your friends and say, hey, let s start a band? we don t really know how to play, we don t know how to write songs, but let s start a band. well, it was during the punk rock movement early on, and everybody was in a band and they were horrible. so it was like, well, we can be in a band and be horrible too. i was in a punk band called the germs and played the drums. i had the choice of singing i had never had experience and no one knew how to do anything, but the punk rock movement lets you
as bryan and julie struggled to escape the skinhead movement they sought the counsel of a rival of sorts. lamont jenkins is an anti-racist who runs the web site one people s project. julie was i m guessing at her wit s end. she wanted to talk to somebody. it s obvious that they re going through something. they re asking for my help. so okay, you got it. you got it. i mean, i think of you as a human first. i don t think of you as an adversary. bryan s first conversation with darrel lasted more than three hours. he was educated. he knew what the hell he was talking about. we liked a lot of the same [ expletive ]. he was a son of a preacher and in the punk rock movement out in new york. our conversation was about the music scene. we was able to get together on kind of like this common bond that we had with each other to begin with. and it just became something else as we went along. and the more i talked to him, the more i actually realized
as a boy, michael s gender identity issue was compounded by learning disabilities and behavioral problems, which all made for a lonely and painful childhood. whether it be football, baseball, whatever, i was always the last one picked, you know, kind of situation. nobody wanted me on their team. it was just never-ending. i really never fit into the group. and that s why in college when i found the punk rock movement, i fit right in. we were all outcasts. michael drifted from one fringe group to the next, from punk rockers to street gangs, and eventually he developed a drug habit he was unable to control. i lived for years being a drug addict, you know, one thing to another, from here to san diego, from san francisco. most of the time miserably depressed. and feeling suicidal. michael eventually cleaned up
you don t have the right to i have every right. daryl lamont jenkins is an anti-racist who runs the website one people s project. julie was, i m guessing at her wit s end. she wanted to talk to somebody. it s obvious they are going through something. they are asking for my help so, okay. you got it. you got it. i mean, i think of you as a human first. i don t think of you as an adversary. bryon s first conversation with daryl lasted more than three hours. he was educated. he knew what the hell he was talking about. we liked lot of the same he was the son of a preacher and in the punk rock movement in new york. our conversation was about the music scene. we was able to get together on kind of like this common bond that we had with each other to begin with. and, you know, just became something else as we went along. and the more i talked to him, the more i realized i had in common with him than some of the guys i buddied up with for close to 20 years.