NAACP Welcomes Entertainment Executive Kyle Bowser as Senior Vice President of Hollywood Bureau
By Sentinel News Service
Published February 11, 2021
The NAACP is pleased to announce that Kyle Bowser will serve as its Senior Vice President of the Hollywood Bureau. In this capacity, Mr. Bowser will be responsible for advancing NAACP’s Hollywood projects, relationships, and overseeing NAACP’s Image Awards production.
For nearly three decades, Kyle Bowser has worked as an entertainment industry executive. His experience spans film, television, music, theater, radio, and digital media. This immersion within a vast sphere of media interests has provided Bowser with unique insight into the intersecting parameters of the arts, culture, business development, and emerging technologies.
The new political season is getting off to a quick start as six candidates have already entered the race for a seat on the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas.
Four Democrats and two Republicans have announced their candidacies for the Pennsylvania Primary Electionon May 18, in which judicial candidates can run on both tickets as a sign of impartiality. They will be able to cross file for both parties tickets after Feb. 12.
The official list of seats open in the judicial race won t be announced by the Pennsylvania Department of State until mid February.
The attorneys who are candidates include:
Bucks County Democratic Party Chairman John Cordisco, a friend of Biden, confirmed the report Tuesday afternoon.
Murphy, of Bristol Borough, represented Bucks County as a Democrat in Congress from 2007-2011, and was the first Iraq War veteran elected to Congress. He later served as undersecretary of the Army under former President Barack Obama. President Biden did come to Bucks to support Murphy for Congress. Patrick also had a friendship with (Biden s son) Beau, Cordisco said. Beau Biden died of brain cancer in 2015.
Murphy attended Bucks County Community College and graduated from the King s College Army ROTC program in 1996, then Widener University School of Law in 1999.
Pennsylvania state Sen. David Arnold died at 49 years old after more than a year-long battle with brain cancer. The Republican lawmaker represented Lebanon County and parts of York County, having taken the seat of former state Sen. Mike Folmer.