Nazarene Harris Nazarene Harris (Source: KSWO) By KSWO Staff | February 8, 2021 at 2:18 PM CST - Updated February 8 at 2:18 PM
Nazarene Harris was born and raised in Dallas, Texas and graduated from The University of North Texas in 2010 with a bachelorâs degree in journalism. A career opportunity in print news brought Nazarene to Oklahoma City in 2012 and she reported for
The Oklahoman for two years before reporting for
The Oklahoma Gazette and freelancing for publications including
Metro Family Magazine, The Curbside Chronicle, The Denton Record Chronicle, The Dallas Morning News and The Huffington Post. Nazarene has had a passion for journalism since she was in elementary school and is thrilled to begin her broadcast television career with KSWO in Lawton.
For the bands 40th anniversary, Hollywood Records has reissued deluxe remasters of Queens second round of studio albums with bonus EP discs fortifying each release.
This batch of five begins with 1977s News of the World, which proceeds regally with the double A-side single We Will Rock You and We Are the Champions. Besides these two classics of Queens back catalogue, the album also features the punk-influenced Sheer Heart Attack and drummer Roger Taylors Fight from the Inside, fueled by a riff that Slash once cited as a personal favorite.
For News of the World, the bands contract with previous producer Roy Thomas Baker had expired, so arrangements were not as elaborate for this LP co-produced with longtime engineer Mike Stone. The production for the back-to-basics recording is relatively sparse. (Guitarist Brian Mays Sleeping on the Sidewalk was recorded in a single take, for example, which sharply contrasts with the sessions for A Night
Provided by Konjo Concepts
OKG: Tell Us a little bit about yourself and your year in review? (Have you gotten covid or anyone near you been affected?)
Jabee Williams: No, I haven t had covid. Despite Covid and so many deaths, 2020 was good for me. Blessed.
OKG: You had your new album come out in the middle of the pandemic. How did you adapt your strategy for the year for promoting your album?
Jabee Williams: I just found new and creative ways to push the album, the only setback was no album release show and no tour. click to enlarge Provided
OKG: Tell Us a little bit about yourself? Carlos Barboza: My name is Carlos Barboza. I’m a muralist, a painter, and a 2020 survivor. OKG: You have been busy painting large murals across the city. What has been your favorite project this year? Carlos Barboza: The Stonecloud Brewing mural. It is easily my favorite project of the year, and flat-out the best working experience I’ve ever had. From beginning to end, the whole Stonecloud crew was beyond amazing in their trust and support. Every single day on-site felt urgent and exciting. But once I finished, I realized that the mural was something bigger than the sum of its parts. Many people mentioned how pleasantly surprised they were to see such values being represented in Oklahoma, and made them feel like maybe they weren’t so alone in their thinking during one of the most divisive times in America. I do believe it was a little bit of lightning-in-a-bottle for its time and place, and it is the
OKG: Tell us a little bit about yourself and your year compared to normal years?
James Cooper: I serve as OKC’s Ward 2 Councilperson. I also teach as an adjunct professor in Philosophy and Film Studies at Oklahoma City University and as an adjunct professor in English at University of Central Oklahoma. Before I took office in April 2019, I served in Oklahoma City Public Schools, specifically as an AVID middle school college preparation teacher. By January 2020, I was learning to balance council responsibilities with university work, excited to teach on college campuses and serve downtown in our municipal building. By mid-March, OCU and UCO shifted all classes online. My kitchen table became where I learned video technology on my laptop, specifically Microsoft Teams and Zoom. My workplace became my small Paseo apartment.