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Canadian sitcoms are doing well, so why are Indigenous sitcoms going to the U S ?

Canadian sitcoms are doing well, so why are Indigenous sitcoms going to the U S ?
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ONLINE: Chandra Crane

ONLINE: Chandra Crane press release: Upper House hosts Chandra Crane and the launch of her book: Mixed Blessing: Embracing the Fullness of Your Multiethnic Identity. Crane will share her personal and professional experience, stories, and the questions people of mixed heritage contend with, followed by a multiethnic community panel.  Chandra Crane understands first-hand the complexity of multiethnic existence. In her first book,  Mixed Blessing: Embracing the Fullness of Your Multiethnic Identity (InterVarsity Press, 2020), she brings the multiethnic experience into clearer focus. Upper House’s Rebecca Cooks will be interviewing Chandra about the experience of “mixed folks” and their journeys to find validity and company in their often ambiguous, beautiful lives. Together, Chandra and Rebecca will delve into the stories and questions that people of mixed heritage contend with. They will also explore the ways God’s character and presence ar

Barbara Brown Taylor is Far from Home

Barbara Brown Taylor is Far from Home Written by:  December 15, 2020 What do we look for in a sermon? Wit? Inspiration? A profound dive into Scripture? A drawing in and drawing together of the people of faith? As her readers know, these are some of the marks of Barbara Brown Taylor’s sermons. , is her latest collection, sermons preached after leaving parish ministry “twenty years earlier than expected.” [1] As a guest preacher far from home, she packs lightly, only “a sacred text, a trust in the Spirit, an experience of being human, and the desire to bear good news.” The earliest sermon in this collection is from 2006, the latest is January 2020. Most of them were preached up and down the East Coast from Chautauqua, New York, to Florida, with several in her home state of Georgia. Others were farther afield: Winchester Cathedral in England, along with pulpits in Ontario, Minneapolis, and Portland. Although she is booked two years in advance, many of her sermons appear

Elizabeth Anionwu: the cool, black and exceptional nurse who fought to make the NHS fairer

Elizabeth Anionwu: the ‘cool, black and exceptional’ nurse who fought to make the NHS fairer Alex Mistlin © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Suki Dhanda/The Guardian When Elizabeth Nneka Anionwu was a child, she had severe eczema – bad enough to need daily dressings and slatherings of coal tar paste. Brought up in care until she was nine by nuns at the Nazareth House convent in Birmingham, she remembers this as torture. “None of the nuns were deliberately trying to hurt me, but they would tear the bandaging off and my skin would come with it,” she says. The exception was when a nun dressed in white, rather than the usual black habit, turned up to look after her. “She would tell rude jokes and use bad words like ‘bottom’ as a form of distraction therapy,” says Anionwu. “I adored her.” When she discovered the nun’s habit was in fact a nurse’s uniform, it put her on a path. “I decided pretty early on that I didn’t want to be a n

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