JFK documentary with Flint/East Village Magazine connection airing on PBS June 2
May25

JFK documentary with Flint/East Village Magazine connection airing on PBS June 2

By Jan Worth-Nelson A documentary about John F. Kennedy’s last major speech, which spotlights, among others, a Flint man present at the speech and the effect it had on his life, will be aired on two local PBS stations at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, June 2. In the interest of full disclosure, that man, Ted Nelson, is my husband. Last July a three-person film crew from Northern Light Productions in Boston came to Flint for three days to...

Read More
Flint residents getting first looks at $55.8 million proposed 2018-19 city budget
May23

Flint residents getting first looks at $55.8 million proposed 2018-19 city budget

By Meghan Christian A proposed City of Flint 2018-2019 budget of $55.8 million, of which $23.2 milion, or roughly 59 percent, is earmarked for public safety, and a proposed 2019-2020 budget of $56.6 million, was presented by Chief Financial Officer Hughey Newsome for comment at a public hearing Tuesday in City Hall. Of the dozen people in attendance, only a handful were not employed by the city, and from that number, only one resident...

Read More
As Woodside takes on new life in its MCC era, neighbors praise, question and complain
May18

As Woodside takes on new life in its MCC era, neighbors praise, question and complain

By Jan Worth-Nelson A small patch of trees known for decades as the Woodside Woods has become a point of contention since Mott Community College bought the historic Woodside Church on the southeast side of the campus eight months ago,  with neighbors in the College Cultural neighborhood surrounding the college both praising MCC’s plans for the $8.5 million expansion and renovation of the former church and questioning the...

Read More
Flint Roller Derby team pairs competitive sport with high-energy fun
May17

Flint Roller Derby team pairs competitive sport with high-energy fun

By Dylan Doherty and Meghan Christian Grace Seymore had been a roller derby skater for a year before her team dissolved as she was considering moving from Clarkston to Flint.  Looking to join a team again, she dropped in on a practice session of the Flint Roller Derby crew. What she saw there immediately got her attention, and she tried out. “These people are fucking amazing,” she remembers thinking,  “This is terrifying.  I need to...

Read More
The “universal good medicine” of Flint artist Pauly M. Everett
May16

The “universal good medicine” of Flint artist Pauly M. Everett

By Jeffery L Carey, Jr. In Flint artist Pauly Everett’s work, a mixed media mash-up of pop culture icons and comic book details are delivered in exuberant primary colors and a hip-hop street art flavor.   He calls his signature style  “city psychedelic art,” and from his crowded, bright studio, Everett, 29,  has established himself not just as a maker of vivid canvases but also as a community-spirited benefactor of...

Read More
Resist “siren call of sameness,” attract internationals to help Flint thrive, experts say
May15

Resist “siren call of sameness,” attract internationals to help Flint thrive, experts say

By Jeffery L. Carey Jr. For Flint to thrive, the city needs to become a diverse international community, economic experts told a lively crowd of about 60 at The Ferris Wheel downtown May 7. In fact, one speaker asserted, creating an ethnically diverse team produces provably better results than just one person, and urged the audience to steer clear of “the siren call of sameness.” The event, “Going Global,” was co-sponsored by...

Read More