TEDxWomen -- Gloria Steinem and Salamishah Tillet
Forever Young: A Public Dialogue between bell hooks & Gloria Steinem
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NEED TO KNOW | Gloria Steinem on men, women and power | PBS
1992 Camille Paglia trashes Gloria Steinem wing of feminism
Gloria Steinem Discussing Her Time in the CIA
Gloria Steinem's Mental Health Problems
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HARDtalk Gloria Steinem Part 1
A short clip of Jennifer Aniston Interviewed Gloria Steinem At Feminist Makers Conference
A short clip of Jennifer Aniston Interviewed Gloria Steinem At Feminist Makers Conference 2014
Self-Esteem and Internal Revolution (Gloria Steinem)
Gloria Steinem: Ms. at 40 and the Future of Feminism
Gloria Steinem Exposed: Feminist Spy for The CIA!
TEDxWomen -- Gloria Steinem and Salamishah Tillet
Forever Young: A Public Dialogue between bell hooks & Gloria Steinem
Gloria Steinem: Feminist Activist
NEED TO KNOW | Gloria Steinem on men, women and power | PBS
1992 Camille Paglia trashes Gloria Steinem wing of feminism
Gloria Steinem Discussing Her Time in the CIA
Gloria Steinem's Mental Health Problems
A conversation with GLORIA STEINEM - 4/15/14
HARDtalk Gloria Steinem Part 1
A short clip of Jennifer Aniston Interviewed Gloria Steinem At Feminist Makers Conference
A short clip of Jennifer Aniston Interviewed Gloria Steinem At Feminist Makers Conference 2014
Self-Esteem and Internal Revolution (Gloria Steinem)
Gloria Steinem: Ms. at 40 and the Future of Feminism
Gloria Steinem Exposed: Feminist Spy for The CIA!
CIA AGENT GLORIA STEINEM AND THE BLACK FEMINIST MOVEMENT
Melissa Harris Lacewell and Gloria Steinem debate part1
Gloria Steinem on Supremacy Crimes | The Queen Latifah Show
One of America's most famous feminists Gloria Steinem, 1971: CBC Archives
Gloria Steinem Supports President Obama
Gloria Steinem at the 2013 HRC National Dinner
Feminist Gloria Steinem: 'women's bodies are ornamentation'
Gloria Steinem Speaks at Tulane
Gloria Steinem on Meet the Press 1972
Gloria Steinem | CONVERSATIONS AT KCTS 9
Gloria Steinem interviews Barbra Streisand - September 15-17, 1986
Gloria Steinem Interview
Gloria Steniem on Marilyn Monroe
Rob Rainey | Gloria Steinem Interview
Roseanne interviews Gloria Steinem (1998)
Interview with Gloria Steinem
So, Gloria Steinem, what would make feminism no longer necessary?
GLORIA STEINEM Interview With Pavlina 2013 Naples, FL
An Exclusive Interview with Gloria Steinem (Women to Women)
Sierra Bender & Gloria Steinem Interviews
Gloria Marie Steinem (born March 25, 1934) is an American feminist, journalist, and social and political activist who became nationally recognized as a leader of, and media spokeswoman for, the women's liberation movement in the late 1960s and 1970s. A prominent writer and political figure, Steinem has founded many organizations and projects and has been the recipient of many awards and honors. She was a columnist for New York magazine and co-founded Ms. magazine. In 1969, she published an article, "After Black Power, Women's Liberation" which, along with her early support of abortion rights, catapulted her to national fame as a feminist leader. In 2005, Steinem worked alongside Jane Fonda and Robin Morgan to co-found the Women's Media Center, an organization that works to amplify the voices of women in the media through advocacy, media and leadership training, and the creation of original content. Steinem currently serves on the board of the organization. She continues to involve herself in politics and media affairs as a commentator, writer, lecturer, and organizer, campaigning for candidates and reforms and publishing books and articles.
Gloria Jean Watkins (born September 25, 1952), better known by her pen name bell hooks (intentionally uncapitalized), is an American author, feminist, and social activist. She took her nom de plume from her maternal great-grandmother Bell Blair Hooks.
Her writing has focused on the interconnectivity of race, capitalism, and gender and what she describes as their ability to produce and perpetuate systems of oppression and class domination. She has published over thirty books and numerous scholarly and mainstream articles, appeared in several documentary films and participated in various public lectures. Primarily through a postmodern perspective, hooks has addressed race, class, and gender in education, art, history, sexuality, mass media and feminism.
Gloria Jean Watkins was born on September 25, 1952 in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. She grew up in a working class family with five sisters and one brother. Her father, Veodis Watkins, was a custodian and her mother, Rosa Bell Watkins, was a homemaker. Throughout her childhood, she was an avid reader.
Camille Anna Paglia (English pronunciation: /ˈpɑːliə/), (born April 2, 1947) is an American author, teacher, and social critic. Paglia, a self-described dissident feminist, has been a Professor at The University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania since 1984. She is the author of the best-selling 1990 work of literary criticism Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson, and four other books, including essay collections, a study of Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, and Break, Blow, Burn on poetry. She writes articles on art, popular culture, feminism, and politics for mainstream newspapers and magazines. Paglia has celebrated Madonna and taken radical libertarian positions on controversial social issues such as abortion, homosexuality and drug use. She is known as a critic of American feminism, and is also strongly critical of the influence of French writers such as Jacques Lacan, Jacques Derrida, and Michel Foucault.
Dana Elaine Owens (born March 18, 1970), better known by her stage name Queen Latifah, is an American singer, rapper, and actress. Her work in music, film and television has earned her a Golden Globe award, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, two Image Awards, a Grammy Award, six additional Grammy nominations, an Emmy Award nomination and an Academy Award nomination.
Latifah was born, and primarily raised, in East Orange, New Jersey. She is the daughter of Rita (née Bray), a teacher at Irvington High School (her daughter's alma mater), and Lancelot Owens, Sr., a police officer, her parents divorced when Latifah was ten. Latifah was raised in the Baptist church and attended Catholic school in Newark, New Jersey. Her stage name, Latifah (لطيفة laţīfa), meaning "delicate" and "very kind" in Arabic, she found in an Islamic book of names when she was eight. Always a tall girl, the 5'10" Latifah was a power forward on her high school basketball team. She performed the number "Home" from the musical The Wiz in a high school play. She is of African American and Native American ancestry.
well now okay, you want to run me out, run me down
But i heard, you're concerned
Baby that you going down
Gettin' down while I'm gonna roll out of town
Rumors flyin', people lyin'
I'm just tryin', tryin' to keep my head up off the
ground
Oh yeah
It's getting harder and harder
I check my pride but you runnin' high
With some other guy and I'm about to die
Tellin' lies, runnin' and cheatin'
And doin' what you please
And no one was surprised
The only thing you need me for is the money
And now I'm so damn confused
Cause even though I paid my dues
Ain't no matter what I do I'm gonna lose
Cause you stone me, stone me, stone me
And now we known each other so long
How we're goin' on and on
I wish I was never gonna be alone
So long, I was dead wrong
Cause you're moving on with your life
Left me in your past, you're past
You're with some other guy
You used to make me high
But now you just stone me
I thought we was in love and now you say
You rollin' holy, left me living lonely
Mmm, what about our son
You have your own child
What you wanna run around
Baby you a wild child
Play on, play on
She get to play on, play on
Then you come a runnin' back
Workin' hard, all alone, too late
Baby I am solo
You hurt me so bad, it took me so long to rise
But baby I survived
Now I don't even wanna see your eyes
You stone me
You hurt me so bad, it took me so long to rise
But baby I survived
Now I don't even wanna see your eyes
(Alvin Lee)
Stone me, stone me - see if I care,
It won't get you no-where.
Stone me, stone me, I am free.
I can't deny - I am high;
High on my own, out of this zone.
And I can't cry no more, I been down on the floor.
Stone me, stone me, straight down the road,
Carry your load.
Ride on, ride on, I am strong.
I can't explain, I feel no pain;
Feeling so strong, I just keep going on.
(Frantz/McGee)
Such pain to be so loved
Such grief to have such joy
And what comes now?
Laugh or tear
Now when your eyes meet mine
Should I have this fear
And now...
Where do I go?
Nameless
I'm standing here
Nameless
With all my fear
Nameless
And now who am I
A pawn of this game
And what comes now?
Rage or fear
And when I feel your touch
Oh how you kill me dear
And now...
Where do I go?
Nameless
I'm standing here
Nameless
With all my fear
Nameless
One breath
One touch
One glance
One love
Now when I go home
Will you be waiting there
And what comes now?
Far or near
And am I in your dreams
With thoughts devoid of cheer
And now...
Where do I go?
Nameless
I'm standing here
Nameless
With all my fear