Keeping Relevant

CUNY TV

About

Ronnie Eldridge, articulate, outspoken, and passionate discusses issues, institutions and politics that affect us all. Celebrating her tenth decade, and trying hard to keep relevant, Ronnie says, “I heard or read this somewhere: ‘… no matter who we are or where we come from, we each grow older every year, but how we handle that process of aging is a personal story. That’s our conversation for today.’”

Available on

Community

545 episodes

Jerry Goldfeder says "Just Vote!"

Jerry Goldfeder makes clear the importance of NY's vote this year, as it will determine who controls the House of Representatives. Gerrymandering, term-limits vs. for-life appointments for Supreme Court Justices discussed. Goldfeder urges all "Just Vote!"

26m
Mar 20, 2024
Jose Saldaña: Release Aging People in Prison - RAPP

The US imprisons more people than other countries in the world: long sentences-and many dying in prison. Guest describes ElderParole/Fair + Timely Parole bills to deal with mass incarceration, the bail and parole systems that promote perpetual punishment.

26m
Mar 05, 2024
C. Virginia Fields Discusses Black Health

C. Virginia Fields leads the National Black Leadership Commission on Health towards health equity for the Black community. Fields names 8 areas affecting the Black community, saying more Black women die from maternity issues than any other group of women.

26m
Feb 21, 2024
Homelessness: A Persistant Crisis

Win, the largest provider of family shelter and supportive housing in NYC, reports a "record number" of homelessness-families and children-needing shelter and services in NYC. Christine Quinn discusses long-term housing stability for families in need.

25m
Feb 07, 2024
The Effects on Workers of Mass Layoffs and Stock Buybacks

The Labor Institute, founded in 1975-develops and conducts education and policy programs to inform, prepare and train workers taking on issues of runaway inequality with unions. Les Leopold discusses the huge impact of the UAW's victory over mass layoffs.

26m
Jan 17, 2024
Carlina Rivera: New York City Council Member, District 2

Carlina Rivera, City Council Member, District 2, was born and raised in District 2 and is never far from home and memories of its diverse neighborhoods. As Chair of the Committee on Criminal Justice, Rivera discusses Rikers, bail, mental illness and more.

25m
Nov 15, 2023
John Mollenkopf: NYC-Immigration/Housing/Polarization & More

Discussing immigration, guest John Mollenkopf remarks that he’d “be doing a lot of what Mayor Adams is doing…screaming for help from the federal government” to allow immigrants to work and to get out of shelters. Mollenkopf pictures cities as "pumps,” drawing people in, lifting them up, providing mobility out of poverty, calling race and class, as factors contributing to a polarized society. Asked why NYC has so large a housing shortage, John Mollenkopf commented it’s hard and expensive to build in New York City.

27m
Oct 11, 2023
Douglas A. Kellner, New York State Board of Elections

Douglas Kellner was one of the first election officials to support the concept of a voter verifiable paper audit trail voting machine to replace lever driven voting machines. New York’s Board of Elections Co-Chaired by Doug Kellner, is unique, with a bi-partisan election administration - two officials in each office - representing the two major parties. When asked if they get along, Kellner replied, “...almost always."

23m
Sep 27, 2023
Arva Rice:New York Urban League/Civilian Complaint Review Bd

Arva Rice smiles when host Ronnie Eldridge says she is the busiest woman she knows, desccribing her leadership roles in the Urban League and the Civilian Complaint Review Board, the oversight entity for the largest police department in the country. Beginning with the Great Migration, the move of black Americans from the south to the north, the 105 year old NYUL, an historic African American organization, continues to work for access, education, housing, employment - full equality.

27m
Sep 12, 2023
Beatrice Weber: YAFFED - Young Advocates for Fair Education

Beatrice Weber describes the poor secular education given many NYC children. As YAFFED’s executive director, Weber speaks personally about changes in her life, her winning case against a school’s poor secular eduction and YAFFED’s pro education mission.

27m
Aug 09, 2023
The Bronx: Borough of Opportunities

Vanessa L. Gibson is the first woman, the first African American to be elected Bronx Borough President. With affection and determination, BP Gibson calls the Bronx "..a borough of opportunities" where small business, the heart and soul of the city, grow.

24m
Jul 19, 2023
Allen Roskoff: Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club

Allen Roskoff, gay rights activist, expresses shock at the current "anger and vitriol..against the gay community," the "hate" openly displayed, which he believes is undoing progress that's been made. Roskoff shares his experiences coming out in the '70s.

25m
Jul 05, 2023
Ester Fuchs: Have We Lost the Civic Responsibility to Vote?

Despite success of Open Primaries and Ranked Choice Voting, voter turnout remains low. Ester Fuchs urges education - support from community and local groups to help reconnect people to the political process, as our government lives by the people's vote.

24m
Jun 02, 2023
Doug Muzzio: Marxe School of Public & International Affairs

Calling the 2024 U.S. elections “huge," Doug Muzzio describes current politics as the "newest of the new” and the times “the most dangerous period we’ve been in” since pre-Civil War: a divided country, moving further apart. Gun control and more discussed.

24m
May 05, 2023
New York State Senator Brad Holman-Sigal, District 47

Chair of the Judiciary Committee, Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal, says Judges matter, and applauds the public's interest in the selection of a chief judge. Sen. Hoylman-Sigal urges the inclusion of LGBT, Black and Asian American histories in NY curriculum.

23m
Apr 14, 2023
Gale A. Brewer: New York City Councilmember, District 6

Gale Brewer, a long serving public servant, has returned to the City Council and District 6. “I love the City Council,” she says: the diversity of newly elected young members, a majority of them women. E-bike battery fires and Smoke Shops are discussed.

24m
Apr 07, 2023
Tom Robbins: Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism-CUNY

Tom Robbins calls his long career as a reporter/journalist, "the greatest job in the world. Doors may be slammed in your face but you have a 'passport' to any place you want to go." Robbins discusses his core issues: good government and criminal justice.

26m
Mar 17, 2023
Barbara Treen, New York State Parole Board

Barbara Treen was a member of the New York Parole Board for 12 years, and continues to work on behalf of the incarcerated to get a chance at parole. Ms. Treen discusses the politics surrounding parole and legislation, the Fair and Timely Parole Act and Elder Parole Bill designed to reform the system. Treen notes the significant support from the CUNY School of Law and others on behalf of those in prison.

21m
Jan 24, 2023
Ken Sunshine: CUNY Board of Trustees

"A kid in politics in the early 70's," Ken Sunshine describes his journey as a PR-Political Consultant, his clients: Mayor David Dinkins, Senator Ted Kennedy, President Bill Clinton, Barbra Streisand, to today, as a member of the CUNY Board of Trustees, chairman of the Governance Committee. Siting the affection New Yorkers have for CUNY, Mr. Sunshine outlines the City University's value to New Yorkers, its business and leadership communities.

30m
Jan 17, 2023
Sam Roberts: Author, Journalist, "New York Times Close-Up"

Sam Roberts, longtime journalist, discusses how few community projects, press conferences, local news, in general, are covered and reported in New York's newspapers. Roberts talks about the digital vs printed forms of getting the news; "It's different," he says, remembering with pleasure, people waiting on the corner for the paper to be delivered. Mr. Roberts is author of "The New Yorkers" untold biographies of remarkable people and their contributions to New York's evolution and host of New York Times Close-Up, on CUNY TV.

29m
Jan 11, 2023
Deneysis Labrada & Dorma Lozada: CARA College Bridge Program

CARA's Bridge Program, reflects CUNY's model, says Ronnie Eldridge, ensuring that first generation, low income students, people of color have the knowledge and support to enroll and persist in college. Deneysis Labrada and Dorma Lozada discuss the program

29m
Jan 03, 2023
Carol Meyerson: Thoughts on Aging

Retired psycho therapist, Carol Meyerson, mindful of how society-even families, often ignoring its older members, comments on the long history, knowledge and experience that the aged are anxious to share. Generations' different attitudes are discussed.

26m
Nov 23, 2022
Rosalind Lichter and Entertainment Law

Discussing changes in entertainment law, her specialty, Rosalind Lichter notes that once independent studios are now owned by large corporations; Wall St. makes decisions-will "big films" play well in China? Streaming, contracts, who is hired, discussed.

26m
Nov 16, 2022
Keith Powers: City Council Majority Leader/Councilmember #4

Discussing Congestion Pricing, Property Taxes, Term Limits-issues affecting NYers, City Council Majority Leader Powers, describes the Council as looking and feeling like the city they were elected to represent. New faces/women/ideas-an energized Council.

29m
Nov 07, 2022
Prof. Heath Brown, Author, Homeschooling the Right

John Jay College professor Heath Brown, author of "Homeschooling the Right: How Conservative Education Activism Erodes the State," discusses the homeschooling movement: conservative political groups/religious groups, educating children as they wish.

33m
Nov 01, 2022
Second-Look and Restorative Justice

CUNY Law School Professor Steve Zeidman discusses Second-Look sentencing allowing courts to reevaluate a person's sentence after a significant time is served to determine if a prisoner's lengthy sentence was still necessary; thus offering a second chance

28m
Oct 13, 2022
Ann Northrop: Journalist, Activist, Co-Host, Gay USA

Vietnam, AIDS, Gay Pride Parade/1970 vs today's marches; Act Up, past demonstrations to inform, to motivate to action; current abortion legislation, the right to privacy for all, make Ronnie and Ann Northrop wonder why "...it looks like we're regressing."

30m
Sep 15, 2022
Naomi Fiegelson Chase: Journalist, Author, Poet

Naomi Chase, at 6, believing that she would be a poet, discusses her novel in verse, "Gittel, the Would-Be Messiah" and reads from "Truro, Cape Cod," a current work, about memories. A divided USA/abortion legislation/candidates for president, discussed.

27m
Sep 01, 2022
Elizabeth Nunez: Educator/Author "Now Lila Knows"

Elizabeth Nunez, in "Now Lila Knows," describes events close to her experiences as a young Caribbean, at an all-white school in the US. A difficult book for her to write, Nunez cites the immigrant's lack of understanding of America's color-based racism.

28m
Aug 26, 2022
Ellen Bender: Markers for Democracy

Ellen Bender and 55 members of Markers for Democracy met to write postcards to voters urging/reminding recipients to vote, to register to vote, to consider candidates - issues. Markers for Democracy are people who've joined together to make democracy work.

28m
Aug 04, 2022