BOSTON/State House - Over 75 immigrants and allies from religious, labor and community organizations held a vigil in front of the Massachusetts State House against Mass.
Alas, your faithful Editor/Publisher is home sick with that cold that's been going around; so I'll be giving my regular editorial a miss this week. Stay tuned for my next installment (and a couple of short news pieces I was working on) in a few days - once I'm on the mend.
From Jersey Shore to the short-lived All American Muslim to the much glitzier Shahs of Sunset, there seems to be no ethnic community left untouched by the national carny show known as “Reality TV.”
The Occupy movement around the country is gearing up for what some have called the “American Spring.” Still reeling from the hammer-blow of police repression which put an end to the birth phase of the movement, the Occupy movement has been driven underground over the past two months, like many o
Since I'm out of town for part of this week, I thought it might be a good time to make a pitch for more volunteer reporters to consider working with us at Open Media Boston.
On Tuesday, March 27th at 4:30, in the main Brookline Access Television studio on the third floor of the High School's Unified Arts Building next to the Green Line D Train Brookline Hills stop, BATV will be hosting a live-audience session of the Eth
BOSTON - Almost 100 students from several Boston area colleges held a protest march around Boston as part of a National Day of Action for Education - called by students in the Occupy movement around the United States.
The Students Occupy Boston march last week was a bit small; so I thought I'd devote this week's Open Media Boston editorial to discussing it and making a couple of suggestions.
Only two words can describe Rangda’s performance at Church of Boston on Wednesday: mind melt.