Last year, Dewey & Douglas McGeoch hosted Ha Ha Hapeville in their backyard but in 2020 they had to shift gears — and venues.
HAPEVILLE, Ga. — It is often said that laughter is the best medicine. With the double whammy of dread and dissension that 2020 has delivered us, people are in need of this particular remedy more now than ever.
Enter Ha Ha Hapeville, a bi-monthly outdoor stand-up comedy show created and produced by Douglas Dewey Entertainment, which ran its entire season last year in their very own back yard had to do what so many many of us have had to do — pivot.
“Last year, Ha Ha Hapeville, happened in our backyard and we were able to pack in 75 to 100 people very comfortably in tight quarters, but unfortunately with COVID-19 and the pandemic, that was not possible,” laments Douglas.
While the logistics of restructuring took several weeks to iron out, the notion of ‘the show must go on’ came rather quickly for the married couple whose collective resumes stretch from Walt Disney World to Provincetown to RuPaul’s Drag Race.
“It was important for us, personally, to have a project to work on,” said Dewey. “Not only because it is helping us, but it’s also our way to say everything is not stopping. Everything is not hopeless. It’s just different. Follow us and we’ll show you how it can be done.”
https://vimeo.com/484096664
2020 also marks a milestone for the dynamic duo. Douglas & Dewey have been together for fifteen years now.
While the Manhattan transplants have only called Hapeville and the Tri-Cities home for just shy of three years, through their newly christened-production company, Douglas Dewey Entertainment, they have created their stand-up comedy show, Ha Ha Hapeville, but also a bingo night featuring their drag alter-egos, Olive d’Nightlife and Agatha Boogie.
“I would dare say that that’s just kind of what gays and lesbians and queers and members of the LGBTQ+ community do we go to those places that others have deemed uninhabitable and unsavory, and we just make it fabulous,” attests Douglas.
They are currently in talks to produce a regular drag show for the Tri-Cities at Arches Brewery sometime in Spring 2021. Ha Ha Hapeville runs through November. For more information about Douglas Dewey Entertainment, visit their website.
For all the news that’s fit to click? Visit the VOX Populi website and like us on Facebook.
City officials, non-profits, and local charter school help to celebrate the memory of student with ‘Buddy Bench’, balloon memorial, and new mural.
EAST POINT, Ga. — On the evening of Friday, November 6th, 2020, 11-year-old Ty’Rell Simms was headed home from his grandmother’s house with a friend. Tragically, he never made it — but his story and his legacy do not end there.
Victim of a drive-by shooting that had absolutely nothing to do with him, Simms left behind a grieving family struggling to cope with their senseless loss and a community left without their classmate, teammate, and friend.
Known for his natural athleticism, generous spirit, warm smile, and overall good nature, Simms touched the lives of many in the Tri-Cities in his brief eleven years.
During the unpleasant undertaking of finding ways to commemorate Simm’s life, his fellow scholars at KIPP South Fulton Academy(KSFA) envisioned ways to commemorate his life.
The Beta Club at KIPP Academy, where Simms had just begun his fifth-grade school year under pandemic distance learning approached the faculty and staff about a ‘Buddy Bench.’
The ‘Buddy Bench project’ is a relatively new initiative where plastic bottle caps and recyclable plastic items are repurposed into a functional memorial or ‘buddy bench’ in someone’s memory.
“Our Beta Club scholars came to us wanting to find an outlet for celebration, for grief or just having a way to feel afterward,” recalls KSFA Literacy Coach, Kathryn McClinton.
“They came up with the ‘buddy bench’ idea so we could collect caps in his honor and create a bench where people could actually come and sit, and remember him while also forming bonds with other people.”
The goal of the daunting task of gathering 400-lb of plastics through donations, both local and abroad to create Simms’ memorial bench.
The cap collection process was spearheaded by a fellow athlete and community youth leader, CJ Matthews. While Matthews did not know Simms personally, he was so moved by the news of his passing, he felt compelled to contribute somehow.
Family-friend and local pastor, Ray Waters solemnly recounts to Vox Pop All, the morning he received the call with the heart-breaking news of Ty’rell’s passing.
“It’s five minutes before church, and I’m thinking about what I’m going to talk about, and I get a call, and it is from Conrad’s (Ty’Rell’s father), brother. Scooter told me that Ty’Rell had been shot the night before and had died,” laments the Village Church pastor to Vox Pop ATL.
“My whole life as a pastor, I’ve been called and told that something tragic that had happened — but nothing like that.”
Wholesome Wave Georgia and Food Well Alliance partner-up to expand SNAP benefits with ‘Georgia Plant 2 Plate’ program
EAST ATLANTA, Ga. — Although general concerns regarding the pandemic have seemed to greatly diminish, the needs of families still dealing with economic hardships and food insecurity have not.
The Georgia Plant 2 Plate program was launched shortly after the pandemic shutdowns in April 2020 to ensure that SNAP recipients had reliable food access by offering 50% off fresh, healthy, and locally grown food.
https://vimeo.com/544003441
For 2021, the Plant 2 Plate program has expanded SNAP benefits to include 50% off local fruit and vegetable plant seedlings or ’starts’ to families paying with their EBT cards.
Along with the purchase of fruit and vegetable starter plants, a free gardening kit including pots, soil, gloves, trowels, and plant care guides were provided to SNAP recipients.
Working in partnership with the Georgia Fresh For Less program at Wholesome Wave Georgia, Food Well Alliance hosted a Georgia Plant 2 Plate pop-up just in time for Earth Day on Thursday, April 22, 2021, at East Atlanta Village Farmers Market located at Stokeswood Avenue SE, Atlanta, GA 30316.
To date, Georgia Plant 2 Plate has hosted pop-up events at:
For more information about the 2021 Georgia Plant 2 Plate program, you can visit their website, and learn more about other programs involving the Food Well Alliance, click here.
For all the news that’s fit to click? Visit the Vox Pop ATL website and subscribe for news updates on Facebook.
The ReKindle 2021: Arts and Music Fest comes back the CP City Hall Lawn boasting a bigger and better itinerary
COLLEGE PARK, Ga. — If you look up the definition for the word, ‘Rekindle’ in the dictionary, you’ll find the following: ‘revive something that has been lost.’
A sentiment that arguably everyone on the planet can share as 2021 slides inexorably towards May and the onset of summer. Rising temperatures and vaccination efforts have begun to coax even the meekest from their COVID compounds to explore the outside world again.
Luckily for the residents of College Park and the rest of Tri-Cities, there is a light at the end of that particular tunnel.
The arts & music festival was a brainchild of CPMSA board member, Grace Lunsford, who proposed the idea to the CPMSA Board during the pandemic lockdown last summer.
“I think it’s pretty obvious that while the Arts are not incredibly lucrative, especially for the artists, it is a magnet that draws people to local businesses,” Lunsford shares with Vox Pop ATL.
Renee Coakley, the Main Street Manager for the City of College Park, who worked closely with the CPMSA last Fall, had this to share.
“We did it so well the first time, as far as social distancing with everything still being up in the air, that we’re pretty much just reduplicating the entire framework with a few additions.”
ReKindlewas created with a collaboration between the City of College Park Cultural Arts Committee and the CPMSA to incentivize residents to support the local businesses in and around the Historic Downtown College Park district.
New additions included in this year’s program are an additional night of music on Friday, April 30th featuring CP community fan favorite, ‘Last Five Standing’ as well as a children’s only art exploration, lovingly nicknamed the ‘Kid’s Korral.’
The Kids Korral is reserved for children ages 3-8 and will be located directly in front of the College Park Auditorium. Each participant will receive a ReKindle College Park paint and brush set sponsored by local favorite, Drip-Thru Coffee.
“Our family and our business are huge supporters of the arts,” expresses Drip-Thru Coffee owner, Christy Deen.
“My background’s with Walt Disney World, so I always try to create a little whimsy, and when I found out that we could be a sponsor for the ‘Kids Korral’ for the ReKindle event this Spring. I was all about it.”
The schedule of events for the ReKindle 2021: Arts and Music Fest is as follows: (Rain Dates | May 7-9th, 2021)
Friday | Music 5:30p -7p Pre-Concert Community Check-in & Picnic 7p – 9p ‘Kick-Off Concert’ | “Last Five Standing”
Saturday | Art 2p -5p Local Fine Artists | College Park City Hall Auditorium Lawn 2p -5p Open Gallery Tours | Push Push Art Studios 2p -5p ‘Kids Korral’ Children’s Art Exploration | College Park City Hall Auditorium Lawn
Saturday Evening | Music 5:30p -7p Community Pre-Concert Check-in and Picnic 7p – 9p ReKindle Concert | “Lamont Landers Band”
Sunday | Art 2p -5p Local Fine Artists | College Park City Hall Auditorium Lawn 2p -5p Open Gallery Tours | Push Push Art Studios 2p -5p ‘Kids Korral’ Children’s Art Exploration | College Park City Hall Auditorium Lawn 6p -8p Fine Artists Gallery Sale | The City Muse
Proceeds and donations from this weekend’s ticket sales will be applied towards funding for future College Park Main Street Arts and Economic Development Event Efforts.
For more information about the ReKindle 2021: Arts and Music Fest, visit the event page here.
For all the news that’s fit to click? Visit the Vox Pop ATL website and subscribe for news updates on Facebook.