www.portlandobserver.com Committed to Cultural Diversity May 30. 2007 M etro ‘r i ' c ^ S o r t l a u ò Q O b s e ru e r SECTION /community L a le n d a r Praise and Worship Local singer/songwriter Gloria Stidum performs a free admission concert at Emmanuel Temple Church, 1033 N. Sumner, on Saturday, June 9 at 6:30 pm. Call Coreinne Peters at 503-758-4556. Youth Summer Sports July 5 through July 27, the summer youth sports program is held on the Portland State University campus, providing low- income youths ages 10-16, with sports instruction, field trips, a free medical exam and two free meals daily. Registration is open now. Visit palkids.org. Interstate Farmers Market A farmers market is held each W ednes­ day through Sept. 26 from 3 - 7 p.m. just off Interstate Avenue between Overlook Park and the Interstate Kaiser Permanente Campus The market is known for its va­ riety of quality fresh local produce, baked goods, cut flowers, artisan cheese, meat and fish. ‘Our Violent Sun’ On the second Monday of each month through August, at 7 p.m. and 8 p.m., the MHCC Planetarium Sky Theater explores the unpredictable behavior and flame­ like geysers of our violent sun. Admis­ sion is $1. Feminist Organization Meeting Monday June 11 at 6:30 pm, there will be achance to learn about Radical W omen’s activities and how to get involved. The meeting will take place at the Bread and Roses Center, 819 N. Killingsworth St. Juneteenth Celebration Saturday, June 16, from 12 p.m. to dusk, the public is invited to this free event at Peninsula Park in north Portland. Community Support The African American Health Coalition, a non-profit that touches the lives of millions of African Americans each year, reminds you to support your community organization. AH donations, grants, and gifts are tax deductible. For more informa­ tion, visit aahc-portland.org. Help Loaves & Fishes The T wo Rivers Loaves & Fishes Center, 9009 N. Foss St., needs volunteer drivers for m eals-on-w heels to ensure that homebound seniors in St. Johns receive nutritional meals and a bit o f companion­ ship. Call 503-988-4088. African American Council You’re invited on the third Tuesday of each month from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. when the African American Advisory Council meets at the King Facility, 4815 N.E. Seventh Ave. Call 503-823-0000. I----- Rude, Crude and Hilarious Portland braces fo r racially charged insult comic by N icole R onal H ooper T he P ortland O bserver With a city as PC as Portland, are we ready fora woman who refers to people in certain racial or homophobic slurs? The New York Times dubs come­ dian Lisa Lampanelli the Queen of Mean. She’s made a name for herself as the insult comic and no group is exempt. And anyone sitting in the front rows of her sold out shows better be able to take a joke at their expense. The 45-year-old white woman hails from Connecticut and looks like any regular soccer mom. But this chick has a potty mouth and doesn’t apologize for it. Lampanelli chimes in to the Portland Observer about interracial dating and why she can drop N -bom bs and Michael Richards of the sitcom Friends can’t. Nicole: Has your com edic act changed since the Michael Richards tirade at the Laugh Factory? And why do journalists keep asking you about it? Lampanelli: How muchdoyou think it’s changed? Not a lot and what do I care. I don’t know what his motivation was behind saying those racial slurs. but it was for the wrong reasons. I make fun of all stereotypes and my inten­ tions are never to hurt anyone. He and I are coming from two different angles. Nicole: What about Don Imus? He’s been hung out to dry after using the phrase “Nappy Headed Ho.” What is the difference in context between you and him? Lampanelli: I am funny and he’snot. Perhaps if there was a joke attached he could have gotten a laugh out of it. Unlike him, I don’t work for anyone but myself so I can’t get fired. I have no one to answer to except my own gut and intention. He apologized for what he said and the flood gates opened. I have been protested and people come after me but I know that I love and hate everyone equally. Nicole: What was it I ike the first time you went on stage and told a seem­ ingly racist joke? Lampanelli: It’snot a racist joke it’s a racial joke. I remember years ago I was nervous about it, but 1 had to do what works for me and hope that people understand and laugh for the right reasons. Lisa Lampanelli is one o f America's hottest comics. The equal opportunity offender continued on page H3 MWMN Production Launches for Globetrotter Story Meadowlark Lemon weighs in on biopic by R aymond R endleman T he P ortland O bserver Celebrities never look perfect in dra­ matic portrayals on screen. This is becom­ ing increasingly true in biopics that have recently come out portraying Muhammad Ali, Ray Charles and Johnny Cash. These three films are the “comparables” that Portland producer Billy Moore is us­ ing for a movie about Meadowlark Lemon, a former Globetrotter great who still plays professional basketball and preaches in Scottsdale, Ariz. By waitinguntil the death of Ali, Charles and Cash, producers of these previous films avoided much legal scrutiny. But Vancouver Outdoors Market Saturdays and Sundays, through Oct. 27, the Vancouver Outdoor Market will fea­ ture fresh produce, food, and arts and crafts. Hours are from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturdays and 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sun­ days. Diabetes Support Group Legacy Emanuel Hospital hosts a diabe­ tes support group the first and third Thursdays of every month, from 7 p.m. to 8p.m., in Room 1027. Bradley-Angle House The Bradley-Angle House needs volun­ teers to help its outreach against domes­ tic violence. Women of color and bilin­ gual women are encouraged to call. For more information,call 503-282-9940. Work against Abuse Community Advocates invites those in­ terested in protecting children from abuse to become an event volunteer, event outreach, technology expert, graphic art­ ists or office support team member. For information,call 503-280-1388. Women in Community Service Volunteer female mentors are being sought by Women in Community Service to work with incarcerated women at the Coffee Creek Correctional Facility. The women provide support and encourage­ ment for inmates transitioning from prison back into the community. For informa­ tion, call 503-570-6614. Food Bank Seeks Volunteers The Oregon Food Bank seeks volunteers on Mondays from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., and Tuesdays, 9 a m. to noon, to sort and repack perishable foods. Call 503-282-0555, ext. 272 or visit Oregonfixxlbank.org. 4 o f insults doesn’t tiptoe around issues o f race. She is coming to Portland fora performance on Saturday, June 9 at the Newmark Theater. Portland producer Billy Moore (left) and former Harlem Globetrotter Meadowlark Lemon work together on a movie about the basketball legend's fraught life. Moore wants to release Lemon’s story lesson for the benefits of finding God. during the next three years when it is I ikely “I’m a minister," he says. "I use joy, I that the septuagenarian will remain healthy. use comedy, I use songs, and I use Christ Even with Lemon around to complain to eradicate racial prejudice; that’s the about the dramatization of juicy bits, only way that I know." Moore will be banking on the fame of Moore thinks the movie will still bring out all the fa sc in a tin g a sp ects o f one the person he calls "the Bob Hope of G lobetrotter's fraught life. Lemon’s story comedy basketball." c o n ta in s all of Hollywood's prerequi­ site s: tro u b le s w ith women, the law, politics and coworkers, Moore said. Lemon doesn't think he has anything to hide. "W e’re going to make a good movie,” he says. “In terms of the drugs and alcohol, I didn't do any of that, but I have been poor, although I like being rich much bet­ ter.” L em on’s nem esis. G lo b e tro tte rs o w ner Manny Jackson, pro­ vides the dramatic ten­ sion that most interests them in this story of a basketball performer’s early moral and finan­ cial poverty. Mix,re says is com ­ mon for anyone to re­ sent the ascension of others to the top and that these powerful men apparently could not find a way to rise peace­ fully together. The Globetrotters of Lem on's era were also A book on Meadowlark Lemon s life is part of the subject of constant Portland producer Billy Moore's research for a movie racial scrutiny. When he is developing on the former Globetrotter great. Lemon first signed on, they provided one of the few professional Lemon isoneofonly fourGlobetrotters outlets for black basketball players that to have his number retired and is second were frequently barred from playing dur­ only to Wilt Chamberlain in terms of name recognition. ing that era in the U.S. As the NBA began to accept black The elite and predominantly white talent later on. Lemon’s team was accused Multnomah Athletic Club has provided a of “Tomming for Abe" by continuing the key venue for Mix,re to solicit financial support for his film. act in a supposedly minstrel-like fashion. “Controversy is just something that "You know how these white MAC comes ou, of that kind of life." says Lemon. people arc." Mix,re says, “they like celeb­ As a bom-again Christian, Lemon w ants rity, and I get to headline w ith big coaches to use the struggles of his past as an object so I get a different level of respect." *