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  • A scene outside a tattoo parlor on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_46.JPG
  • Despite the cold weather, a huge crowd attends the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_33.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_13.JPG
  • Holy Fuck  is a four-piece experimental electronic band from Toronto. Instead of using laptops, loops and programmed backing tracks, the band uses live instrumentation and a slew of miscellaneous instruments to achieve an electronic sound that is truly one-of-a-kind. Holy Fuck are long time veterans of SXSW, and have also entertained audiences at Coachella, Lollapalooza, CMJ, and Glastonbury. Their debut album was named one of the Montreal Mirror's top ten albums of 2005, while their second album was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize. The band is best experienced live, where their multi-layered electronic compositions come to life via pummeling bass and drum...Holy Fuck performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_59.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_57.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_52.JPG
  • Night scene on 6th St. Austin, Texas during SXSW music festival.
    2010_SXSW_40.JPG
  • Night scene on 6th St. Austin, Texas during SXSW music festival.
    2010_SXSW_39.JPG
  • Night scene on 6th St. Austin, Texas during SXSW music festival.
    2010_SXSW_38.JPG
  • Street vendors sell glow in the dark light saber to the 6th street crowd during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_37.JPG
  • Night scene on 6th St. Austin, Texas during SXSW music festival
    2010_SXSW_36.JPG
  • A band performs inside a bar during 2010 SXSW Music Festival
    2010_SXSW_28.JPG
  • A band performs inside a bar during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_26.JPG
  • Maud in Cahoots prior to her performance during 2010 SXSW Music Festival
    2010_SXSW_25.JPG
  • Yes Giantess of boston performs at Malverde during 2010 SXSW Music Fesitval
    2010_SXSW_22.JPG
  • Long Way from Orange County, California initiates a mosh pit on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_09.JPG
  • Estelle is an English R&B singer-songwriter, rapper and producer. She won a grammy for American Boy featuring Kanye West in the category best rap/sung collaboration and received three consecutive 'Best Female Artist' trophies from the UK Hip-Hop Awards...Estelle performs at The Blast Live @ SXSW sponsored by Digiwaxx on March 20, 2010 at The Ranch.
    2010_SXSW_67.JPG
  • Ozomatli music-- a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa, dancehall and cumbia, samba and funk, merengue and comparsa, East LA R&B and New Orleans second line, Jamaican ragga and Indian raga.  The band had long been a favorite of international audiences--playing everywhere from Japan to North Africa and Australia--and their music had always been internationalist in its scope, seamlessly blending and transforming traditions from Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East...Ozomatli performs at Auditorium Shores Stage in Austin, Texas in front of thousands of fans during 2010 SXSW music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_65.JPG
  • Ozomatli music-- a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa, dancehall and cumbia, samba and funk, merengue and comparsa, East LA R&B and New Orleans second line, Jamaican ragga and Indian raga.  The band had long been a favorite of international audiences--playing everywhere from Japan to North Africa and Australia--and their music had always been internationalist in its scope, seamlessly blending and transforming traditions from Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East...Ozomatli performs at Auditorium Shores Stage in Austin, Texas in front of thousands of fans during 2010 SXSW music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_64.JPG
  • Ozomatli music-- a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa, dancehall and cumbia, samba and funk, merengue and comparsa, East LA R&B and New Orleans second line, Jamaican ragga and Indian raga.  The band had long been a favorite of international audiences--playing everywhere from Japan to North Africa and Australia--and their music had always been internationalist in its scope, seamlessly blending and transforming traditions from Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East...Ozomatli performs at Auditorium Shores Stage in Austin, Texas in front of thousands of fans during 2010 SXSW music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_63.JPG
  • Ozomatli music-- a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa, dancehall and cumbia, samba and funk, merengue and comparsa, East LA R&B and New Orleans second line, Jamaican ragga and Indian raga.  The band had long been a favorite of international audiences--playing everywhere from Japan to North Africa and Australia--and their music had always been internationalist in its scope, seamlessly blending and transforming traditions from Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East...Ozomatli performs at Auditorium Shores Stage in Austin, Texas in front of thousands of fans during 2010 SXSW music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_62.JPG
  • Ozomatli music-- a notorious urban-Latino-and-beyond collision of hip hop and salsa, dancehall and cumbia, samba and funk, merengue and comparsa, East LA R&B and New Orleans second line, Jamaican ragga and Indian raga.  The band had long been a favorite of international audiences--playing everywhere from Japan to North Africa and Australia--and their music had always been internationalist in its scope, seamlessly blending and transforming traditions from Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East...Ozomatli performs at Auditorium Shores Stage in Austin, Texas in front of thousands of fans during 2010 SXSW music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_61.JPG
  • Holy Fuck  is a four-piece experimental electronic band from Toronto. Instead of using laptops, loops and programmed backing tracks, the band uses live instrumentation and a slew of miscellaneous instruments to achieve an electronic sound that is truly one-of-a-kind. Holy Fuck are long time veterans of SXSW, and have also entertained audiences at Coachella, Lollapalooza, CMJ, and Glastonbury. Their debut album was named one of the Montreal Mirror's top ten albums of 2005, while their second album was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize. The band is best experienced live, where their multi-layered electronic compositions come to life via pummeling bass and drum...Holy Fuck performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_58.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_56.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_55.JPG
  • Holy Fuck  is a four-piece experimental electronic band from Toronto. Instead of using laptops, loops and programmed backing tracks, the band uses live instrumentation and a slew of miscellaneous instruments to achieve an electronic sound that is truly one-of-a-kind. Holy Fuck are long time veterans of SXSW, and have also entertained audiences at Coachella, Lollapalooza, CMJ, and Glastonbury. Their debut album was named one of the Montreal Mirror's top ten albums of 2005, while their second album was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize. The band is best experienced live, where their multi-layered electronic compositions come to life via pummeling bass and drum...Holy Fuck performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_53.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_51.JPG
  • We Were Promised Jetpacks are a four-piece rock  band from Scotland currently signed to Fat Cat Records...We Were Promised Jetpacks performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_50.JPG
  • Inside Pure lounge on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_49.JPG
  • The neon light of an ATM machine illuminates at night during the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_48.JPG
  • Despite the cold weather, a huge crowd attends the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_44.JPG
  • Musicians jamming in the alley during 2010 SXSW Music Festival
    2010_SXSW_43.JPG
  • A musician performs before a mural on 6th St.  The mural reads "Austin, Texas, Live Music Capital of the World."
    2010_SXSW_30.JPG
  • A band performs inside a bar during 2010 SXSW Music Festival
    2010_SXSW_29.JPG
  • The Texan flag hangs inside Hoeks Death Metal Pizza
    2010_SXSW_24.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_23.JPG
  • Nicostai of Los Angeles performs at the Aquarium on Sixth.
    2010_SXSW_21.JPG
  • Outside the venue of a sold out show, fans climbed up to get a better view of the bands' performance.
    2010_SXSW_19.JPG
  • Outside the venue of a sold out show, fans climbed up to get a better view of the bands' performance.
    2010_SXSW_18.JPG
  • Outside the venue of a sold out show, a huge crowd listens in to the bands'  performance.
    2010_SXSW_16.JPG
  • The American flag hangs next to a poster inside Hoeks Death Metal Pizza.
    2010_SXSW_15.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_08.JPG
  • A huge crowd gathers around Joshua Morrow from Bloomington, Indiana as he performs beating on his drums.
    2010_SXSW_07.JPG
  • A woman films herself in the middle of 6th street.
    2010_SXSW_06.JPG
  • Gloria Cycles traveled from England to participate in SXSW music festival.
    2010_SXSW_05.JPG
  • Musicians perform in the middle of 6th street attracting the crowd.
    2010_SXSW_04.JPG
  • Seen from above, a steady stream of crowd walk the pavement of 6th street.
    2010_SXSW_01.JPG
  • Bajofondo performs at Auditorium Shores Stage on March 18, 2010 during SXSW music Festival in Austin Texas.  Bajofondo is an array of music based on the fusion of diverse electronic genres (house, trance, trip hop, dub, drum n' bass, etc.), rock, hip hop with the traditional sounds of tango, murga, milonga and candombe.  It is comprised of Gustavo Santaolalla (guitar, percussion, vocals, backup vocals), Juan Campodónico (programming, beats, samples, guitar), Luciano Supervielle (piano, keyboards, scratch), Javier Casalla (violin), Martín Ferrés (bandoneon), Gabriel Casacuberta (upright bass, electric bass), Adrián Sosa (drums) and Verónica Loza (VJ, vocals).
    2010_SXSW_60.JPG
  • Holy Fuck  is a four-piece experimental electronic band from Toronto. Instead of using laptops, loops and programmed backing tracks, the band uses live instrumentation and a slew of miscellaneous instruments to achieve an electronic sound that is truly one-of-a-kind. Holy Fuck are long time veterans of SXSW, and have also entertained audiences at Coachella, Lollapalooza, CMJ, and Glastonbury. Their debut album was named one of the Montreal Mirror's top ten albums of 2005, while their second album was nominated for the Polaris Music Prize. The band is best experienced live, where their multi-layered electronic compositions come to life via pummeling bass and drum...Holy Fuck performs at AAM 2010 SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas.
    2010_SXSW_54.JPG
  • DJ Spyder performs during Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_47.JPG
  • Musicians jamming outside a tattoo parlor during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_45.JPG
  • Despite the cold weather, a huge crowd attends the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_42.JPG
  • Despite the cold weather, a huge crowd attends the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_41.JPG
  • Despite the cold weather, a huge crowd attends the Red Bull Thre3 Style concert during 2010 SXSW Music Festival.
    2010_SXSW_35.JPG
  • Night scene on 6th St. Austin, Texas during SXSW music festival.
    2010_SXSW_34.JPG
  • A musician performs before a mural on 6th St.  The mural reads "Austin, Texas, Live Music Capital of the World."
    2010_SXSW_31.JPG
  • Maud in Cahoots plays her violin during her performance.
    2010_SXSW_27.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_20.JPG
  • Outside the venue of a sold out show, fans climbed up to get a better view of the bands' performance.
    2010_SXSW_17.JPG
  • A tattoo parlor on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_14.JPG
  • A long line forms ouside of Hoeks Death Metal Pizza.
    2010_SXSW_11.JPG
  • A huge crowd gathers around Joshua Morrow from Bloomington, Indiana as he performs beating on his drums.
    2010_SXSW_10.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_03.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_02.JPG
  • Talib Kweli is a Brooklyn emcee and is one of the most critically successful rappers of his time.///Talib Kweli performs at The Blast Live @ SXSW sponsored by Digiwaxx on March 20, 2010 at The Ranch.
    2010_SXSW_66.JPG
  • Party goers celebrating St. Patrick Day pose for a photo outside a bar on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_32.JPG
  • Battle Hooch of San Francisco entertains the crowd with their wild performance on 6th St.
    2010_SXSW_12.JPG
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4961-Edit.jpg
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4942-Edit.jpg
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4934-Edit.jpg
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4935-Edit.jpg
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4913-Edit.jpg
  • Alfred Melbourne, Founder of 3 Sisters Farms. Broderick, West Sacramento.<br />
<br />
Having spent 18 years of my own life incarcerated, I founded Three Sisters Gardens in 2018 to inspire and empower the youth in our community. I fell back on my Hunkpapa Lakota native heritage and I thought what better way to get these youth to see themselves as leaders and important by teaching them how to grow organic vegetables to give back to the community. We give up to 40-60% of our vegetables to elders, women, and children. During the pandemic, I sent all of our youth home and they weren't happy with it. But we had to make sure that we were taking care of them and doing the right thing. Working with a skeleton crew, we grew 55% less than we could have.
    _AWT4912-Edit.jpg
  • Sameer Jha, LGBTQ+ youth activist and founder of the Empathy Alliance, an organization dedicated to making schools safer and more inclusive for LGBTQ+ youth, poses for a portrait in front of the LGBTQ+ Pride Mural at the San Lorenzo Library in Fremont, Calif.<br />
<br />
https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/LGBTQ-youth-activist-sameer-jha/
    Sameer Jha_4.png
  • Sameer Jha, LGBTQ+ youth activist and founder of the Empathy Alliance, an organization dedicated to making schools safer and more inclusive for LGBTQ+ youth, poses for a portrait holding a book that he wrote, Read This, Save Lives: A Teacher’s Guide to Creating Safer Classrooms for LGBTQ+ Students, Fremont, Calif. <br />
<br />
https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/LGBTQ-youth-activist-sameer-jha/
    Sameer Jha_1.png
  • Sameer Jha, LGBTQ+ youth activist and founder of the Empathy Alliance, an organization dedicated to making schools safer and more inclusive for LGBTQ+ youth, shows off his favorite series of books in his personal library in Fremont, Calif. <br />
<br />
https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/LGBTQ-youth-activist-sameer-jha/
    Sameer Jha_3.png
  • Sameer Jha, LGBTQ+ youth activist and founder of the Empathy Alliance, an organization dedicated to making schools safer and more inclusive for LGBTQ+ youth, is photographed with his parents, Charmaine Hussain and Sudhir Jha, in his home in Fremont, Calif. <br />
<br />
https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/LGBTQ-youth-activist-sameer-jha/
    Sameer Jha_2.png
  • Students listen to a lecture on HIV/AIDS at SMA Negeri 1, a government high school in Jayapura, capital of Papua. The course is taught by a teacher who only had 1 week of training and without books or visual help.<br />
<br />
For many Papuan youth, a first sexual encounter can take place during their early teenage years, and some are sexually active by the time they reach puberty in their mid-teens.  Life Skills Education (LSE), a curriculum that covers education on human reproduction, pregnancy, sex, STDs, and HIV/AIDS designed by UNICEF is taught in many high schools throughout Papua.  However, this essential educational course is only available in schools located in cities but not in rural areas.  Moreover, LSE doesn't reach many indigenous Papuan youth because many young Papuans are not able to attend high school.  Additionally, many teachers lack sufficient training and essential materials such as books with up-to-date information and visual aids to adequately educate their students.  Often, they encourage their students to seek additional information on the Internet.  Detailed information on condoms is regularly excluded in lectures and reading materials because of the general perception that it will endorse pre-marital sex.  Students carry incomplete information, misconceptions and misunderstandings into adulthood, which increase their vulnerability to the epidemic.
    AgainstAllOdds_Final_12.JPG
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_5.png
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_6.png
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8365.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8291.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award, brainstorms with her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead.
    _AWT8188.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award, brainstorms with her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead.
    _AWT8144.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award, brainstorms with her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead.
    _AWT8116.jpg
  • Portrait of Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation.  Suhani is one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award
    _AWT8010-Edit.jpg
  • Portrait of Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation.  Suhani is one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award
    _AWT7980-Edit.jpg
  • Portrait of Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation.  Suhani is one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award
    _AWT7928-Edit.jpg
  • One of three of Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration (SEED) murals in downtown Stockton featuring  Martin Luther King Jr. and Jasmine DellaFosse, a Stockton youth organizer.  August 20, 2020.
    Bloomberg_Businessweek_Stockton_Equa...JPG
  • One of three of Stockton Economic Empowerment Demonstration (SEED) murals in downtown Stockton featuring  Martin Luther King Jr. and Jasmine DellaFosse, a Stockton youth organizer.  August 19, 2020.
    Bloomberg_Businessweek_Stockton_Equa...JPG
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_9.png
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_4.png
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_3.png
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_8.png
  • The biggest wildfire in California this year, the 76,000-acre Mosquito Fire, is 50 miles west of Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada foothills.<br />
<br />
Smoke from the Mosquito Fire has prompted cancellations of sporting events, classes at the University of Nevada, Reno campus, hotel bookings and outdoor tours, derailing the start of an autumn season on which many businesses count.<br />
<br />
Tourism-driven businesses can be affected quickly when visitors curtail their activities or cancel reservations entirely. In July 2018, California businesses lost $20 million to cancellations amid a major outbreak of fires, the nonprofit group Visit California reported. Oregon saw a $51 million drop in tourism revenue from similar fires in 2017, according to nonprofit group Travel Oregon.<br />
<br />
In nearby Tahoe City, Calif., the 212-room Granlibakken Tahoe hotel has lost almost all of its bookings since Sept. 6. Its current occupancy level is 15%, said owner Ron Parson. The hotel and a sister resort lost $1 million in revenue during the fires last year, he said.<br />
<br />
The Mosquito smoke also forced cancellation of a youth soccer tournament called Come Up for Air. Expected to draw 4,000 players on the second and third weekends of this month in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., the cancellation cost $2.5 million in lost revenues from hotels, food and beverages, estimated Brandon Garinger, tournament executive director. He said it was the second such cancellation in a row for the seven-year-old tournament.<br />
<br />
“As soon as the smoke comes in, we lose a lot of customers,” said Kim Childers, a clerk at the Adrift Tahoe sports shop in Kings Beach, Calif. Rentals of kayaks and other watercraft are down by about half from where they are when the skies are more clear, she said. (Jim Carlton)<br />
<br />
<br />
https://www.wsj.com/articles/smoke-from-mosquito-fire-shrouds-lake-tahoe-despite-californias-mild-fire-season-11663724870
    WSJ_LakeTahoe_Smoke_7.png
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8258.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8241.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8230.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8225.jpg
  • Suhani Jalota, founder of Myna Mahila Foundation and one of the finalists of the Global Citizen Prize Cisco Youth Leadership Award and her team members Ankur Manikandan, Data Scientist, and Shagun Maheshwari, New Product Development Lead, talks to her team in Mumbai, India via Zoom.
    _AWT8213.jpg
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