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Daily Archives: July 18, 2017
What Makes an Artificial Intelligence Racist and Sexist – Lifehacker
Posted: July 18, 2017 at 4:11 am
Artificial intelligence is infiltrating our daily lives, with applications that curate your phone pics, manage your email, and translate text from any language into another. Google, Facebook, Apple, and Microsoft are all heavily researching how to integrate AI into their major services. Soon youll likely interact with an AI (or its output) every time you pick up your phone. Should you trust it? Not always.
AI can analyze data more quickly and accurately than humans, but it can also inherit our biases. To learn, it needs massive quantities of data, and the easiest way to find that data is to feed it text from the internet. But the internet contains some extremely biased language. A Stanford study found that an internet-trained AI associated stereotypically white names with positive words like love, and black names with negative words like failure and cancer.
Luminoso Chief Science Officer Rob Speer oversees the open-source data set ConceptNet Numberbatch, which is used as a knowledge base for AI systems. He tested one of Numberbatchs data sources and found obvious problems with their word associations. When fed the analogy question Man is to woman as shopkeeper is to... the system filled in housewife. It similarly associated women with sewing and cosmetics.
While these associations might be appropriate for certain applications, they would cause problems in common AI tasks like evaluating job applicants. An AI doesnt know which associations are problematic, so it would have no problem ranking a womans rsum lower than an identical rsum from a man. Similarly, when Speer tried building a restaurant review algorithm, it rated Mexican food lower because it had learned to associate Mexican with negative words like illegal.
So Speer went in and de-biased ConceptNet. He identified inappropriate associations and adjusted them to zero, while maintaining appropriate associations like man/uncle and woman/aunt. He did the same with words related to race, ethnicity, and religion. To fight human bias, it took a human.
Numberbatch is the only semantic database with built-in de-biasing, Speer says in an email. Hes happy for this competitive advantage, but he hopes other knowledge bases will follow suit:
This is the threat of AI in the near term. Its not some sci-fi scenario where robots take over the world. Its AI-powered services making decisions we dont understand, where the decisions turn out to hurt certain groups of people.
The scariest thing about this bias is how invisibly it can take over. According to Speer, some people [will] go through life not knowing why they get fewer opportunities, fewer job offers, more interactions with the police or the TSA... Of course, he points out, racism and sexism are baked into society, and promising technological advances, even when explicitly meant to counteract them, often amplify them. Theres no such thing as an objective tool built on subjective data. So AI developers bear a huge responsibility to find the flaws in their AI and address them.
There should be more understanding of whats real and whats hype, Speer says. Its easy to overhype AI because most people dont have the right metaphors to understand it yet, and that stops people from being appropriately skeptical.
Theres no AI that works like the human brain, he says. To counter the hype, I hope we can stop talking about brains and start talking about whats actually going on: its mostly statistics, databases, and pattern recognition. Which shouldnt make it any less interesting.
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What Makes an Artificial Intelligence Racist and Sexist - Lifehacker
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Robotic Hogwash! Artificial Intelligence Will Not Take Over Wall Street – Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Posted: at 4:11 am
Wall Street Journal (subscription) | Robotic Hogwash! Artificial Intelligence Will Not Take Over Wall Street Wall Street Journal (subscription) A decade on, artificial intelligence and machine learning are the buzzwords in automated investment. But for all the hype, applying AI to investment still has ... |
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The future of artificial intelligence: two experts disagree – The Conversation AU
Posted: at 4:10 am
Artificial intelligence (AI) promises to revolutionise our lives, drive our cars, diagnose our health problems, and lead us into a new future where thinking machines do things that were yet to imagine.
Or does it? Not everyone agrees.
Even billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk, who admits he has access to some of the most cutting-edge AI, said recently that without some regulation AI is a fundamental risk to the existence of human civilization.
So what is the future of AI? Michael Milford and Peter Stratton are both heavily involved in AI research and they have different views on how it will impact on our lives in the future.
Michael:
Answering this question depends on what you consider to be artificial intelligence.
Basic machine learning algorithms underpin many technologies that we interact with in our everyday lives - voice recognition, face recognition - but are application-specific and can only do one very specific defined task (and not always well).
More capable AI - what we might consider as being somewhat smart - is only now becoming widespread in areas such as online retail and marketing, smartphones, assistive car systems and service robots such as robotic vacuum cleaners.
Peter:
The most obvious and useful examples of current AI are the speech recognition on your phone, and search engines such as Google. There is also IBMs Watson, which in 2011 beat human champion players at the US TV game show Jeopardy, and is now being trialled in business and healthcare.
Most recently, Googles DeepMind AI called AlphaGo beat the world champion Go player, surprising a lot of people especially since Go is an extremely complex game, way surpassing chess.
Peter:
Many auto manufacturers and research institutions are competing to create practical driverless cars for general road use. While currently these cars can drive themselves for much of the time, many challenges remain in dealing with bad weather (heavy rain, fog and snow) and random real-world events such as roadworks, accidents and other blockages.
These incidents often require some degree of human judgement, common sense and even calculated risk to successfully navigate through. We are still a long way from fully autonomous vehicles that dont need a licensed driver ready to take control in an instant.
The same can be said for all the AI that we will see over the coming 10-20 years, such as online virtual personal assistants, accountants, legal and financial advisers, doctors and even physical shop-bots, museum guides, cleaners and security guards.
They will be advanced tools that are very useful in specific situations, but they will never fully replace people because they will have little common sense (probably none, in fact).
Michael:
We will definitely see a range of steady, incremental improvements in everyday AI. Online product recommendations will get better, your phone or car will understand your voice increasingly well and your vacuum cleaner robot wont get stuck as often.
Its likely that well see some major advances beyond todays technology in some but not all of the following areas: self-driving cars, healthcare, utilities (electricity, water, and so on) management, legal, and service areas such as cleaning robots.
I disagree on self-driving cars - theres no real reason why there wont be fully autonomous controlled ride-sharing fleets in the affluent centres of cities, and this is indeed the strategy of companies such as NuTonomy, working in Singapore and Boston.
Michael:
Major advances will come from two sources.
First, there is a long runway of steady incremental improvements left in many areas of conventional AI - large, complex neural networks and algorithms. These systems will continue to improve steadily as more training data becomes available and as scientists perfect them.
The second area will likely be biological inspiration. Scientists are only just starting to tap into the knowledge about how brain networks work, and its likely they will copy or adapt what we know about animal and human brains to make current deep learning networks far more capable.
Peter:
Old-fashioned AI, which was based on pure logic and computer programs that tried to get machines to behave intelligently, basically failed to do anything that humans are good at and computers are not (speech and image recognition, playing complex strategic games, for example).
Whats quite clear now is that our best-performing AI is based on how we think the brain works.
But our current brain-based AI (called Deep Artificial Neural Networks) is still light years away from emulating an actual brain. Enhanced AI capabilities in the future will come from developing better theories of how the brain works.
The fundamental science needed to cultivate these theories will probably come from publicly funded research institutions, which will then be spun off into commercial start-up companies, and then quickly acquired by interested large corporations if they look like they might be successful.
Peter:
Most jobs wont be under threat for a long time, probably several generations. Real people are needed to actually make any significant decisions because AI currently has no common sense.
Instead of replacing jobs, our overall quality of life will go up. For example, right now few people can afford a personal assistant, or a full-time life coach. In the near future, well all have (a virtual) one!
Our virtual doctor will be working for us daily, monitoring our health and making exercise and lifestyle suggestions.
Our houses and workplaces might be cleaner, but we will still need people to clean the spots the robots miss. Well also need people to deploy, retrieve and maintain all the robots.
Our goods will be cheaper due to reduced transport costs, but well still need human drivers to cover all the situations the self-drivers cant.
All this doesnt even mention the whole new entertainment technologies and industries that will spring up to capture our increased disposable income and to cash-in on our improved quality of life.
So yes, jobs will change, but there will still be plenty of them.
Michael:
Its likely that a significant fraction of jobs will be under threat over the coming decade. Its important to note that this wont necessarily be divided by blue-collar versus white-collar, but rather by which occupations are easily automatable.
Its unlikely that an effective plumber robot will be built in the near future, but aspects of the so far undisrupted construction industry may change radically.
Some people say machines will never have the emotional capabilities of humans. Whether that is true or not, many jobs will be under threat with even the most rudimentary levels of emotional understanding and interaction.
Dont think about the complex, nuanced interaction you had with your psychologist; instead think about the one with that disinterested, uncaring part-time hospitality worker. The bar for disruption is not as high as many think.
That leaves the question of what happens then. There are two scenarios - the first being that, like in the past, new types of jobs are generated by the technological revolution.
The other is that humanity gradually transitions into a Utopian society where scientific, artistic and sporting pursuits are pursued at leisure. The short to medium-term reality is probably somewhere in between.
Michael:
Its unlikely in the near future but possible. The real danger is the unpredictability. Skynet-like killer cyborgs as featured in the Terminator film series are unlikely because that development cycle takes a while, and we have multiple opportunities to stop development.
But AI could destroy or damage humanity in other unpredictable ways. For example, when big companies like Google Deepmind start entering into healthcare, its likely that they will improve patient outcomes through a combination of big data and intelligent systems.
One of the temptations or pressures will be to deploy these extremely complex systems before we completely understand every possible ramification. Imagine the pressure if there is good evidence it will save thousands of lives per year.
As we well know, we have a long history of negative unintended consequences with new technology that we didnt fully understand.
In a far-fetched but not impossible healthcare scenario, deploying AI may lead to catastrophic outcomes - a world-wide AI network deciding in ways invisible to us human observers to kill us all off to optimise some misguided performance goal.
The challenge is that with newly developing technologies, there is an illusion of 100% control, which doesnt really exist.
Peter:
All our current AI, and any that we can possibly create in the foreseeable future, are just tools developed for specific jobs and totally useless outside of the exact duties they were designed for. They dont have thoughts or feelings. These AIs are just as likely to try to take over the world as your Xbox or your toaster.
One day, I believe, we will build machines that rival us in intelligence, and these machines will have their own thoughts and possibly learn in an unconstrained way. This sounds scary. But humans are dangerous for exactly the reasons that the machines wont be.
Humans evolved in a constant struggle for life and death, which made us innately competitive and potentially treacherous. When we build the machines, we can instead build them with any underlying motivation that we would like.
For example, we could build an intelligent machine whose only desire is to dismantle itself. Or, we could build in a hidden remote-controlled off switch that is completely separate from any of the machines own circuits, and an auto-shutdown reflex if the machine somehow ever notices it.
All these safeguards will be trivial to implement. So there is simply no way that we could accidentally build a machine that then tries to wipe out the human race.
Of course, because humans themselves are dangerous, someone could build a machine that doesnt have these safeguards and use it for nefarious purposes. But we have that same problem now with nuclear weapons.
In the future, just as now, we have to hope that we are simply smart enough to use our technology wisely.
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Federer on verge of Wimbledon immortality – Inquirer.net
Posted: at 4:10 am
This combination of pictures created on January 29, 2017 shows Switzerlands tennis player Roger Federer holding up his 18 Grand Slam titles. 1st row, from left : Australian Open 2017, Wimbledon 2012, Australian Open 2010, Wimbledon 2009, Roland Garros 2009, US Open 2008. 2nd row, from left : US Open 2007, Wimbledon 2007, Australian Open 2007, US Open 2006, Wimbledon 2006, Australian Open 2006. 3rd row, from left : US Open 2005, Wimbledon 2005, US Open 2004, Wimbledon 2004, Australian Open 2004, Wimbledon 2003. / AFP PHOTO / STF
Five years after his last Wimbledon triumph, Roger Federer can capture a record eighth All England Club title Sunday and become the tournaments oldest mens champion of the modern era.
With his 36th birthday fast approaching, the evergreen Swiss will comfortably succeed Arthur Ashe, who was almost 32 when he won in 1975, as Wimbledons most senior champion.
Victory over Croatian giant Marin Cilic will also give him a 19th career Grand Slam title and second in three majors this year after sweeping to a fifth Australian Open in January following a six-month absence.
I was hoping to be in good shape when the grass court season came around, said Federer who, for good measure, also pocketed back-to-back Masters at Indian Wells and Miami as well as a ninth Halle grass court crown.
The first three, four months were just like a dream really. So this is something I was working towards, you know, Wimbledon, to be in good shape. Im happy its paying off here now.
Federer admits his form in 2017 has surprised even himself after he shut down his 2016 season to rest a knee injury in the aftermath of his brutal five-set semi-final loss at Wimbledon to Milos Raonic.
He has 30 wins and just two losses this year and he has reached his 11th Wimbledon final without dropping a set.
Sundays match will be his 102nd at the tournament and his 29th final at the majors.
It makes me really happy, making history here at Wimbledon. Its a big deal. I love this tournament, said Federer, who has been tied with Pete Sampras on seven Wimbledon titles since beating Andy Murray in the 2012 final.
All my dreams came true here as a player. To have another chance to go for number eight now, be kind of so close now at this stage, is a great feeling.
Yeah, unbelievably excited. I hope I can play one more good match. 11 finals here, all these records, its great. Im so close now.
While Big Four rivals Murray, Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal failed to even make the semi-finals, Federer has been reborn.
He came into Wimbledon having radically pruned his playing schedule, skipping the entire clay court season.
Wimbledon is just his seventh event of the year; 28-year-old Cilic is in his 15th.
Federer, reveling in the spotlight of having played all his matches on Centre Court, has hardly been troubled on his way to the final.
He has lost serve just four times and spent four and a half hours less on court than Cilic.
Federer also boasts a 6-1 career record over Cilic, the 2014 US Open champion who has made his first Wimbledon final at the 11th attempt.
However, Cilics game is made for grass and 12 months ago he led Federer by two sets to love and held three match points in an epic quarter-final which the Swiss superstar eventually claimed.
When Cilic won his only Slam in New York three years ago, he demolished Federer in straight sets in the semi-finals.
I dont want to say its more relaxed going into it because I have a good head-to-head record against Marin, even though the matches were extremely close, said Federer.
But its not like weve played against each other 30 times. You feel like you have to reinvent the wheel.
Its more straightforward, in my opinion. I think thats nice in some ways. Its a nice change, but it doesnt make things easier.
Cilic is only the second Croatian man to reach the Wimbledon final after Goran Ivanisevic, his former coach, who swept to a memorable title victory in 2001.
A win on Sunday would also make him the first Wimbledon champion outside of Federer, Murray, Djokovic and Nadal since Lleyton Hewitt triumphed in 2002.
However, he has only won one of his last 12 matches against a top five player at the Slams, even if that was over Federer in New York three years ago.
Cilic has fired 130 aces at Wimbledon this year and dropped just 10 service games.
This is Rogers home court, the place where he feels the best and knows that he can play the best game, said Cilic.
Obviously Im going to look back, 12 months ago I was one point away from winning a match against him here. But its still a big mountain to climb.
Federers defeated semi-final opponent Tomas Berdych sees only one winner on Sunday.
Idont see anything that would indicate Roger is getting older. Hes just proving his greatness in our sport, said the Czech.
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Skip the SupplementsHere are 30 Foods to Eat Instead – Men’s Health
Posted: at 4:09 am
Men's Health | Skip the SupplementsHere are 30 Foods to Eat Instead Men's Health The problem: While the pills used in scientific studies are carefully tested for quality and dosage accuracy, most consumer OTC supplements are largely unregulated, says Mark Moyad, M.D., director of preventive and alternative medicine at the ... |
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Experts warns nursing mothers to stop eating food supplements – Information Nigeria
Posted: at 4:07 am
Information Nigeria | Experts warns nursing mothers to stop eating food supplements Information Nigeria pregnant woman A Kwara-based paediatrician, Dr Opeyemi Akinwande, has warned pregnant and nursing mothers against the consumption of food supplements not prescribed by a physician. Akinwande gave the warning in an interview the News Agency of ... |
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La Crosse Holistic Moms Network emphasizes healthy, hands-on parenting – La Crosse Tribune
Posted: at 4:07 am
As a self-described crunchy, hippie, granola mom, Amanda Spencer has made organic her mantra, but that doesnt mean you wont find the occasional box of Cookie Crisp in her cupboard.
Im not a purist, Spencer admitted. I try not to indulge in a lot of sugar, but moderation.
The 37-year-old mom of three was raised in what she calls a conventional American household, with processed snacks and plenty of TV, and when she had her first child 13 years ago, she parented how she knew. But when her second child arrived seven years later, a switch to organic baby food sparked a world of change for the whole family.
I realized the way I parented wasnt conducive to healthy behaviors, Spencer explained. I stopped smoking and drinking soda. I started buying organic and then growing my own food and canning. Im still getting more into it every day. The experience has been so beneficial for their childhood development.
In October 2015, eager to find like-minded moms to share ideas and knowledge with, Spencer, who lives in Galesville, started a local chapter of the Holistic Moms Network with Carolyn Knapp, 33, an Onalaska mom of two with a similar passion for health and hands-on parenting.
The Holistic Moms Network, a non-profit organization with more than 120 chapters across the United States, encourages active, informed parenting, offering forums on a variety of topics ranging from non-toxic cleaners to alternative medicine. The La Crosse chapter is currently comprised of 12 mothers ages 20 to 40, who gather monthly for mediation, yoga or raw foods cooking classes and discussions on homeopathy and baby wearing, a form of carrying your child close to your body during daily activities. The members vary widely in their interpretations of holistic and degrees of commitment to each aspect, and Knapp prefers the term conscious parenting while Spencer calls her approach peaceful parenting.
To me, a holistic mom is someone who takes the advice of others but also looks inside herself and uses her own instincts, Knapp said. Obviously, you need to find what works for you. Its not all or nothing.
For Knapp, that means focusing on natural food, supplements and outdoor exercise, but passing on cloth in favor of paper towels. Spencer home-schools her youngest children, forages and buys secondhand, but gave up on cloth diapers. When it comes to medicine, both favor a balance between holistic and modern. As a chiropractor, Knapp believes in the physical and emotional benefits of being properly aligned and regularly adjusts her kids, and Spencer is a fan of home remedies. While the Holistic Moms Network has faced scrutiny over the anti-vaccine stance of some of its advisory board members, Knapp says the local chapter does not influence either way but invites discussion from its members.
Knapp and Spencer stress that meetings are a supportive, judgment-free zone, and while members may differ in opinions and choices, they are united in the quest to raise their children in a happy, healthy manner.
The choices you make for yourself and your family are going to shape the future and the environment, Knapp said. Its always just a journey of being open, curious and seeking.
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Weather radar will be down this week for upgrades – Ashland Daily Tidings
Posted: at 4:06 am
By Ryan Pfeil For the Tidings
The National Weather Service radar system on Mount Ashland will be down for five days this week for system upgrades.
Technicians began installing a new signal processor on the WSR-88D radar dish today, which will improve processing speed and data quality, Weather Service officials reported.
Radar coverage will be available from adjacent radar sites in Eureka, Sacramento, Portland, Pendleton and Reno, but local coverage will be impacted.
"Thats why its good were not expecting a big outbreak of thunderstorms this week," said meteorologist Ryan Sandler. "That would have been bad news."
The work is part of a four-phase, $150 million project spanning five years, intended to extend the life of the 20-year-old dish and 121 other Next Generation Weather Radar NEXRAD facilities across the U.S. into the 2030s. The service-life extension program includes major component replacements on the dishes, including the signal processors, transmitters, pedestals and equipment shelters.
The National Weather Service, U.S. Air Force and Federal Aviation Administration all use the technology.
The Medford NEXRAD system went live in April 1996. The 28-foot dish beneath a white fiberglass globe on Mount Ashland sends out pulses of electromagnetic energy and can gather data from storm clouds that include the intensity and size of rain and hail, air circulation and wind speed.
From 1971 to 1995, the agency used WSR-57, or Weather Surveillance Radar 1957, named for the year the technology was built.
Reach reporter Ryan Pfeil at 541-776-4468 or rpfeil@mailtribune.com. Follow him at http://www.twitter.com/ryanpfeil.
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Weather radar will be down this week for upgrades - Ashland Daily Tidings
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Heat wave to hit Central Illinois | Local News | pantagraph.com – Bloomington Pantagraph
Posted: at 4:06 am
BLOOMINGTON Temperatures are expected to reach 85 degrees Monday, but the mercury will steadily rise after that, resulting in highs of around 95 degrees by Wednesday and Thursday.
There is no rain in the forecast until Friday, said forecasters with The National Weather Service in Lincoln. Tuesdays high is expected to be 90 degrees.
The heat index values will range between 100 and 107 degrees Wednesday and Thursday.
It will cool off slightly on Friday, with a high near 90 degrees.
The Doppler radar at the NWS office in Lincoln will be offline on Monday and Tuesday, and perhaps into Wednesday, said NWS.
The $150 million investment is being made by the three organizations that use the radars the NOAA National Weather Service, United States Air Force and Federal Aviation Administration. The three other service life extension projects include refurbishing the transmitter, pedestal, and equipment shelters.
A crew will install a new signal processor, which replaces obsolete technology, improves processing speed and data quality, provides added functionality, and increases IT security, said the agency.
During the outage, radar coverage is available from adjacent radar sites, including Chicago, Davenport, Iowa, St. Louis, Paducah Ky., Evansville Ind. and Indianapolis.
On this date in 1903, several tornadoes moved across northern and Central Illinois during the late afternoon and early evening. The two most significant tornadoes touched down in LaSalle County, affecting the towns of Mendota and Streator. Ten people were killed by the two storms. Five of the deaths occurred at a race track, where people were taking shelter under a grandstand when it collapsed.
Follow Kevin Barlow on Twitter: @pg_barlow
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Billy Porter in full bloom – Out In Jersey
Posted: at 4:06 am
Tony Award winner talks arts activism, his play on the lost generation of gay men and returning to Kinky Boots?!
Iconic soulstress Nina Simone questioned her place in the world as a black woman after learning of four young African-American girls who were killed in the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963. She responded defiantly with Mississippi Goddamn, a political anthem that acknowledged, All I want is equality for my sister, my brother, my people and me.
In 2013, singer and theater performer Billy Porter left his mark on socially-conscious art while originating the role of Lola, a drag queen who finds common ground with a shoemaker, in the Broadway musical Kinky Boots, which garnered the Pittsburgh native a Tony Award for Best Actor.
This year, just days before President Donald Trumps inauguration, Porter married his longtime partner, Adam Smith because what if he couldnt after Trump took office? But acts of sociopolitical defiance in the face of a minority-deserting administration extend also to his latest album, Billy Porter Presents: The Soul of Richard Rodgers. Among the classic selections: the hopeful Edelweiss from The Sound of Music, intentionally released as the albums first single on Trumps Inauguration Day.
Why end the album with Edelweiss?
Billy Porter: I released (that song) the day of the inauguration as a single. If youve ever seen The Sound of Music, Edelweiss is the song they sing as they try to escape Austria during the Nazi regime. I was making a very specific statement about that day.
What statement were you making?
BP: We need to pray and we need to engage, and we need to be visible and we need to be like that Edelweiss Flower and still bloom in the darkest of times, in the coldest of times.
Whats your past relationship with Richard Rodgers music?
BP: Richard Rodgers is from the Golden Era of musical theater, when musical-theater music was what was on the radio. (He) had managed to crack through the zeitgeist in a way that not a lot of composers can because still, even to this day, his music is very popular, so everybody knows a Richard Rodgers song. When you hear how we deconstruct the material and try to update it for a new millennium, youll hear them in a totally different way than before.
Which song of Richards do you feel closest to?
BP: Probably Edelweiss just because it means so much every time I sing it, and it makes me feel like Im contributing. For some reason, society today thinks that artists should just shut up and not talk about politics, and I dont really understand that, because weve always been the people who illuminate we speak truth to power in creative ways and create conversations, and can change hearts and minds. So, Im going back to that. You know, Im just interested in the president not lying. Im just interested in that. To go from what we had to this is just horrifying.
As a recently married man, how does it feel to be official in Trumps America knowing our rights may be in jeopardy?
BP: Well, you know, we got married before he took office for that very reason, because we just wanted to make that clear. I mean, its weird because its my job, you know? My job is to try to reach across and speak to people who we dont normally speak to and come to an understanding. Music is universal, and it breaks down walls and barriers.
You say its your job to reach across the aisle does that feel even truer after doing Kinky Boots?
BP: Yeah, because when I was doing Kinky Boots the first time, it was about being in the middle of change that was moving in our direction. Now, its about making sure our rights dont get rolled back. Its a different climate. Its a lesson in understanding that its ongoing and forever. You have to fight for the rights, and then defend the rights forever. If we didnt learn that before, we know it now.
Are you going to any red-state cities on this tour?
BP: This first leg, yeah, I am. Im going to Florida and Indiana, and some other places all over the country. Im excited to do it because I lead with love, and I feel like no matter what disagreement there may be, Im leading with love. Im here to hear you. Im here to talk about it. And Im here to actually have rational conversation.
But Im not interested in having irrational conversations, and that needs to get called out. I think we have sort of begun the first steps of doing that recalibrating. The press thought he was such a joke that they didnt pay attention to him, really, and then he got away from us, and the world is in chaos. So, its a far more political show than I have been doing recently.
Political how?
BP: I have some protest music in the old-school tradition of the ones who came before me, like the Nina Simones, the Harry Belafontes and Curtis Mayfields that movement of music that was about educating and speaking truth to power and making sure our voices were being heard. That kind of art needs to come back.
Tell me how you wound up re-imagining these songs within an R&B framework.
BP: It just kind of came together. It started out as an idea. We did a concert back in 2009 at a theater in Los Angeles, where the focus was deconstructed arrangements. We went from jazz all the way through to modern hip-hop, and so when the album came around, I thought we should really focus on being fresh and innovative in terms of sound. I thought the R&B and soul versions of these were something we hadnt really heard a lot about.
In the early aughts, you told The New York Times that youre one of few Broadway performers to have an R&B album.
BP: Thats why I did this album, because thats really the biggest point Im making: which is, we sing like this. We do it like this. And we do it eight times a week. So, wake up and listen, cause this album stands up next to any R&B soul album ever made. It stands up to it, and I know that. The new album, Im really proud of it. We just need to embrace it and write more material now, and I think Hamilton kicked that door down. Im writing a contemporary-gospel musical right now we have to show up and create the material.
How did the idea come to you?
BP: Ive always wanted to do it; I just needed a way in, because religion can be so polarizing. How do we remain authentic to the genre while embracing people who dont necessarily believe in the language of the doctrine that gospel music sort of came out of? How we tell it telling the audience and teaching them how to hear it, teaching how to watch it is very important. How do we teach people how to watch us? How do we teach people how to hear us that embraces them and not makes them feel alienated? The focus is love. Thats whats in the room, and it doesnt matter what life you live outside of there. Were talking about us right here, right now. I dont know if thats gonna work, but that was the way that I could write it. And its not about religion at all, by the way. It just happens to exist inside of the music that represents religion.
How far into it are you?
BP: I just finished the first draft, and Im writing it with (gospel performer and composer) Kurt Carr. We got about 17 songs, which is good. I also have a play thats in development at the Public (Theater) about what I call the lost generation of gay men my age 47 who came out in the 80s and went straight to the frontlines to fight for our lives and here we are 30 years later. Those of us who survived have PTSD and we know how to fight a lot, but we dont really know how to live. Im excited to be talking about that in creative ways.
Both of these pieces sound very close to you.
BP: Yeah. Very, very, very close.
This piece on the lost generation whats your role in its development?
BP: I wrote it. Its in development right now, so its the very beginning stages. But Im also sort of speaking about it because thats how shit happens you gotta speak it into action.
Do you miss Kinky Boots?
BP: I do. Especially now, because I feel like doing Kinky Boots in this political climate is an act of resistance. And its the best kind, because, once again, it reaches out with love. It leads with love its art, so it opens up a different side of the blinds. People hear differently, people see differently.
Do you have any interest in ever returning to that role?
BP: I do, and I may at some point in the very near future. And thats all Ill say about that. (Laughs)
Late last year Vice President Mike Pence attended a performance of Hamilton and actor Brandon Victor Dixon spoke out during the curtain call about whether this administration will protect minorities. If Pence attended Kinky Boots, how do you think you wouldve handled the situation?
BP: I think Brandon was unbelievable. Its like, you represent us, you work for us and I hope that you remember that. There are a lot of people who are nervous about what you may or may not do. The politics you ran on do not feel like they include us, so we just want you to know that as you move forward. Remember us.
The thing about Trumps response was, you cant be a dictator, boo. You cant. Were not gonna do that. Whatever it takes, weve done it before, so pull it together, people, and lets start fighting. We gotta come together.
As editor of Q Syndicate, the international LGBT wire service, Chris Azzopardi has interviewed a multitude of superstars, including Meryl Streep, Mariah Carey, and Beyonc. Reach him via his website: chris-azzopardi.com.
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